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m I ' TAIMAGE ON "MARRIAGE" "j Sf* ' { v" A SERMON ON MATRIMONY AT THE BROOKLYN TABERNACLE. Row to Choose n. Wife?Wise Men who Mnde MUtakcH iu Selection Helpmates. "The Marriage King" is the title of a series of discourses to be preached on * Sunday mornings by Dr. Talmage in the 1 Brooklyn Tabernacle. The first was [ delivered Sunday and its subject was "j-iow to unoose a wile." In it Dr. Tnlmage played changes on the entire ' rangff of the gamut of human emotion, exciting his congregation to laughter, 1 that went to the high notes of giggling, 1 and then went deeper and moved many ' of the audience to so sorrowful a ?.ondi- < tion that they found relief only in tears. The comedy part was the strongest and 1 had the most numerous illustrations. < Laughter, therefore, was the more prom- < inent feature in the accompaniments of 1 the sermon. 1 The text was selected from Judges, xiv., 8?"Is therenever a woman among all the daughters of thy brethren or among all my people that thou goest to take a wife of the hncircumcised Philistines ?' , 1 "Samson, the giant, is here asking the consent of his father and mother," said the Doctor, "to his marriage with a young woman whom they deemed unfit for him. In the text his parents arc 1 ' forbidding tlic bans. They are in effect saying to him, 'Are there no young woI men among our own people that you I must ask conjugation with this foreign I flirt ? Are there no lilies among the I % daughters of Israel whom you could I f wear on your heart, that you must be I compelled to wear the Philistine thistle? I Do you choose this crabbed apple bcI cause there are no pomegranites?' These I were just upbraidings because his parents when speaking of their own B people spoke of a race strikingly charI acterized by female loveliness. The I midnight was veiled in their hair and a lake of blue was in their eyes, the buoy ancy and freshness of spring was in thteir gait, and this was only typical of the beauty and the glory of their souls. 4 A TRIBUTE TO WOMAN. f "I have no words sufficiently eloquent ip set forth my admiration of good wonbanhood. Good and true women were iiever so numerous as they arc to-day. mmen are now seventy-live per cent ^Bbetter than they ever were. The women plf this country are better educated than men, and if things go on in the Iume ratio it will be difficult for the { /en to find enough ignorance in tl;e op-, bsito sex to make an appropriate con- 1 >rt." The ladies in the congregation 1 niled at this and looked at one another 1 amplacently. "If I am under a delu- 1 on in this I hope to continue in this Elusion until I embark from this planet. 1 nere are thousands of American pulkts, and among them this one, that Lve avoided a discussion of a great [any practical things, and among these lings is the subject I am to discuss in lis series of snrmonK Thin in tho 1 I 1st time that I have heard of it being 1 pcussed. I "There are a vast number of people mo ought uot?t? be married.- There le 940,000 more women in England pan men, and about the same number n this country. The moral of such a act is that thousands of women should egard it as a duty to take measures so Effective that they should be able to Lke care of themselves. 'Another fact | that there are a very large number of lin who arc not fit to be mitrned, and lis time to say that if a woman who fcses her integrity and her honor is not [t to be married, then is it equally true hat a man who is untrue to the best >romptings of his moral nature and is mpurc is not fit to be married. I am, Iinerciore, tftis morning, as a relicious ( leachcr and as one who will have to give In account of his stewardship, about to jive yon some advice that should be Id opted when you choose a wife. i awfui, examples. ( I "Martin Farquhar Tupper, the poet, . recommended men to pray and seek pivine guidance before they chose a ( wife. He and all the people who ad- 1 vised the same thing were laughed at 1 when they said this. Many of those 1 who laughed then are laughing now on the other side of the mouth. (Laugh- 1 ter.) Some good and wise men have [wrecked their lives by this neglect. ; IVitness the man of this text Then 1 here was John Wesley?as good a man { ,8 ever lived?was chained to a woman 1 vho did all she could to destroy his in- ^ luence,* and sat in Citv Roads Chapel ? nakiiig mouths at him while he breached. Then.there are women who re scolds f\nd who IqqV on ypu like & March northeaster. (Laughter.) 'i'hen men there arc the opium eating women lr-400.000 of tlicm in America to-day? ( who will have their drug although it j |03tfc them the greatest treasure of their ^ household. I urge you to ask divine ^ fcuidancc, because society is full of arti- _ A rx i i * ? ' Iijciumy. jviter ncr uressmaKCr, ner pair adjuster, her jeweller, and other [mysterious agencies have transformed a woman, how can an unsophisticated apian discern the real meaning of these physiological hieroglyphics ? (Loud laughter.) Men arc by these means ^swindled; they make a bargain from a sample, and when the goods come to bo delivered they find that they are (toot equal to the sample. (Giggling laughter.) They marry a sweet tempered woman, as they suppose, and she turns out to bo a Jezebel; thev marry a prom an as meek apparjentlv as the sainted wary, and they eret a Lucre/.ia Borgia when they thought they had a Martha "Washington. (More laughter.) I care not. for such women or the richness of Iheir upholstery, for I will tell them they are not as honest as the cyprians on the street, for these latter advertise (their infamy, but the former profess heaven when they mean hell. May I not, therefore, ask yon to seek divine J /guidance before you choose a wife? for there is no worse predicament on earth than to be unequally yoked together. mistakes sastt/f madr. ( "Adam had not * large number to we- < lect a wife from, and, judging from the 1 mistakes he mnd-e, I am glad th?t he < H/vras limited t>o Eve ot none. If you i HSftake Jfbe direction you will vnatoc I I - .. , . I . I do mistake. A great dculhas been said about woman being taken from the ribs of Adam. But there are twenty-four Hbs and there are twenty-three nossibilities to one that you will gel, the wrong rib. (roars of laughter.) John Milton, the poet, who was blind, was told that his wife was a rose, and he reiit ? ~e ^IIVU) X (1111 S1VSU Iliuvil \/l iV JUU^U VI color, but I think it is very likely so for I feel 1* thorn." (Laughter.) Look at Solomon, whose married life wa as unhappy as it was multitudinous, and among the wise observations of his experience in this matter is this:?\A. continual dropping on a rainy day and a contentious woman are alike.' "If in this matter you make no mistake you will have two heavens, one liere below and one hereafter; but if you 110 make a mistake you have two hells, jne here and one hereafter." Dr. Talmage concluded by giving a aumber of illustrations of the beneiicjnce of woman as a Chrir.tain, nnd :losed with a pathetic and touching description of the scenes around his uother's deathbed. War Reminiscence. Old Washington people will remember Hudson Taylor, who, during the war md for years previous, was first chief ilerk and then proprietor of a bookstore n Pennsylvania avenue. During the var he was a bosom friend of Edwin VI. Stanton, the then Secretary of War. "I remember," says Mr. Taylor, "that while I was in Washington during ;he war there ?vas one period when ;herc was some talk of doing away with 111 the regimental bands in the army. T4. ! J 1I.-1. Al A At., n it was tillm Liiub tiiuy cost me uovernment miilons of dollars, and as there was clamoring among some for retrench nent it was seriously proposed that nusic in the army be dispensed with. A. little party of gentlemen, including nyself, fearing that such an order would ue given, went to the War Office one evening to call upon Mr. Stanton socially, as we often did, and in the course of the little talk we had the mat:cr was broached. Said Mr. Stanton : 'It s urged simply as a matter of economy. Wc now have hundreds of millions of 3ebt, and it is growing fast.' Said I: 'Mr. Stanton, I h^ve read somewhere :liat music has been used in nil ages, lot only as a stimulus to the passion of combat, but also as a dative to tho ienee of danger, and whue embattled losts are marching with measured tread ;o the field of death music is the magic :hat lures them to their doom!' Mr. Stanton rose from his chair, and in an imphatic manner exclaimed : " 'Bv thunder, Taylor, that's a true saying] Where did you get that ? The "egiments shall keep their bands if all :lie finances of the United States go to ;hunder!'" It is needless to add that music in the irmy was not abolished. The Poultry Yard. One dozen winter eggs will pay a jigger store bill than two dozen suinner eggs. Sift the coal ashes in the poultryiousc for the fowls to pick at and dust .hemselves in. t)id you ever try feeding a nice, iweet, fine cut clover hay to fowls in vinter? It's tip-top feed. Timothy is irst-rate, and corn stalks are good. Corn is a good feed for cold weather, >ut care should be taken not to feed so ibcrally as to cause the hens to become !.\ccssively fat, or they will cense to ay. A sloppy wet floor in a hen house is in abomination, and invariably brings iramp," colds, and roup. It may be too ate now to raise your floor if it is of ;hat description, but you can put boards n and cover them with litter. A hen that sit** on the roost, or stands 3n one leg from morning till night these :old days, will not lay. Exercise is as issential as good feeding, and hens that ue expected to lay must be so fed as to :omel them to scratch and take exercise. Water with the chill taken off should )C supplied to fowls at least twice a lay during freezing weather. It should lot be kept constantly before long wattled fowls like Leghorns, since their ippendages are apt to become frost-biten from frequent dipping in the water. The early crop of broilers should chip ;he shells the latter part of January. So ire up the incubator and set the old hen is soon as you can get good eggs and jnough of them. But consider before tou begin that you have no easy job ihead of you for the next three months. ?Fwm Journal. ?lans for tlie New Cruisers. Chief Engineer Loring of the Bureau >f Steam Engineering of the Navy department is hard at work on the plans or the new unarmored vessels that the Government is to build. Thnsn vill mark a new departure in shinbuildng. They will be required to aevclop i speed of eighteen knots an hour, a hing that no vessel in the Hritish navy :an accomplish. The problem the sngineers have to deal with is a difficult >ne. The vessels arc small, and yet it s necessary to get into them engines of J, 500 horse power. Mr. Loring is confilent that these vessels will eclipse anyhing that England has ever built. He iays that while we have not the room in >ur navy yards for such work as England ia?, there is no question but thAt our vorkmen can compete successfully with hat, country in mechnnical skill. One lisadvantage our vessels havo when hey are first tried is that they cannot )e always officered and commanded by :rews who know how to get the beat vork out of them. In England, when a vessel is tested she is put in charge of i crew of experts, who are kept especally for that work. Thus tho very ?st results ore attained on fiist rial. Aw Army's Losses.? Napoleon lost in lis retreat from Moscow 400.000 men. [)f them 125,000 wero killed, 182,000 lied of hunger ami disease, and 103,000 ivere taken prisoners or dcncrtod. Many ?f them joined him aftorwards, and tho ictual loss did not probably ecoaod ?0,000. * era? * . - " vvy. "T , ' v . " t . ' ' AW ell Bred Maid. Richard Grant White used to tell an exquisite story to illustrate the native courtesy of well-bred Americans: "When Gen. Washington was in New England he was entertained at dinner by a country gentleman, who lived comfortably but, quietly 111 his old-fashioued home far from town. .When the general rose to go the little daughter of the host, not yet in her teens, opened the door for him. As he passed out in his stately way he bowed and said to the little maid: 'I wish you had a better office, my dear.' 'Yes, sir,' she quickly replied, with a bow; 'to let you in, sir.'" , The Arab's Fatalism. The wild Arab of the desert is as ferocious as the North American Indian. In place of the Indian's delight in warfare, he has a profound faith in "kismet"?in his fate. On two days, as Emerson puts it in one of his poems, it is useless to fear death?the day on which you are appointed to die and the day on which you are not appointed. On the first "neither balm nor physician can saveon the second, no power can send one to the grave. With this creed for an armor, and the further conviction that if fate decrees his death he will awake in a Mohammedan paradise, the followers of the prophet are formidable enemies. Mr. J. D. L. Harvey, proprietor of the Palace Market, Chicago, writes that he spent $2,000 in trying to cure his wife of rheumatism, and that St. Jacobs Oil accomplished what all else fail led to bring about. He says that it is a greater di*covc-v than electricity. A duck of a man Lrener'allv makes a o goose of a husband. The powers of oratory of U. S. Senator Voorhees, of Indiana, are universally acknowledged. Where even in Demosthenes could there be words more eloquent than these? "1 consider St. Jacobs Oil a splendid remedy. I suffered from rheumatism of the back. I used St. Jacobs Oil, which gave me instantaneous relief, ani then cured me." An intoxicated man is always rich (:n his mind), but a rich man is not always intoxicated. Prof. Grothe, of the Brooklyn Board of Health, analyzed Red Star Cough Cure and found it absolutely free from poisons and opiates, and safe and sure. Price, 25 cents. You can't learn too much, but you con half learn too much. Children's Ailments, such as "constipation,1' disordered bowls, worms and many other diseases so prevalent can be successfully treated by the occasional use of Walker's Vinegar Bitters. It is as safe and certain in its action upon children as upon adults. It acts on the liver and cleanses the blood. He that would sooth sorrow must not ajgue on the vanity of the most deceitful hopes. It is so Everywhere.?E. B. Ball, druggist at Hiattsville, Kan., has this to write about Aliens Lung Balsam: "It is the best selling tliroat and lung remedy, and gives general satisfaction. 1 cheerfully recommend It. Price Sue., 60c. and $1 per bottle at Druggists. Foolishness?Other people's wisdom. Onr ProrrciH. As stages are quickly abandoned with the completion of railroads, so the huge drastic, cathartic pills, composed of crude and bulky medicines are quickly abandoned with the introduction of Dr. Pierce's "Pleasant Purgative Pellets," which are sugar-coated, and little larger than mustard seeds, but composed of highly concentrated vegetable extracts. By druggists. A striking picture is never dangerous. -A Small I,enk will sink a great ship: and what at first appoari to be a tritling cough is npt to culminate in consumption if not properly attended to in time. l<or consumptl m, which is scrofula of the lungs, and forxll blood and skin diseases. Dr. Pierce s "Golden Medical Discovery" has no equal. By druggists. A bad O men?Getting in debt. Young and middle-aged men, suffering from nervous debility and kindred affections, as loss or memory and hypychondria, should enclose 10 cents in stamps for largo illustrated pamphlet suggesting sure cure. Address, WorldV Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. V. i A sound investment?buying a drum. Menbman's Peptonized hekf toxic, thuoniv I preparation or beef containing its entire nutrCtfoiM properties. It contains blood-making force.generating anil life-sustaining properties; Invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general debility; also, in ail enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, overwork or acute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. Caswell,Hazard & Co., Proprietors, New York. Sold by druggists. I Had a bilious attack and one of those indescribable cases of constant weariness. Took quinine and other remedies without relief. Took Dr. Jones' Red Clover Tonic; am strong and welL Asa Thompson, Logan, Ohio. There are nineteen metals more valuable than gold, but no remedy which will compare with Bigelow's Positive Cure for coughs and colds. A prompt and pleasant cure fnr all Uiroat and luns troubles.' GO cents and fi " Good at a pinch?A tight nlioe. RedStar TRADE yu/ MARK. tfough lure 2Vm from, Opiate*, -Emetics and Ftoison. IurI*. O K(Jts. prompt. qtr At DaoaMart add Diuum. THE CMAJUJM A.TOOELEB CO, ?AymiOttK. MP. Pffig, UEflMAN REM III For PainlitStS m MAlUi A.TOUUI M.BiUIMU.n. 'V >y,\ O -1 . .NjVv \ ?., V '/* \v*' * & 5i A vigorous and healthy growth of hair 1* maintained by using Halls Hair Renewer. The value of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, in cold* and coughs, cannot be overestimated. Domestic "sauce" is kept in family jars. EXCITEMENT UNABATED. Proof that that Physician's Terrible Confession Im Trnc. Cleveland O., Herald. Yesterday aiid the duy before we copiod Into our columns from the Rochester, N. Y., Democrat and Chronicle, a remarkable statement, made by J. B. Heuiou, M. D.. a gentleman who is well known in this city. In that article Dr. Ilenion recounted a wonderful exjierience which l?efcll him, and the next day we published from the same paper a second article, giving an account of tno excitement in Rochester, and elsewhere, caused by Dr. Heniou's statement. It is doubtful if any two articles were ever published which caused greater commotion both among professionals and laymen. Since the publication of these two articles, having been besieged with letters of inquiry, we sent a communication to Dr. Henion and u ur nr??.?? p- n- ? ? aiwj 11. xi. n iu uui (X/ v>u., uskiiik II uuy additional proof could bo given, and here it is: Gentlemen: I owe my life and present health wholly to tho power of Warner's Safe Cure, which snatched me from the very brink of the grave. It is not surprising that people should question the statement I made (which is true in every respect) for my recovery was as great a marvel to myself, as to my physicians, and friends. * * * J. B. Henton. M. D. Rochester, N. Y., Jan. 21. Sirs: The best proof we can give you that the statements made by Dr. Henion are entirely true, and would not have been published "unless strictly so, is tho following testimonial from the best citizens of Rochester, and a card published by Rev. Dr. Foot?. H. H. Warner & Co. To Whom it May Concern: We nre personally or by reputation acquainted with Dr. Henion, and we believe he would publish no statement not literally true. We are also personally or by reputation well acquainted with H. H. Warner & Co., proErietors of Warner's Safe Cure (by which Dr. [enion says he was cured).whose commercial and personal standing in this community are of the highest order, and we believe that they would not publish any statements which were not literally aud strictly true in every particular. '* C. R. Parsons, (Mayor of Rochester.) Wm. Purcell, (Editor Onion and Advertiser.) , W. D. Shuart, (ex-Surrogate Monroe County.) Edward A. Frost, (ex-Clerk Monroe County.) E. B. Fenner, (ex-District Attorney Monroe County.) J. M. Davy, (ex-Member Congress, Rochester.) John S. Morgan, (County Judge, Monroe Co.) 4 Himu SmT TTV /Ponifulicf on/1 QoA^BtYiiin \ John Van Voorhib, (ex-Member of Con-, gross.) Jo Editor of the Lxvinq Church, Chicago, Til.: There was published in the Rochester (N. Y.) Democrat and Chronicle of the 31st of December, a statement made by J. B. Heniou, M. D., narrating how he had been cured of Briglit's disease of the kidneys, almost in its last stages, by the use of Warner's Safe Cure. I was referred to in that statement, as having recommended and urged Dr. Henion to. try the remedy, which he did, and was cured. The statement of Dr. Henion is true, so far as it concerns myself, and I believe it to be true in all other respects. He was a parishioner of mine and I visited him in his sickness. I urged him to take the medicine. !and would do the same again to any one who was troubled with a disease of the kidneys and liver. Israel Foote (D. D.,) (late) Rector of St. Paul's Episcopal church, Rochester, N. Y. It seems impossible to doubt further in the face of such conclusive proof. A vested interest?A waistcoat in pawn. Not Once in a Tboaiaad Yrarit, What is it that occurs once in a minute, wice in a moment and not once in a thousand oi?ra? The letter in: which is always in sweet rum and mullein. Taylor's Chorokee Remedy if Sweet Quin and Mullein will cure cough*, olds and consumption. The habit of running over boots or shoes corrected with Lyon's Patent Heel Stiffeners. 3 months' treatment foroOc. Piso's Remedy for Catarrh. s?old by druggists. To chin a man doesn't make him a Chinaman. A <?a?o Not It roiul II lp. Dr. M. n. Hinsdale, Kewunce. III., ucIvIkc* as of a remarkable cure of Consumption, lie says: "A neighbor's wife was attacked with violent lung din. taw, unit pronounced beyond help from Quick Consumption. As a last resort the family was persuaded to try DR. Wit. HALL'S HAXSAM FOR THH LUNGS. To the astonishment of all,, by the time she had used one-half dozen t>ottles she was about the bouse doing her own work. Bound to make a noise in the world?Cats. EPITHELIOMA! OB SKIN CANCER. for seven years I Buffered with a cancer on mj face. Elgbt months ago a friend recommended the uko of Swift's Specific, and I determined to make an effort to procure it. In this I was successful, a nd began Its u?e. The Influence of the medicine at flr?>t was to somewhat aggravate the sore ; but soon tne tnflamatlon was allayed, and I began to Improve after the first few bottles. My general health ha* greatly Improved. I am stronger, and am able to dc nny kind or work. The cancer on my face began to decrease and the ulcer to heal, until there Is not vestige of it left?only a little scar marks the place. Mrs. Joicik A. McDo.vald. Atlanta, Ga., August 11,1885. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed'free. Tub Swift Specific Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga N. Y., 157 W. 2?d St. . GREAMBALM^PSffl BIPTi V'A^H Cleaacs the Head. RTrapiy p^tllV Allays Imflaiiiuiation. I Heals the Morcn. Res- MySv ^ H tores the (Seniles of FHfrFEVERgJ ?A Tasle.Smell,tlrurinir. E> a positive cure. 3t ^9 Cream Balmn?^@l ha? gained an enviable repu;?tign wherever known, ^ ^z\iV>W|k A '? a 1 displacing all otber pre par- u.sa.i ^ uav-FFUFB pain; agreeable to use. lI/\ | | fc I LI) Pric? 6Co. by mail op at druggist. Bend for circular. ELY BROTHERS, Drafgiita, Ow*fo, N. Y, MmttoUm* and tea giro* ^ nTOIDlTB.V JUnost nhwdl saii?fa? f^S mxmuwito*. ? kutMnr BROSL - _ Paris, t?a H KriithbttW Ckaiwoa tfcs favor of If-,, pv , , _ . tb? public and now ranks ^rU' OX . M?Bg the leading Modi* Gkvolnnatl.HHHi rla?< oftbo oil<lo?. ^ a. l. smith. "' dford, V* ? s&skc-" MaaaanBMmii>a _ TfcNNTRUTAL PILLS "CHICHESTER'S -ENGLISH." The Orlfindl and Only Geanlae. *fb iadalWBTl Reliable. D<nn of worthies* loluttow. nrafiOE??gf8&5: Id kj DrantnU vtrywIiM Atk tor "Clilrtw ! >? PwgrtnM filk Trtimmr. DUSJa Dill* fi???E"Qllifc0wfi5 Bla r S I IllSa BhtumaHe Hwi? M>wi >*<. ti.00i.iwm, to m. CAULIFLOWEBS^^^Sb^. U/ANT?P^??SB if-1'S' i i .- : , .. '? /. ,V ; 4 ^v#BROWH'S JfeHHlli X ?- ? BITTERS Combining IKON with PUKE VEGETABLE TONICS, quickly and completely CLEANSES and ENRICHES THE BLOOD. Quickens the action of the Lirer and Kidneys. Clears tho complexion, makes the akin smooth. It docs not lqjnre the teeth, canto headache, or prodnco constipation?ALL OTIIEB IRON MEDICINES DO. Physicians and Dra*gi*t8 STery wlicr* recommend it. M9. Y. Adams, 199 Ramsay St., Balto., Md., says: " I had a bad cam of Hcrofula which caused an eruption of the Bkin on my face. I was persuaded to use Brown's Iron Bitten. Four bottles have completely cured me." Mns. M. W. Sale, BIB 8. Pine 8t.. Richmond, Va.. says: "My little boy was suffering from a very serious attack of blood poisoning and the doctor not benefiting him in the least, I tried Brown's Iron Bitters. Two bottles cured him, although his blood was in a terrible state. It is certainly a great tonic and purifier and I heartily recommend it. Elaink Bi.oxqam, Pleasant Dale, W. Va.. says: " 1 have usod Brown's Iron Bitters for Ohronic Koroma?so pronounced by my physicians?with most , beneficial effect.. I cordially recommend it " Mr. Martin McRae. Lumber Bridge, N O., says: " I had a humor in my blood, something like Tetter or King Worm. Brown's Iron Bitters has curod me." Genuine has abore Trade Mark and crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other. Made only by KKOWN CHEMICAL CO., BALTIMORE, MP. FOR COUGHS, CROUP AND CONSUMI^TIO^USE TftftPs ^SdY OF SWEET GUM ADD MULLEIN. The Sweet Gum from a tree of the same nanx growing In the South. Combined with a tea mnrie Irotn tho Mullein plant of the old Oeldn. For uale by nil druealnts at 2.S rent* nnd 91.00 per boltle. WALTER A. TAYLOR, Atlanta, ?.?. ^PAGE'S CfiUPD GLUE flgjyjefcMENDS EVERYTHING HEwSSKBSdWond. leather .Taper, Ivory .Glnss, 111 IK1 p4 (* Furniture. Itric-n-Hrnc, Ac. ISimuBrCStrong as Iron, Solid as a Bock. v5mt1,c toUl1 Quantity sold durinjr tho .^hQ pu?t tlve year* Amounted to over 32 MILLION wr#&?ZttEEn!a bottic.?!EVT: it v w > n v wants it. nnjl A11 dealers enn soli it. Awarded MIH TWO coin medau. l'ronouneed Strongest Clue known Send dealer's card nnd 10c. postage Contains no Acid. ? f,,r c"n f.'lKE V.y \Slu ? - *' "* Russia CkukxtCo. (jloueester.Mnsa Payne*' Automatic Engines and Saw-Mill We offer an B?n in H. P. mounted Engine with Mill, ftin. solid Saw, 60 ft. b*lt\na. cant-hooks, rig complete for op*r*tlon. on cart, t'.IOn. Engine on skid* 81'* [eee. S^nd for circuWr (it). B. W. PAYNfc ?fc UONHi Manufacturers of *11 styles Automatic Rn? I allies* from 2 t-o RXi H. P.: alan Pnlleya. Hancera ami I phaftnjr. Klmira. N. Y. R?? I860. 1 pUlli FITS! When 1 say cure i i>n um mean merely to atop luum lor ft time and than hivTe them return again, I maan a radical car*. 1 btf* made the disease of FITS, EPILEPSY ar FALLRiQ HICKNEWa llta-loug study. IwarraotniJ remedy to eura tlia worat caiia. Uecauea others ha*a I (allad fa no raaaon 'or nnt now receiving a cure. Cena at cnea for a treatise and a Free Buttla of my Infallible I remedy. Qlre Express and Poet Offlca. It CO*Is joa fcoiLlDC i?r a trial, ami 1 will euro y?a. Addrass Dr. II. <>. HOOT. 1U Taarl 81, Haw lot*. Salvo ICMS DRIINKEHHESS and Intemperance* not Instantly, but effectually. '1 he only scientific antl- ' d/b dote for tlit Alcohol Habit and the | only remedy that darea to wnd trlif bottles. Highly endorsed by the med?5L leal profession and prepared by wellknown New York physicians. Send atanipa for circulars aad references. Address "SALVO REMEDY," So. 2 Went 14th St.. Mew York. \ No Rope to Cut Off Horses' Manes, kk Celebrated 4ECLIP.?K? IIAI.TElt Ml anil BRIDljIi Combined, cannot bo Slipped by any hone. Sample fiv* /l^V Halter to any part of U. s. froe. on receipt of $i. Sold by all Saddlery. Zaj/J Hardware and Harness Dealer*./JCrrf JjTSM Special discount to the Trade. f^T V\w Send for Price-\V J. . LlfSIITIIOUSE, J \> Rocheftt.r, V. w ? i mf Plso's Remedy tor Catarrh Is the fl| ? Best, EtMlest to Use, and Cheapest. ^ESM|hhihiwm|H|| Al^o good tor Cold In the Head, Ks Headache, Hay Fever, Ac. CO cents. qQ TH0RST01TS pearITOOTHPOWDER Keeping Taetb Perfect mad Caaa Healthy. MflDDlllllC Chloral and IVIUnrnillCOpium Habits lUhlLY (JUIIUU. ADT1CB FRBB. OR. J. C. HOFFMAN. Jefferson, Wisconsin. WELLBORINC,, m ~ . *s\) LIST OP DX8KASK9 ALWAYS CURAHUi BY USINO MEXICAN MUST AN Gr LINIMENT. OF HTOUH PLB8H. I OF ANIMALS. Rhfinmallam. IBeMUikM. i Barn* and 8cml4s? Btrta ud Galls* ' BtloiaudBltH, SmtII) Cracks* : Cats and Braises* Screw Worm* Grab* Spralas 3c Stitches* Feot Rst* Hssf All, Csstrmoted Mssoles* Laaeness, Stir Jslnts* Swlaay* Fsaaderi* t Backache. Bpralas* Straias* Eraptioas. Sara Feat* Frsst Bites* Stlflhess* ww ** e* teriuu aiseeees, sm ereij nuts or iKyaflent. for general use in family, stable and toek-yari,ttl? THE BK8T OF ALL LINIMENTS i " . - s i . ! P?; "v- ..'w w.l'j j.J&'.CW;-.. ' ? ' *V?? iv -< / vv-^w wr f}i * , * . $i\EN's 25 25 CESTS J?VA^W^CESTS fop tOT Cough i^t^Rif^XCroup UINGBAI# THE BEST AMD CHEAPEST COUGH or CROUP ,~pn ~pr? pi'y AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL ItContains no Opium in Any Form. A1.LEN'H LI NG UALKAM In Threo 81c* Bottle*, Prloc 25 CciitK, 50 OintH tuid 81 Per Dottle. Tho 25-Cent Rottleii are put up for the accommodation [>f all who desire Rlmplv a Cough or Croup Remedy. Those desiring a remedy for CONSUMPTION or any LUNCi DIHEASE Hhould sccure tho largo $1 bottles. Price, 25c., 50c. and $ I per Bottle. SOLD BY ALL MEDICISE DEALERS. VINEGAR BiTTERS ix tlac {rrciit IClood Purifier and Lifc-trivin? rrincipii-; a wentli: Purgative und Tonic; a perfect Kenoviitor und Invlgorator of the system. Eii ViiM-pur Bitters there is vitality but >o nlcoholicor mineral poison. IliM-iucN ol" tlic Miin, of whatever name or nature, are literally duK up and carried out of the system inn short time by the use of the Bitters. Vinegar Hitter* allays feverishness. Itrelieves, and in tbue cures Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Gout, and similar painful diseases. Vinegar Bitters cures Constipation and prevents Diarrhoea. Never before has a medicine been com' pounded poHsesoing the power of Vineuar Bitteiis to heal the Kick. Send for either of our valuable reference books for ladies, for farmers, for merchants, our Medical Treatise on I)isease3, or our Catechism on Intemperance and Tobacco, which last should be read by every child and youth in the land. "Any two of the above books mailed free on receipt of four cents for registration fees. <% li.II. McDonnklRrug Co., 532 WashingtonSU. N.Y. B N fc'7 DROPSY TREATED FREE! DR. H. H. GREEN, A Specialist for Eleven Years Past, Ha* treated Dropay and its complications with the most wonderful tureens; uses vegetable Kmedlos, entirely harmless. Removes all symptoms of dropay in eight to twenty daya. Cures patients pronounced hopeless by tho best at pbvaiciar.sl^rom tho flrat does the symptoms rapidly disappear. and in tsn daya at least two-thirds of all symptoms are removed. Home may cry humbug without knowing anvthtn* About It. Bemembor. it docs not coat 90a sny thine to realize tfafc merits of my treatment for yourself. In ten days the difllcultv of breathing is relieved, the pulse reRuKr, the urinary organs made todischaive their full duty, sleep is restored, tho swelling all or nearly Koue. tho strength increased, ami appetite made good. I am constantly curing cases of !our standing, cases that have been tapped a number or times, and tho patient declared unable to live a week. Bend for 10days' treatment; direction* and terras free. Give full, history of case. Nam* eex. how long afflicted, how badly swollen and whore. Is bowels costive, have legs bunted and dripped water. Send for froo pamphlet, containing testimonials, questions, etc. Men aaya' treatment furnished free b; mail. Send 7 cents in stamps for postage on msdlclo*. Epilepsy fits positively cured. II. H.<;itEEN.M. n., 65 Jones Avenue. Atlanta, Oi. Mentioa this paper. a s?Kin of Beauty is a Joy Forever. DR. T. FELIX OOURAUD'3 ORIENTAL CREAM. OR MAGICAL BEAUTIFIES. <? a Hemoves Tan. Pimples, TJ ? ? Freckles. Moth-l'otches, M J ? , ltnsli and Skin iIUc-ihi-s. and ?. co . 1 = HE~XE "< ry tilemixh on beauty, a j o> c S 0 jptyr ajid detie? detection. It ha4 "" Ptfi.1 BK6..T "too<l the tr*t of gj if Vg P the U-jVHt harmful of all the Skin prennrations." Onehottt* will last nix months, UHiHK It every any. Also Poudro Subtile removM xuitcrtluouh linir without injury to thonkta. H?r. H. R. T. (JOl ltU U, Solo Prop., 48 New Ytrk. For Kale by I>ruKK'"t? and Kanny Goods Ik'alors in th? II. H.. Canada*. Kurupe. ITIlowai* of baM> Imitation* >1.(100 Iteward for arrest and proof of any ono soiling aun?. FRAZER AXLE GREASE. uld-tcoth^ ls^ S?4 **?1,^'>^^?! |#B- ffl Tiie Best 3 K p? K Waterproof llfalB Coat. tTh. KTcJS addJt Bevare of imitations. Noncjrenulne without tlie Allraexperleace. Remarkable aod qalek enraa. Trial r?^ OftM. Sand Hump for ?e*lcdparlleolar?. Addraaa. Dr. WARD A CO., IAHJISLUL1, JIO.' UFU ONLYrjfflfWa men msas&< extra... r,t&,J& KEU MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO> S. Y. K1DDER8 PACTuSsH^fSR: DATE MTQ Obtained. Rood ?ta tnp far W t% I EvPB I V? Inventors' Guida. L. BUiOHAK, Patrnt I-awj-er, Washington, D. C. / pnPP ? JteLssffSJJ^si Aue pkpp^?d&nhtb.c^ ltf 1kb IP Newxk.N.J.StKUttmwforport'g. PENSIONS IN CREASED Write L- Bingham^ I Att'y, Wash'n, D. Q. Palms' BmincM College, PblUitelptkU. Tanu oniy <<U. atta*t?on? InmitMJ. Write for oimiiIui. AGENTS. -Uc. Haraple tUnhhoJderT^Ti v"c Abboharp ACo., Cl?rk?bn??. w. v*.!1 JtvljJGl hhibbyrnr^SRVR^ > Torn are ?Uo~?:la./V?e trial <?<Mrfv?aM of ttM?M of Dr. Dye*ii OtHbrated Volttiewlt wit* Klectrlo ?m.V.; W * iv.'WV^ j/.yv'* , V*> 'o , ' ' /. >/: