THE REV. DR. TAIH4GE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUNDAY SERMON. Text: 11 Given to Hospitality” —Romans, cii.. IS. There is danger that the multiplication of targe and commodious hotels in our towns, and cities, and villages, will utterly extermi nate that grace which Abraham exhibited when he entertained the angels, and which Lo' showed when he wutched for guests at Hte of the city, and which Christ recog as a positive requisite for entering 1, when he declared: “I was a stranger and ye took Me in. ” I propose to speak this morning of the trials ind rewords of Christian hospitality. The first trial often comes in the whim and ec centricity of the guest himself. There are a great many excellent people who have pro tuberances of disposition, an l sharp edges of temperament, and unpliability of character, which make them a positive nuisance in any house where they stay. On short acquaint ance they will begin to command the house hold affairs, order the employes to unusual •ervico, keep unseasonable horn’s, uso narcotics In places offensive to sensitive nostrils, put their feet at unusual elevations, drop the ashes ot their Havana on costly tapestry, open bureaus they ought never to touch, and pry Into things they ought never to see, and be come impervious to rousing bells, and have all the peculiarities of the gormandizer or the dyspeptic, and make excavations from poor dentistry with unusual implements, and in a thousand ways afflict the household which proposes to take care of them. Added to all. they stay too long. Tb »y have no idea when their welcome is worn out, and they would be unmoved even by the bless ng which my friend Gerrit Smith, the philan thropist, asked one morning at his breakfa;t table, on the day when he hoped that the tong protracted gueste would depart, saying: •*0 Lord, bless this provision, and our friends who leave ns today!” But, my friends, there are alleviations to be put on their side of the scale. Perhaps they nave not had the lame refining influences about them in early life that you have had. Perhaps they have inherited eccentricities that they cannot help. Perhaps it is your duty, by example, to show them a better way. Perhaps they arc sent to boa trial for the development of your patience. Perhaps they were to bo intended as an illustration of tne opposite of what you are trying to inculcate in the minds of your children. Perhaps it is to make your borne the brighter when they are gone. When our guests are cheery, and fascinating, and elegant, it is very easy to entertain them; but when wo find in our guests that which is antagonistic to our taste and senti ment, it is a positive triumph when we can obey the words of my text and be “given to hospitality.” _ Another trial in the using of this grace is In the toil and expense of exercising it. In tee well regulated household things go smoothly, but now you have introduced a foreign element into the machinery, and though you may stoutly declare that they must take things as they find them, the Martha will break in. The ungovernable stove, the ruined dessert, the joint that proves to be umnasticable, the delayed mar keting, the perplexities of u caterer, the diffi culty of doing proper work, and yet always being presentable. Though you may say there shall be no care or anxiety, there will be care and there will be anxiety. In 1094 the Captain-General provided a very grand entertainment, and among other things he had a fountain in his garden—a fountain of strong drink. In it were four hogsheads of brandy, eight hogsheads of water, twenty five thousand lemons, thirteen liunredweight of Lisbon sugar, five pounds of gratol nut meg, three hundred toasted biscuits, and a boat built on purpose was placed in the foun tain, and a boy rowed around it and filled the cups of the people who came there to be supplied. Well, you say that was a lux urious entertainment, and of course the man had no anxiety; but I have to tell you, that though j'ou had, or propose, an enter tainment like that, you have anxiety. In that very thing comes the Divine reward. We were bora to serve; and when we serve others we serve Cod. The flush on’ that woman’s cheek, as she l>ends over the hot stove, is as sacred in God s sight as the flush zji the'cheek of one who, on a hot day, preaches the Gospel. We may serve God with plate, and cutlery, and broom, as cer tainly as we can serve Him with psalm book and liturgy. Margaret, Queen of Norway, and Sweden, and Denmai k, had a royal cup of ten lips, on which was recorded the names of the guest* who had drunk from this cup. And every Christian woman has a royal cup, on which are written all the names of those who have ever been entertained by her in Christian style—names not cut by human Ingenuity, but written by the hand of a Divine Je6us. But, my mends, you are not to toil unnecessarily. Though the fare be plain, cheerful presidency of the table, and cleanliness of appointments will bo good enough for anybody that ever comes to you** house. John Howard was invited to the house of a nobleman. He said: “I will come on one condition, and that Is, that you have nothihg but potatoes on the table.” The requisition was complied with. Cyrus, King of Persia, under the same circumstances, prescribed that on the table thore must be nothing but bread. Os course those were extremes, but they are illustrations of tho fact that more depends upon the banqueters than mion the banquet. I want to lift this Idea of Christian entertainment out of a posi tive bondage into a glorious inducement. Kvery effort you put forth, and every dollar you give to the entertainment ot friend or you give directly to Christ. Burmoae it were announced that the Lord Jesus would come to this place this week, what woman in this house would not be glad to wash for Him, or spread for Him a bed, or bake bread for Him ? There was one of old who washed for Him, drawing the water from the well of her own tears. He is com ing, He will be here to-morrow. “ Inasmuch as ye have done it to one of the least of these, my brethren, ye have done it to Me ” In pict ure galleries we have often seen representa tions of Walter Scott nn 1 his friends, or Washington Irving with his associates; but •11 those engravings will fade out, while through everlasting ages, hanging luminous and conspicuous, will be the picture of you and your Christian guests. You see we have passe! out from the trials into the rewards of Christian hospitality; grand, glorious, and eternal. The first re ward of Christian hospitality is tho Divine benediction. When any one attends to this duty, God’s blessing comes upon him, upon his companion, upon his children, upon his dining h.UI, upon his parlor, upon his nursery. The blessing comes in at the front door, and the back door, and down through tho skylights. God draws a Jong mark of credit for services received. Christ said to Hi* disciples: “Ho that receivoth you, re ceiveth Me; aad tie that giveth a cup of cold water in tho name of a disciple shall in no wise lose his reward.” As we have had so vnaay things miordod against us in heaven, it will be a satisfaction to have written on unfailing archives, the fact that in the month of May, or June, or September, or De cember, 1087, we made the blissful mistake of supposing that we were entertaining weak m n l:ke ourselves, when lo! they showed their pinions before th*v left, and wo found out that they were angels unawares. Another reward comes in the good wish** •r.rl prayers of our guests. I do not think one’s house ever gets over having had a e *od man or woman abide there. George White fleld used to scrat-h on the window of the room where he was entertained a passage of Bcripture, and in one case, after he left, tho whole household was converted by the read ing of that passage on the window nano. Tho woman of Kbnnom furnished a little room I over the wall for Klisha, and all the age« hove heard the glorious cooswiuences. On a cold, stormy winter night, my father enter tained Trueman Osborne, the evangelist, and through all eternity I will thank God that Truemau Osborne stopped at otir house. How i many of our guests have brought to use cor. doleuce, and sympathy, and help! There is 1 a legend told of St. Seb&ld, that in his Christ ian rounds he used to stop for entertainment at the house of a poor cartwright. Corning there one day, he found the cartwright and his family freezing for the lack of any fuel. St. Sebald ordered the man to go out and break the icicles from the side of the house and bring them in, and the icicles were brought into the house, and thrown on the hearth, and they began to blaze Immediately, and the freezing family fathered around and were warmed by them, 'hat was a legend; but how often have our guests come in to gather up the cold, freezing sorrows of our life, kindling them into illumi nation, and warmth, and good cheer He who opens his house to Christian bopitalitv, turns those wh • are strangers into friends. Years will go by, and there will be ’great changes in you, and there will be great Ganges in them. Some day you will be sit ting In loneliness, watching a bereavement, and you will get a letter in a strange hand writing, and you will look at the post-office mark, and say: “Why, I don’t know anybody living in that city;” and you will break the envelope, and there you will read the story of thanks for your Christian generosity long years before, and how they have heard afar off of your trouble. And the letter will be so full of kindly reminiscences and Christian condolence, it will be a plaster large enough to cover up all the deep gashes of your soul. When we take people into our houses as Chris tian guests, we take them into our sympathies tor ever. In Dort, Holland, a soldier with a sword at his side stopped at a house, desiring lodging and shelf or. The woman of the house at first refused admittance, saying that the men of tho house were not at home; but when he showed his credentials that he had been honorably discharged from the army, he was admitted and tarried during the night. In the night-time there was a knocking at the front door, and two ruffians broke in to de • spoil that household. No sooner had they come over the door-sill than the armed guest, who had primed hjs pioce and charged it with slugs, met them, and telling the woman to stand back, I am happy to say, dropped the two assaulting desperadoes dead at his feet. Well, now there are no bandits prowling around to destroy our houses; but how often it is that we find those that have been our guests become our defenders. We gave them shelter first, and then afterwards in the great conflicts of life they fought for our repu tation; they fought for our property; they fought for our soul. Another reward that comas from Christian hospitality is in the assurance that we shall have hospitality shown to us and to ours. Ia the up-turnings of this life, who knows in what city or what land we may be thrown, and how much we may nee i an open door? There may come no such cris.s to us, but our children may bo thrpsrn into some such strait. He who is in a Christian manner hos pitable has a free pass through all Christen dom. It may be that you will have been dead fifty years before any such stress shall come upon one of your descendants; but do you not suppose that Goi can remember fiity years? And the knuckle of tho grand child will be heard against tho door of some stranger, and that door will open; and it will be talked over in heaven, ana it will bo said: “That man’s grandfather, fifty years ago, gave shelter to a stranger, and now a stranger’s door is open for a grandson. ” Among tho Greeks, after entertaining and being entertained, they take a piece or lead and cut it in two, and the host takes one-half of the pieco of lead and the guest the other half as they part. These two pieces of lead ore handed down from generation to genera tion, and from family to family; and after awhile perhaps one of the families tn want or in trouble go out with this one piece of lead and find the other family with tho corre sponding piece of lead, and no sooner is the billy completed than tho old hospitality is aroused, and eternal friendship ph»dged. So the memory of Christian hospitality will go down from generation to generation, and from family to family, and the tally will never be lost, neither in this world nor the world to come. Mark this: the day will come when we will all be turned out-of-doors, without any ex ception—bare-foot, bare-head, no water in the canteen, no bread in the haversack, and we will go in that way into the future world. And I wonder if eternal hospitalities will open before us, and if we wifi be received into everlasting habitations? Francis Fres cobald was a rich Italian, and he was very merciful and very hospitable. One day an Englishman by the name of Thomas Crom well appeared at his door asking for shelter and alms, which were cheerfully rendered. Frescobald afterward lost all his property, became very poor, and wandered up into'England: and one day he saw a pro cession passing, an lo! it was the Lord Chan cellor or England; and lo! the Lord Chancel lor of England was Thomas Cromwell, the very man whom he had once befriended in Italy. The Lord Chancellor at the first glance of Frescobald, recognized him, and dis mounted from bis carriage, threw his arms around him, embraced him jiaid his debts, invited him to his hou?e, and said: “ Here are ten pieces of money to pay for the bread you gave me, and here are ten pieces of money to provide for the horse you loaned me, and here are four bags, in each of which are four hundred ducats. Take them and be well-” Bolt will be at last with us. If we entertain Christ in the person of His disciples in this world, when we pass up into the next country, we will meet Christ in a regal pro cession, and He will pour all the wealth of heaven into our lap, and open before us everlasting hospitalities. And O, how tame are the richest entertainments we can give on earth compared with the regal mu nificence which Christ will display before our souls in heaven! I was reading the account which Thomas Fuller gives of the entertain ment provided by George Neville. Among other things for that banquet they had three hundred quarters of wheat, one hundred and four tuns of wine. eighty oxen, three thou sand capons, two hundred cranes, two hun dred kids, four thousand pigeons, four thou sand rabbits, two hundred and four bitterns, two hundred pheasants, five hundred partridges, four hundre 1 plover, one hundred quail, one hundred curlews, fifteen hundred hot nasties, four thousand cold ven ison pasties,four thousand custards—the Earl of Warwick acting as steward —and servitors one thousand. O, what a gr ind feast was that! But then compare it with tho provision which God has made for us on high: that great banquet hour; the one hundred and forty and four thousand guests; all the harps and trumpets of hoaven as the orchestra; the vintage of the celestial hills poured into the tankards; all the fruits of the orchards of God piled on the golden platters; tha.angels of the Lord lor cup-bearers, and the once folded starry banner of the blue sky flung out over the scene, while seated at the head of the table shall be the One who eighteen centuries ago declared: “I was a stranger and ye took Me in.” Our sins pardoned, may we all mingle in those hospitalities 1 Buttermilk as a Popular Drink. “Buttermilk has become an exceed, iiiglv fashionable drink,” said one of our restaurant keepera the other day. “It is healthy and refreahing, and the public are catching on to it right briskly. When pro|)erly made it is just what the over- I heated system seems to crave. Through I the churning the first process of diges j tion is accomplished,making ittbe easiest ‘ »nd quickest of ail things to digest. It makes gastric juice and contains |>rnper ( lies that readily assimilate with it with ! very little wear upon the digestive organs. I do quite a business in dispensing but ! termilk.”— Phi'adslphia Call. 1 The famous Dismal Swamp in i:o I longer used as a shelter for runaway ne gro slaves, of course, but it is believed to lie the hiding place of at least tOu while men who, for various reasons, w»c j to retire to private life for a spell. LAfil£s’ COUfSIS. Physique of American Women Mr. Higginson, in his “Common Sense About Women,” is very angry with the “physiological croakers” who represen the American woman of to-day as having lost the plump form and robust constitu tion of her grandmother. He quotes n French tourist in American, the Abbe Robin, who wrote in 1782, that “at twen ty years of age the women have no longer the freshness of youth;” and another, L. F. de Bcaujour, who wrote that “at the age of twenty-five their form changes, and at thirty the whole of their, charms have disappeared.” Mr. Higginson is convinced that the physique of American men and women to-day is better than was that of their grandparents who lived in this country; and he attributes this im provement to ‘ ‘the great increase of ath letic games; the greatly increased pro portion of seaside and mountain life in summer; the thicker shoes and boots of women and little girls, permitting them to go out more freely in all weathers.” and the increased habit of dining late, which secures the professional and mer cantile classes more time to digest thr u principal meal.— Epoch. The Quiet Girl. The quiet girl never wears high color, on the streets; you do not sec her flaunt ing in brilliant plaids, when they happen to be the style; when high hats are “in” she does not pile hers so high that it sweeps the cobwebs from the sky; she does not wear an exaggerated bang when the bang is in vogue, nor the biggest bustle in town, nor the longest train to her tea-gown, nor the greatest number of bangles when bangles reign. But be cause she does not chatter and giggle, and make herself conspicuous in horse cars or at matinees, does not announce her convictions on all occasions and all subjects, and profess her admiration at every hand’s turn, itmust not be supposed that she has no ideas or convictions or enthusiasms; that she moves along like a 6tar in the heavens, which obeys tbc laws of gravitation without selecting its course, or objecting to its orbit. She is quiet because she has no power to make herself heard, to change her conditions, or because she is maturing that power. In the meantime it is the quiet girl who marries earliest, who makes the best match, who fills the niches which her more brilliant sisters leave vacant, who manages the servants, runs the sewing machine, remembers the birthdays, listens to the reminiscences of the old, and often keeps the wolf from the door.— Harper's Bazar. A Woman’s Conversation. What a woman should aim at in con versation is not only to entertain by giv ing her own thoughts, but at the same time to draw out those of others, especially the bashful, and particularly the bashful men. Nothing pleases a man so much, nothing gives him such an idea of his superiority, as to allow him an opportunity of imparting information, though he may not have penetration enough to discern that it is the tact of the woman that entices him into talking about what perhaps he knows less than she. I remember hearing it remarked of Mrs. Cleveland that she was a charm ing conversationalist, because she always chose topics which 6hc knew would in terest others, and in this lies the whole secret of the art of conversing. A cele brated French woman, who had neither wealth, beauty nor position to elevate her in social circles, rose to the highest rank among the rourt during the latter days of royalty, simply by her art of pleasing in her conversation. Brilliancy in conversation is not the es sential characteristic. Some of the most charming talkers are anything tyut witty or learned; but the truth is we love to hear those speak who really feel what they say, whose words are choice with out being studied, and natural and easy without being childish or slangy. Wo love to listen to those whose purity of soul shines in their conversation, and we feci that words arc but the personifica tion of the beauty within.— Philadelphia Times. Fashion Notes, Printed flannels make convenient ana pretty costumes for young ladies. All shades of yellow are used to brighten the effect of dark fabrics. Jackets have close coat sleeves, with buttons and buttonholes at the wrist. New hats in felt and beaver or hatter’s plush come in all the now dark and light colors. Cocks’ plumes, much curled, are seen in quantities on importations of hats and bonnets. Black silk costumes are stylishly trimmed with Chantilly piece and e.lg inn lace. The Railway Age says: “It is probable that the number of miles of new road constructed in tho United States (luring 1887 will be about 12,000. This figure is the greatest on record. It has never been approached except in 1882, when the total was 11,508 miles. Track-laying for 1887, up to Beptemlier 1, aggregates 0,402 miles. Kansas still continues far in the. lead over the other Htalcs in ths work of railway construction. ’’ A Man With Eleotrlo Fingers. Anton Saverne, a Belgian cabinet maker employed at a Kensington ship yard, has the wonderful power of pro ducing electric sparks by rubbing his fingers. Saverne is a little, swarthy fel low, about forty years old, with a bushy head of black hair, keen blue eyes—very rare among bis countrymen—and very small hands. Ilis motions prove that he is excessively nervous, and his senses of hearing, sight, and smell, as he assured a reporter of the Daily News yesterday, arc unusually acute. His parents still live on a farm in Belgium, near Brussels, and he is the youngest of a family of eleven children. “ I know not how I do it, ” he said last evening, as the reporter saw sparks shoot from Saverne's fifigers. The cabinet maker rubbed his finger tips rapidly up and down uponhis trousers. Then, hold ing his hands out with the fingers widely extended, jets of tiny yellow flames, or long sparks, shot out. They seemed pro polled by some unseen force ten or twelve inches into the air, when they vanished. Tile right hand appeared more charged with electricity, if the sparks are elec tric, than the left. The lamp in Saverne’s front room was put out so that the sparks might be seen in all their brilliancy. It was a wonderful sight. Again and agair. did the bushy-headed Belgian rub his fingers and hold them out while tiny showers of bright sparks darted out as if from toy fireworks. “I was not always so,” said Saverne, lighting the lamp and bis black pipe, filled with villainous tobacco at the samt time. “When I had been sick ten years ago it was said I would die. I lay so weak one night in my father’s house when there rnmo up a storm. Such thunder and lightning I never knew be fore. A rid my body had such queer sen sations. While I lay, covered up with bedclothes, my mother sat holding her face in her hands by my side ; and ] seemed io feel a thousand ncedtes prick - ing my limbs and chest and the soles of my feet. It was not so painful, for queer thrills came with every prick, and when tire thunder rolled away and tho rain stopped i rose up, leaned back, and put out my hand to take that of my moth er’s. My eyes were closed, but I heard her cry, ‘Anton!’ “ ‘What?’ I gasped weakly. “ ‘Your hand.’ “I looked at it. The one nearest to her. It was all aflame. I was terrified. My cry brought my father and sisters to the room. They looked at me in horror. I took my other hand from the clothes to rub the right. Sparks shot from the lingers of the left. Soon they died away, but I have only to rub my hands as you have seen and the lights come,” Saverne toid of the hardships brought upon him by his singular faculty. The neighboring peasants in Belgium avoided him and told awful stories of iris being in league with the devil. Men would not hire him to plow or in harvest time. His own family clung to him, but the farm was small and he came to this coun try five years ago. Here lie learned the cabinet-making trade and got employ ment at finishing ship interiors. But when his companions saw his faculty or infirmity they 'rented him coldly. His ignorant neighbors in Schleswig street regard him as possessed of an evii spirit. Saverne’s electric fingers are the curse of his existence.— Philadelphia Press The Government of Colombia offers a reward of $ 10,000 in silver to any one who will discover a new merchantable article of export. I'rnft’Mftioiial Ktiuuette prevents some doctors from advertising their skill, but we ore bound by no such conven tional rules an«l think that if wo make a dis covery that is of benefit to our fellows, we ought to sp ead the fact to the whole land. Therefore we cause to bo published through out. the land the (act that Dr. R. V. Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery” is the best known reinedv for consumption (scrofula of the lungs) and kndred diseases'. Stud 10 cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce’s complete treatise on consumption, with unsurpassed means of self-frtillincnt. Address, World’s Dispensa ry Medical Association. 003, Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. The truly pood man is he who docs not lose his child heart. Menirui. Unlike otlicf cathartics, Dr. Pierces “Pel lets” do not render the boweis costive after operation, but. on Ihe contrary, establish u ( permanently healthy action. ‘Briny entirety verjtahle , no particular care it required while using them. By druggist. The Polish jieople never swear in their own language, but always in Russian. Woman and Her Dlnense* is the title of large illustrated treatise, by Dr. K. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., sent to any midrese for ten cents in stamps. It teaches successful self treatment. The hay crop is the leading crop of tho United States. Dniiwillri’s. Wives, Mothers. Send for Pamphlet on Female DiseSsw, free, securely sealed. Dr. J. B. >. arct isi, Utica,N.Y Extraordinary but nevertheless true. We refer to the announcement of B. F. Johnson 4( -•. of Ridiui< nd. in which they propose to show working energetic men how to make from 4100 to S3OO a month over and alxive expenses. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Tkomp *:>n’H Eye-water. I linguists sell at3V per Isutie Lung Trouble* and Wasting Diseases can he cored. If property treated In time, as shown by the following statement ■ from D. C. FitEKMAH, Sydney: “Having been % great sufferer from pulmonary attacks, ami gradually was-in* away forth# post two years, it affords me pleasure to testify that Scott * EuutSion of Cod Liver Oil with Lime and 'o lahas given me great relief, and I cheer fully recommend it to all suffering in a simi tar way to myself. In addition, 1 would sty that it is very pleacant lo take.” From $2,000,000 to $4,000,000 worth of gold is used annually in the shape of foil for gilding, lettering, edging of hooks, feign and ornamental painting and denistry, gilding taking the greater share. Pis ’ • Remedy* for Catarrh is agreeable to use. .* tis not a liquid or a snuff. 50 ct' What Is the Use Os your dragging yourself around, day after day, without any life or activity, feeling all tired out and ir.lseratle, when yon might be as quick and lively and strong as ever ? Take care of yourself at once, or In the depleted condition of your system, a com plaint otherwise trivial may fasten upon you with serious or fata! results. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is Just the medicine you need to build up your entire sys tem, to purify and quicken your blood, and to give you appetite and strength. . "Hood’s Sarsaparilla as a blood purifier has no equal. It tones the system, strengthens and invig orates, giving new life. I have taken it for kidney complaint, with the best results.”—D. R. Saof»D*Rs, SI Pearl Street, Cincinnati, O. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only uyC. I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell Mass. 100 Poses One Dollar H N U—4o Pensions I VoalwlUllw HAM, Att'y. WMhtngton, DC. One Agent (Merchant only) wanted In every town rot During the la«t year yon furnished me with 97,000 ’Tansill’s ranch.** This month you have sold mo "1,000, almost all of wh'oh have been sold, from one to five to each person. You will please ship 0,000 every Saturday until further notice. C. S. Prowirr, Druggist, Denver, CoL Address R. W. TAKSILL Sc CO., Chicago. THOUSANDS s«y that Ely’s Cream Balm cured them of HAYFEVER •' pply Bolin into each nostril SIOO to S3OO who can rurnisb their own horses and give their time to the business. Spare moments may be profitably employed also. A few vacancies In towns and cities. B. 1. JOHNSON A CO., 1013 Main St., Richmond, Va. Merjjnlne Habit Cared la M OFSiiiß! FLORIDA CD ft HOMES AND 8 1111 3RANGE PROVES I HB»la 10 Orange Grove Tracts of 40 acres. 20 Orange Grove Tracts of 20 acres. 40 Orange Grove Tracts of 10 acres. 330 Orange Grove Tracts of 6 acres. 400 Orange Grove Tracts of 2%acres. 100 City Building Lots. We are giving away a portion of our lands that the remainder may be greatly Increased in value. Ad vcrtislng space cost? too mueh to give full particu lars here ; but send your full name and postofflee address to our Northern office, where all deeds are made, and we will send you by return mall, in a nealea envelope, n NUMBERED Land rn r r CERTIFICATE | It 11 Which certificate will enable you to secure one of the above divisions of valuable Florida property, free. -Vo charge of any kind ia made for either the numbered Lana Certificate or the Property it de nignalcs. Aid, MtHK. Address W. 11. Whet btone, Sec’y, 227 Main Street. Cincinnati. Ohio. YOU WILL BE A TRAITOR to yourown Interests and to those dependent on you If y an fall to avail yourself of this Great Free Land Oner. Se cure It for your children. Send your application not later than two weeks from the date, of this paper. A T PMTQ Obtained. Send stamp for | E. Its IO Inventors* Guide. L. ißixo -1 ham, Patent Attorney, Washington, D. C. FOR i r ATAJ, OEU f:s Fl!C|Ssff|\lC t'» * s • dier> nn 1 tiffin. Smtio torctr -3 cultirs. No fee nnw aoeeemfol. ■ K. 11. .V CO, If. shing ton. I>. O. DSH* 6re«J En,li,li Gent an* Dllff S iSSfSi Rheumatic Remedy- Oval :<4» round, 1 ♦ IMU. AGENTS WANTED i,T County. A rare opportunity for new heglnncre*. linprreedented success. SI-4 to |t 1 *.2 a day ca>dvuiade GEO. A. BAKER AC 0., Charleston. H. C. ( *OI. O Is worth AVio iH>r pound. Pettit’s Eye Salve vTfl.'Hi, but lH sold at ’Accents a box by dealers. SSaaSaEs PK to mark your linen. Send sIsIBBBIPi stamp for circular*. Address. H. s. Hanner, Lock Box ID Branford. Fla KIDDER’S A SURE CURE FOR INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA. Overs,ooo l*hysleians have sent us their approval of DIGESTYLIN, saying that It Is the best preparation for Indigestion that they have ever used. We have never heard of a cam of Dvspepnia where DIQKSTYUN was taken that was not eared. FOR CHOLERA INFANTUM. IT WILL CURB THE MOST AGGRAVATED CASKS. IT WILL STOP VOMITING IN PREGNANCY! IT WILL RELIEVE CONSTIPATION. Far Summer Complaints and Chronic Dlarrhcra, which are the direct result* of Ini perfect digestion. DIGBBTYLIN will effect an Immediate cure. Take DYGF.STYLIN for all palne and disorder* of the gtomaoh, they all come from tndige«tlon. Ask your druggist for DIGEST VEIN i price $1 per Urge bottle). If he does not have It send one dollar to ua and we will send a bottle to you, express prepaid Do not hesitate to send your money. Our nouse I* reliable. Established twenty-five rears. WM. F.ltlllDKK ACO., W«Mltcnriin Chcml.l., h.Uoho Bi„ K.T. asps. FACE, HANDS, FEET, and all their imperfections, including Fv fya. CSjflv »’lal Development, Knirnnd Scalp, Nuper )?f|, ffl fluotie Hair. Birth Mat Is, Moire, Warts, *• 'Mfu Moth. Freckles, Red Nnre, Acne, pluck Heads, Nears, lltGmr and their treatment. O-o I w’lrHend |rtr>, for hook of !/l 4th t-dlttoo. l»r.J. H.W.odt»«r7.a7 N.pearl St., Allany.J’T.Y., EJt’b’dlClA ripa«&j DAIV HAMMERI ESS. I DALY THREE BAHIL MANHATTAN HAMMIBIEIS. I PIEPfR IIEICH LOAPIIS. Bend for Cataloguo of Hpeoialtte*. •< HOVERLING. I»AI,V A BALES, Oi and I:a Chambers Street, Mow Toifc. ■ Tb*FT*H Hii4K«BU»TlltKl* » U-rr-W, **l c k«r»rtsl|«lta(MW. Hero# rmtHi* without tba The Origin! *%^^JaSSS L,TTtB ’ t&xmT LIVER OOB.O\\K. riKItCB’S PELLETS, OB i little svoar-coatEb pills. ' erSe w'S out or occupation. Put upin »la® vials, hermeti cally settled. Always fresh and reliable. As a laxative, alterative, or purgative. , these little Pellets give the most perfoct ( satisfaction. si HEADACHE. ! Billons Headache, Dlzzlncoa, Conatlpa , tion, Indication, ww rflL ' Hiltons Attack a, ami nil R. X&/ttfai of the atom- JSjt wj- Wfi ach and bowels, arc prompt- <7 ly relieved ana permanently I cured by the uSd of o .n«* I Pierce’# Plensaiit Wm.yiMlvc Pellets, iln explanation of the relttMhjtl i"* 0 '’ ‘T! these 1 Bellets over so great a yarlfttyof diseases, it nitty truthfully be eaid that action upon the svstem is universal, not a K*W (l tissue escaping their sanative Influence 60W by druggists, 25 cents a vial. Manufactu. ed at the Chemical laboratory of World's DiMtfMABY Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. 4^5500J2S i ls o (fby tbc manufactnr- I P7 / V’KSv era of Dr. Bago>. Catarrh if . N ■ t Remedy, for a cue of XL -» J.;. chronic Nasal Catarrh which I ! they cannot cure. SraPTOJf* OF CATARRH.—DuII. 1 heavy heartache. Obetniction of the nasal passages, discharges faliing from the head into the throat, sometime* profuse, watery. > and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid; the eyes are weak, watery, and inflamed; there is ringing in the ears, deafness, hacking or coughing to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive matter, together with scal>s from ulcers; the voice is changed and has a nasal twang; the breath is offensive; smell and taste are im paired; there is a sensation of dizziness, with mental depression, a backing cough and gen \ oral debility* Only a few of tho a*>ove-narae