o DR. TALHAGB'S Ml Preached in the City of Vienna, Austria, XI Is Subject 1 "The , Barprlaesj In f Tkttj "Behold, th)m!f teas not told me.n -1 Kings x., 7. . , . Appoarinfr. before you to-day, bit mind yet agitated with the sceuery of the Holy Land, tvom which wo have just arrived, you will xpect me to revert to some of the scenes 'once enacted there. Mark a circle around Lake Galilee, and another circle arouud Jer usalem, and you describe the two regions in which cluster memories of more events than in any other two circles. Jerusalem was a spoil of fascination that will hold me the rest of ray lifo. Solomon had resolved that that city should be the center of all sacred, regal and commercial magnificence. He set him self to work, and monopolized the surround ing aesers as a mgnway ror Ms caravans. He built the city of Palmyra around one of the principal wells of the east, so that all the long trains of merchandise from the east jrere obliged to stop there, pay toll and leave part of their wealth in the hands of Solomon's merchants. He manned the for - tress Thapsaeus at the chief ford of the Eu phrates, and put under guard everything that paecd there. The threo great products of Palestine wine pressed from the richest clusters and celebrated all the world over; o which in that hot country is the entire substitute for butter and lar d, and was pressed ""in urauuuea unm every tree in the country became an oil well; and honey, which was the entire substitute for sugar toes three great products of the country bolomon exported, and received in return fruits and precious woods and the animals of every clime. . He went down to Ezion-geber and ordered a fleet of ships to bo constructed, oversaw the workmen, and watched the launching of the flotilla which was to go out on more Ze8 vye9. to bring home the wealth of the then known world. Ho heard that the Egyptian horses were largo and swift,and long maned and round limbed, and he resolved to purchase them, giving eighty five dollars apiece for them, putting the best of these horses in his own stall and selling the surplus to foreign potentates at great profit ,. .. iie neara tbat there was the best of timber , on Mount Lebanon, and he sent out one hun dred and eighty thousand men to hew down the forest and drag the timber through tho uiuuuiAia gorges, so construct it into rafts to be floated to Joppa, and from thenco to be drawn by tix teams twenty-five miles across the land to Jerusalem. He heard that there were beautiful flowers in other lands. He sent for thent planted them in his own gar dens, and to this very day thero are flowers uma ui mm cny Ructi os are to , be found in no other part of Palestine, the lineal dennflnrlsLnra rt Vi 1 xl Solomon planted. He heard that in foreign groves there were birds of richest voic9 and i most luxuriant wing. He sent out people to catch them, and bring them there, and he put them into his cages. Stand back now and spa this lnnt t.mln nf camels ommg up to the King's gate, and the ox trains from Egypt, gold and silver ana precious stones, and beasts of every Hoof, and birds of every wing, and fish of every scale! Seethe peacocks strut under the. cedars, and the horsemen run, and the chariots wheel 1 Hark to the orchestral Uase upon the dance I Not stopping to look into the wonders of the temple, step right on to me causeway, and pass up to bolomon's palace. buildings on which the King had lavished the wealth of many empires. The genius of Alirara, the archtect, and of the other artists s bore seen in the long line of corridors and " h f?sPended gaUery and the approach to Jino wo una ourselves rimi.l n rnlIasf.iYi ' racenea winaow opposite tra- cened window. Bronzed ornaments burst ing tato lotus and lUy and pomegranate. Chapiters surrounded by network of leaves , in which imitation fruit seemed suspended as in hanging baskets. Three branches so ... Josephus tells us three branches sculptured on the marble, so thin and suhtla that the leaves seemed to quiver. A laver canable or. Holding five hundred barrels of water on six hundred brazen ox heads, which pushed with water and filled tho whole place with coolness and crystalline brightness and .umuui piasu. iea tables chased with chariot wheel and lion and cherubim. Solo mon sat on a throne of ivory. At the seating place of the throne on each end of the steps, a, brazen hon. Why, my friends, in that Piacei j y frto'ned tnair candles with snuffers iT mi they cut theu' fruits with knives ol gold, and they washed their hands in basins ol gold, and they scooped out the ashes with shovels of gold, and they stirred the altar itres with tongs of gold. Gold reflected in ;?lwafrl Gold flashing from the apparel 1 Ucld blazing in the crown 1 Gold I gold! gold! , - -'Of course the news of the affluence of that place went out everywhere by every caravan "liS7 yipg of every ship, until soon the streets of Jerusalem are crowded with curi osity seekers. What is that long procession approaching Jerusalem? I think from the pomp of it there must be royalty in the train. I smell tho breath of the spices wnich are brought as presents, and I hear tnO ShOUt Of the driver Anrl T cm fha Hnafc covered caravan showing that they como from far away. Cry the news up to the nalace. Thn Onun n a t all the people come out to see. Let the mighty men of the land come out on the palace corridors. Let Solomon come down the stairs of the palace before the Queen has alighted. Shake out the cinnamon, and the saiEron, and the calamus, and the f ranu' ' incense and pass it into the treasure house. Take up the diamonds until they glitter in the sun. The Queen of Sheba alights. She enters the palace. She washes at tho bath. She sits down at the banquet. Tho cup barers bow. The meat smokes. The music trembles in the dash Of the waters from thn mnltan coo Then sherlses from the banquet, and walks through the conservatories, and gazes on the architoc . ture, and she asks Solomon many strange , of the Hebrews, and she then and thero be comes a servant of the Lord God. , She is overwhelmed. She bagins to think that all the spices she brought, and all tho precious woods which are intended to b3 turned into harps and psaltories and into rail Ings for the causeway between the temple and the palace, and the one hundred and eighty thousand dollars in money she bagins to think that all these presents amount to noth ing in SUCh anlace. aitd Klin U nlmnct.aahnnta1 uuwuoni auu sne learns nrimir. t.h ro cr nn that she has brought thorn, and she says within herself; 4,I heard a great deal about this place, and about this wond3rful religion of the Hebrews, but I find it far beyond my h i ?best anticipations. I must add mora than fifty per cent, to what has been related. It exceeds everything that I could have ex- nocted The half the half was not told Learn from this subject what a beautiful thins it is when social position aud wealth eurronder themselves to God. When religion comes to a neighborhood the first to receive it are the women. Some men say it is because they are weak minded. I say it is because thfy have quicker perception of what is rihft, more ardent affection and capacity for subl iiner emotion. After the women have received the Gospel then all the distressed and the poor of bot h flexes, those who have n fnonds, accept Jesus. Last of all come th srreatly prospered. ' "? Alas, that it is sol If t here are those who have been favored of fortune, or, as I might better put it, favored of J - 1, Mirren lor all yon have and all you ex-j-- t to be to the Lord, who blessed this Queen )f 5-Uifiba, CVrtalnly you are not ashamed to bn fovml in this Queen's company. I am glad ! i:tl Chribt I.'s had His imperial friends i 't egiw l.iis-.aboth; Christina, Queen of i'i M-Tii 'eodorovna, Queen of Bus- i i; ' iic, J' "fiMss of France; Helena, the i -1 nv-' ,-r of t.'onstantino; Area . froTii S r frv"!; fortunfs, buiH:.M-j ; 1-aV j ii Oon. - ti.aoj.let.nd toditii tor the alleviation of the ' masses; Queen Clotilda, lending her husband and threo thousand of his armed warriors to Christian baptism; Elizabeth, of Burgundy, giving her jeweled clove to a beggar and scattering great fortunes among 'the distressed; Prince Albert, singing "Rock of Ages" in Windsor Castle, and Queen Victoria, incognita, read ing the Scriptures to a dying pauper, h .1 bless God that the day is coming when royalty will bring all its thrones, and music all its harmonies, and painting all its pict ures, and sculpture all its statuary, and architecture all Its pillars, and conquest all its scepters, and the Queens of the earth, in long line of advance, frankincense filling the air and the camels laden with gold, shall approach Jerusalem, and the gates shall be hoisted, and the great burden of splendor shall be lifted into the palaco of this greater than Solomon, Again, my subject teaches mo what is earn estness in the search of truth. Do you know where Sheba was? It was in Abyssinia, or some say in the southern part of Arabia Felix. In either case it was a great way off from Jerusalem. To get from there to Jeru salem she had to cross a country infested with bandits, and go across blistering deserts. Why did not the Queen of Sheba stay at home and send a committee to in quire aoout tnis new religion, and have tho tielegates report in regard to that religion and wealth ot King Solomon? She wanted to Bee for herself, and hear for herself. She could not do this by work of commit tee. She felt she had a spul worth ten thou sand kingdoms like Sheba, and she wanted a robe richer than any woven by Oriental shuttles, and she wanted a crown sot with the jewels of eternity. Brinor out the camels. Put on the spices. Gather un the jewels of the throne and put them on the caravan. is tart now-no time to be lost, uoad on the camels. When I see that caravan, dust cov ered, weary and exhausted, trudging on across the desert and among the bandits until it reaches Jerusalem, I say: 4There is an earnest seeker after the truth." But there are a great many who do not act in that way. . They all want to get the truth, but they want the truth to come to them; they do not want to go to it. There are people who fold their arms and say: "I am ready to becomo a Christian at any time; if I am to be saved I shall be saved, and if I am to be lost I ah all be lost." But Jerusalem will never come to you: you must go to Jeru salem. The religion of the Lord Jesus Christ will not come to you; you must go and get religion. Bring out the camels; put on all the sweet spices, nil the treasures of the heart's affection. Start for tho throne. Go in and hear the waters of salvation dashing in fountains all around about the throne. Sit down at the banquet the wine pressed from the grapes of the heavenly Eshcol, the angels of God the cup bearers. Goad on the camels. The Bible declares it: "The Queen of tho south" that is, this very woman I' am speaking of "the Queen of tho south shall riso up in judgment against this generation and con demn it; for she camofrom the uttermost parts of the earth to hoar the wisdom ot Solomon; and. behold! a greater than Sol omon is here." What infatuation the sitting down in idleuess expecting to be saved. "Strivo to enter in at the strait gate. Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, aud it shall bo opened to you." Take the Kingdom of Heaven by vio lence. Urge on the camels! Again, my subject impresses me with the fact that religion is a surprise to any one that gets it. This story of the new religion in Jerusalem, and of the glory of King Solo mon, who was a type of Christ that story rolled on and on, and was told by every trav eler coming back from Jerusalem. Tho news Coes on the wing of every ship and with every caravan, and you know a story en larges as it is retold, and by the time that story gets down into the southern part of Arabia Felix and the Queen ot Sheba hears it, it must be a tremendous story. And yet this Queen declares in regard to it, although sho had heard so much and had her antici pations raised so high, tho half the half was not told her. So religion is always a surprise to any one that gets it. The story of grace an old story. Apostles preached it with rattle of chain; martyrs declared it with arm of fire: death beds have affirmed it with visions of glory, and ministers of religion have sounded it through the lanes, and the highways, and the chapols, and the cathedrals. It has been cut into stone with chisel, and spread on the canvas with pencil; and it has been recited in the doxology of great congregations. And yet when a man first comes to look on the palaco of God's mercy, and to see the royalty of Christ, and the wealth of this banquet, and the luxuriance of His attendants, and the loveliness of His face, and the joy of His ser vice, he exclaims with prayers, with tears, with sighs, with triumphs: "The half tho half was not told me!" I appeal to those who are Christians. Com pare the idea you had of the joy of the Christian life before you became a Christian with the appreciation of that joy you have now since you have becomo a Christian, and you are willing to attest before angels and men that you never, in the days of your spiritual bondage, had any appreciation of what was to come. You are ready to-day to answer and say in regard to the discoveries you have made of the mercy and the grace and the goodness of God: "The half the half was not told me r Well, we hear a great deal about the good time that is coming to this world when it is to be girded with salvation. Holiness on the bells of the horses. The lion's maae patted by the hand of a babe. Chips of Tarshish bringing cargoes for Jesus, and the bard, dry, barren, winter bleached, storm scarred, thunder split rock breaking into floods of bright water. Deserts into which dromeda ries thrust their nostrils, because they were afraid of the simoon deserts blooming into carnation roses and silver tipped lilies. It is the old story. Everybody tells it. Isaiah told it, John told it, Paul told it, Ezekiel told ii Luther told it, Calvin told it John Milton told it everybody tells it; and vet and vet when the midnight shall fly the hills, and Christ shall marshal His great army, and China, dashing her idols into tho dust, shall hear the voice of God and wheel into line; and India, destroying her Juggernaut and snatching up her little children from the Ganges, shall hear the voice of God and wheel into line; and "ine covered Italy, and wheat crowned Russia, and all the nations of the earth shall hear tho voice of God and fall into line; then the .Church, which has been toiling and struggling through the centuries, robed and garlaned like a bride adorned for her husband, shall jut aside her veil and look up into the face of her Lord the King and say: "The half the half was not told meP Well, thero is coming a greater surprise to very Christian a greater surprise than anything I have depicted. Heaven is an old story. Everybody talks about it. There is hardly a hymn in the hymn book that does not refer to it. Children read about it in their Sabbath-school books. Aged men put on their epectacles to study it. We say it is a harbor from tiie storm, we call it lono. We, say it is the house of many mansions. We weavo together all sweet, oeiutiful, delicate, exhilarant words; we weave them into let ters, and then we spell it out in rose and lily and amaranth. And yet that place is going to be a surprise to tho most intelligent Chris tian. Like the Queen of Sheba, the report has como to us from the for country, and many of us have started. It is a desert inarch, but we urge on tho camels. What though our feet be blistered with tho way? We are hastening to the palace. We take all our loves and hopos and Christian ambitions, os frankincense and myrrh and cassia, to the gTentKing. We must not rest. We must not halt. The night is coming on, and it is not safe out here in the desert. Urge on the camels, I see the domes ngainot the sky, and the houses of Lebanon and the temples and the gardens. See the fountains dance in the sun and the gates flash as they opea to let in the poor pilgrims. Send the word up to the palace that we aro coming, and that we are weary of the march of the dosert. The King wiU come out and say: "Welcome to the palace; bathe in tWse waters; recline on these banks, Take this cinnamon and frank inconre and myrrh and put it upon a earner and swiriF jt befure the altar." Aud yet, nsy friend wnen heaven bursts upon us it will hi a greater surprise than that Jesus ou the throne, and we made liko Him I All our Christian friends surrounding us in glory 1 All our sorrows and tears and sins gone by foreverl The thousands of thousands, the one hundrod and forty and four thousand, the great multitudes that no man can num ber, will cry, .world without end: "The half the half was not told mo T NAPHTHA WORKS EXPLODE. UeuCaagbt I n the Debris and Covered With Burning Oil. At three o'clock in the afternoon om of the large thousand-barrel stills of the naphtha works at the Standard Solar . Refinery in Lima, Ohio, exploded with a terrfiio force that was felt all over the city. The still was located in the works at the east end of the grounds. The shock shook all the houses in the south ern part of the oity. At the South School building it nearly caused a panic among the children. The still was No. G, and it was being emptied when, in some way not yet explained, it exploded, tearing away a por tion of the roof. A number of men who were working near were covered with the debris. The oil immediately caught fire, causing considerable excitement. The men employed in other parts of the works came rushing to the rescue, and the work ot removing the injured was immedi ately commenced. William Culver.f oreman was found insensible under a pile of brick with a big gash in his bead and faea burned. Peter Devine, a brick mason, had his right leg broken in two places and was badly bruised and burned. The fire was extinguished without any great loss of property. HE POISONED THE FAMILY, Fiendish Revenge of a Seventeen year.old Boy All May Die. A fiendish and probably successful attempt Jo poison bis parents, brothers and sisters, was made by Ed Church, aged seventeen,at the family residence, one and a-half miles from Guyandotte, W. Va. One child,a girl, aged thirteen, is dead, and the twins, a brother and sister, are not expected to live. The father, Walford Church, the mother and a fourth child are in a critical condition. Last Friday Edward, the murderer, had a quarrel with bis father about a horse. The boy left home in a huff, and going to Guyan dotte, he purchased a quantity of rough on rats at Murphy's drug store. He tooic the poison borne and mixed it with a sack of flour in the pantry. Sunday night Mra Church set some dough to raise, and next morning prepared to bake the loaves, using some of the dough for biscuits for breakfast. Church ret used to eat the meal, but nothing was thought of this. In about an &onr or two Che tainily all became sick, ani r. Dabney, of Guyandotte, wassautfor. All his efforts seem to have been unavailing, and it is not improbable the entire family will die. The murdererfled from the nous j at the first signs of sickness among the family, and has not been captured, although the country is being scoured tor him. He probably crossed the river to Ohio. On Business. The Governor of Georgia had just dismissed a delegation of Prohibition ists, when a card bearing the name "Judge J. T. W. Madison" wrs hand ed him. The chief executive was very tired, haviDg been harassed with dry ' speeches, and would have sent down an excuse, but the high-sounding name or the card bespoke a visitor of impor tance ; so, wearily yielding, he told the porter to show the gentleman up. A few momenta later one ' of the most deeply colored gentlemen in the Stat Btepped into the room. 1 "Dis yerede gubner?" "Yes. What do you want?" "I's called on bizness, sah. Fs er jedge down " "I'ou are a judge?" "Yes, Justice o' de Peace down in de iwamp distriek." "Well, state your business with me as quickly as you can." "I'll do it, sah. Caze datf s whnt I come yere fur. Lemme see, now. Oh, yas. Some time ago, sah, I had er man named Sam Bly 'rested an' tried for stealin' co'n. I tried Mt myse'f and fined him four hundred dollars an'' six mnnts in jail. Dis wuz all satis-, factory, 'specially ter me, but de blame, lawyer he tuck er 'peal ter de circus, cou't. Now, sah, my bizness wid yon . is dis yere : Ef yon's got any 'fluence wid de jedge o' dat circus cou't, Iwush you'd drap him a few lines an tell him 1 ter send dat case back ter me. Now, is' you got much 'fluence wid dat judge?" "You old scoundrel, get out of here or I will have you thrown out. "Jest wait er minit, sah; jest wait er minit. I know dat nigger stole dat co'n, an' I know dat ho wants ter take er 'peal just so he ken skape de justice dat is atter him. Dar's anuder thing: Dat nigger is er mighty p'litical bother down dar an' de folks wants ter git rid o' him till atter de leckshun knows da does, er da wouldn't er promised me er hunnnd dollars ter send him np. Now, it's er gubnor's duty ter do whut de folks wants him ter do an' hoi' on, hoi' on, 111 go. Neber seed sich times ez dese comin' ober folks. Hoi' on, fur I'se dun gone." Arkansaw Traveler., Me Wouldn't Do. "Yon advertised for a waiter, sir; X should like the position." "Have you had experience ?" "About five years, sir." "In what hotel?" MIn no hotel, sir. I am a collector in the subscription department ot a newspaper, and I have been waiting about five yars for you to pay your ubscription." "You won't do; yon are too slow. Call with that bill to-morrow." The latest trust is that in dried ap ples. Give it plenty of water and it ig sure to swell. Pains and Aches In varloufl parte of tba bod, more particularly in 'Jm back; ihoolden nd Joint, are the UBWeloom Indication that rheumatism haa gained a foothold and you are "Ja for it" for a longer or horter period. Rheumatism U caused by 1 actio aold In th.t Mood, and is cured by Hood SorsapariUa, which nentraiiaei the acidity and eradicates every impun ity f rem the blood, "I suffered from acute rheumatism inducted by t ever sprain of a once dislocated ankle joint which caused great swelling and Intense pain. Onv bottle of Hood's SarsaparUta restored clrculatlo'i cleansed the blood and relieved the pain so that . am nearly well," U T. Hmrr, Springfield, Ma. Hood's Sarsapartlla BolU by all druggists. 1; si for fi Trftparedon py C. I. HOOD CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. ICO Coses Ono pefbr . An Editorial Necessity. . ; Ilouse agent Let me see. I hare a .yery nice vacant fiat, sir, on , Applicant Won't do, I don't want a flat. X must have a house, "House?" "Yes, with a garden.", "Garden?" , : "Certainly." "Um-well, now I think of, It. 1 have one place a little -out that might suit. There is a space of ten or fifteen square feet at the back. It is now paved with stone, but the pavement can be taken up easily enough." "That will do." , "All right. Fond of flowers, eh?" "No, but I've got to have some sort of a garden, you know, because I'm the editor of an agricultural paper." New York Weekly. 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A i V KrleslrkTtL ImiOisffikalQt, We have sold TAg G for man J'ara, and H has trivpn tue bf.si. of sv.ia--"larcnin. . Obi . . ) 1). ILDYCTTCftCO.. Sted jBoaringg, ilrasl a and iWim Bn. fn PEN t-'tf jtfr M 1 prmtrrib S '""sa,-' j dors Ills; ii A kernels. V 1 specific lor th X TO DAT8, 1 ol thin dlsott I 4trmatMl wsyn II. 11 A Good for every woman's need. Whatsoe'er her dime or creed, English, Yankee, Turk, or 8wede, " Moslem, Spanish or Egyptian Known in every land and tongue. Friend to women, old and young-, Round the world lta praise is sung, . " Pierce's Favorite Prescription.' Dr. Pierce' " Pavorifce Prescription Is a" fully compounded by an experienced phy sician, and adapted to woman's delicate organization. It Is purely vegetable in composition arid nerf ectlv harmless in anv condition of jthe system. Contains no alcohol to inebriate; no syrup or sugar to ferment iii the stomach and derange digestion, ' As an ' invigorating tonic, it imparts strength to tho whole system. For over worked, "worn-out." "run-down," debili tated teacher, milliners, dressmakers, seam stresses, "shop-girls," housekeepers, nursing mothers, ana leeoie women generally, vr, Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the greatest earthly boori; being unoqualed as an appe tizing cordial and restorative tonic. As a soothing and strengthening nervine, "Favorite Prescription" is unequaled and SCS Nm3 W ir bv llv, w PEILEIS. o a Q 0 w One tiny, Bugar-coatod Toilet a dose. Cures Sick Headache, Bilious Headache, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the Stomach and Bowels. 25 cents a vial, by druggists. . - : E5m Bui rv'- fit in Rin;,;if?TNS 7 v n I wjr- labor 2SRADHELD REGULATOR Cft ATtANTAni n pi r a or BEST IN THE WORLD U llbnwb g3T &rt tha Oanulne. Sold Sverywhera. OMC !TU1 V. BoolH-liNilB)r, nnslnrss Forms, KIC Penmanship, A rl h mtic hhort-band, etc., lhnrmihlT-tuiflit br MAIL. Circnlra iren. !rrat's l'sHre, 437 Mala Bt. Buffalo. N. Y. SI .'(SMI-ONE DOLLAR PER WEU irir wills cmia nm n WATPU euvn uuuu uulu iiniuu WRITI fOn -Kiel U1TANO CttCUUH L -. . V V- " -.'HI .! . R. HARRIS CO , HEADQUARTERS. 109 E. Favettv St.. Baltimore. Wd. Mention this paper when writini. Copyright liitsat. CDUITER'.'AXLE-' Sin W IL. Br. HI V, m-Zli Best Conab. Medicine. Recommended bv Phvslcians. Bl tisi 1 1 Cnroa where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to tho , vl fia taste. Children tai it without objection. ' By. drnggists. , h . 1VERY1AM HISJOWOOGTOR. By JjHAMILTON AYERS, A. M., H. D. This is a most Valuable Book for tho Honeehold, teaching as it does the ea&tty-distinguished Symptoms of different Diseases, the Causes and Means of Preventing such . Diseases, and the Simplest Remedies which will Alleviate or Cure. PAGES, PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED The Book Is written in plain, very-day English, and is free from tho technical term which render most Doctor Boolu bo valueless to the giinoralibv of readers. This Book w in tended to be of Ser viee in the Fam Uy, and is so worded a to be readily understood by alL OFJiLY 6O cents, postpaid. (The low price ouly being made possible by the Immense edition printed.) Not only does this Book contain so much Information Relative to Diseaaa, but verv r.ror erly gives a , Complete Analysis of every thinR prtaininp: U Courtship, Marriage and the Production and liearing of liealtliy Families; tOKCther with Valuable Iteolpo nnrl PronorlpUjuis, ijtlliiutloii of Itornnl?nl lraotleo, Corrccit Use of Ordinary Herbs. Kev Ecfition, Revised and Enlarged, with CoiiiplefD Index. With this Book in the house there is ,no excuse for not knowing what to do in ' an emergency. Don't wait unlit you have illness in your family before yoii order but aenV at once for this valuable voJuma. x i um wun oiXjTsr 00 ounTfi, postpaid. Bond postal notes or poit.go ataraps ot any denomination act Lirger th im 5 cenh boot: pub rjsfiixG jipus?:, isi u, gt., x y. r;tv is invaluable in allaying and subduing' nervous excitability, irritability, exbaus tion, prostration, hysteria, spasms and other distressing, nervous symptoms, commonly attendant upon functional, and organic dis ease of the uterus, or womb. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anx iety and despondency. It is the only medicine for the cure of all those peculiar weaknesses and ailments incident to females, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from, the manufact urers, ot giving satisfaction in every eat or price ($1.00) will be promptly refunded. See Guarantee printed -on bottle-wrapper and faithfully carried out for many years. For a Book of 160 pages on Woman t Her Disease?, and How to Cure them, (sent sealed in plain envelope) enclose ten cents, in stamps, to World's Dispensart Mkdical Association, 663 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y. Dr - Pierce's Pellets Unequaled as a LBVER PILL. Smallest, Cheapest, Easiest to lalte Ir rou wish , M , OOI (WifHlMSSOli REVOLVER tmmhsf on ot iho rolo- WESSOM bratod RMITII arms. Th finest email arrai ' firmt rhoino of all exiicrtR. m.nhfa.liirMl mm 1ia Btannfaotnrea in oaunre ;w ann 4-iiiul ain irleorrlouble action. Safety lismmerlcs and Target inodcilR. ConKtrticted -ntlr"ly ot aet ejanU Ity wroiilit steel, carefully inspexto'l for wort uanshpand stock, they are unrivaled for finleh, durability Bint iiccurncv. Donotbedeceiyedb cheap iriullenble rant-Iron- Imitations whioil are often sold for the trcnnuie ai-tic-ln and are not rmlv unreliable, but daiiirorous. The SMITH St WESSON Revolvers are all RtsmprA npon the bar rels with firm's name, axldn-ss and dates of patent and are inarnniiTil iwrfeet in tvery detail la- Sint upon having the genuine article, and if your ealer cannot supply you all order sent to address below wlU reooivo prompt ani careful attention. Deacrptivecatalotriia and nrliMS f'trninhed iiixn ap plieatou. SMITH & WESSON, f ar-Mention this paper. Sorlnglleld, Mm, tFTFR iii nruFRs Fin' nnMSULT S'ii North Fifteenth St.. rhtladelphla, I'a., for the treattnont of Blood Poisons, Skin Kniptlons, Kenrona Ckimplalnts, Eiicht's Mnease, Stricture, Impotency aud kindred (lineages, nasnntter pf Ions; standlnK r from whnt causrewfTfrtJrtnBV BTT'en days' medicine furnished by mall rnrC Send for Book on Ml' EC I A I. IMmcrsm. rtlCCs jV Vftlmvtilo Trentlne Olvlnar full information of aa Easy and Speedy care fru ts the afflicted. Da. J. C. norrstiXJefteron,Wleooaln. II A HIT. Only Certoln aaa) tiny I'liKK In tba World. J. 1.. bT SFilKftS, U N IT ; r