Newspapers / The Anson Times (Wadesboro, … / Sept. 9, 1886, edition 1 / Page 4
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DR. TALHARO SERMON : NON-CHUBCHGOEES, Preached at ths Hsmptonm, tons Zaltalf Text: "Other sheep I have, which are not of this fold.!- John x., 14 There is no monopoly in religion. The rrace of God is not a little property that we may fence off and hare all to onrtelvea. It ts not a king's park, at which we look through a barred gateway, wishing that we xnlzht go in and see the deer and the statu ary, and pluck the flowers and the fruits in the royal conservatory. No; it is the Fa ther's orchard and everywhere there are bars that we may let down and gates we may swing open. . - . In mv boyhood,next to the country school house, there was an orchard of apples, owned by a very lame man, who, - although there were apples in the place perpetually decaying by scores and scores of bushels, never would allow any of us to touch the fruit. One day, in the sinfulness of a nature inherited from our first parents, who were ruined by the same temptation, some of us invaded that orchard, but soon retreated, for the mac came after us at a speed' reckless of making his lameness worA and cried out: "Boys, drop those apples, or 1 11 set the dog on you I" Well, my friends, there are Christian men ' who have the church under severe guard. There is fruit in this orchard for the whole world, but they have a rough and unsympa thetic way of accosting outsiders, as though wants them all f come and take the largest and the ripest fruit on the premises. Have you an idea that because you were baptized at thirteen months of age, and because you have all your life b jen under hallowed influ ences, that therefore, you have a right to one whole side of the Lord's table, spreading- Jourself out and taking up the entire room! tell you no. Yo J will have to haul in your elbows, for I shall to-day place on either side of you those whom you never expected would sit there; for, as Christ said to the Jews long ago, so he says to you and me: "Other sheep I hare, which are not of this fold." MacDonald, the Scotchman, has four or five dozen head of sheep. Borne of them are browsing on the heather, some of them are lying down under the trees, some of them are in bis yard; tUey ore scafcteied ttrouud in eight or ten different places. Cameron, his neighbor, comes over, and says: "I see you have thirty sheep ; 1 have just counted them." "No," says MacDonald, "I have a great many more sheep than that. Some are here, and some are elsewhere. They aro scattered all around about I have 4,01)0 or 5,W in my flocks. Other sheep I have, which are not in this fold." So Christ says to us: Hero is a knot of Christians and there is n knot of Christians, but they make up a small part of the flock. Here is the Episcopal fold, the Methodist fold, the Lutheran fold, the Congregational fold, the Presbyterian fold, tha baptist and the I'edo-Baptist fold tho only difference between these fast two being the mode of sheep-washing; and so they are scattered all over, and we come with our statistics, and say there are so many t housand of the Lord's sheep; but Christ responds: "No, no; you have not seen more than one out of a thous and of my flock.- They are scattered all over the earth, ami 'other sheep I have, which are not of this fold.' " Christ in my text was prophesying the conversion of the Gentiles with as much con fidence as though they were already con verted, and he is. to day, in the words of my text, prophesying the coming of a great mul titude of outsiders that you never supposed would come in. saying to you and saying to me: "Other sheep I have, which are not of this fold." 1. In the first place,. I remark that the Heavenly Shepherd will find many of his sheep amid the non-churchgoers. There are congregations where they are all Christians, and they seem to b3 completsly finished, and they remind one of the skeleton leaves which, by chemical preparation, have had all the greenness and verdure taken off of them, and are left cold and whito and delicate, nothing wanting but a glass case to put over them. The minister of Christ has nothing to do with such Christians but to come once a week, and with ostrich feather dust off tha accumulation of the last six days, leaving them bright and crystalline as before. But the other kind of a church is an armory with perpetual sound of drum and fife, gathering recruits for the Lord of Hosts. We say to every applicant: "Do you want to be on God's side, the safe bide and the happy side i If so, come to the armory and get equipped.' Here is a bath in which to get cleanset). Here is a helmet for your brow. Here is a breast plate for your breast. Here is a sword for your right arm, and yonder is the battlefield. Quit yourselves like men." There are some here who say: "I stopped foing to church ten or twenty years ago." y brother, is it nt strange that 3'ou should be the first man I tonld tails to today? I know all your; case; I know it very well. You have not teen accustomed to come into a religious assembly, but I have a surprising announcement to make to you. You are going to become one of the Lord's sheep. "Oh!" you say: "it is impossible; you don't know how far I am from a nythins of that .kind." I know all about it I have wan dered up aud down the world and I under stand your case. I have a still more start ling announcement to make in regard to yon. You are not only going to become one of the Lord's sheep, but you will become one to day. You will go from this servics to talk with some one about your soul. Teoplo of God, pray for that man. "Other sheep I have, which are notcf this fold." When the Atlantic went to pieces on Mars Rock and the people clambered up on the tvaantt wtitr tint tl.i 1 . . : - . . . the gospel, of whom we have all read, sit down and take care of those men on the beach, wrapping thtm in (!anue's, kindling fires tor them, seeing that they got plenty o food? Ah! he knew that there were others who would do that! He says: "Yon lerare men and women freezing iu the rigging of that wreck. - Boys, launch the boat:" And now I see the oar blades bend under tho strong pull; but before they reach tho rig .. ging a woman- is frozen and dead. She was washed of, poor thing! Put ha say.s: "There is a man to save," and ha crioso.it: "Hold on rive minutes longer and 1 will save you. Steady! Steady! Hive me your hand. Leap into 'the lifeboat. Thank God, he is savel" f there are those here to-day who are safo 0:1 the shore of God's mercy, but I sea there are some who are freezing in the rigging of sin, and surrounded by perilous storms. Pull awav. mv lads! Let us rearh them Alas. one is washed o!T and gone! The. o is one more t3 be saved. Let us push out for that one. "Clutch the rope, O dying man! Clutch it with a death-grip. St?adv, now, on the slippery places. Steady! There! Saved! SavedT' Jnst as I thoushfc. Vor Christ his declared that there are some stiir in the breakers who shall come ashore. ' Other sheep I have, which are not of this fold." ' Christ commands his nfinisters to bo fish ermen, and when I go fishing t do not Want to go among other churches, but into the wide world; not sitting along a small creek where eight or ten other persons are sitting with hook and line but, like the fishermen of Newfoundland, sailing off and dropping net away outside, forty or fifty miles from shore. Yes, there arc noa-churchgoers hero nhq will come in. Next Sabbath they will -again be in the religious service. They are this moment being swept into Christian asso ciation. Their voices will be heard in pub lic prayer. They will die in peace, their b?d surrounded by Christian sympathies, and D3 carr ed out by devout men to be b u ied, and 5n their graves be chiseled the words: 'Precious in the sight of the Ixtrd is the death of his saints." And on r resurrection day you will get up with the dear children you have aiready buried, and witn your Christian parents who have already won the palm. And all that grand and glorious his ! tory begins now. "Other sheep .1 have, ."i"iau!;aiu, iuo uoaeuijr suepoura is going to .find a great many cf his sheep among those who are positive rejectors of Christianity. I do not know how you cam to reject Christianity. It may have been through bearing Theodore Parker preaca,-09 through reading Kenan's "Life of Jesus Or through the infidel talk of some young man myour store. It may have been through the trickery of some prof es Christian man who disgussted you with religion. I do not nsk yon how you became so; but vou frankly teir me-that vou do reiect it. Yon do not bel-.eve that Christ is a divine being.athough you admit that he was a good man. You do not believe that tho Bible was inspired by God, although you think that there are some very fine things in it. Yon believe that tha scriptural description of Eden was only an allegory. There are fiftv things that I believe that you do not believe. AndVyet you are an aceonrnoJating real Everybody that knows you says that of voa u i saoura asx you to cto a tindnes3 for me or if any one else should ask of yon a kin! ness. you would do it Now, I have a kind ness to ask of you to-day. It is something that will cost yon nothing and will give me try the power ol Christ's religion. If I should come so you ana you were verv sick, and doc tors had given yon no and said there was no chance for you, and I should take ont a little bottle and say: "Here is a medicine that will cure you: it has euro! fifty people and it will cure von." vou would ssv "T hM denceinit.'' Iwouldsar: "Wont you take it lb obliee me?" "Well , ,ii l .y accommodation to yon HI take it," My friend, will you be just as accommodating xa matters oi reugionl , r " TiSraI? some, ,of you ' who have found out that this world cannot satisfy your souL You are like the man who told me after the service waiver: "I have tried this world and found it an insufficient portion. Tell ewSOmvth,n- l"!r" Yo have come to that You are sack for ths need of divine medicament Now, I coma and tell yon of physician who will cure you, who has cured hundreds and hundreds who were sick as you are. "Oh," you say, "I have no con fidence In him!" But will you try him! Ac commodate me in this matter; oblige me in this matter; Just try him. I am very cer tain he will cure you. Yon reply : "I have no special confidence in him: but if yon ask me as a matter of accommodation, introduce himin So I introduce him Christ, ths physician who has cured- more blind eyes, and healed more ghastly wounds, and bound S more broken hearts, than all the doctors cs the time of sculapius. The Divine Pbvtician is here. Are yon not ready to try him! . Will you not, as a pure matter of experiment, stats your case before him now! Holding nothing back from Him. If you cannot pray, if yon d not know how to pray any other way. say "Oh. Lord Jesus Christ this Is a Strang thinz for me to do! I know nothing about the formula of religion. These Christian mania have been talkinz so long about what thou canst do for me, I am ready to do what ever Thou command est me to ao. I am reaay to take whatever Thou command art me to take. If there be any power in religion, as thesepeople say, let me have the advantage Will you try that experiment! I do not at this point of my discourse say that there Is anything in religion ; but I simply say try it try it Do not take my counsel, or the counsel of any clergyman, if you despise clergymen. Perhaps we may be talking pro fessionally; perhaps we may be prejudiced in the matter ; perhaps we may be hypocritical in our utterances; perhaps our advice is not worth taking. Then take the counsel of some very respectable layman as John Hilton, the poet; as William Wilberforce, the states man: as Isaac Newton, the astronomer; as Robert Boyle, the philosopher; as Locke, the metaphysician. Thar never preached or pretended to preach; and yet putting down, oae his telescope, and another, his parlia mentary scroll, and another his electrician's wire, they all deilara the adaptiveness of Christ's religion to the wants and troubles of the world. If you will not take the recommendation of ministers of the gospel, then take the recommendation of highly respectable laymen. Oh, men, skepti cal and struck through with unrest, would you not like to have some of the peace which broods orci our souls to-day? I know all about your doubts. I have bean through them alL I have gone through all the cur riculum. I have doubted whether there is a God, whether Christ is God. I have doubted whether the Bible was true. I have doubted the immortality of the soul. I have doubted my own existence. I have doubted every thing, and yet, out of that hot desert of doubt, I have come into the broad, luxuriant sunshiny land ol gospel nope, ana peace, ana comfort: so I have confidence in preaching to you, and asking you to come in. However often you may have spoken against the Bible, or however much you may have caricatured religion, step ashore from that rocking and tumultuous sea. If you go away adhering to your infidelities, yoa will not sleep one wink to-night You do not want your children to come up with your skepticism. You cannot afford to dio in that midnight darkness, can you If you do not believe iu anything else, you believe in love a father's love, a moth er's love, a wife's love, a child's love. Then let me tell vou that God loves vou more than thev do. 3h! vou must come in. You will come in. The great heart of Christ aches to have you come in, and Jesus thU very mo mentwhether you sit or stand looks into your eyes and says: Ulhor f neep 1 nave, which are not of this fold." 3. Aeain. I remark, that the Heavenly Shepherd is going to find a great many she3p Cmong tnose wno nave Dean nung oi evii habit. Itmakej mo feel mad to see Christian roeoDle eive up a prodigal as lost There are thosa who talk as though the grace of God were a chain of forty or nfty links, an! after thjv- had run cut there was not bins- to touch a verv bad case. If thev were huntlntr and eot off the track of the deer, they would look longer among the banks ana the Dusnes tor tne lost game toon thev have re?n looking for that lose soul People tell us that if a man has delirium tre mens twice that he cannot be reclaimed; that after a woman has fallen from her integrity she cannot .be restored. 1 he Bible has dis tinctly intimated that the Lord Almighty is ready to pat doa 4'JO times: that is seventy times seven. Th?re are men before the throne of God wh have wallowed in every kmd of sin: but, saved by the grace of Jesas, and washed in his blood, they stand there radi ant now. There are those who plunged in the very lowest he 1 of abomination, who' for the tenth tims have been lifted- up, and, finally, by the Grace of God, they stand ip Heaven gloriously rescued by the grace prom ised to the ch ief of sinners. I want to tell you that God loves to take hold of a very bad case. When the church casts you off, and when tha club room .casts you off, and when society rnsfcs vou off. anl when business associate! cast you off, and when father casts you off, and when your mother casts you off, and when everylody casts you off. your first cry for help Trill send the eternal God clean dows Into ttwMlitch off your suffering and shanan The Good Templars cannot save you, although they are a grand institution. The Sons oi lemperance cannot save you, although they are mighty for good. Signing the temperance pledge cannot save you, although I believe is it Nothing but the grace of the eternal God can save you, and that will if you will throw yourself on it. A man said to me: ''Unless God helps me I cannot be delivered. I hav tried everything, sir; but now I have got into the habit of prayer, ano? when I come to a drinking saloon I pray that God will take me safely past, aud I pray until I am past He does help me." For every man given to strong drink there are scores of trapj set, and no one but the everywhere present God can see that man through. Oh! they talk aooui; me cata?omDs or japies,ana the cata combs of Rome, and the catacombs of Egypt the burial places under the city w h?re the dust of a great multitude lie but I tell you New York has its catacombs, Nashville has its catacombs, aid New Orleans i!s cata combs, and Boston its cata?omb3, and Phila delphia its catacombs, and every town and city neighborhood its catacombs. They are th3 underground restaurants, full of dead men's bones and all uncleanness. Young man, you know it God help you! Thre is no need of going into the art gallery to see in skillful sculpture that wonderful representation of a man and his sons wound around with s?rpents. There are families represented in this audience that are wrapped in the martyrdom of fang and s ale and venom a liviug Laocoon of ghast liness and horror. What ara you to do? Do not put your trust in bromide, of potas sium, or in Jamaica giuger, or anything else that apothecaries can mix. Put your trust only in the eternal God, an I ho will se3 you through. Some of you do not have tempta tion every day. It is a periodic temptation that comes every six weeks, or every three months, when it seem? as if the powers of darkness kindle around about your tongue" the fires of the pit It is well enough at such a time, as some of you do, to seek medical counsel; but j our first and most importunate cry must b& to God. If ths hends will drag you t? the slaughter, mako them do it on your knees. O God! now that the paroxys u of thirst is coming again upon that niau, Lelp him. Fling back into the pit of hell the fiend that assaults his soul this moment Oh! my heart aches to see men go on in this fearful struggle with out Christ There are here those whose hands so tremble from di station that they can hardly hold a book ; and yet I h ive to tell you that they Will yet preai h the gospel, and on communion days carry around the conse cratel bread, acceptable to everybody, be cause of their holy life and their consecrated behavior. The Lord is going to save you. Your home has got to be rebuilt Your phys ical health has got to be restored. Your worlUly Irutiiwsslms Kot to be reconstructed-, ihe church of God is going to rejoica over your discipleihip. "Other sheep I have which are not of this fold." While I have hope for all prodigals, there are some people for whom I am not so hope ful. I mean those who have been church goers all their lives,who have maintained omV ward morality, but who. n jtwithsta.ndi.iu- twenty, thirty, forty years of Christan ad vantagas, have neve.- yielded their hearts to Christ They are gospel" hardened. Asar mon has no more effect upon them than the shining of the moon on the city pavement As Christ says : "The publicans and harlots will go luto the kingdom of Goi before them." They have resisted all the importu nities of divine mercy, and have gone, dur ing these thirty year through mo ,t power, ful earthquakes of religious feelinz, and they are farther away from God than ever. After a while tbey will lie down sick, and some day it will be told they are dead. No hope! But I turn tp out siders with a hope that thrills through my body and souL Other sheep I have, which are not of this fold." You are not gospel hard ened. You have not heard many sermons during the last few years. As yoa came mto a religious meeting to-day everything was novel, and all the services are suggestive j uays. xxow sweet tne opening hymn sounded in your ears, and how blessed it is in this p'.ace! Everything suggestive ol Heaven. You do not weep, but the shower itf?? You sigh, and yoa hava no ticed that there is always a sigh in tte wind before the rain falls. Ihere are thoe here who would give anything if they eoukl find Jih the bitter past! Oh, the graves over which I have stumt lad ! Whither shall I BP Alas for the future! Everything is dark-sodark rodarkl God help me! ii3od pity me l Thauk tha Lo;d for thai lastut terance. You have begun to pray, and when a man begins to petition, that sets all heaven flymg : his way. and Gcd steps ia and beats back the hounds of temptation into the ken nel, and around about the poor wounded soul puts the covert of his pardoning mercy. TIber :on'eti!in7 fall. What was thatr It is the bais of the fence around the sheepfold. tfho shepherd lets them down, 11. - Aim nf tit mrtrmfcain tttond in; soma of them, tfieir tbtbo bram Dies; son m umu, nucu -- thVdogs; but bomading in. Thank Godl "OthCTsheep I havewhich are not ot tail fold." ' Essence of Bnsincsi Uw. : It is a fraud to conceal a fraud. Ignorance of the law excuses no one. Notes bear interest only when so stated. A receipt for money it not always cos lutire. Signature! made with a pencil are good ja law. The law compels no oae to d impossi bilities. Principals are responsible for the acts it their sg.nts. . No consideration is sufficient in law If it be illegal in its nature. The tavee should be distinctly nameo in the note, unless it is payable to bearer. A bill may b rotten npon any paper r substitute -r it, either with ink or pencil. A note obtained by fraud or from person in a state of intoxication cannot oe collected. Notice of protest may be sent either to ;he place of business or of residence of Ihe party notified. 'An indorsee has a right of action igainst all whose names were on the bill when he received it. The time of payment of a note must not depend upon a contingency. The promise must be absolute. A note made by a minor is void ; a con tract made with a minor is void ; a con tract made with a lunatic is void. If the drawer of a check or draft has changed his residence the holder must use all reasonable diligence to find him. An agreemeht without consideration is void; a note made on Sunday is void; contracts made on Sunday cannot be en forced. Each individual in a partnership is re sponsible for the whole amount of debt of the firm, except in case3 of special partnership. A note indorsed in bianK tne nam of the indorser only written is 'trans ferable by delivery, the same as if made payable to bearer. If the letter containing the protest of non-payment be put in the postoffice, any "miscarriage does not affect the party giv ing notice. If a note is lost or stolen it does not release the maker. He must pay it if the consideration for which it was given and the account can be proven. "Value received" is usually, and should be, written in a note, but is not essential. If not written it is pre sumed by law, or may be supplied bj proof. An oral agreement must be proved by evidence. A written agreement provei itself. The law prefers written to oraJ evidence, because of its precision. Checks and drafts should be presented during business hours, but in this coun try excejlt in cases of banks th time extends through the day and even-' ing. If one holding a check as payee oi otherwise transfers it to another, he hai a right to insist that the check be pre sented that day or, at the farthest, th day following. No evidence may be introduced to con tradict or va-y a written contract, bu such evidence may be received in ordei o explain the contract when it is inneet of explanation. The maker of an accommodation bil or note that is, one of which he has re ceived no consideration, having lent hii name or credit for the accommodation o' the holder is as fully bound to all otheJ parties as if there were a good considera tion. How General Lee Courted Death. Mr. Reagan gives me a new fact in General Lee's history which is not gen erally known in the North. He said that toward the close of the downfall of the Confederate government there was a very general impression among the high oili cials of the Confederacy that G-oeral Lee intended to lose his life on the field of battle. The impression was shared by the officers of Lee's army. General Lee never lo t an opportunity of placing himself iu a position of dinger. General Reagan says that he drove out from Rich? mond to see Lee on the day the princi pal battle of Cold Harbor was fought. As he came up near where he could see Lee's headquarters, he saw tho sheik bursting continua ly around his tent and plowing un the ground iu front of him. Some of the officers askel Mr. Reagan to try and persuade Gencr.il Lee to move his headquarters behind a piece of tim ber near by. All felt that h was expos ins: his life too much. Mr. Reagan said to General Lee: "I do not presume to advise any Gercral in the midt of a bat tle, but are" you not exposing jourself too much? Ought you not go back nearer youf reserve?" General Lee said he had no reserve. He had only, ope line of men He did not dare to shorten Vis lino for fear it would be turned, and did not dare to thin it for fear it would be broken. General Lee evidently sought der th many times during the c'osiag days of the war. That was the view of the Southern lead ers then, and is still believed by many. Washington Letter. Facts About the Stars. Alpha Centaurii, the leading star in the constellation of the Centaur, is the nearest star to the earth, so far as known. Its distance is usually placed at from 20, 000,000,000,000 to 29,000,000,000,000 miles from the earth. A star called Sixty-one Cygni is classed as second in distance, being put at 54,780,999,000,000 miles distance from our globe. Most of the stars, however, are millions of times farther away from us than these. Light travels about 186,000 miles in every sec ond of time, and yet with this incon ceivable rapid velocity it would take light about twelve years to traverse the space separating us from that star. From the greater portion of the stars light would bi many centuries in reaching us. That is to say tn these particular in stances, the stars which we see are not the stars as they exist to-night, but as they existed before Columbus sailed on his voyage of discovery, or even before the creation of Adam. The names of Miss Francis E. Willard and Mrs. Hannah White'i Smith, of this country, have been placed on the Execu tive Committee of the International Con '& e-s of the Social Pnr tan Feaeratio that met recently in London. FAR II AND HOUSEHOLD. Picking Pear. 'A Pear Grower" says in the New York Tribune : Some sorts of summer pears ripen well tipon the tree, and re. quire no other special care but to uso them as soon as . fully fit, for their decay is very speedy. Others are ; much the better for being taken into a cool room, to ripen as soon as the septum is formed so thit th-y will detach there. When, t.k-n into cool, still air, ripening is les rapid, there is less danger of rot at the cors, and there is more juciness and fla vor, and more delicacy of color. It is very common to see pears which are hard an I green in October, left on. the trees, or oir crwise neglected as worth less, when they are really capable of ripening into finer maturity of tender fleyh and. ikli flavor than any of the earlier sort. For it is a general rule with all fruits that those which require the lo gest term to complete their growtli reach the highest perfection and value. The very late sorts should be left upon the tree as long as the night frosts aro light usually till late in October. It is important to pick with care not to break the stem, but to sever it at its natural septum of partition. This leaves it scaled, but if broken nearer the fruit a leakage is opsned throngh which juice escape?, and the fruit soon begins to look shrivelled about its baseband loses qual ity and capacity for keeping. It should be kept covered so as to prevent draught f a'r, and in a cool place not too dry. Ripeness can be hastened by removing some to a drawer in a warm room, when usually a high color and flavor wjll be developed, if the due season has arrived. Packing and Shipping Efffrs. Eggs, especially in summer, should be not only sound but fresh laid. Stale eggs, though apparently sound, are sure to reach market in bad order, or will change so rapidly that dealers lose money on them. Alwayi ship at once while fresh. tTse strong, stiff barrels. For packing, use fine, kiln-dried cut straw or wheat chaiff. S:me Canadian packers use dry oat-hulls, which answer a good purpose. Never use oat or buckwheat chaff, and never use new oats, straw or chaff, as they sweat and rot the eggs in a short time. Place first a little long, soft straw or hay, two or three inches in thickness, evenly over the bottom of the barrel, then'about the same depth of packing, then a layer of eggs, laid upon the sides, evenly embedded in the packing, with the ends toward the barrel, about one inch from the staves. Cover the layer with three-fourths or one inch of pack ing, rubbing it well in between the eggs with the hand. Cover the last layer with about three inches of packing, and then the same quantity of long straw or hay as at the bottom, filling so high that the head must be pressed in by a lever or other mechanical power, thus holding the contents so firmly that they cannot shift or loosen in the barrels. In winter, to guard against frost, use more packing, leaving the eggs farther from the sides of the package. One of the chief causes of failure in packing eggs is using too little packing at the top, bottom and sides of the barrel. Do not c.owd too many into the package, and never let the. eggs touch each other in the layers. For an ordinary flour barrel seventy dozen are quite sufficient. Put about four and one-half dozen in the first layer, and increase one-half dozen to the layer up to six and one-half dozen in the two middle layers, then decrease at the same rate. It is well to shake the barrel gently after each layer is put in, first placing a light follower upon the layer. The count should be carefully made, and honestly marked on the bar rel. Cultitator. Recipes. Tomato Soup. To one quart of boil ing water add one quart of tomatoes; boil again and put in one teaspoonful of soda; as soon as it has ceased foaming, add one pint of milk, four rolled crack ers, butter, pepper and salt, and serve very hot. A Nutritious Broth. A quarter of a teaspoonful of beef extract, the yolk of an egg beaten up, a cup of boiling water, a little salt added and served with a slice of hot toast, makes a palatable and nutritious lunchoon, and an excel lent repast for invalids. Coffee Cream. Beat one quart of rich, sweet cream to a stiff froth, like the wh'te of eggs for icing; then mix with one-quarter pound of granulated sugar, and, shortly before serving, beat into it one cup of cold coffee extract, which ha-? b?en made by slowly filtering two cups of boiling water through two ounces of finely-ground coffee. Serve in glass dish with lady fingers or fresh sponge cake. - Veal Salad 3x one half teaspoon ful of mustard with half a "cupful of vinegar. Beat the yolks of two or three egs, with a little salt, until they are quite thick and light, then, stirring briskly all the time, slowly add two or three tablespoonfuls of best salad oil, and four tablespoonfuls of rich, thick, sweet cream. Then add mustard, vine gar, salt and pepper to taste, and soma very finely chopped parsley and tarra gon. ' Pour this sauce over a heaping p'ateful of cold roasted -teal, cut into piccss about an inch long and a quarter inch thick, cover tightly aud let it stand in a cold place for an hour or two. Serve on platter and garnish with sprigs of crisp parsley and slices of hard boiled egg. "It is worry, not work, that is killing me," said the tramp, sadly, as he tried to worry down a slice of bread and butter without any jam spread on it. "." Imrtaat m Merchant Tailr. M. von Keller & Co., successors to Keller & Ruhl, at the old Cloth House,? corner Ann and William Sts., New York city, are doing an extensive busines by means of furnishing to the Merchant Tailoring trade throughout the United States, complete sample collec tions of their Woolens in season, and receiving and executing orders received through tht samples. : Whenever a style has been sold ut. they notify their customers to that effect, to that the parties holding their samples are el ways properly informed as to which styles they can offer to their patrons. The Mer chant Tailor is thus placed in a position to show a large veriety of styles without encum tiering himself with a large stock. - We un der, tand that any Merchant Tailor desiring such collection of . samples can have same sent free of charge. i$'Wres3 Messrs. M. von Keller & Co, T . - A NEW -TRADE. THE ART OP MAKING NEW FUIV WTUKE LOOK LIKE .9LD. Catering to the Taste for the Antiqrvt) - Operators of tho Truquae Production of Old Pala tial Furniture Truquage, although term probably familiar to many of our readers, never theless deserves to rank among the finer arts of modern civilization, such is tha industry and skill and ingenuity with which it is carried out. Burns' cottar mother was chiefly admirable for the skill with which she "gar'd aulda things look maist as well as new," but the truqueur devotes himself, on the contrary, to the art of making things look quite as good as old. The connoisseur in furniture of the present day is well aware that, for certain important qualities of soundness, good workmanship and good taste, the "old is better," with valid reason also for his opinion. But the crowd, who have neither his leisure, hi3 knowledge or his experience, naturally fall into the hands of the scientific experts of tru qUage, an easy prey to the spoiler. The stock-in-trade of tha French tru- 1 queurand his English congener quite as expert a? he neM not be large. Wal nut juice which gives an agreeable mel lowness of tone and nitric acid are neither of them expensive. The latter imitates pretty closely the ravages of ants, and holes bored with a fine augur easily gives a worm-eaten appearance whica ap peals to the lover of the antique in carved furniture. The writer was informed by a workingman's wife that her husband was one of these solely employed in the boring or augur business ; but in Paris live worms are kept to do the work, and do it even better, and to order, which is more surprising. New oak can be stained by a solution of old iron in hot vinegar, which darkens it to a deeper tone; it is then carefully oiled and polished. The price demanded, however, is such that "bargains" can be boasted of by the in experienced, while really fine: work al ways commands its value in the open market. The unhappy pieces of furniture which have to date from the sixteenth century are severely beaten with heavy blud geons, which , serves to give them the worn appearance necessary to three cen turies of existence. A common device is to paint the ' panels of cupboard's, roughly carved oh the premises, with white paint; they are then dried in the sun, and, after keeping somemonths, are washed in potash, which remo-ves the paint in patche?, and the exquisite finish of the carving beneath is apt to be taken for granted by the buyer; who is aware that in the last century much good pan eling was thus painted, and preserved to our generation in consequence of all its pristine freshness of cutting an outline. Buhl of a very ordinary description is ornamented by French dealers with brass scroll work, after the designs of Gillot, who succeeded Buhl. Those who can be taken in by these mechanical repro ductions must be left to their fate. In porcelain and faience one can only say caveat emptor, so clever are the tricks by which even the learned are deceived. At Cage's manufactory at Versailles the faience de Nevers is reproduced to per fection; but here all is fair and open dealing. If the buyer prefers his pur chase "antique," M. Cage will bake it for him until the glaze crackers. It is further mellowel in a manure heap, and a slight extra charge is imposed. The special marks of favorite potters are easily imitated, and as much pains is taken with spurious ware, with intent to deceive, as would suffice to give value to real specimens The character of the early decoration is carefully preserved the even white of the Moustiers ware; the dead, dull white of the Marsellaise, and the careful finish of the old Delft potters. At Venice the reproduction of the old palatial furniture is a thriving industry, and the same at Florence; but it posses ses little or no artistic value. The ebony is black stained wood; the stipi are bone, and not ivory ; the shapes and patterns are, however, carefully copied, and the prices are not excessive, and gcod patterns are a distinct gain in fur niture; but the modern production will not have the lasting qualities of the old.' Ivory triptychs are manufactured at Ver sailles. The golden tint is gained by boiling in oil, then plunging into boiling water and drying before a hot fire, which cracks the ivory to perfection. These require a skilled eye to detect, as the carving is often meritorious. Even works of the highest art do not escape the truqueur. Clodion, the late eminent French sculptor, discovered that a group bearing his signature had been sold for 4,500 franco. Legal proceedings were instituted accordingly. It was brought to light that the work in question was due to one Lebroc, who had made it his study to imitate Clodion. Nevertheless, three eminent judges Millett, Chapu and Guillaume after careful examina tion, and in spite of the signature, de cided that, in their opinion, it was not the handling of Clodion. So the sales were annulled, and damages were not al lowed by the courts. Clodion's real name was Michel, arid some of his earliest and finest works are thus signed. The arts of truquage extend themselves even to lit erature. As long ago as the seventeenth century we find the printers of Lyons and Rouen simulating princeps editions of Racine and Moliere. The type, the paper, the colophons, ' all being re produced with unscrupulous accuracy, and then palmed off as genuine upon the unwary purchaser. The manufacture still prospers, aided with the photogravure process and the arts of fac simile. So also are old letters and autographs successfully floated, signed by Cardinal de Retz or Colbert, or whom you please, fetching a good price, and almost challenging scru tiny. The history ofcthe Shapira forgeries of the Pentateuch are fresh in the recol lection of our readers. They were offered at the moderate price of 1,000,000 ster ling. So also the famous verais Martin can still be bought at Paris, very like, but still not genuine; and clever painters, whose work is as good as Lancrets, can be found to figure as Watteaus with no mean success. But at present the' secret of the real Martin vernis remains as im penetrable as it is exquisite. In buying old oik furniture, the buyer thould notice the presence or absence of the ties' or cross-bars near . the floor, which are invariably in the construction of the seventeenth-century joiners. The forger is apt to forget this, . and thus' bimself brand the work as spurious.. Decoration was formerly the proper art' of a guild of Florentine artiste in the fourteenth century. Painters, jewelers engravers and metal workers lived is ft happy state of co-operative harmony, ao that a coffer or casket , might bear the successive impress of many clevr hands ; ts the enamel, the setting, the lock, the jewel work, wou'd each be executed by ui ftrtist-craf tman, skilled at Dello, or Collhii, or GhibertL It will scarcely do to contrast the revived mode of painting on furniture, as we behold it in the shops, with this delicate and masterly work. Yet many of our young painters might be wore employed than in spending real thought and putting real good work on articles of daily use, which we have come to regard, unhappily, as necessarily ugly because utilitarian. London Queen. Doctoring the Maoris. I was told that a real medical mis sionary would be likely to do an immense deal of good in New Zealand, on account of the great fancy the Maoris have for being doctored. They do not mind pain. If you give them one mustard plaster they are not contented; they must have one on every part that feeh uncomfort able, aud have been seen with as many as five or six on at onco. They are par ticularly fond of having their teeth drawn; that is their delight; and when a tooth is out they take it. outside the house, and get a stone, and hammer away till it is reduced to powder. They quite enjoy this revenge upon their old enemy. "I want you to pull out this tooth," a Maori said one day to Mr. Taylor. "There is nothing the matter with it." "Yes, there is; it gives me great pain." "It is not your tooth gives you pain, it is something else." ' 'But it is my tooth, and you must take it out. I suppose you tell me you won't because you can't." And he roared so loud to show how bad the pain was, and got altogether so excited, that at last the missionary agreed to take the tooth out on the full' under standing that it was done simply to please the patient. "There," he said afterward, "you see it is as I.said; there is nothing at all the matter with it," Then why did you touch it" asked the tiresome invalid. "You say it is quite good, and yet you took it out. Put it in again !" What was the good of reasoning with the man? "Open your mouth," said the missionary, "and I'll see what I can do." And, strange to say, the tooth went back into its place, and does not seem to have given its owner any further trouble, while the missionary gained great credit with the natives for being able, riot only to take teeth out, but ' to put them back again ! But it is little wonder that when the man turned round and said : "Now, then, take out this other one; -it must be this one huats me," the request was steadily refused. "Glimpses of Maori Land,."' How to Swim. - In nine cases out of ten, Mr. Sund strom says, a boy who wants to make a first clas and scientific swimmer should begin by forgetting what he already knows, so as to learn over again in the right way. The first thing to master is the breast stroke. That is the stroke which frogs use, and always have used, and it seems to be the natural way of .wimraing. Imitate a frog as closely as you can, and you will need no better teacher. But. a frog's legs and feet form one straight line, and his fingers are fas tened togetler so as to form a very fine paddle. Hold your ringers close together when you strike out so as to imitate the webbed feet of a duck; and when you draw up y:ur leg3 for a fresh kick, be careful to straighten out your feet, so as to avoid the resistance of the water against your insteps. Iu kicking out, strike the soles of your feet against the water, as though you were pushing yourself up in bed. . Spread your legs far apart as vou kick, and then, when they are fully ex tended, comes sn important point in swimming. Do not jerk them up for another kick, as ignorant swimmers do, b it draw them tight together, as though your legs were a pair of shears with which you wanted to cut the water. By thus closing your legs on the water you will add almost as much to your fpeed as by the first kick. Kick out as your arras are being ex tended for a stroke, and draw up your legs while making ihe stroke. That is the moment at which to get your breath, as the water is thca, smooth in front of you, and less apt to get into your mouth. It is well to accustom yourself to breathe only at every third stroke, as it will help you very much in rough water. It is im portant to draw the breth in quickly, and sobreathing through the mouth, which ought not to be practiced in other exercises, is good in swimming. Har per's Young People. Gush. Don't gush. Avoid extremes, superla tives and gush. Don't exaggerate the significance of trifles ; don't' describe mole-hills as mountains. If a rain drop wets your face, don't say that the storm was terrible; if a person is polite to you, or does you a favor, don't immediately conclude that he adores you and would die for you ; if, on the other hand, he seems somewhat uneffu live, don't infer that he hates and would like to kill . you. Appreciate all good things, but don't sentimentalize over them. Don't, run when walking would be just as well, and probably better ; and don't just pour yourself out when, per haps, it would be totter to contain your self. Gush is doubUcss enjoyed by an individual here and there who is himself effusive, but by the world in general, it ii usually received as one of the things to to endured with other afflictions. - atchman. ' The owner's photograph must now ap pear on all passports in Turkey. For removing dandruff ? and curing all scalp diseases, use Hall's Hair Renswer. - - Ayer's lAguj Cure is acknowledged to be the standard remedy for fever and ague. ; . WORDS OF WISDOM. Think much, speak little, write less. " a young man idle, and old man needy. Better it be done than wish it had been. r Report is a quick traveler, but not b ssfe guide. . The greatest glory of a free-bom peo ple is to transmit that freedom to their children. Conscience is a great ledger-book, in which all our offenses are written and registered. Those who act right walk with the stars, and with all the deepest processes of the universe. Education is the only interest worthy the deep controlling anxiety of the thoughtful man. Rural recreations abroad and books at home, are the innocent pleasures of a. man who is really wise, and gives for tune no more hold of bim than of neces sity be must. There is room for the exercise of char ity everywhere in business, in society and the church; but the first and chief est need of it is at home, where it is the salt which makes everything sweet, the aroma which makes every hour charming, and the divine light which shines starliko through all gloom and depression, A huge derrick-pole fell and severely in jured the foot of mechanical engineer K It. Hoyt at the New Orleans Exposition, and aftir only three applications of St . Jacobs Oil, ail the swelling anl pain disappeared. The entire assessme nt of Dakota T 11 itcry U J 30 033,600. The most astonishingly beneflcial results have followed the use of Red Star Cough Cure by those affected with throat and lung troubles. Price, twenty-five cents. Chief John Smoke Johnson died at his resi dence on the reserve at Brantford, Ont, re C3atly. Deceased was 94 years of age, b?ing the oldest Indian of the Mohawk Tribe. He fought in the American war of 1813. If vou have numbness in arms or limbs, hetrt skips beats, thunips or flutters, or ytu are nervous and irritable iu clanger of shock Dr. Kilmer's Ocean -Weed regulate?, relieves, corrects and cures. A protesional beggar died recently in Rio Janeiro and left a fortune of 300,00 . In every community there are a number of men whose whole time is no occilpied, such as teachers,-ministers, farmers' sons ana otheri. To these classes especially we would say if you wish to make several hundred dol lars during' the next few months, writeat once to B. P. Johnson & Co., of Richmond,. Va., and they will show you how to do it. There are six poets in the .British House of Lords, Tyson, of course, heads the list. Hoinetliins; About Catarrh. A great many people aro afflicted with Catarrh who do not know what ails tbenis and a great many more continue sufferer; who might be cured. Thickening of the membrane which lines the nasal passages, thus making breathing difficult; a discbarge from the nostrils, more or Jess copious, watery or thick, according to the stage of the disease; a sense of fullness in the head; a constant inclination to spit; and, in advanced cases, a dropping of intensely disgusting matter into the throat, are a few of the prominent symptoms of Catarrh. Deafness, inflamed eyes, neuralgic pains, sore throat and a loss of sense of "smell, are very often caused by Catarrh. All these troubles are cured by Piso's Rem edy for Catarrh. Relief is had immediately after beginning its use, but it is important that it be - continued without intermission until the catarrhal virus is expallod from the system and healthy secretions replace tho diseased action of the mucous membrane. Manifestly it is . unreasonable to expect a cure in a short time of a di ease that has been progressing for months or years. This quest ion of time is provided for in the putting up of Piso's Remedy for Catarrh . It is so concentrated that a very small dose is directed. The quantity in one package is sufficient for a long treatment, consequently the expense is a mere trifle, and there is no excuse for neglect nor reason for it but for getful ness. A cold in the head is relieve A by an" appl cation of Piso's Remedy for Cattrrh. The comfort to bo got from it in this way is worth many times the cost. The foliowing letters are specimens of those received every day, testifying, to the worth of Piso's Remedy for Catarrh: Allegheny, Pa., Sept. Id, 1885. Piso's remedy for Catarrh is doing wonders for me. I believe it will crre any case of Catarrh, if used according to directions. Mrs. F. JO.INSON. 49 E. Diamond St. Spring Hill, W. Va., Oct. 20, 1885. Enclosed find ono dollar for two packages of Piso's Remedy for Catarrh. THe sample packago received in June, gave perfect sitis factiou. GILL. ME33ER-. Harkopd Mlls, N. Y., Aub'. 8, 1885. I have used a liittle ovt r half a package of Pito's Remedy for Catarrh, and it has helped me more than any of the different medicine; I have used. 1 feel coniidmt that it will cure me. I can and do recommend it to others who are troubled with the disease. Rev. A. DAMON. Cyrus Fillmore, the brother of President Millard Filaiore, is still living in Indiana. A Remedy for I.ung DiacRse. Dr. Robert Newton, late President of the Eclectic College of the city of New York, and formerly of Cincinnati, Ohio, used Dn, Wm. Hall's Balsam very extensively in his prac tice, as manyof his patients, now, living, and restored to health by the use of this invaluable medicine, can amply testify. He always said that so good a remedy ought to be prescrib ed freely by eve'ry physician as a sovereign remedy in all cases of lung diseases. It cures consumption, and has no equal for all pectoral complaints. Henry Ward Beecher fa to lecture in this country next winter on Ireland.. Thepure.it, sweetest and best Cod liver Oil m the world, manufactured from fresh, healthy livers, upon the seashore. It is abso lutely pure and sweet. Patients who hav once taken it prefer it to all others. Physi cians have decided it superior to any of the 0teLAls "Vmket. Made by Caswell, Haz ard k Co., New York. Rapped hands, face, pimples ai ugh skin 1 cured by - using uniper Tar Soap, made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York n2Seea3 XPfP? to be exhibited in HorticulturPl Hall in Boston, in October- ''Xothing Like it Known." Among the 150 kinds of Cloth Bound Dol lar Volumes given away by the Rochester ' '! American Rural Home for every 1 Sipt?n totat8-PaSe. 41-. 16 year old Weekly (all 5x7 inches, from 300 to 900 pages, bound in cloth) are: 7 Law Without Law- Danelson's Medical) yers- Counselor, Family Cyclopedia. Boys'Useful Pastimes. Farm Cyclopedia. Five Years Before the" Farmers and Stock Mast. breeeders' Guide. People's H sicry of Common Sense in United States, w lryYard' Universal History of World Cyclopedia. all Naitons. Porrular His of fii vt- a.; . Reference: Hon. C. R. Pa Mayr affi ester, forl l years past Sample rarir2e Rural Ho Co., Ltd.. RocheSS? v v "S6'?? C01- has been climbed by 1 259 persona this season. ,'4oa PATENTS ham. Patent Lawyer. Send stamp for w v .t 8 uwie. 1 Uiso- .TCTTipe entire ituiara. anna- lTJa-m.irt. 5 J"", i P wo m EM If4liit ranwMi utrenctb. or ak. .r lnSralUea peealtor t tktr mrx, mkuU I tr mi m ST tJttu. M M nrCTTflMir w i wins,. This iadlctfi combines iron with pur tpu; . tonka, and is lnvlubl for Dimun ixct,n.ir , WvMCa and all who lead sedentary Mrm. Ill, ricbea and P rifles, the Blood, NtiumlbtrV the Appetite, sstrencthmn the .Utux'les atu Nrrvee la lact, tharounUIr lavlgaratm. Glean the complexion, anatnahmthe skin wn.tL It does Dot blacken the twth. cause headacba u. product) const Ipatinn "It r rm mrHir. Miss E. J. Thompho:, Rl C.4n" u A:p r. , mare, Md., sarr: " I hare snffrrwUjwfuvLv ith I male Weaxnew and received no real lrtint urnl i used Brown' Iron Bitters. Two bottles Dim cute J ma. 1 heartily recommend it." MRS L, O. CHAPLtTK. 1M Fourteenth St , V,. , : J tag, W. Va.. says: I suffered with emjhfltll neea. and obtained creator rrlif (mm the u- . Brown's Iron Bitters than any taedkine I eTer a: vi I Genuine haa abore Trade Mark and rrr tml rd i -,- . on wrapper. Take no other. Madti rly t , I UHOWN CHEMICAL. CO., HALTIMOiU, Ma Pensions v to SoMlrr 'ft !! . r Clrrulnt-x . ( 1 1 . AM .Mt'v.ViJ.iin:. t Ml III I I-A I I I'l 1 mvaiias tioiei saorgicai mm BUFFALO, 1ST- T.. Ore I zed with a fall Stiff r elgfctera . Kxpcrlcaced aad Iklttfiil rhyalclaas aad lara-cant for Ibe treatment of all Carnl DUeatcf. OUR FIELD OF SUCCESS. Chronic Naaal Catarrht Throat ao4 Lnu( Dlaeate. Llrer and Kldnr Disease, Bladder Diaeanee, Dtaeaae of Wdnien, Blood Dleoasee aud Ner oai Affeciloua. cured here or at home, with or without seeing the patient. Come and se us, or send ten cenfa m ptiuupa for our "Invalids' Ouldo Book" wbicU girt all particulars. , k-mJM v una uuifji uj per toucy, Norttirnnl Lonee, nnrf nft Itlm-hltl f'nrtllt lor Delicate Diseases. caused by Yoiithfnl Vol Ilea and Pernicious So)l tary Practices are epeca!" and permanently cured by cur Book, port-paid, 10 cl. In Btumi. Specialists. icupiurc, or urcci, radi- -. 11 1 1 . 1 . . L . 1 . . HMPTI1BF I without trusses, without ptn Guarnntecd. Book scut for ten cents In stamps. PILE TimiOItS and STHICTIHFI treated under guarantee to cure. One gent for ten cents in stamps. Address Won r,r s Dispensart Medical Association, 6ttt Ma!r Streetr BulTalo, N. V. xu9 irearracai vi many thousands of cases of tho diseases peculiar to Diseases of WnUFU I WQMBW-. If URlCn. I (ho Tnvn lids' Hotl n4 Surericul Institute, bns afs forded large experieuco iu Rdapting rcinedtea for thpJr cure, and PliiRCE'S Favorite Prescrioiion Is the result of this vast experience. It Is a powerful ICcntornflro Tonic aud Ncrvln-e, Imparts visor nnd Mi n!1' to the system, and cures, as If by rrt!i;i S-ru-corrlieo, or white," cs reunite flowing:, painful mcuMtrnntlon, mi natural suppressions, irol;ii;M or 1811108 of tlio iilcniH, hcmU irk. autovcrslou, retroversion, bcni-ins-dowu seusat ioim, cliroiilc onsc.. tlon, inflammation nnd ttl-ci-iiiin-i of tho womb, inflammation, paii: and tenderness In ovaries, internal heat and "female weakness." It promptly relievos nnd euros Nantes and weakness of Stosunr-Ia, Indiges tion, Bloating-, Nervous lrosti -alien, and SlocplcMKiicka, in cither r-,x. PRICE $1.00, OR 0 FOI1 ifjjS.OCv Bold by Druggists every whcrc.--rrM ten cents In stamps for lr. I'icicc'fl hirv; Treatise on Diseases of Woineu, illustrated. World's Dispensary Medical Association, tJU3 main-Street. BUFFALO, N.Y. SICK-HEADACHE; Bilious Headache, Erizziitc, C!o!il I n tion, !:! iceiftion, and union Attar tiff promptly cured "Ly "Or. Plcrco's I'lranniii .Purgative. Pellets. cents a vial, fcy Druee. $700 to sssoa expense, can be. made working fort! A j preferred wtn cairftirnis tir.-ir ov,r 1? i -n:i-i give 1 heir whIe tint-? 1 th- l-'i i 1 Spare moments may be protiljibly sIho. A few vacancies in town-i nn-t-'i !t B. F. JOHNKt N V. '." 10N Main Si., Uk-hmo., 1, V. Skunk, Raccoon, &ViinW no all ot;iT Raw Kurs Hor-i; iP ''KICKS, s. xv f.,r-l,T-.jt. 1. BOI tJHTON, II U ,11 I l :."vr;... DR. KILMER'S Ofio of. every five meet lias some fena JJeartHiseascnn'l i .- in st:mt danger of Ai"-i'i-fcUiock or Sudden J leat ii Tina Keiuwiy ii ;'u;::i' . r,tvfs rorrr-cl: 1 '-i f IT i ronareil rt It. la.. MeTKyKAity, i;ii:t! fit.ii.t' - UUiusT0 1tertimn'--iii ri LADIES A new and' reliable 'compila tion of l.Otrf) CookijV' aii'l Hfiltimr Hm'imtwh. Tii.'iik'd "II receipt of 25 cents in stamp. A(Mr ss. t;l:o. u. n k.i. 1.0 vs. . 28 N. Holliday St., Baltimore. AM. S N r 3 CIS, WILL BOY A HOR BOOK (fully illustrated)" tolling Howtotinard Against eu in Ibis valuable aniauii. How t Dot f.ft.l lieu Avif. and iloiT to. Core DUean, with many Valu.ib Kt-ipes. Also how to toil the Age of your Hor-Be. No Horse owner thould be witb j . as tha information may bo needed any to save your animal. Sent postpaid fcr . cents' in stamps. " HORSE BOOK COMPANY, 134 Leonard Street, New York City a? m n v r 1 A D A Crat-elaxa tMeilourr rcttoa 'JtZ ;e tecoara tbnitn.ij of tha n." iaacomit. It i-tvi Kmcitah wort Jy 't n Ta n TT ,,.m villi BJ''-. 0 I 1 .Hi J; $l.oo I I LI! ill nil 3i r-jLti rtaa fru M m TR -Mst lUl IV iL. 1 IH fnst S,i'I5?BAWDGL,CKEB1,wrTnt'Xl-nTTOor, and will kP 'Y :tn Harriett atom. Tha new. POMMEfj BMCKERIa a r1"": ri.ii"C c"a!'J" uf li u a. a u ca uuuu Bewrif lir.i.".ttonn. None nrmiiim vr f Illaatratod rt. ... ir i i -.,. . iu .lot
The Anson Times (Wadesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 9, 1886, edition 1
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