KEV DR. TALMAGE. I'HE BROOI.LYN DIVINE’S SUNDAY SERMON. Text: il Theu that turn many f. right eousness shall shine a* the stars forever anl ever.” —Daniel xii., 3. Every man has a thousand roots and a thousand branches. Ills roots teach down through all the earth; his branches tpread through all the heavens. He speaks with voice, with eye. with hand, with foot. His silence often is thunder, and his life is an un them or a doxology. There is no such thing as negative influence. We are all positive in the place we occupy, making the wbrld better or making it worse, on the Lord’s side or the devil’s, making up reasons for our blessedness or banishment: and we have already done a mighty work in peopling heaven or hell. I heir people tell of what they are coin? to do. A man who has burned down a city might as well talk of some good that he exnects to do, or a man who has saved an empire might as well talk of some good that he expects to do. By fbe force of your evil influence you have already consumed infinite values, or you have, by the power of a right influence, won whole kingdoms for God. , It would bo aburrt for me to stnn I here •nd, by elaborate argument, prove that the world is off the track. You miuhtas well Atandat the foot of an embankment,amid the wreck of a capsized rail train, prov ng bv elaborate argument that something is out of order. Adam tumbled over the embaukim nfc fixtj' centuries ago,and the who’e race, m on * long train, has gone on tumbling in the same direction. Crash! Crash! The only question now is. By what Unerase can the crushai thing be lift;d? By what hammer may the fragments be reconstructed? I want to show you how we may turn many to righteousness, and what will be our future pav for so doing. First—We may turn them by the charm ol a right examplo. A child, coming from a filthy home, was taught at school to wash its * face. It went home so much imppoved in ap pearance that its mother washed her fac<*. And when the father of the household came home, and saw the improvement in domestic appearance, he washed his face. The neigh bors happening in, saw the change, and tried the same experiment until all that street was purified, and the next street copied its example, and the whole city felt the result of one schoolboy washing his face. That is a fable, by which we set forth that the best way to get the world washed of its sins and pollution is to have our own heart and life cleansed arid purified. A man with grace in his heart, and Christ an cheerfulness in bis face, and holy consistency in his behavior, is a perpetual sermon: and the sermon differs from others in that it has but one head, anil the longer it runs ihe bet ter. There are honest men who walk down Wall street, making the teeth of iniquity chatter. There are happy men who go into a sick room, and, by a look, help the broken bone to knit, and the excited nerves drop to calm beating. There are pure men whoso presence silences the tonerue of uneleanness. The mightiest agent of good on earth is a consistent Chris tian. I like the Bible folded between UN of cloth, of calfskin or morocco, but I like it lietter when, in the shape of a nnn, it g"es o:it into the world—a Bible dl'istrated. Courage is beautiful to read about; but rather would 1 see a man with nil Mia world against him confident as though all the world were for him. Patience is beautiful to read about; but rather would 1 see a buffeted soul calmly waiting for the time or deliverance. Faith is beautiful to read about: but rather would I find a man in the midnight walking straight on as though lie saw' everything. Oh. how many souls have been turned to Go«l by the charm of a bright example! When, in the Mexican war. the troops were wavering, a General rose in his stirrups and dashed into the enemy’s lines, shout ng: ‘ Men. follow!’ They, teeing his courage and disposition, dashed on after him and gained the victory. What men want to rally them for God is an examnle to lea l them. ■ All your commands to others to advance amount to nothing so long ns you stay fe hind. To affect them aright you no xl to start for heaven yourself, lookipg back only to give the 6tirrmg cry of “Men, follow!” Again: We ninv turn many to righteous ness by prayer. There is no sii'-h detective as prayer, for no one can hide away from it. It puts its hand on the shoulder of u man ten thousand miles off. It alights on a ship mid Atlantic. The little child cannot understand the law of electricity, or how the telegraphic operator, by touching the instrum *nt here, may dart a message under the sea to anot her continent: nor can we, with our small intel - lect, understand how the touch of a Chris tian’s prayer shall instantly strike a soul on the other side of the earth. You tike shin and go to some other country, ana get there at 11 o'clock in the morn ing. You telegraph to New York, and the message gets here at 6 o’clock in t>esame morning. In other words, it seems to arrive here five hours before it started. Like that is prayer. God says: “Before they call I w ill hear.” To overtake n loved one on the road 3*ou may spur up a lathered steed until he shall outrace the one that brouznt the new s to Ghent; but a praj’er shall catch it at one gallop. A boy running a wav frmn home may take the midnight train from the coun try village and rea-h the seaport in time to gain the ship that sails on the morrow; but a mother’s prayer will be on the deck to meet him, and in the hammock before lie swing i into it. and at the capstan before he win is the rope around it, and on the sea. against the sky, as the vessel plows on toward it. There is a mightiness in prayer. George Muller proved a company of jxior boys together, and then ho prayed up an asylum in which trey might be shel tered. He turned his face toward Ed nburgh ind prayed, and th-re ctme a thousand pounds. He turned his fa* p toward London »nd prayed, and there ca ne a thousand pounns. turned his face toward Dublin tndprayet. and there ur prayers, or tin ! plan o' c ur prayers: but it is the faith tr ( them that t*d’s. Believing prayer >oar» | higher than th** lurk ever sang, plungei de**rs*r than d'vine hell over sank: dnrt* quicker than lightning ever flushed. Thotlgt we have us** 1 only th** back of this weapor in*‘end of the edge, what marvels have leer wrought! If saved we are all the captives oj •rune anrrvet prayer. Would Cod that, ir t- edestr* forth- r*s »ie of souls, we might K»**■ r-r fnr h**«l*’f t‘e revuir-e* of lh« I *•" » Omnb n'otit 17 • niwy turn tns'ny Jo rigliiyetpn*lm Cun.OrU/i arimonlt.ou. Bo ur»i yr.ut pn*£ I you can mako a formal speech. Address the , one next to you. You will not go home alone to-day. Between this and your place of stop ping you may decide the eternal destiny ol an immortal spirit .lust one sentence may do the work. Just one question. Just on* look. The formal talk that liegins with a siirh, and ends with a canting snuffle, is nol what is wanted, but the heartfchrob of a mar in dead unrivst. There U not a soul on earth that vou may not bring to God if yon rightly go at it. They said Gibraltar could not be taken. It ii a sixteen hundred feet high and three miles long. But the English and Dutch did take It. Artillery, an l sappers and miners, and fleets pouring out volleys of death, and thou sands of men. reckless of danger.can do any thing- The stoutest heart of sin, though it lie rock, and surrimded by an ocean of transgression, under Christian bombardment may b*» m<*dA to hn : st th* flag of redemption. But is all this admonition and prav«r. and Christian work for nothing? My text promises to all the faithful eternal lust**r. “They that turn many to righteousness shall shine ns the c tars forever.” As stars, the redeemed have a borrowed light. Whnt makes Mars and Venus and Jupiter so luminous? When tb* sun throws down liis torch in the heavens the stars pick uo the scattered brands and hold them in procession ns the oueen of the night, ad vances; so all Christian workers, standing around the throne, will shine in th* light bor rowed from th** Sun of Righteousness—Torus in their faces. Jesus in th**ir songs, .Testis in their triumph. Christ left heuren once for a tour of redemption on earth, yet the glorified one* know lie would com* back again. But lot him ab beats his throne, and go a wav to stay forever, the music woull nt-’P t.’ie congregation disperse; the temples of God l*o darken *I: the rivers of light stagnate, and every chnr'ot would be come a hearse, and every bull would toll, ami there would not b* room on the hill sides to bury the dead of t.h*» great metropolis, for there would lie pestilence in heaven. But Jesus lives, and so all the redeemed live with Him. II*• shall recognize them as His comrades *n earthly toil, and remember what they did for f h*» honor of His name and for th** spread or His kingdom All their pray ers «n*l tears and work will rise before Him us Ho los'ka into their faces and He will divide His kingdom with them- His pence their peace; His holiness-their holiness: Hi? jov—the'r inv. Th-* glory of the central ilnone reflected from the surrounding thrones, th** last snot of sin struck from the Christian orb. and the entire nature a trem ble and a-flash with light,, they B'iall shine a* the stars fo-evor and over. Again: Christian workers shall bo like tho stars in tho fact that they have a light inde pendent of each other. Look up at tne night, ami we each world shows its distinct e’ory It is not like Mi<» conflagration, in wh ch vou cannot tel! where one flame stops and another begins. Teptune, Hers-he! .and Mercury arj as distinct as if ouch on** of them were the on!v star; so our individualism will not be lost in heaven. A great multitude—yet each one as observable, as distinctly recog nized. ns greatly celebrated, ns if in all the spaco from gate to gate, and from hill »o hill, he was the onlv inhabitant: no mi vine-un—no mob—no indiscriminate nr-h; each Christian worker standing out illus trious—all the story of earthly achieve ments adhering to each one; his s**lf denials, and pains, and services, and victories published. Before men went out to the last war. the orators told them that, they would all Im* remembered bv th *ir country, ami their names he commemorated in poetry nml in song; but go to the graveyard in Rich mond and you will find th* re six thousand graves, over eieh on** of which is the inscrip tion, “Unknown.’ The world does not re memlier its heroes: but th-re will be no un recognized < hristian worker in heaven. Each one known by all; grandly known; known by acclamation; all the pist story of work for God gleaming in cheek, and brow, and foot, ami palm. They shall sh ne with distinct light ms the stars, forev-r and ever. Again, Christian workers shall shine like the stars in clusters. In looking up. : you find the worlds in family circles. Brothers and sisters—they take hold of each other’s hands and dance in groups. Orion in a group. The I’leia ies in a group. Tho solar system is ouly a company of children, with bright faces, gathered around one great fireplace. Tho words do not straggle off. They go in squadrons ami fleets, sailing through im mensity. So Cbristiam workers in heaven will dwell in neighborhoods ami c usters. I am sure that some people 1 will I k ) in heaven a great deal lietter than others. Yonder is a con stellation of stately Christians. They lived no earth by rigid rule. They never laughed. They walked every hour, anxious lest they should lose the r dignity. But they loved God, and yonder they shine in brilliant con stellation. Yet I shall not long to get into that particular group. Yonder is a constel Intion of small hearted C’histians—asteroids in the eternal astronomy. While some souls go up from Christian battle jfhd blaze like Mars, these asteriods dart a feeble ray like Vest». on'ier is a constellation of martyrs, of a postlee, of patriarch*. Our souls, as they go up to heaven, will seek out the most con genial ix) iety. Yonder is a constellation almost merry with the play of light. Unearth they wore lull of sympathies aad Bongs, and tears end raptures and congratulations. When they prayed their words took lir**, when they sang the tune could not hold th**m . when they tvept over a world's woes, thev sobh**d as if heart broken; when they worked for Christ, the}' flamed with enthu siu-m. Yonder they are—circle of light’ Const*) ntion of joy! Galaxy of fire! Oh, that you ami 1. by that grace which ran transform tho worst, into the host, might at la»*t sail in the wake of that fleet ami wl eel in that glorious group, as the stars, forevei ami ever! Again: Christian workers will shine like the sian in swiftness of motion. The world** do not stop to shine. There are no fixed stars save as to relative ftosition. The star most thoroughly fixed flies thousands of miles a minute. The astronomer, using his tele scope for nn Alpine stock, leaps from world crag to world crag, and finds no star stand ing still. The chamois hunter has to fly to catch his prey, but not so swift is his gam* as that which the scientist tries to shoot through the tower of observatory. Jake petrels mi l Atlantic, that seem to come from n> shore, and l»e bound tc no landin: place—flying, flying— s*i tin se great flocks of worlds rest not as t hey go, wing and wing, age after age. forever and ever. The eagle hastes to its prey, but we shall in sjiee i beat the eagle*. You have noticed tho ve'ooity of the swift hors.*, tinder wldm*B toet tho miles slip like a smooth ribbon, and as he pass's the four hoofs strike the eartn in such quick b«at your pulses take the same vibration. But all those things ore not swift in comparison with the motion of which i speak. The moon moviH fifty-four thousand mil s in a day. Yond'*r, Neptune flashes on eleven thousand miles 1h en * our. Yonder. Mercury Kc hundred and L efty year. > e cork is not cut till ze tree is feefteen, zen not till is ze twenty fife, or or ze most zat. /air is always ze eight or ten year between, and >e cork is more, mooch more, after ze cutting, but nefer so good as ze first.” “Ever see it done?” “Oui, oui, monsieur: ze—vat you ca’l ’em, 'small boys,’see eferysing, eh ? zay cut ze I ark up and down ze t:ce, zen around and around, and take out ze blocks: soak ’em in wusser, and press ’em under >e he fa loads. e ‘small boys’ we go veree easy up in zem.” Hustle Pursuit of au Eccentric Poet. The Aft'S California tells that not long ago some tourist from the East tailed to a man digging in the garden of Joa |Utn Miller, the poet of the Sierras, near I nut Vale, Cal., and desired to be f-hown over the place. The man dropped his pick and very patiently showed the garrulous party the crematory, the waterworks, the wolf dc*», and all they desired to see. But thev <*x pre s*d dreadful disappointment at not "ruling the poet at horn** '.'ow, look here, old fellow,” said the leader of the pirty, as they were going, to the man .« ho was about to resume IDs pick, ' what sort of a looking ra m is Joaquin Miller, anyhow T* “Well, he look* like i! e.” v iia the quiet answer. “Like you? looks ti .0 you p ♦ l i«; | m Wi«>» Dilier." Freaks or Razors. Thefra*»t grades of n or* are so deli cate that even the famouv Damascus blades cat not equal them in texture. It is no* gen ially known that the grain of a Swedish razor is so sensitive that ita general direction is changed after a short servi* e. When you buy a tine razor the grain run*i from the upper end of the outer jpo nt in a diagonal direction toward the handle. Constant stropping will twist, the steel until the grain ap pears to sst straight up and down. Sub sequent use will drag the gram outward from the edge, so that after steady use for severnl mouths the fibre of the steel occupies * position exactly the reverse of that wb ich appeared on the day of purchase. The process also affects the temper of tne blade, and when the grain sets from, the lower outer end towards the back you have a tool which cannot be ' kept in condition by the most conscien ; tious ban er Hut here’s another freak of nature* Leave the razor alone for a month, :>»d whew you take it up you will Hind that the grain has resumed its first position. This opt ration can be repeated until the steel is worn through to the back. When a threatening lune disorder Shows ita first proclivity. Do not let it cross the bonier— Quell it with activity. Many a patient, yoang tr olden. Owes a qutok recovery AM to Dr. rterre's Golden Mediral Discovery. The public school the church and the home are the conservator* and generators, of intel - licence and v irtue. Whatever nett anliws or icstroys their influences is hostile to our form of government. A Business bike Otter. For many years the manufacturers of Pr. Cage’s Catarrh Remedy have offered,ingest faith, tout) reward for a ease of Nasal Catarrh which they cannot core Tb» remedy ' is sold by druggists at only oO cents. ’’This wonderful remedy has farrly attained a world-wide reputation, if you have dull. ’ heavy headache, obstruction of themr-al discharges falling from the head into the throat, profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, tin* k. tenacious, muons, purulent, bloody ami putrid: if the eves are weak, watery and inflamed: if then* is ring ing in the ears, deafness, hacking or cough ing to clear the throat, expectorati Hi of of fensive matter, together with scabs from ul cers; the voi<>» being changed and lias a nasal twang; the lireath offensive: smell and taste impaired; sensation of ilizzioeas, with mental -depression, hacking cough and general de biliiy, you are suffering from nasaJ catarrh. T oe more complicated your disease, the great **r the nuailer amt diversity of symptoms. Thousands of cases annually, without mani festing half of the above symptoms, result »n consumption, aml end in the grave. No disease is so ccmiucn, more deceptive auil dangerous, or less undtistotsl. or more uu succtsifnlly treated by physicians. Brewing beer is more lucrative thin brew ing books. Coupled with the that Matthew Arnold s estate amounted to only about fSOOtt. we find the announcement that the will of Mr. George Henty. brewer, of Northlands, Chichester, pats the value of : his personal estate at over a million anl a I hall of dollars. Would you know the keen delight Os a wholesome ap|»*tite. Unrestrained by i-oiie’s dire. Headache’s cure, or fever’s fire. Thoughts morose, or icy chills * Then use Dr. lulls. Dr. ITerce’s Purgative Pellets—the original an 1 only genuine Little Li ver Pilli; 25 cents a vial The saloon is unden: abiy the hot bed of ig norance and vice. Its* mission is wholly evil. It drinks up the sap that nourishes the tree « an itestimonials ot the thousands who have use I them. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr- Thomp i Eye-water. Di uggists sell at2sr. per bottle Conventional 'Mlonon ' KraalilUia. Whereas. The Motion Route iL N. A. A C Ry. Cod d**sires to make it known to the world at large that it forms the double cun necting link of tourist travel le tween the winter of Florida and the summer r-wortx of the Northwest; and Whereas, Its “rapid transit*’ system is un surpassed, its elegant fu'lnian Buffet Sire*, er and Chair car syvnv l*etwren Chicago and Louisville, Indianapolis a**d Cincinnati unequalled: and B hereas. Its rates are as low as the k west: th**n l*e it Resalted, That in the event of starting nn u trip it is good jtotieg to consult with E. O. McCormick. Gen l Fn-*. Agent Monon Rout*-, 185 Dearborn St.. Chicago. fnll partem larn (In anv event send fora ToarfatGuide, enclose-Ic. postage.) A Summer Medicine Sommer’s heat debilitates both nerves and body, and Hc.id ache, Sleeplessness, Ner vous ProstratioD, and an “all-played-out” sensation prove that Paine’s Celery Compound should be used notr. This medi cine restores health to Nerves* Kidneys, Liver, and Bow els, and imparta life and energy to the heat proslrvtesl system. Vacations or no vacations. Paine’s Celery Compound is the medi cine for this season. It is a scien tific combination of the best tonics, and those who me it begin the hot summer days vith clear heads, strong nerves, and general good health. Paine's Celery Compound is sold by all druggists, f 1 a bottle. Six for $5. WELLS, RICHARDSON A CO, PropT* Burlington, Yt AND Hot Weather Inviprator Th* Exerntinner Was Unpopular. The office of public executioner at Vienna i> not a very desirable poaition. A few days since this o!ficial, ac companied by two assistants, went to Trieste to poln-h o J some poor wretch who was under sentence of death. While sipping bear in a “brasserie” they were recognt/el, and the place was im mrd-ately turned into a battlefield. They were mobbed and narrowly escaped with the*r lives to the aearna police station. The proprietor of the • brasserie” then brok- the gbsscs out of which they had been drinking, and after chopping up the chairs upon which they had beeu sit tis he m *de««i*ionfire of them in thu street. The barber in Trieste was oblisr* 4 gtec* . a card in all the local pa pi • a rumor that the executioner had been shaved in his shop, a* in consequence of the story getting abroad every one of his regular customers refused to continue their patronage.— L hrfmt Truth. A Sraor Itrmrdv. In th** matter «:f curatives what you want is srmiethiog that will do its work while y* u cccitsniie to do yours—a remedy that, will pr« run no inconvenience nor interfere with vnur'harimss. Such n remedy is Allcock's lYuu.cs Plasters. These plasters are pure ly \ egetable and absolutely harmless. They in quire no change of diet, and are not affected by wet or cold. Their action does not inter fere with labor or buuness: you can toil ami vet be cured while hard at work. They are so pure that the youngest, the oldest, the most delicate person of either sex can use tb**m with great l*eneßt Beware of imitations, and do not be deceived bv misrepresentations. Ask for Allcock’s, and let no explanation or soli-itaticn in luce you to accept a sub s?it«it»v B. B. B. fßotanic Blood Balm.) Observe the following editorial from the At. ianta ih? foremost pa}* r of the South: ‘The Constiiaticn has observed the giotvih of in Atlanta institution now famous well-nigh the sort! over. It is the Blood Ba'ro Company who ■!*ake B. B. B. We hive watched the course? of this medicine- in hundruls of cases that appeared'" •o be hopefoss. and it has worked amazing cures. We take pleasure in giving emrendorsement to the men who make np this company. They are truthful, accurate and conservative business men * physicians. They have the confidence of the people among whom they liv>, and their medi cine- speaks for itself. A whole library does not ritweigh the heartfelt testimony of one man wh«*, in despair from a disease, no doctors have beta able to cure, and other remedies aggra vated, fin-ls that B. B. U. Las restored his health, vigor and manb*»L And just such tes timony the Blood Balm Company have bv 11:2 bnsbeL- No other remedy in the world can produce the nnmbirof genuine testimonials of remarkable and seeming miraculous cures as can B. B. 8., made in Atlanta, Gx. Read a few here sub mitted: KIDNEY WEAKNESS. For fifteen years my liver and kidneys have been badly affected—not a day in that time without the headache. Since using 11. B. B. - Botanic Blood Balm—l have been entirely re lieved : no pain, no trouble at all. and I feel almo-i him another person. lam one among ths- greatest advocates cf B. B. B. and you are at liberty to use my name. Mrs. C. 11. Gay, Rocky Mount, N. t*. RHEUMATISM. Newton, N. t used B. B. B. as • purifier of the blood and to build up ihe sys tem generally, and consider it without excep tion the finest remedy of the kind in the mar keL Yours with best wishes, Arthur G. Lrwis, Editor Southern Society. Vc»gS>^a-yvn", ,f r \\te |S| I Cafrh iNtm nllve with FLBES I s, »n*r’> Stisky Fly ■ t*%PE-« Sr'Ml.y Atldre' of Hl* or ifwels, or vus: M. j» •*!*«* laid, on r*wtpt « 5 **■••*!. T. 11. I>(nut. Mmmmlh... *.*.*■• VF -l .fi, N.w t *rli. , Ma >r (hat Cun>,MlW mI /sv RIFLES pAT^ fIHF PiitoliJrvi’i JH y»\ fur f ||l * rißh ts I*l | C.*A’cr,a. \A\ Usui M j'Wi hi wv. IN «sna Qma V 1 ••• • • t•t • t YOU SUFFER from Biliousness, Constipation, Piles, Sick Headarhe, Sour Stom ach, Colds, Liver Trouble, Jaun dice, Dizziness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, etc. — Vou need Suffer no longer. - * WARNER’S SAFE PILLS will cure you. They have cured tens of thousands. They possess these points of su periority : su"ar coated; purely vegetable, contain no calomel, mercury or mineral of any kind; donotgripe; never si cken;easy to take; mild in operation; and for these reasons are especially the favorites of women. Ask for WARNER’S SAFE PILLS. IlllPntfrnrn w« win punl year asms •»£ UII lUV tn t L). sst- * trsn « In ports stamps; rrti will then receive great avmMra nf piet •rrs. csids. catalogues, books, ssnipl# uorkaefsrt. .irniism. tnaruinrs, papers, general samples, etc.,ste., Um'Or to you ths great broad field of the great employment niidageney business Those whose names are in this Directory ofirn rrreivn that which if purrhnsed, would cost gJU nr gjOcaah. I boutandn of men and women make larpt sums of money in ths agency bnotneoa 1 ena of miliums of dollars worth as goods are yearly so'.ksellers, novelty dealers, inventors and mi nuts, tureen nf the Inr cd Btt tea and Europe It is regarded ns the vtanderd AgeotsTMrrctory of the world and i« relied upon ; a harvest asvrits nil u hoes names appear in It. 1 hose who an names are in it will heap posted on ail the new money making things that row* out, while literature will sow to them in a etoadr atreem. The great bargains of the most reliable firms will he put before all. Agents make money In their own localities. Ager-ts make money traveling ail around tor agents mskn nvrr tan thousand dollars a rear. All depends on w list the agent baa to sell. Few there are who know all shout the business of those who employ agents; those who have this information nils big money easily: tbnss whoss names srv in this Diree. tore ret thiainfi.rmstlon rut sud complete. This Directory Is used bv all first-class firms. s!l over tho world. wh« einnloy sprats Over J.OHMotich firms use it. Tour name in tltlsdlreo torv will bring yon in great Information and large velne; thotft sands still through it be led to profitable work, and pottTVgg. Reader, the wry best small Investment yon can make. Is to has* Je«u uams and address pnnsed in this directory. Address, Astsai. an Autsis' DIkKcTOKT, Augusta. Alains. Hue mean what we she BALD SPOTS Wocorethew- THIN HAIR rIJZ? *V DANDRUFF -«»• THIN BEARD **£ FALLIMC HAIR remedj. rECHTER ItFMFOV (HI.. Xcw Horen, Coin. BotMC. Pens tbb to asms laid leaded (rise?. KflT TI OU| l make more money w«rkn.~loi uailian •UiWi «»t anything r|s«- in the world Either sev Costly outfit rkLK. Terms FMKK. Addr<«a. T Kt’k A Co., Augusta, MJins. HERBPAND FIFTH WHEEL taKOTsmtint HKItiIBAWII in.. rcemssiW B!air f sPi!ls Rheumatic Oysl AAux. 311 rutmtl, 14 I*lll*. tttt a day. »A*op!nt wnrttt ft .ft. HUDI %f| >Jn*.» nut ji'der lha lio.Tte’t ftrt. Writs DWlrewMar t,te.i> Modn M Hder IV».. Holly. Wr%. GflLDUwerUi «srliigN. Atsjr tissnk in one I'catllng. CltnrsnflOSf at Baltimore. I HOT el Detroit. I.*lloat Philadelphia. I I Hint Washington. 121 H M Button, large i-'m.-m-m of f '••lumbl.t l«iw student« »t Vain. W«*!|psl»*v. OlmtlDi. T’nlof Pnnn., Mloh •K.-tn Chantan.|ti;i. n.\ KmloriMtl by Rb HAko J*«f»cr»>R, ih«‘Sfiutitist. Ifon. W. \v Astor, Jrnsti r lUxjamin. Judge tJsn-w.5. d». Drown. K, H. Cook. Prtn. N. V. Ntah 1 Normal College, Ac. Taught liv itirretpontloni’i', I'ros tree tut* rosT ekke from PROP. I.OISKITK. Ui Fifth Av»*. N. Y. BLOOD POISONING, S dSLETS lh** Lrinarjr Organs ponitively tturrd or no charge, Onr medicine in a preventive of Malsriit and Yellow Fever Fnll sire earn pie Tiottle sent free on receipt of » rtN. to prepay p'mtawre., A«Mrtws THE HART MEIHUIxk 4 ».v Hog 3ttl, I nloaTAIIc, Ct. in by / ) d ■ ’ *■ U. tor Price !<•'■ duSroiD.Fttubutkfl^W nHnoa. Tents, Breech loodlug dotibU fihofgna it |tH| Sin- e itarrel Breeeh I »r»f|er.s »t ft to $1?. t>tib> $ '*. vi t<* •!.*. ivaihls Iwrrvl Muazle loaders nt |i W $ *-i. tiepnalitnr KUtee, IMhooPtr, sl4 to »3(t Kevolrers, t! lo fM; Fiob-rt lti»l<*->. f!.'Ato|*. tiunasentr. O. It. to rxaniioe UrrslrFr* liy m.n! •<> snr P. o. Addreos JOH.V miTIINUIT NCiTtNUtl.i WOKkS. I'tttsbarg, Pms*. SIOO to - norm ein b* v v 7 wUVW working fop us Agi-Dia preform i who ran furnish their owa hoiws ami lIv« their who In time to the liuslneas. Hpsre momonu niay re profitably employed also. WEBER ruio-Fom. ENDORSED BY TffF LCAJIFNG ARTIRTfi, BERK SASUASH. AND THE PRESS. AS THE BEST PIANOS MADE. Prior* ».i rraeonaMe mi terma as easy aa whl. AUtulislrd Catalogun he*. Mention tint I’ «»»*■* OSOOOE A TXOU7r.SK. Biarhamten. V. T. /^|kFARMER'S /Hr wife »/ J Ween rem*> ..f her Ponitrv sWa; j {j ' t%o\ vruin tin IN* lJis-I'ai," Aimik «•»Ing it*. ,«r '♦». • i.rifti-isi |*«Mtitr> Kalev-t on. .man worhusg fl. I. t.i llrrrdl.itV.f: emnrm, and e> s*r» Ibi tig, lusts S'«t. )UN shouU knot* oh ikla anbis ri, fient p<>'ipaid for ‘2Ar! Mi Iniok pi ii. iioi -k, - . I 8 * '• vrbtn^