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DR. TALMAC V ivi? 1 I *ici HIV 'S oi l VV.\M<!\<;TON, I'. ! lu I unique way tin' hoa\? ni., ' ??.. ... i- discoursed u pot J by hr.Talia.c'e in tl''- .-?'Nimii limier iii?- ligar?' . .i ir ur : iyxl .John xi v.. L'. I i M '. I 'lir r's hott: ?. aro ma ny : 11 ?iii -. H-. . - i !. .: i it- <.i iis< ilic?ititi t iiat is .i t;'itiy a'jl. Tin ?ii ...ipi? ? wirri; sa?l. .un? (;'!?ri.n( . tiered heavoii H? ali alter ative, .i fiimplant .'ii.'i a tonie. Iii: .-ii'iw ti;' ni thal Ihi ir s. rrowa aro mi ly :> il u!. background of a bright pi?* turi! of tr u 111111-.' felicity. Ile lr?- j them know that;, though jiov? ihey live "ii the lowlands, they ill >? ! have a house on the it]>1an<?-. N u ly all the lliblo description-"! Inaven may br li:.-ural ive. I am in>t positiv? | that in all heaven tin re is a literal crown ?>r harp or pearly .'.itu or throne or chariot. Tin y : i\ ?? only ascii to illustrate the glori* . I' tin- place, but how well they <? . it! The favorite symbol by whieli the Bible presents celestial happim-s i- a house. I'aul, who never owned a house, although li?: hire?! mm for two years ia Italy, speaks .?! heaven as a "hoii.-i! not made with hands/ ami Christ in our text, lim translation ol' which is little | changed, MI as to give tim moro ?iceui atc meaning, says: '-li: My Kalhor's Ima?e arr many rootie . This divinely authorized compari son nf heaven to a great homestead of large accommodations 1 propose to C.ir?'\*" I a -"in - healthy neigh b i;. .. i.i' build.-, a very com mo ni...:- halo tai um ile m ii M t have room i". .'.. iiis children. The rooms come to bo called after the different members of the? family. That is mother's room, that is George's room, ' that is Henry's room, that is Flora's 1 room, that is Mary's room, ami the house is all occupied. lint time goes by, and the sons go out. into th?; world and build their own homes, and the daughters are married or have talents enough singly to go out and do a g<ei?l work in the world. After a while tho I father and mother an: almost alone in the big house, and, seated hy thc i evening stand, they say, "Well, our family is no larger now than when we started together forty years ago." But time goes still further by, and some of the children are unfortunate and return to thc (dd homestead to live, and thc grandchildren come with them and perhaps great-grandchildren, and again tho house is full. Millennia ago God built on the hills of heaven a great homestead for a family innumerable, yet to be. At first lie lived alone in the great house, but after awhile it was occupied by a very large family, cherubic, seraphic, angelic. The eternities passed on, and many of the inhabitants became wayward and left, never to u luru, and many ol' the apartments were va cant. 1 refer to thc fallen angels. Now these apartments ure lilling up again. There are arrivals ai the old homestead of God's children every day, and tho day will come when thor J will bc uo unoccupied room in all the house. As you and I expect to enter it and I make there eternal residence, I thought you would like to get some more par ticulars about thc many roomed home stead. "In my Father's house are many rooms.'' You see, thc place is to be apportioned off into apartments. Wc shall love all who arc in heaven, but there arc some very good people whom wc would not want to live with, in the same room. They may be bet ter than we are, but they are of a di vergent temperament. We would like to meet with them on the golden streets and worship with them in thc temple and walk with them on thc river banks, but I am glad to say that we shall live in different apartments. "In my Father's house are many rooms." You see, heaven will be s?? large that if one wants an entire room to himself or herself it can bc afford ed. An ingenious statistician, taking thc statement made in Revelation, twenty-first chapter, that the heaven ly Jerusalem was measured and found j to be 12,000 furlongs and that thc ? length and height and breadth of it j are equal, says that would make heav- j cn in size 'MS sextillion W8S quintil- : lion cubic feet, and then, reserving a certain portion fer thc court of beaven and thc streets and estimating that the world may last a hundred thous and years, bc ciphers out that there are over 5,000,000,000,000 rooms, each room seventeen feet long, six teen feet wide, fifteen feet high. But I have no faith in the accuracy of that calculation. He makes the rooms too small. From all I can read thc rooms will be palatial, and those who have not had enough room in this world will have plenty of room at thc last. ? should not wonder if, instead of the room that thc statistician ciphered out as only seventeen feet by sixteen, it should be larger than any of tho rooms at Berlin, St. James or Winter palace. "In my Father's ;E'S SERMON. lie < 'elestial I ? onie. house arc ina.'.;, f'" n.-. Carry ?ii i: . ni nil further the *->'iM holism of i!iv 1 xi. Iel u . join hands and go i ihj.i majestic homestead a nd . ' . ur-? Ives. As wo ascend i.lic :. : .? . I? |H un invisible guards man open lia; front door, an i u. .. i lu red tn i he right into i lie. i : : ; ll I . i ? tit ni t Lo old homestead, !.. : : (h? place where we fi r -1 nie? I. [h. wi lennie of heaven. Tin re must a place where the departed -j.nit enters and a place in which it con fronts, the inhabitants celestial. Thc reception room of the newly arrived from tl?i- world what jenes it must have witnessed duce thu first guest arrived, the victim of the first fratri cide, pious Abell! In that r< >? . m Christ lovingly greeta al! newcomers. Ile redeemed them, and He has thc richi h. the first embrace on arrival. What a minute when the ascended spirit first secs thc Lord! Better than all we ever reid about Him or talked about (lim or sang about Him in all the churches and through all our earthly lifetime will it he, just for .?ne s<.nd (ti eec Him. The most rapturous idea we ever had of Him on sacramental days or at the height of some jrreal revival or under thc uplift ed baton of au oratorio is a bankruptcy of thought compared with thc first flash nf His appearance in that recep tion room. At that moment when you confront each other, Christ look ing upon you and you looking upon Christ, there will he au ecstatic thrill and surging of emotion that beggar all (description. Look! They need no ! introduction. Long ago Christ chose ? that repentant sinner, and that repent ant sinner chose Christ. Mightiest moment of an immortal history - thc first kiss of heaven! Jesus and the soul! The soul and Jesus! Hut now into that reception room pour the glorified kinsfolk, enough of earthly retention to let you know them, but without their wounds or their sickness or their troubles. Sec wdiat heaven has done for them-so radiant, so gie :ful, so transportingly lovely! They call you by natue. They greet you with an ardor proportioned to thc anguish of your parting and the length of your separation. Father! Mother! There is your child. Si - tors! Brothers! Friends! I wish you joy. For years apart, together again in thc reception room of thc old homestead. You see, they will know you are coming. There aro so ! many immortals filling ill the spaces between here and heaven that news like that Hies like lightning. They will be there in an instant. Though they were in some other world on er rand from God, a signal would be thrown that would fetch them. Though you might at first feel dazed and overawed at their supernal splen dor, all that feeling will be gone at their first touch of heavenly saluta tion, and wc will say: "Oh, my lost boy!" "Oh, my lost companion!" ' Oh, my lost friend! Are we here to gether! " What scenes in that recep tion room of thc old homestead ha.'e been witnessed! There met Joseph and Jacob, finding it a brighter room than anything they saw in Pharaoh's pal ie. ; David and the little child for i\ lo-in he euee fasted and wept; Mary ami Lazarus after thc heartbreak of Bethany; Timothy and grandmother L<<i-; Isahella Graham and her sailor Soil ; Alfred and George Cookmau, the m>>tery nf the sea at last made mani fest; Luther and Magdalene, the daughter he bemoaned; John Howard and the prisoners whom he gospelized, and multitudes without number who, once so weary and so sad, parted on earth, but gloriously met in heuven. Among all the rooms of that house there is no one that more enraptures my Mitti ihau that reception room. ' In my Father's house are many rooms." Another room in our Father's house is thc throne room. We belong to the royal family. The blood of King Jesus flows in our veins, so wo have a right to enter tho throne room. It is ito easy thing on earth to get through even the outside door of a king's residence. During the Franco German war, one eventide iu the sum ! mer of 1870, I stood studying the ex quisite sculpturing of tho gate of tho Tuileries, Paris. Lost in admiration . of the wonderful art of that gate, I I knew not that I was exciting suspic ion. Lowering my eyes to the crowds of people, I found myself being close ly inspected by the government offi cials, who, from my complexion, judged me to be a German and that for some belligerent purpose I might be exam ining tho gates of tho palace My ex planation in very poor French did not satisfy them, and they followed me long distances until I reached my ho tel and wero not satisfied until from my landlord they found that I was only an inoffensive American. The gates of earthly palaces are carefully guarded, and if so, how much more tho throueroom! A duzi'Jiiig place is it for mirrors and al! costly art. No one who over -aw lt" thronerooui of thc tir-t ami only Napolc in will ever forget the hitter N . mbroidered in purple and col-1 on the upholstery of chair aud window, the letter N gilded on the wall, the letter N chased on i the chalices, the letter N Untiing from the ceiling. What a conflagration ol' brilliance the throueroom of Charles Immanuel of Sardinia, "t Ferdinand of Spain, of I! lizabeth of F.ugland, of I iou i fa.f Italy, lint the throne room of our Father's bouse hath a glory eclipsing all the t'.: ?jierooins that ever -aw scepter wave or crown j flitter or foreign cmbassador bow. for our Father's throne i- i throne of (..race, .i throne of mercy, a throne of holim -, a throne of justice, a throne | i/f universal dominion. We need not stand shivering and cowering Indore j it, for our Father says wc may yet one ! day come up and .-it on it beside Him. "To him thal ovcreometh will 1 grant to .-it with Me in My throne." You sec, we ar?; princes and princesses. Perhaps now wc move about incognito, | as Peter the Groat in thc garb of a ship carpenter at Amsterdam or a.; (?uccti Tirzah in the dre--, of a pea sant woman seeking tho prophet for her child's cure, but it will bc found out after a while who we arc when wc get into thc throueroom. Aye, we need >t wait until then. Wemay by prayer and song and spiritual up lifting this moment enter the throne room. O King, live forever! Wc touch the scepter and prostrate our selves at Thy feet. Another room in our Father's hon-?: is the music room. St. John and other Hilde writers talk so much about lin: music of heaven that there must, bc music there, perhaps not such as on earth was thrummed from trembling string or evoked by touch of ivory key; but, if not that, thenso.no tliing better. There arc so many Christian harpists and Christian com posers and Christian organists and Christian hymnologists that have gone up from earth, there must bc for them some place nf especial delectation. Shall wo have music in this world of discords and no music in the land of complete harmony? In that mysie room of our Father's house you will some day meet thc old masters, Mozart and Handel and Men delssohn and Beethoven and Dodd ridge, who.se sacred poetry was as re markable as his sacred prose, and James Montgomery and WTilliam Cow per, at last got rid of his spiritual melancholy, and Bishop Heber, who sang of "Greenland's icy mountains and India's coral strand," and Dr. Rallies, who wrote of "High in yon der realms of light," and Isaac Watts, w ho went to v?3?t Sir Thomas Abney and wife for a week, but proved him cnlf ur? airr.wialilit o ern nef fltat lV?Of7 - -a --? ~ - o"-- -" <J made him stay thirty-six years, and side by side Augustus Toplandy, who has got over his dislike for Methodists, and Charles Wesley, freed from his dislike for Calvinists, and George YV. Bethune, as sweet as a songmaker as he was great as a preacher and thc author of "The Yrillage Hymns," and many who wrote in verso or song, in church or by eventide cradle, and many who wero passionately fond of music, but could mako none them selves, the poorest singer there more than any earthly prima donna and the poorest players there moro than any earthly Gottschalk. Oh, that music room, the headquarters of cadence and rhythm, symphony and ohant, psalm and antiphon! May we bo there some hour when Haydn sits at the keys oi one of his own oratorios, and Davie thc psalmist fingers the harp, ant Miriam of the Ked sea banks claps tin cymbals, and Gabriel puts his lips t< thc trumpet and the four and twentj elders chant, and Lind and Parepi render matchless duet in thc mush room of the old heavenly homestead "In my Father's house aro manj rooms." Another room in our Father's bous* will be tho family room. It may oor respond somewhat with tho farail; room on earth. At morning am evening, you know, that is tho plac we now meet. Though every membe of thc household have a separat room, in tho family room they al gather, and joys and sorrows and es pcrienccs of all styles are there rc hearsed. Sacred room in all ou dwellings, whethor it bo luxuriou with ottomans and divans and book in Russian lids standing in mahogan case or there be only a few plai j chairs and a eradlo. So the famil I room on high will be the place whei the kinsfolk assemble and talk ov< thc family experiences of earth, tl weddings, the-births, the burials, tl festal days of Christmas and Thank giving reunion. Will tho childrc departed remain children there? Wi the aged remain aged there? Oh, n Everything is perfect there. Tl ohild will go ahead to glorified mat ui ty, and the aged will go baok to gloi fled maturity. The rising sun of tl one will rise to meridian, and the d soending sun of the other will retu: to meridian. However much we lo our ohildren on earth, we would oo sider it a domestic disaster if th staid ohildren, and so wo rejoice , j their growth here. And when \ ui?ct i? the family room of our Fath er's house we will be glad that they have grandly and gloriously matured, while our parents, who were aged and infirm here, we shall bc glad to find restored to the most agile and vigor ous immortality there. 1 hope none of us will he disap- ; pointed about getting there. There is a room fer us if we will go and take j it. hut in order to reach it it is abso- ! lately necessary that w< take the ? right way, and Christ i- the way, and we must enter at the right door, and ? Christ is the door, und we mast start j in time, and the only hour you arc .sure pf is the hour tl.'' cl ark i >?w -trikes, and the only sec?n i tue otic your wat.-h is now licking. I hold in : my hand a roll of letter- inviting you all to make that your home forever. ?? The New Testament is only a role ?d' ; letters inviting you, as thc spirit of ? them practically says: "My dying yet immortal child in earthly u< iiilihorhood L have built for you a groat residence. lt is full of rooms. I have furnished them as no palace was ever furnished. Pearls arc nothing, emeralds are noth ing, ehrysoprasus is nothing, illu mined panels of sunrise and sunset nothing, thc aurora of thc northern heavens nothing, compared with the splendor with which 1 have garnitured tl.'Mn. Rut you must be clean before you can enter there, and so I have opened a fountain where you may wash all your sins away. Conic now! Fut your weary but cleansed feet on the upward pathway. l>o jou no see amid thc thick foliage on thc heavenly hilltops tho old family homestead?" "In my Father's house are many rooms." The Story of a Furnace. The host looked at his guest. "Come down to thc basement," he said, with a slight wink: "I want to show you my furnace." The hostess glanced up with a queer little smile. "Mr. Stivcrson is quite daft about his furnace, Mr. Jolloboy," she said. "Ive no doubt he'll bavo you down there every time he opens a damper." Thc host turned away and choked slightly, aud then they stepped down thc stairs together. Mr. Stivcrson wei.t straight to thc furnace room, and reaching above the bricked beater, pulled down a squat black bottle and a small glass. He lilied the latter. "Here's to tho furnace," he said with a hoarse chuckle, as he passed the glass to his guest. "Have to bea little careful, you know, on account of the old lady. Rest woman in the world, of course, but prejudiced. How's that?" The guest gulped and took down thc contents of the glass? "Npw, what would you call that?" "Well," replied the visitor with a _:_ t?._ v.- r_i. _:?u ._.. T iJllUlUUt-, IU UC X1U Ll IV ?lui JiUU| JL would call it a mighty good sample of spoiled cidar vinegar." "Eh! what?" And th . host hastily poured out a glass and took a mouth ful. "Wow-w-w! So it is. HaDg it all, the old lady has discovered tho hiding place! Wonder what in thun der she did with tho real stuff? Heav ens! what a contemptible trick. Let's go upstairs." And they went. "How did Mi. Jollyboy like the fur nace?" inquired the hostess as she kooked up with a pleasant smile. The accidulated guest did bis best to call up a smile in return. "It's a splendid furnish-I should say furnace," he remarked. "I don't think I ever saw one with bettor ap pointments outside and inside." "And on top, too?" queried the hosfcless sweetly. Then she pointed to the open register at her feet. "It's quite wonderful," she added, "how distiuotly the sound of voices in the furnace room below comes up through the register. I could hear every word you said!" Then she laughed softly. But the men made no comment. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Rheumatism-Catarrh, are Blood Dis eases-Cure Frei ! It is the deep-seated, obstinate cases of Catarrh and Rheumatism that B. B. B. (Botanio Blood Balm) cures. It matters not what other treatments, doctors, sprays, liniments, medicated air, blood purifiers, have failed to do, B. B. B. always promptly reaches the real oause and roots out and drives from the bones, joints, mucous mem brane, and entire system the specific poison in the blood that causes Rheu matism and Catarrh. B. B. B. is the only remedy strong enough to do this so there can never be a return of the symptoms. Don't give up hope but ask your druggist for B. B. B.-Bo tanic Blood Balm of 3 Bs.-Large boiiiets $1, six boules uu? treatmen?:) $5.. B. B. B. is aa honest remedy that makes real oures of all Blood Diseases after everything else fails. We have absolute confidence ia Bo tania Blood Balm; hence, so you may test it, we will send a Trial Bottle Free on request. Personal ' medical ad vice free. Address Blood Balm Co., 380 Mitoholl St., Atlanta Ga. - A kansas man is having a violin made from a pieoe of the pulpit of the first church of the Pilgrim Fathers, near Boston. Joseph Stookford, Hodgdon, Me., healed a sore running for seventeen years and eured his piles of long stand ing by using DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. It cures all skin diseases. Evans Pharmaoy. Freak Farms. Farmers of Indiaua are raising strange products these days, the list including tomcats, skunks, weasels, rabbits und frogs. Herman Fular, at New Harmony, Posey County, has ten acres devoted to raising and breed ing Angora cats. Some sell for as much as $25 apiece. During thc last year he has raised '?.<)l)l) for the Fast en! markets. A mile away is a leech farm. It is the only one in the country, and the industry is carried on in moss filled vu-. Thc original leeches caine from C i many. Nathan Meyer has a rabbit farm of sixty acres, near Wabash. This year Io; expects to raise 1,000,000 rabbits. Tin; meat is edible, the pelts aro in great demand, ami some of the rab bits arc sold as pots. From the hair crush hats are made. There are six big skunk farms in Indiana, where the little animals are raised hy the thousands. Their pelts sell for from $1.50 to $2 apiece. Mark Uccger has a large pepper mint farm in St. Joseph County, and some Poles have au ernonnous pepper mint farm on the Michigau lndiana linc. Tho most freakish notion is to ar tificially fatten watermdons. Thc fanners do it by perfo: ling a sur gical operation on the stem, inserting a cotton fuse, which is passed through the cork of a bottle full of sweetened w_ i\ ^ - Thc night watchman who struck a match in the powder mill at Santa Clara. Cal., to see what time it was has not, been able to tell anybody since whether bia watch had stopped or not. . A very pretty custom obtains among cer tain classes by which the newly married pair starts p. savings bank for the child yet to he. livery day a penny or a dime, as thc case may bc, is dropped into thc bank to swell the fund, and this practice is kept up until thc child is old enough to save for itself. The parents have the right theory but how rarely thev carry it to its broad est application. Every mother is perforce laying up for her child what money cannot in fluence-happiness or misery. The nervous mothcrwill have a nervous child. The irrita ble and fearful nirther cannot have a happy and cheerful child. In mind and body thc child will reflect the mother's condition. The best preparation for motherhood is made by the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Its perfect control over the sensitive feminine organism gives it a natural influence over the mind. It ban ishes anxiety and fear. It docs away with the misery of morning sickness. It prives vitality and elasticity to the organs pecu liarly feminine, and makes the trial of motherhood easy and brief. It makes healthy mothers, Capable of nursing and nourishing the babes they bring; into the world. "Favorite Prescription" contains no alcohol, whisky or other intoxicant. Accept no substitute. .? Mrs. Axel Kjer, ?af Gordonville. Cope Girar deau Co., Mo., writ??: "When I look at my little boy I feel it my duty to write to yon. Per haps soine one will see ray testimony and he leif to use your ' Favorite Prescription ' and be blessed in the same way. This is my fifth chilli and the only oue who came to maturity ; the others having died from lack of nourishment so the iloctor saith I was not sickly in any way and this time I just thought I would try your ' Prescription.' I took nine l>ottlo acid to" my surprise it carrieil me through, and gave us as fine a little boy as ever was. Weighed ten and one-half pounds. Ile is now five months old, has never beee sick a day, and is so strong that everybody who sees him wonders at him. Ile is so playful and holds himself up so well. I would like to see this in print for so many have uskeil me, ' Do you think these are the testimonials of the people, or has Dr. Pierce just made them up and printed them? ' " Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure bilious ness. VALUABLE LAND SALE. WITH a view of changing my invest ment I will offer f?r falo on next 8alesdav, December 4, 1890, before the Court House In Anderdon, S. C., if not enid at private sale before, my Planta tion, containing 332 aurea, more or lena, situated near the Town of Button, S C., aub divided aa follows : TRACT NO. 1-57? acre*, known as the Wilkes Place. TRACT NO. 2-56i acree,known as the Martin Place. TRACT NO. 3-07 aerea, known as the Caroline Ellison Place. TRACT NO. 4-120 acres, known aa the Wm. Ellison Place. Including 36 acree of woodland, originally part of Georg?* Tel ford land. Terms-One-third raab, balance In one and two years, with Interest at eight per cent per annum. Purchasers to pay for papers and stamps. W. P. COX. Nov 16, 1809 21 2 KAMNOL HEADACHE, NEURALGIA,' LA GRIPPE. Relieves all pain. 25c. ?all Druggists. BANKERS and BROKERS. GEO. SK?LLEE & CO., CONSOL, STOCK EXCHANGE BLDG, 60-62 Broadway, - New York. . LOTS OF MONEY CAN be made through speculation with deposit of $30.00 [thirty dollars] upward [or 8 per cent, margin upward] on the Stock Exchange. The greatest fortunes have been made through speculations In Stocks, Wheat or Cotton. If you are Interested to know how spec ulations are conducted, notify na and we will send yon information and market otter free of oh argo. Usual commission chai ged for exe cuting order?. Goveromeot. Municipal and Railroad bonds quotations furnished on applica tion for purchase, sale and exchange. Oct. 25,1899 18 Om U!2 ?Vege table Pr cp aration for As - similating tocFocKlatulRcgula ling thc Stomachs aii?Bowels af Promote s Digcs?cn,Checrful ness and Rest.Conta?ns neither Opium.Morpl?ne) nor Mineral. KOT NAB C O T I c. J\vT7/JitK See tl ' Aix.Sc/u:a - JioJuUe Sat? - Anise Sail * JXrprmdnt - Jil Oir?utia?: Sada, * It'mnSccd - ?'tflrifad Sugar . Yiai?/yrttn- Hatrr. Apcr?cc? Remedy for Constipa lion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Tac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. " At t>;.mb.ii.t.lxs .old EXACT COPVOF WRAEPEB. wm ffor Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Always Bought. THC CENTAUR COM PAN V, NtW VOf?K CITY. Is a Little Thing when it Begins ! THE longer 3011 put if. off the harder it is to cure. The longer it lasts the more serious it becomes. Let it run on and there's no telling what the eud will be. Tho worst ease of Consumption was a little Cold ouce. TAR MINT Will stop any Cough when it first begins. It will stop most Coughs after they get bad. But the best way is to take it at the first sign of a Cold. It ought to be right at your elbow all the time. Tar Mint Is the BEST REMEDY for COU ^HS, COLDS, HOARSENESS, and all diseases of the Throat and Lungs. Don't buy any other kind. DRUG CO OUR y and Wagon Trade is on the increase, hut we want it to increase more. THOUSANDS of Farmers can testify that "Old Hickory," "Tennessee, "Studebaker" and "Milburn" Wagons are tho lightest running and will wi longer than other makes on the market. You may find in this County th Wagons that have been in constant use for the past twenty years. We also have on hand a large and vaaied assortment of BUGGIES a CARRIAGES, and among them the celebrated 'Babcock's," "Columbiaig "Tyson & Jones," "Columbus," and many other brand?;. Our record for selling first-class G. .ods is evident by the blands me doned above, that we have exclusive sale for in Anderson County. Our "Young Men's" Buggy has no equal. Have also a large and select line of HARNESS, SADDLES, BR' DLES, &c., and have recently secured exclusive control and Bale of the ce^| brated "Matthew Heldman" Harness, which is well known in this Coun and needs no "talking up." The Wagon and Buggy manufacturers are advancing prices on all tb' goods on account of the advance in price of a l the material, and in con4 quence we will have to advance our prices from 85.00 to $10.00 a job ; bB we wish to give you a chance to buy before the rise, so you had better jo in the procession and buy one of < ur Buggies or Wagons at once, for on ai after September 1st next our prices will be at least 65 00 higher than present.- We regret having to do this, but cannot get around it. Buy now and save this advance. JOS. J FRETWELL. Will still seU you a first-class Baggy for $30.00. Cal riage $85.00. O.B. &"BK0. ?SOO BARRISLS. GOT every grade you are looking for. We know what you want, a we've got the prices right. Can't give it tb yoe, but we will sell you bi grade Flour 25 to 35c cheaper than any competition. Low prado Flt IS.00 pei'barrel. . f , ? Car EAR CORN and stacks of Shelled Corn. Buy while it is cheal advancing rapidly. We know where to buy and get good, sound Corn che ; OATS, HAY and BRAN. 8pecial prices by the ton. ' We want your trade, and if honest dealings and low prices count will get it. Yours for Business, O.D. ANDSR80N & BRO feft? Now is your chance to get Tobacco cheap, doting but edda' ends in Caddies.