RELIGIOUS READING. A Silent Prayer. In the still all the music lies unheard; In the rough marble beauty hides unseen; To make the music and the beau'y, needs The master’s touch, the sculptor’s chisel keen. Great Hester, touch us with thy skillnl hand; Let not the music that is in use diet Great Seulptor, hew and polish us; nor let, Hidden and lost, thy form within us list Spare not this stroke! do with us as thou wilt! Let there he nodfcht unfinished, broken, marred; Complete thy purpose, that we may become Thy perfect image, thou our God and Lord. —T Bonar. The Search. “Canst thou by searching find out God!"— Job 11:7. “Search me. O God, and know my heart’’ -Psalm 1119:28. If we would by searching find out God, wc must ask him first to search and to find us. He knows us infinitely better than wc know ourselves, and ho knows whether wc truly desire to find him. He who begins this Psalm (139) with the words “O God, thou hast searched mo and known me,” ends it with a prayer that God would still more search him and know him (Terse S 3). He wished to lay his heart open to God, well knowing that it was already before him, and that the darkness of svilful concealment as well as the light of can did confession were “both alike” to that Ailsceing Eye (verse 13). Thus the Psalmist knew something of God; he recognized that before him with whom wc have to do all things ire naked and open, for God had taught him this great truth in his deep est heart, and was ever teaching it more »nd more in answer to his prayer. When God has thus searched the heart, the man is no longer left in utter ignorance, standing aloof before an unknown God; he has had dealings which he can never forget, with his Maker, and having known God as the searcher, he cannot rest till the Holy Spirit of God reveals him also as the cleanser of the henrt. To know God thus, wo must know him in Jesus Christ, who came to reveal him to man. Enlightened by this glorious revela tion, wc know thing9which prophets and righteous men sought in vaiu to know, snd are no longer forced to ask without hope of an answer, Can we find God? because now wc can sec God has found !ls.—(Sunday atHome. Living for Christ. “ For me to live is Christ, and to die is gain.’’—Phil. 1., 91. The words of the Apostle are certainly very singular: “For me to live is Christ.” How is it that to live is Christ?” If the great Apostle could say these words, may you and I? Was the Apos tle’s life to represent Christ? Was he in tome sense to be a Christ on earth? !f so, may you and I, in our lives, repre sent Christ? May we be to the world, in some sense, a Christ? Is it possible for ns to have such a grand conception of life- its mission, its duties, its responsi bilities? There is a sense in which the Christian may be said to show forth Christ in his life. “FortoliTe is Christ,” further signifies, that, in living we receive into our hearts the Spirit of Chrilt. ‘Tf any man have not the Spirit of Christ,” the Apostle says, “he is none of His.” If we belong to Christ wc have the Spirit of Christ—that is, wo have a mind like to His mind. Was n<‘ amiab'e? So are we. Wns he meek? So are we. Wns Hcpatient? So are we. : Could He bear with the perversity of others? So can wc. Could He bear to ! be reproached without becoming nngry? j So cun we. Was He longsuffenng? So are we. Could He endure persecutions unmoved? So can we— that is if wc arc Christ’s; for all true Christians have in them the mind that was in Him. It is true, with this mind, wo have tempta tions, and we have peculiarities of dis. position, which those temptations influ ence; we are liablo to bo thrown off our guard; we need constant watchfulness; but just so far as we are Christ’s, we have the mind that was in Christ Again “ for us to live is Christ,” is this— that we show to the world how Christ would live, how Christ would labor, and toil, and suffer, and act were He in our place. Thus we show the world that we are Ilis. We stand up before the world to point out to the world what is Christ like; what arc Christ’s dispositions as manifested to that world. If then, you are set in this world, to show to all around you how Christ would have lived, In what a responsible place has Christ placed you I What a vast responsibility rests upon you if you stand to represent { him in your temper, words and actional I think we may proceed still farther, and say that, in a modified sense, every one of us stands in the relation of Christ to society. 1 say in a modified sente. Have you ever marked the Apostle's lan- j guage: “Now, then, we are ambassadors for Christ; we pray you, in Christ’as! stead, be ye reconciled to God?” * That Is, the Apostle was standing in Christ’s stead; was talking Christ’s words; was pleading as though Christ did plead. Now, Christ placet us in this position. . We are in Christ’s stead. Wc atand be fore the world to exhibit Christ’s loveli ness; to do Christ’s work; to live Christ’s life on and on. He |iasgone up to heav- . on. He sends Hit Spirit into, the world. The Spirit dwells in Christian hearts, works out through Christian agencies to j accomplish the good that is aecom-• plished. And while we are doing this. It it Christ that it working In us to will : and to do for His own glory; and we work amid the world in Christ’s stead, and stand before th> world to represent Christ’s person. The blind and cowardly spirit of evil { is forever telling you that evil things are pardonable, and you shall nit die for them, and that good things are in possible, and you need not live for them; and, if you believe these thinga,you will j find some day to your coot, that they , are untrue. Therefore, I pray with all * earnestness to prove, and know within your hearts, that all things lovely and righteous are possible for those who be lieve in their possibility, and who de termine that, for their part, they will l make every day’s work contribute ts ( them.—[John Raskin. I Blr William Thompson says that the sup will last 10,000,000 yean as it is. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. • A gross of steel pens, formerly costing #33, may now be produced for eight cents. The cost of making gold chains has been reduced to an eighth of what it was. These illustrations show the di minished cost of production in metal work. An artesian well being sunk at White Plains. Ncv., is down over 3,300 feet, nnd can go no further until the water, which is seventeen per cent, salt, and so heavy that the ropes and tools float on it anti the drill does not penetrate the rock, has been shut out. Some time ago, says a Southern paper, the United States Navy Department, wanted a mast for a war vessel that should be perfectly straight, eighty-four feet long and twenty-four inches square at the top. Agents df the government tried in vain in several States to have the contract filled. At last the matter came to the notice of some lumliermen of Or angeburg, 8. C., who made a search, and in a short time discovered on the Edisto several trees that came up to the require ments. One was cut down, hewn and shipped to its destination. The New York State Board of Health , has prepared a report on the pathogenetic powers of contaminated ice, in which it is stated that ice formed in impure water may contain from eight to ten per cent. of the organic matter dissolved in De water, and in addition a very large amount of the organic matter that was merely sus pended or floating in it. It may also contain living animals and plants, rang ing in size from visible worms down to the minutest spores, and the vitality of these organisms may be unaffected' by freezing. Such ire is unfit for use in drinking water, for it may cause serious illness. In an English discussion of railway speeds it appears that rigid tests with a Bristol and Exeter engine, with 9-foot single driving-wheels, gave 80 miles an hour as the greatest attainable rate down an incline of I in 90 with no load, a sin gle ear reducing thi9 to 78 miles. A Great Western engine, with 8-foot wheels, could do no better than 78 miles down 1 in 100. On a level nr ascending grade the maximum can !te but little imirr than B 0 miles an hour. As these enginas were •designed especially for giving the great est possible 6peed, it is affirmed no mod ern motors are adapted for beating their records, and that reports of train-running at more than 75 miles an hour, even for the shortest distances, must lie due to in accurate timing or other errors. Considerable interest has lately been manifested in a statement puhlishol by M. Villon, a French chemist well known for scientific research, that he has discover ed an alkaloid poison of ptonnunred char acteristics in decayed animal tissues. This poison is quite "jpowerful, a dose of five eentigrartmies being sufficient to kill a dog. . The interesting point in M. Vil lon’s researches is the fart that in his in vestigations he applied tests to spoiled flour, because of the likeness of gluten to animal fibrin, and in that way discov ered tha poisonous alkaloid. Spoiled and decayed flour has a peculiar appearance and a foul, caustic, pungent, bitterflavor. It tastes hot and stinging, somewhat like pepper, according to the stage of decom position. Dough made from it is also bitter to the taste and offensive to smell, and it crumbles in hot water and affects injuriouslv the stomach. Plagues have, been attributed to the use of decayed flour, the great plague in Rome being cited as an instance. Wheat flour spoils very easily, especially in the months be tween March and August, when a fer • mentation sets in that goes on through the succeeding months until the spoiling | is complete. Artificial (old. Altogether what with the use of these machines in store houses, parking houses and breweries, we are doing to-day in New York by chemicals and machinery what would require the melting of 3,000 tons of ice a day. This at the prices de manded by the "ice companies for ice for such purposes represents a work which woula cost $7,500 a day if ice were used. Machinery does the work infinitely better and at less than half the cost. Inasmuch as this artificial cold production has been a rapidly growing business since its in ception ten years ago, of course a great many firms have gone into the manufac ture of cold producing machinery. An expert tells me that there are forty-two manufacturers engaged in the business of making and selling such machinery in the United States. Although the artificial production of cold dates from 1835. the first great advance in the process was made by Carre, a Frenchman, who used liquid ammonia in some machines he cx ! hibited at the Paris Exhibition of 1867. At that time and since then it has also heen attempted to produce cold by com- I pressing air and liberating it, the liber ated air absorbing heat very rapidly in ; expanding. Several Americans have dis- I tinguished .themselves in this field of in- I vention, hut the present process, which is | heing improved almost yearly, is, like most other great inventions, the work of : a number of different men, each one of whom has added something to the whole. —Acte York Lrttrr. The Women Row (he Canoes. The Rev. Thomas Brydges, a mission- I ary in Terra del Fuego, in the island of \ Onisin, among the Ona and the Yagbnns, ' mentions a curious cireumstAre with | reference to the people, illustrating the I influence of environment on the aequire ] ir.ent of habits. Between men and women j there is a fair division of labor. Among | other things, the men make ami fit up the I canoes, hut the women are tha rowers. The result is that the women are good I swimmers, hut the men cannot swim at : all. The reason is that often on the ! roast there is not a single tree to which ’to fasten the ranoes. The women, there fore, after landing their husliands, have to row the canoes to a spot where sca ! weed has hern massed together, in order I to moor the eanoea thereon; after which ! operation they are compelled to swim J hark. So, alsn, when tha canoe is wantnd, I the women have to swim nut for it and j row back for their husbands. One of tha beat known menagerie pro prietors in the neighborhood of P arisha* a lion styled the “Cashier. ’* Every even iag he put* his receipts for the day into • leather bag, which he deposits in the mid* die of the lihn's cage. Nobody has ven tured to meddle with it so far. MARVELOUS CHANGES. What thn WtjJJjMj Those who Is this country unconsciously undergoing a wonderful change, is the change to take plaoe before we are aware of the fact, and when it has taken place will we wonder why we did not see it before it was too late? Thoee that see the changes early avail themselves early, and thereby receive bene fit The shrewd iron man sees the iron inter est transferred from Pittsburg and Penn sylvania to Birmingham, Alabama, and in his far-sightedness tees the furnaces in Pennsyl vania torn down and deserted for this new and prolific field. It is claimed by the iron men of Alabama that the low price at which iron can be produced there will revolution ise the iron interests of the world. We Lave seen the grain-growing centres of this country shifted to the West. We have seen the pork-packing industry (lit from Cincinnati to Chicago, and from tbence to Kamos City and Omaha. Southern cotten mills undersell New England and American markets, and challenge the world. We have seen and are seeing all this take place before our eyes, nnd know that other changes are taking place equally as prom inent, and we wonder as we behold them. Ten years ago the insurance companies only required an analysis of the fluids when they were taking insurance for very large amounts. To-day no first-class company will insure any amount unless they have a rigid analysis of the fluids passed, and if any traces of certain disorders are apparent, the application is rejected. In their reports they show that the death of sixty of every 100 people in this country, is due either di rectly or indirectly to such disorders. The Brompton Hospital for Consumptives, Lon don, England, reports that sixty of every 100 victims of consumption also have serious dis orders of the kidneys. Among scientists for the treatment of this dread malady the question is being dis cussed: “is not this disorder the real cause of con sumption i” Teu years ago the microscope was some thing seldom found in a physician's office; now every physician of standing has one and seldom visits-his patients without calling for a sample of fluids for examination. Why is all this? Is it possible that we of the present generation are to die of diseases caused by kidney dis orders? or shall we master the cause by Warner's safe cure, the only recognized specific, and thus remove the effects? It is established beyond a doubt that a very large percentage of deaths in this country is traceahlg to diseased kidneys. For years the proprietors of Warner’s safe cure have been insisting that there is no sound health when the kidneys are diseased, and they enthusias tically press their specific for this terrible disorder upon public attention. We are con tinually hearing its praises sounded. This meaus wonders! Cannot the proprietors of this great remedy, who have l>e«m warning us of the danger, tell us how to avoid a disease that at first is so unimportant and is so fatal in its termi nation? Are we to hope against hope, and wait without our reward? The most significant of all changes, how ever, that we of to-day can note is this radi cal change of view to which the public has been educated: It was formerly thought that the kidneys were of very small importance; to-day. we believe, it is generally admitted that tnere can be no such thing as sound health in any organ if they are in the least degree deranged. The Heart's Work. In a recent, lecture before a London in stitution Dr. B. W. Richardson stated that the work of the heart in a healthy man is equivalent, to the feat of raising five and one-fifth tons one foot per hour, 125 tons in twenty-four hours. The use of eight ounces of alcohol causes the heart's work to show an excess of twenty four foot-tons. Ulustratihg this power ful engine's performance by a new calcu lation, he assumed that the blood is thrown out by an average of sixty-nine strokes per minute, and at the force of nine feet to each stroke, which would give the mileage of the blood through the body as 207 yards per minute, seven miles per hour, 168 miles per day, 61,.320 miles per year, or 5,150,880 miles a lifetime of eighty-four years. In the same long life the great journey of the blood would be the result of the grand total of 2,869,776,000 heart-beats. When everything else fails, Dr. Sag? 8 Catarrh Remedy cures. The Weaker He* are immensely strengthened by the use of Dr. R V. Pierce's “Favorite Prescription,” which cures all female derangements, and gives tone to the system, Sold by druggists. The colleges of this country contain 1,000 female students. “Over nnd Over lAgnin.’* Repetition is sometimes the only way to impress a truth upon the mind. Accordingly take notice that Dr. Pierce’s “Pleasant Pur gative Pellets,''(the original Little Liver Pills» continue to bo wonderfully effective in cases of sick and nervous headache, constipa tion,indigestion, rush of blood to the head, cold extremities, and all ailments arising from obstruction of the bodily functions. Their action is thorough yet gentle, and the ingredients being entirely vegetable, they ca i be taken with impunity iiito the most deli cate stomach. All druggists. Hub Alice R. Jordan, LL. D., of Yale, is only twenty-three. One kind of medicine will not cure all kinds of diseases: Dr. Kilmer's Prepartions are Specifics—a remedy for each « isease. They are the result of a successful practice since 1859. Guide to Health (Sent. Free) Binghampton, N. Y. There are six lady medical students in Ed inburgh College. Chronic Couth# nnd Coldt, And all diseases of the Throat and Lungs, can be cured by the use of Scott’B Emulsion, a*« it conta ns the healing virtues of Cod Liver Oil and II ypopho«phites in their fullest form. Isa beautiful creamy Emulsion, palatable as milk, rosily digested, and can be taken by the rnoet delicate. Please read: “I consider Scott’s Emulsion the remedy par excellence In Tu berculous and Btrumous Affections, to say nothing of ordinary colds and throat troubles.* -W. R. 8. Connell, M. D., Manchester. O. Regard not dreams, for they are but the the images of our hopes and fears. Want# the Farts Known* Mr. Editor: I and mv neighbor- have been led so many times into buying diffr rent thing* for 1 vsr, kidneys and blood, that nave done us more harm than good, I feel it die your readers to advise them when an honest, and pood medicine like Dr. Harter's Iron Tonic can be had. Yo*irs truly. An Old Hubpc:ubeb. Do what yon ought, let come what will, llnnghiers. Wives, Mothers. Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases,free, securely sealed. Dr. J. B. Marchisi. Utica. N.Y. Dignity does not consist in possessing hon ors, fait in dceerving them. Don't Rend Thin if you have a sufficiency of this world's goods, but if you hav« not, write to Hallet & Co., Pot Hand, lie , aud receive, free, full particu lars about work that you cen do. and live at home, wherever you are located, at a profit of from |5 to *25 per day and upwards. All Micnel; both sexes; all ages. All is new. Capital not required; Hallett & Co., will start you. Don't dslay; investigate at once, and grand success will attend you. Making a Balky Horse Go. Colonel James R. Randall arrived on the train to-day, says a recent letter from Columbia, Ga. He made a sensation as soon as he reached town by showing himself a valuable auxiliary of the So cicty for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. The horse in a street car backed and began to act ugly, so much so as to frighten the lady passengers. The driver became very mad at the horse’s behavior, and a male passenger proposed throwing sand in the animal's eyes. “Oh, no!” said the Colonel, “don’t do that; it is unncecessary and inhuman. The poor beast only needs to be diverted. Tie a handkerchief around his fore leg and ho will start off promptly.” The driver agreed to try so simple an expedient, and the horse moved at once with the utmost placidity. As the animal started the driver snatched his whip, looked at the Colonel, and exclaimed: “If that don't beat the Dutch!”* Thirty-three years ago the total wheat product of Victoria, then called Aus tralia Felix, was 498,70 H bushels. The past season's crop aggregated 12,000,000 bushels, which will leave 5.000,000 bushels for export. The average yield per acre in that country last season was twelve bushels. A leading physician lias made the startling revelation that six thou'ami pi»;ple. mostly children, die yearly in this country from the effects of cough mixtures containing morphia or opium. Red Star Cough Cure contains neither opiates or pois ns; purely vegetable. A new process of deodorizing furs makes < ertain kinds much more desirable. March, 1882, Rev. L. N. St. Once, P. P. Indian Missionary, Glen Fails, N. Y..wrote: ‘•A single application of St. Jacobs Oil reliev ed me of rheumatism.” October 29,1886, he writas again: “It cured me then.” Miss Augusta Klumpke, of California, who is a strident of medicine at the Paris Medical School, has just been apf»ointed house sur geon in the hospitals of that city. This is Ihe fi s. instance of a woman receiving this honor. and*it was won in the face of the most bitter opposition. The best cough medicine is Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Sold everywhere. - ELY : s CATARRH CREAM BALK 3 ,SWORTH AM TOANVMAN g|| WOMANORCHILDgk /£/M suffering front WC SOT A LIQUID or U.SA. | A particle Is applied into each nostril and Is ■ • agreeable. Price «* ren»« at druggists ;by inai.’. registered, so cts. Circulars free ELY bKOTHKK*. Druggist*. Owefio. N.Y. SPp&rc •^|@(CA p C'NE)©| PO®MASTER Hftfcwt Award! of Htdala la Korops and lawiw, The neatest, quickest, safest an I most powerful remedy known for Rheumatism. Pleurisy, Neuralgia, Lumbago, Backache. Weuknt ei, cold in the chest ami all aches and pains: Endorsed by 5,000 rhvsi ciaus and Druggists of the highest repute. Benson's Plasters promptly relieve and cure where other plasters and greasy salves, lininunts and lotions, an? absolutely use tea*. Beware of imitations under Rim lar sounding names, such as “Capsicum,” ‘‘Cap ucin.” "Capsiclne,” as they are utterly worthless anil intended to deceive. Ask for Benson's aud take NO OTHER*. All druggists. SSABURY At JOHNSON. iTopricforw, New York. one Agent (Merchant only) wanted In every town foi Durln, sh. li«r icir • • : i”.' I h U.s.i ■Tansill's Punch.” This month yju have sold me 21.000, almost allof wh c i have been sold, from one to live to each person. You will please ship 5,00) every Saturday until further notice. C. S. Puowitt, Druggist, Denver, CoL Address R* W. TAKSILI, A- CO., Chicago. SENnFORCATAmGIfEg. A . * A jfo I-milcn! Those dull! .o, tired looks and feelings Cy (gjjQjr speak volumes! This JWtiKrS&f 1 temedy corrects al 1 con *ov ditions, restores vigor © and vitality and brings hack youthful bloom * y nd beauty, vßvaa.' .£¥? 0 y r,v J ’repair'd lit l)r. Kilmer’sDi.s --• V* . rr.v:-:.v, Binghamton, S. Y. IWAV 'OtS,-* Letters of inquiry answered. ▼ N 4 Guide to Health(Seut Free). y j k Mhonest! i H k amounts of I I IrgSO to @3OO, on II to Teu years time. |JUK^ Our new plan—available to burdensome to none, htate you can safely use, also ate and occupation. The tivatem In ull,w!th Forms, etc., Free, on re ceipt of stamp. No postals answered. 1. BLTLLIt, See’y, Bradford w lock. Cor. Sixth Vine. ■BOMB CINCINNATI, ORXOJBMBB •vwiniii i ii n— a Ask your retailer fortkfl Jam— Warns* MkjlWt Cnutlou ! Homo dealers iccommend Inferior 1 goods in order to moke a larger profit. This Is the original $3 Shoo Beware of imitations which ac knowledge their own inferiority by attempting ic | build upon the reputation of the original. None Genuine uulcm* bearing thin Htnnip JAMES MEANS’ S 3 SHOE. Ji'* rto *”,byMon, CoinyreHß an* M. IT hi IturabilUy. Crmjv't d j My \\ Qf fiHiimlou bow Ik i ! K VT h» any State o. j C: Oureelebra»ed fa«*r«»rv produces» largerryinMl’y of Shoes of Mils grade than any «eltv Lictorv 1e tf.c world. Thousands who w»*ar them will tell e.. t «).*• reason If you nek then? .1 A ~it *»!OK for Boys Is ut.anpr.-v- *3 ;> r&iu*r. pgISLICKER’sr ■/*/ Crr w% rs I M\J Ml* hsH-t Mona. Th* n-w POMMKL f LirUß Is • perl.r» sost, s»4 B Hn, IS ” ftfianry thert-t? hw-e rtlmltiUuD+'ltoM gtvinlwe wlWnwgdke^fSr ft This is all right , ‘ Hood’s Sarsaparilla. ’ Can’t Fool me Twice.” Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a peculiar medicine. In very many respects it is so different from any and ali other medi lnes ever offered to the public that It ia with peculiar force and propriety that it may be said to be Peculiar to Itseif. It Is peculiar to itself, in a strictly medicinal sens*, in tnree import ant particulars, viz.: first. In the combination of remedial agents used ; second, In the proportion in Peculiar to Itself which they are mixed ; third, in tie process by which the active curative properties of the prepara tion are secured. The?e th;ee important points make Hood's Farsa- I porllla peculiar in the wonderful cures It has accom plisbrd, wholly unprecedented in the history of m?dic!ne, aud giving to Hood's Sarsaparilla a clear r'ght to the title of “The greatest blood purifier ever discovered.” Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by al! druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared i by C.I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. : IQO Poses One Dollar • A “25 Years £ Poultry Yard’’ ICrgigiaSd Edition. 108 paged. How to prevent V£%«VllO(; and POL’LTIIY CIIOLERA, CAPES vBHr and KOIT 1 wrote it as a tqstem of HOC and POULTRY keeping. IHHRKvn'PtoinK and remedies for all diseases. How to leed Tor Eggs. 25c. in stamps. A cony of I “The Cove Dale Poultry Yard.” containing Ulus. Catalogue and Price List of SO varieties FREE. • A. M. LANG. Box 846, Cincinnati. - -■ to Soldiers A Heim. Send eta- p fr L’ r ■ ircuiar - . < '<»!-. L. Bl> «* B WIS/3113?KAll. Att'* .Wash'Ukton. K C l £OIRON EfTONIC wknr. \jJn V ill purify »he BL OOD resolute mwi the LIVEP ftncl KIDNEYS ai.d 1 JBl Restork the HEALTH nndVIO- HwifrlHiA of YOUTH Dytpepsia,Wiint of Appetit**, IndigeMiou.Lttck of Strength and Tired Feeling ob cured: Bones, mus. c * 9B ftntl iw rvr " receive new XHA for"e. Enlivens the mind nnd supplies Brain Power. SuToring from romidninta E OBEm wS peculiar to their will find I-.MUI L.O in DR. HARTER’S IRON TONIC a safe nnd speedy cum. Givisaclenr. heal thy completion. Frequent nbcrtipts at count* rfeit ingonlyadd to the I opnlarily of the original. Do> not experiment-»et tlio Oktoit. al AND BEST. 4 Or. HARTER*'* UVFR PILLS V figure Constipation Li• <*r Com* taint and Sich ■ ■ Hevdaohe. Uurap'e Doso and Dream Book! ImilM on rocetpt of two cents in postage. J Tt ” “R.HARTER MEDICINE COMPANY St. Louis. V 9. W*g\ ■ DR. WILLIAMS' PILES * Indian Pile Ointment ■ HlltiV ■ will cure any case of ltr.li log, Bleeding, Ulcerated or Protruding Piles. CURE (IDAKANThKI). Prepared for Piles only. (Physicians’ Jara by express, ore paid, 82.50.] Price per box. 50c. anu 91. Sold, by druggists or mailed on receipt of price by LAMAR, RANKIN A LAMAR, Agent*. Atlanta, fia. I \I»V ACJENTH WANTED in every town toaell i k onr Common-sense Bustle and Combination Skirt • .untie nnd Supporter. Send SI.OU for samples snd agen v Address with stamp H. A.French A Co., Atlanta, t.a ODDTTPP PTTIf Genuine State of Maine Sprue* OlilUOu UUM“ um ' I‘A els. per ounce ; .'Jounces .30 cm. by mall. W. CUSHING A CO.. Foxcroft. Me. 8 N P-11 OAK The Great Nursery of PERGHERONJORSES. yjfestkj olcboicest Families. i L A Rh ENI.nBFRU, All Ages, both Boxes, fflfcSS INBTOCK. . vBI | Vm| 300 to 400 niPOKTEO ANNUALLY j from Kmnre.alliyconlod - ithextendrd pedigrees In the ivrrhtron Stud Book* The Perrh«-ron Ist he only draft riTcd of Franco fioiwwMlng a Mud book that has the 1 rapport and rnd-u wment of the French Government, f fVM'I fur 1120-psge Catalogue, t Hum rations by Maes u. w. DUNHAM, Wayne, DuPogt Co., Illinois* Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is peculiar In the phenomena l record of the sales It has attained, never equaled by any other preparation In so short a time. Older medicines have been forced to stand aside when real medicine! merit was considered, and to-day ; Hood’s Sarsaparilla stands medicine of Its kind in the country. It Is pecullarfin Its strength i and economy—loo ctoses one dollar, it Is a concen trated extract from Strsaparilla, Dock, Jumper Berries, Mandrake, Dandelion, and other variable vegetable remediae, and Is much strongrr then eny f imllar preparation upon the market. Hence, mu£h smaller doses of Hood’s Sarsaparilla are necessary than Is the case with other medl.Jnes. A dollar bot tle of Hood’s Sarsaparilla contains an average of more than 100 doses, and will last e month, while, others will average to last not over a week. Henc* on the simple question of economy Sana, parilla Is given a decided preference. Ifvou hava never tried this medicine, do so this season | Hood’s Sarsaparilla j fold by all druggists. $1; six for #5. Prepared j by C. L HOOD 8c CO., Apothecaries, Lowell. Mass. I 100 Doses One Dollar M Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Deo Hatnesville, N. J-, ) October 15, 1886. ( j E. T. IJazeltine, Warren, I’a. j Denr Sir: I was taken with a very ; severe cold last Spring, I j and tried every cure we J j bad in the store, and could * get no help. I had 01. r village doctor | prescribe for me, but kept getting worse. I saw an other physician from Port Jervis, N. Y., nnd ho told me ho used Piso’s Cure for Consumption in hi 9 prac tice. I bought a bottle, and before I had taken all of it t there was a change for the j better. Then 1 got my era- f ployer to order a quantity • of the medicine and keep ii it in stock. I took one I more bottle, and my Cough S was cured. liespectfully, Frank McKelvy. CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. Efi psi Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Uso H LU „ • iin time. Sold by druggists. Hi 003 COLUMBUS , AdU .<=«■««* MANURE SPREADERS ! jh K& FARM WAGONS”ldthtflntyw tiff^irifiHT Th •* cheapest Spreader out and tha ; Ur # / OPly kind that csobaat ijvlwfeip 1 *° a*!? to old W **T22.* jiTTi Easters Branch Hanar, Hagerstown. Maryland. ATLANTA” SAW WORKS. Msnsfsotsren «f sad Dsaist* In SivsiudS&t-Mlll Supplies. m.p.lrla, . a,.(tatty. O—ui<» It Sena, oen.m asaffafegr l * I "end eh r-r 3 cent rtf nine frr a sack L3QS6S Howrr seeJl ■ wwlw v kinds, i Tftr* Al.i. I'.rcbttltr. Ms^f FOX ,W l>ire S*< rfr. KMUilne ■ «5 Cellii «. Ut in i>inHry jnirrntf. itlJh r.ass 1 .Pngs r< r Hblcidui; : ,VJ«S inrmrrs I A,'’rtrr-s All FM«.k n,,,.. PA f EIMTK y**»*i» W. Ker.rl ,1 mill, f o Han. Fetent law? *-r. V ashingion. D. IX tismmgif Q 1° time. Sth* In drui'irtvts. 2 OMKS, OFFICE FURNITURE AND FIXTURES. TmM*r&U'wiX£rsS£\&. t«

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