REV- DR. TALMAGE.
THE BBOOLLYN DIVINE'S SUNDAY
SESSION.
Text: The sun shall be turned into dark
Yiess. Acta ii., 20. -
Solar eclipse is here prophesied-to "take
place about the time of the destruction of
ancient Jerusalem. Joseph us, the htetonaa,
aays that the prophecy was literally fulfilled,
end that about that time there were strange
appearances in the heavens. ; The sun was
not destroyed, but for a little while hidden.
Christianity is the rising sun of our time,
and men have tried with the uprolling va
pors of skepticism and the smoke of their
blasphemy to turn the sun into darkness.
Suppose tt e archangels of malice ana horror
should be let looe a little while and be al
lowed to extinguish and destroy the sun in
the natural heavens. They would take the
oceans from other worlds and pour them on
this luminary of the planetary system, and
toe waters go hissing down amid the ravines
and the caverns, and there is explosion after
explosion until there are only a few peaks of
fire left in the sun, and these are cooling
down and going oijt until the vast continent
of flame are reduced to a small acreage of
fire, and that whitens aod cools off until
there ara only a few coals left, and these are
whitening and going out until there is not a
spark left in all the mountains of ashes and
the valleys of ashes and the chasms of ashes.
An extinguished sun. A dead sun. A buried
sun. Let all worlds wail at the stupendous
obsequies. -
Of course this withdrawal of the solar heat
and light throws our earth into a universal
chill, and the tropics become the temperate
and the temperate becomes the Arctic, and
there are frozen rivers and frozen lakee and
frozen oceans. From Arctic and Antarctic
regions the Inhabitants gather in toward the I
center and find the equator as be poles. I'he
slain forests are piled uo into a great wmnre,
and around them gather the shivering vil
lages and cities. The wealth of the coal mines
. is hastily poured into .the i furnaces and
stirred into rage of combustion, but soon the
bonfires begin to lower and the furnaces be
gin to go out and the nations begin to die.
Cotopaxi, Vesuvius, Etna, Stromboli, Cali
fonuan geysers ceatte to smoke, and the ice
of hail storms remains unmelted in their
craters. AH the flowers have breathed their
last Lreath. Ships with bailors frozen
at the mast and helmsmen frozen at the
wheel, and passengers frozen ln the cabin;
all nations dying, first at the nlorth and then
at the south. Cbi:d frosted arid dead in the
cradle. Octogenarian frosted and dead at
the hearth. "Workmen with frozen band on
the hammer and frozen foot on the shuttle.
Winter from sea to sea. All congealing win
ter. Perpetual winter. Glob of frigidity.
. r - l LI. M L. U I. w
ueraispoero wacKioa iu iiiU'Hma 'ft
chains of ice. Universal Nova Zembla.il
m, . i f a i : . V, .... X
1 no eartn an ice noe gnuuiug ngaimi uvum
ice floes. The archangels of malice and hor
ror have done their work, and now they may
take their thrones of glacier and look down
. upon the ruin they have wrought.
What the destruction of the sun in the
natural heavens would be to our physi
cal earth, the destruction of Christianity
f would be to the moral world The sun
turned into darkness. Infidelity in our time
is considered a great joke. There are people
who rejoice to bear. Christianity caricatured,
and to hear Christ assailed with quibble and
quirk and misrepresentation and badinage
ana narioquinaae. ji , i
I propose , this morning to take infidelity
and atheism out tf the realm of jocularity
into one of tragedy.and show you what they
propose, and what, if they are successful,
they will accomplish! There are those in all
our commnnities who would like to see the
Christian religion overthrown!, and who sajy
the world would be better without it I want
to 6how you what is the end of this road,
and what is the terminus of ) this crusade,
and what this world will be when atheism
and infidelity have triumphed ver it, if they
can. I say, it they can. I reiterate ; it, if
- they can. - j. I
In the first place, it will bel the complete
and unutterable degradation of womanhood
I will prove it by facts and arguments which
no honest man will dispute. In all com
munities and cities and states and nations
where the Christian religion has been domi
nant, woman's condition has! been ameli
orated and i n proved, and she lis deferred to
and honored in a thousand thing?, and every
gentleman takes off his hat before her. If
your associations have been good, you know
that the name of wife, mother, daughter,
suggest gracious surroundings. You know
there are no better schoo!s and .seminaries in
Brooklyn or in any city of this country than
the schools and seminaries for young ladies.
You know that while woman may suffer in
justice in England and the United States,
she has more of ber rights in: Christendom
than she has anywhere else. .
Now, compare this with woman's condi
tion in lands where Christianity has made
. little or no advance in Chinaj, in Barbery,
' in Borneo, in Tartary, in Egypt, in Hindo-
stan. The Burmese Bell their wives and
daughters as so many sheep. 1 The Hindoo
: Bible makes it disgraceful and an outrage
for a woman to listen to music or look out of
the window in the absence of er husband,
and gives as a lawful ground If or divorce a.
woman's beginning to eat before her husband
has finished his meal. What mean those
white bundles on the ponds and rivers
in China in the morning? Infanticide fol
lowing infanticide. Femate children de
stroyed simply because they fare female.
. W oman harnessed to a plow as an or. Wo
man veiled and barricaded, andj in all styles
of cruel seclusion. Her birth a misfortune.
Her life a torture. Her death a horror.
The missionary of the cross to-day in
heathen lands preaches generally to two
groups a group of men who do as
they please - and ait, where jthey please;
the other group women hidden and care
fully wtcluded in a side apartment, where they
may hear the voice of the preacher but
may not be seen. No refinement. No lib
erty. No hope for thi life, Ni hope for the
life to come. BJnged nose. Cramped foot.
Disfigured face. Embruted sonL 1 ow com
pare those two conditions. How far toward
thia latter condition that I speak of would
woman go if Christian influences were with
drawn and Christianity were destroyed r It
is only a question of dynamics. If an object
be lifted to a certain point and 'not fastened
there, and the lifting power be withdrawn,
how long before that object will Tall down to
the point from whjch It started! It wdl
fall down, and it will go still jfurtherthan
the point from hich it starte L Christian
ity has lifted woman up from the! very depths,
of degradation almost to the skiei If that
lifting power be withdrawn she falls clear
back to the depth from which she was resur
rected, not going any lower because there U
no lower depth. And yet, notwithstanding
the fact that the only salvation of woman
from degradation and woe is the Christian
religion, and the only influence that has ever
lifted her in the social scale is Christianity
I have read that there are women who reject
Christianity. 1 make no remark in regard
to those persons. I make no remark in re
gard to them. In the silence of your own
soul make your observations.
If infidelity triumph and Christianity be
overthrown, it means the demoralization of
society. The one idea in the Bible thit athe
ists and infidel moat hate, is the idea of ret
ribution Take away the idea, of retribu
tion and punishment from society, and it
will begin very, soon to disintegrate; and
take away from the minds of men the fear
of hell, and there are a . great many of them
who would very soon turn this world into a
ball- The majority of those who are indig
nant against the Bible because of j the idea of
punishment are men whose lives are bad or
whose hearts are impure, and who hate the
Bible because of the idea of future pun"sh
. ment for the same reason that criminals hate
; the penitentiary. Oh, I Lave heard this brave
talk about people fearing nothing of the
consequences of sin in the next world, and I
have made up my mind it is merely a
cowards whistling to keep his courage up. I
have seen men fiannt their immoralities in
the face of the community, and I hare heard
them defy the judgment day and scoff at the
, idea of any f uture consequence of their sin;
but when tbey came to die they shrieked
until you could bear" them for nearly two
blocks, and in the summer night jthe neigh
bors got up to put the windows down because
they could not endure the horror.
I would not want to see a rail train with
five hundred Christian people on; board go
down through a drawbridge into a watery
grave. I would not want to see five hundred
Christian people go into such disaster, but I
tell you plainly that I could more easily s?e
that than I could for any protracted time
stand and see an infidel die, though his pillow
were of eider down and under a canopy of
vermilion. I have never been abl to brace
np mv nerves for such a spectacle. ! There is
something at such a time so indescribable in
the countenance. I just looke 1 in u-son it for
a minute or two, but the clutch of his fist
Yts io diabolic, , end the ftrensth'; of voice
r
w so unnatural, T could pot eainra It
"There is no bell, there is ni bell, there is no
bell!" th man had said for slity years; but
that night when 1 looked in the dyinz room
of my infidel neighbor, there was something
on bis countenance which seemed to say:
There is, there is, there is. there is."
The mightiest restraints to-day against
theft, ajrainst immorality, against libertin
ism, against crime of all sort the mightiest
restraints are the retributions of eternity.
Men know that they can eseape the law, bnft
down In the offender's soul there is the reali
zation of the fact that they cannot escape
God. He stands at the end of the road of
profligacy, and be will not clear the guilty.
Take all id of retribution (and punishment
out of the hearts and mindb of men, and ft
would not be long before Brooklyn and New
York and Boston and Charleston and Chi
cago became Bodoma, Th only restraints
against the evil pavaons of the world to-day
are Bible restraints. I r .. .
Bappose now these generals of atheism
and infidelity got the victqry. and suppose
tbey marshaled a great army made op of the
majority of tha world. They are in com
panies, in regiments, in brigades the whole
army. Forward, march r-ya hosts of infidels
and atheists, banners flying before, banners
. tyhin) hiimvm insrribed with toe
words: "No God! No Christ! No punish
ment! No restraints! Down.with the Bible!
Do as yon please!" The
darkness. ,
fnmnt mairrti CTpa
mm turned into
army of infidels
and atheists! And first of ail you win aitac
the churches. Away with) those nouses of
worship! Ther hare been standing there so
long and deluding the people with consoU
tion in their berearem ents and sorrows. All
those churches ought to bej extirpated; they
hare done so much to relieve Ife
i : 1 V. ranarin!T land theV have SO
Jonheld P the Wea of eternal rest af ter the
Turn the St
narnrnm or I. nix ltis ut wtki.
tA.hfmacles into club ho
I'AtArs ana est. t buj"
the temples and
Away with
army, of in-
thvia rhnrhe! !
Foward, march I ye grpas
a,a ..- athalsti an.lnnrtl of
all they ssat-
,u u-Kwf KhrwnU the Sabbath schools
fiilM with bright eyed, bright cheeked little
ones, who are singing song on Sunday after
noon, and getting instruction when they
ought to be on the street corners playing
marbles or swearing on the) common. Away
with them ! Forward, march! ye great army
of infidels and atheists, and next of ail they
will attack Christian asylumsthe institu
tions of mercy supported by Christian phi
lanthropies. Never mind the blind eyesand
the deaf ears and the crippled limbs and the
weakened intellects. Let paralyzed old age
pick up its own food, and orphans fight their
own way, and the half reformed go back to
their evil habits. Forward!, march! ye great
army of infidels and atheists, and with your
battle axes hew down the iro3s and split up
the manger of Bethl-ihem. J i . .
On, ye great array of infidels and atheists,
and now they come to the graveyards and
the cemeteries of the eartty. Full down the
sculpture above Greenwood's gate, for it
; means the resurrection. Tear away at the
-entrance of Laurel Hill tbe figure of Old
Mortality and the chiseL On, ye great army
of infidels and atheists, into the graveyards
and the cemeteries; and! i where you see
'Asleep in; Jesus," cut it away, aod where
you find a marble story bf heaven, blast it,
and where you And over a little child's grave:
'Suffer little children tq come un,to me,"
substitute the words ,'de'usion'1 and 'sham,'
and where you find an angel in marble,strike
on! the wings,ana wnen you come w a iamuj
vault, chisel on the door:
forever." s
'Dead once, dead
Rnt on. ve crreat army
of infidel3 and
atheists, on!. They will attempt to scale
heaven. There are heights to be taken. Pile
hill on hUl and Pelion upon Ossa, and then
they hoist the ladders against ths walls of
heaven. On and oa until they blow up the
foundations of jasper and (the gates of pearL
They charge up the steep. Now they aim
for the throne of him who liveth forever
and ever. Tbey would take down from their
high place the Father, the Son, the Holy
Ghost. "Down with them!" they say.
Down with them fromjthe throne!" they
say. "Down forever I Down out of sight 1
He is not God. He has no right to sit there.
Down with him! ; Down with Christ!"
A world without a haad, a universe with
out a king. Orphan constellations. Father
lea galaxies. Anarchy supreme. A de
throned Jehovah. An Assassinated God.
Parricide, regicide, deicide. That ia what
tbey mean. That is whan they will have, if
they can, if they can, if they can., Civilisa
tion hurled back into semi-barbarism, and
semi-barbarism driven back into Hottentot
savagery. The wheel of progress turned the
other way, and turned to i aru the dark ages.
The clock of the centuries put back 2000
years. Go back; you Sandwich Islands,from
your schools and from your colleges, and
from your reformed coniLtion, to what you
W mt D . .
were in 1820. when th
missionaries first
came. Call home the
missionaries from
India and overthrow
their 2000 schools
where they are trying
heathen, and scatter
to educate the
the 140,000 lit-
tie children that th
ey have gatnerea
out of barbarism into
civilization. uo-
literate all the work o
Dr. Duff In India,
of David Abeel in China, of Dr. King in
Greece, of Judswn in feurmata, of David
Brainard amid the American aborigines, and
send home the three thousand missionaries
of the cross who are toilihg in foreign lands,
toiling for Christ's sake,) toiling themselves
into the grave, i Tell tttae three thousand
man of Gol that they are of no usa. Bend
horns the medical missionaries who are doc
toring the bo lies as well as the souls of the
nat ions. Go home, London missionary so
ciety. Go home, American bard of foreign
missions. Go home, ye (Moravians, and re
linquish back into darkness and squalor and
filth and death the nations wnom ye nave
begun to lift. X
Oh, my friends, there
a nefarious plot on eartl
delity and atheism btfv
tias never been such
as that which inft-
i planned. We were
because of the at-
shocked a few years ago
tempt to blow up the pi
rliament houses in
London; out ii lnnaeiity ana atneism suc
ceed in their attempt they will dynamite a
world. Let them have their full way and
this world will be a habitation of three rooms
a habitation with juit three rooms; the
one a madhouse, another a lazaretto, the
other a pandemonium. (These Infidel bands
of music have only just 1 begun their concert
yea, they have only
Instruments. I to-day
?n strinzin? tneir
ut before you their
whole programme from
In the theatre the tra
!e;inning unto close,
edy comes first and
the farce afterward: (but in this infidel
drama of death the farce comes first and the
tragedy afterward, And in the former athe
ists and infiiels laugh and mock, but in the
latter God himself will laugh and mock. He
says so: 'I will laugh at their calamity and
mock when their fear cometh."
From such a chasm of individual, national,
world-wide ruin, stand ? back. Oh. young
men, stand back from that chasm! You tee
the practical drift of my sermon. 1 want
you to know where that) road leads. Stand
back from that chasm or ruin. The time is
going to come tyou and I may not live to see
it, but it will come, just aa certainly as there
is a God, it will come) ben the infidels and
the atheists who openly) i and out and out
ami above board preach and practice in
fidelity and atheism wjil be considered as
criminals against society, as they are
now criminals against God. Society
will push out the leper, and the wretch with
soul gangrened and ichorous and vermin
covered and rotting; apart with bis beastiality,
will be left to die in the (ditch and be denied
decent burial, and anea will come with
spades and cover up the carcass where it
falls, that ft poison not the air, and the only
text in all the Bible appropriate for the fu
neral sermon will be Jerfroiah xxii. , 19: "Ii
shall be buried with the burial of an ass.'
A thousand voices cprne up to me this
morning, saying: Do yon really think in
fidelity will succeed Has Christianity re
ceived its death blow f and will the Bible
become obsolete r Ye$. when the smoke of
the city chimney arrests and destroys the
noonday sun. Joseph us says about the time
of the destruction of Jerusalem tne sun was
turned into darkness; but only the clouds
rolled between the sun and the earth. The
sun went right oa It is the same sun, the
same luminary as when at the beginning it
shot out like an elect rjs spark from Gods
finger, and to-day it is warming the nations,
and to-day it is gilding the sea, and to-day
it is filling the earth with light. The same
old ran, not at all worn nut, though its light
stepione hundred aod ninety million miles a
second, though its pulsations are four hun
dred and til ty trillion undulations in a sec
ond. Same sum, with beautiful white light
made up of the violet ami the indigo and the
blue and the green and the red and the yel
low and the jorange ihe seven bmutlfut
colors now iusfc as when the solar spectrum
first divided them.
At the beginning God Sssid: "Let there be
light," and light was, and light is, and light
sha'l be. So Christianity i rolling on. and
it is going to warm all j nations, and all na
tions are to bask in itc light. Men may shut
the window blinds so : they cannot see
it,-or they may . smoke) the pipe of specu
lation until they are shadowed under their
own vaporing; but the Lord God is a sun!
Tkis white- Lt5 cf the Goepel roait up at
J1 the beautiful colors at earth ; heaven
Siotet plucked irons JK5
SroietSSl
AU the beauties of earth aa d be ven broogbt
ot bVttorpiritual spactm m. Great Brit
ain uVoing to take ail Eurt for God. The
UniteFs are going fe take aU Ainerica
forGod Both of them tog ber will take all
come a piai.; ? rr 7
spoken it. Hallelujah, amd 11 .
., -j ' m. ;
- - - 0 ji -
Odd Names.
There re many EDgftsh namsas re
markable for their oddity. JIanj of them
it wuld be bard to classify, or to loah
any idea of thfcir origin. 3Iafjr jears ago
the following list wa taken from news
paper giving an account of a polif kal
meeting in. a suburb of PhiUdei'hia,
Slosfc.af them would seem like fictitious
names made up for some humorous, story:
Adaita Dialogue, Jacob Juvena'i, Jacob
Hollow bush, David Bfarndollfrx, John
IIoggerletz Anthony Ablo, George
Limebumer, Peter Fetters, Joan perken
pine, Petfer Luiensheets, Jolin Dicken
sheets, BarzellAi Flick, Frederick Ever
back, Nelson Swallow, Solomon Sell,
G eorge Crock. Jacob X igfctcap, - John
Winpenny, John KodenpHiar, Samuel W
Hex, Jacob Saatserman, Ji5charrJ Slaugh
ter. Samuel Ilsycock.
The f ollowinjj a miscellaneous selec
tion: Preserral Fish, Christian Grumb
ling, Syivanus Shugebottom, William
Sheepshanks, ft is told of tJie two gentle
men wearing t he last two names, happen
ing to meet in a. common friend'a house,
who introduced them to each other say
ing: VMr. Sheepshanks. Mr. . Shuffle
bottom Mr. &byxtlIebottcn, Mr. Sheep
shanks," e-ach seemed tonbtice the oddity
of the other's name, and thought that
their friend was jesting, endone of them
curtly asked: fcDo you intend to insult
us?" ' -r-: -
In Philadelphia, fifty years ago, there
were two dieting uished physicians, with
the characteristic names Physic nd
Ilartshorne, and. later, a dentist by the
name Toothakerv Among the California
teachers there was one by the name
liattan, a name' .not aa properly appreci
ated, now as it -wa uld have been fifty or
sixty years ago when the rattan was
the schoolmasters sceptre, anil the boys
got a rattaning for mischief or negli
gence... ; ' '.- '
Not many yeais ago there were in
Boston, ' New York and Philadelphia
four eminent Unitarian clergymen, by
the names Bellow&, Furness. Sparks and
Burnap. These lery and suggestive
names, were, in thus case, very inappro-.
priate, as none oil' them were believers
in Gehenna, amd all of them with char
acters the opposite of their names.
Not loDg ago tjiere was a sign in St.
Louis bearing the inscription t "Swindler,
Dealer in Beat "Estate," a name which
might have . deterred a ; superstitious
person from investing his money With
'one whose charrscter might accord with
his name: Chicago Current.
The Richest Jttan in the World. ,
Claus Sprecklesi is the richest man in!
the world. Speckles resides in Sanf
Francisco. Thirty years ago Sprecklesj
was working for 50 i a month. He ir
now worth $200, 000,000, which givesj
him $175,000,000 ia excess of Jay Gould,
and $150,000,000 isv excess of Vander
bilt His three sons are worth $50,000,
000 ; total for the w hole family, $350, -000,000.
. Spreckles has, single-handed,
built up the Hawaiian: Island sugar
trade under the reciprocity treaty.
Within ten years the production there
has increased from 20,000 tons a year to
120.000 tons for the present year. A
the island progressed so did the Spreck
les family. They raised sugar, then re
fined it, making large profits out of each
transaction. They built a large fleet ot
sailing vessels for trading to and from
Honolulu, finally budding, at Cramp's
shipyards in Philadelphia! two of the
latest and best equipped American steam
ers afloat. They have since added two
more steamers to their fleet, each o
which is 3,500 tons burden (exclusive
of cOal), and have extended their trade
to . Australia, now holding a contract
with the Colonial governments for car
rying the mails between San Francisco
and Sydney. They also control di reel
lines of sailing i vessels with England,
New York, New South; Wales, San
Francisco and San Diego." One of the
numerous plantations on the islan'ds
ranked as the largest and best equipped
in the world, turning out 16,000 tons of
raw sugar in a year. .They are now en
gaged in the establishment of beet sugar
factories throughout California. JYew
York Sun. '
Saw the Joke.
Mrs. 'Winks (looking up from paper)
- Ha, ha, ha I That's too funny. The
idea ! t Ha, ha, ha 1 Oh, derr, I'll hurt
myself laughing."
Mr. Winks Well, I've always be
lieved that a woman never could see a
joke, but you seem to have got one
through jour head this time."
"Humph! I'd like to see a joke I
couldn't see throush."
"Head that one i
"Let me see. Where is it? Oh, here
it is: Bridget, said the lady of the
house severely Ha, ha, ha! Isn't it
f unny t Severely ! The idea of the lady
of the house daring to speak to the
cook 'severely.'. He, he, he; ,
"But what's the rest ? V
T didnt jjet nJ further.!' Omahm
World.
Botanic Blood Balm.
The puerile effort on the the part of any one
to decry the inestimable value of iopeix in mod
ern medicine may Receive and saklead ihe Igno
rant, but is truly ridiculous to physicians and
other etndentsof medical science. It is a base
characteristic of quackery to promulgate such
falsity, and with financial gain an only object, is
indeed disreputable, i In the cure 'of the worst
form of Blood PoiaonJ Iodide of rot ash is tndi
pcnsable a fact acknowledged by all intelligent
phyKdans-Hxmibined (as in the case of B.
B. B.) with certain vegetable ingredients every
fault of the drug is removed, and it does not dis
order the stomach or clog the kidneys.
The following testimonial comes unsolicited : !
Kzxxesaw, Oa, Sept. 11, 1SS7. V
B. B. B. Company Mi Dejl Sa : We had
all despaired of my wife ever recovering. Her
mouth was one solid nicer, and for two months
er more her body was broken out with sores un
til she lost a beautiful bead of hair, also eye
lahes and eye-brows ; in fact, she seemed to be
a complete wreck ; Sow comes the great secret
which I want all the world io know ; That three
bottles of Blood Balm medicine has dope tle
work which would soond incredible to any oite
wbo did not know it to be so. To-day my wife i.
perfectly, healthy, cd has a three-months' old
babe, also perfectly healthy.
Very respectfully, IL L. Cassidt.
Dn
R3D
M EXCITING WOLF CHASE.
A PAVOSITE SPORT OF nUXTEZLS
X2T THE WEST.
The Desperate FJght of a Wolf to
Save HerYounr From the Jawa
of the Hounds. . ;
- "Chasing wolves with horses and
bounds where these animals abound in
I me west," eaia iien;amin need, ot Ly
coming Co., PentL.Trho recently returned
from a 30 years residence in the North
western Territories, "has grown to be,
next to coursing antelope with grey-?
hounds, the favorite sport of the hunters
for pleasure. The wolf chase is especially
popular in Idaho. In a fair stand-up
fight a grayt wuite or black wolf will
whip any dogV no matter how bold or
game he is. These species of the wolf
know their own powers, and seem to like
nothing better than to have a set-to with
a dog. : I never knew a gray wolf to run
from a single dog in all my experience.
I was one of the patty that camped
between the headwaters of the McArtnur
and Malado Hirers, near the base of the
Salmon Mountains, in Idaho, in the dajs
when buffalo was still plenty, but wolves
were so numerous in that region, and we
found the chase of them on horseback so
exciting, that many a buffalo owed his
life at our hands to that wolfish presence.
I remember in particular one wolf
hunt we had while encamped in the Sal
mon IIoud tain region We were mount
ed on the be.t butfalo-hunting horses we
could buy, and when a horse is a good
buffalo-hunter be-is as good as a horse
can be. Our pack of hounds was large
and every dog a thoroughbred foxhound.
The season was early Fall. Cur route
led to the rocky rises of the Salmon
range, which 'are famous lurking places
for the gray wolf, the rocks ana dense
undergrowth giving them the best of
shelter, and the numerous streams afford
ing them unusual opportunities to cap
ture game animals that seek the water
to drink and feed on the tender roots
; and plants that grow on the borders of
the streams, . ; T
"We had ridden several miles through
this rough country before the dogs suc
ceeded in starting a wolf, but at ' last
they gave tongue in a thicket off to the
right, and quickly following the excited
braying a very large but gaunt she wolf
with a litter of whelps tumbling after
her broke into the opening. She dashed
past us like a flash, and her litter of
young ones huddled close too; her, evi
dently finding no difficulty in keeping
pace with her, although she went Ike the
wind. As the wolf passed us she was so
close that a pistol shot could have
dropped her, but not a man raised his
hand against her.- There was a stretch
of prairie probably one eighth of a mile
in width between the thicket where
the wolf had been started and a dome
like but not steep mound or hillock. :
She dashed straight for the hillock, and so
swift. wa? her gait that she bad disap
peared around it before the dogs broke
from,, the brush to take up-the trail.
lhey followed it in, lull
cry, and we
spurred our horses to the
hillock, and
up its sides to the summit
to discover
taken. The
the direction the wolf had
killing pace she had cut out was more
than her pups could maintain, as we dis
covered oh reaching : the top of the
"mound, as the. old wolf had slackened
her speed to suit that of her youngy- two
of which had fallen behind and were
making their way with difficulty.
"The dogs dashed around the hillock
and were quickly clearing the space be
tween them and the young wolves that
had dropped so far in the rear that it was
only a question of a few seconds when
the jaws of the leading ' hounds of the
pack would close upon the"m, and their
future as prowling pests would be de
stroyed. Although the mother wolf
governed her pace to suit that of those
of the litter that had -kept by her, it was
plain that it was only by great effort
that they were able to move even at that
speed. The old wolf could easily have
escaped by abandoning her interesting
family, but, wolf as she was, she was a
true and brave mother. She evidently
recognized the fact that the situation
was critical, and she changed her tactics
in a surprising manner.' She suddenly
turned in her tracks and charged back
upon the hound that led the pack by
several paces and was almost upon the
wolf cub that was furthest in the rear.
The winded litter kept on at the best
speed they could make. The sudden
charge of the old wolf took the hound so
by surprise that before he could make
any show against her at all she had him
by the throat, and with one terrible
snap of her strong jaws severed wind
pipe and jugular vein, and threw
the dog from her as dead as a stone.
The two young ones kept on in a totter
ing way for a few paces and fell ex
hausted to the ground. The old wolf,
seeing that it wai impossible 'to revive
them, dashed on again and placed her
self in the midst of the family that was
left to her and by various - devices tried i
to urge them on and encourage them.
But it was useless. They fell behind
singly and in pairs until only one, with
more vigor than - the rest, was left
struggling along with the mother.
."Only one result could be foreseen
from the situation, but the old wolf
resolved to make one more attempt to
save her youngs ones. The dogs were
almost upon ber, and suddenly she
struck off at right angles from the direc
tion her weary cubs were taking, and
sped away over the prairie like a race
horse, passing, the hounds almost under
their noses. . She could "have but one
design in thus apparently abandoning
her cubs and that was a heroic measure.
She hoped to divert the dogs from them
by leading them in a chase after herself
and she succeeded. The pack followed
her, and now that the chase was in we
dashed after the hounds. But it was a
short one, as the wolf wavered in her
course, apparently drawnby her maternal
instinct back to her abandoned young,
and she gradually turned and bore back
toward the spot where she had left them.
The dogs headed her off, and before we
reached the scene of the ensuing conflict
the wolf had been torn to pieces, but
not before she had ripped another of the
pack to death, leaving us but four with
which to seek sport for the rest of the
day. Xob York Tlm?$.
1 Shoetins Trout vTIth a Gna.
i Jlr. llatcher says: Whenever I felt ai
if I wanted a trout for dinner I would
stroll over to the pond and bring one
down, or up rathei, with my rifle. Be
tween 11 and 12 o'clock: at midday are
the hours when they can be ahot, as for
i oaie unexplained reason thej come up
near the surface. 1 alnays aim for tbe
head. .Jf o, the ball never penetrates the
head or any portion of the fish. It is
seldom that even a scale is disturbed.
The rifle ball sever touches them. Tbey
aro killed apparently by concussion.
The water, 1 think, flatten the balL
Immediately upon being shot they rice
to the surface, floating upon their backs.
I never take the trouble to fish with a
hook, preferring my rife." AU.ah.Ux CV
ttiiutisn. j-
-Early linear ii oaa of the rh trarlcr.
Iltid of tfcnoss who lira 1?? 1?
scientific and industrial.
A French workman has succeeded ia
producing artificial silk. .,
A repeating cannon invented by Gru
son has been tried at Drosschart, in Bel
gium, which can throw twentj-seven
shots a minute.
A new war vessel has been ordered by
the British Admiralty, which is to be.
named the Blake, of 000 tons burden
and 20,000 horse power.
Pin statistics prove that each inhabi
tant of the United States consumes one
pin per day. This makes necessary the
daily manufacture of sixty millions of
pins.
About 200 towns throughout the
United States are endeavoring to have
electric lights; in about fifty towns com
panies are beiag organized for electric
roads. ;
A Vienna en gnieer named Fisher hat
just taken out a patent for a pew smoke
abating process. He proposes, by means
of electricity, to condense the col id part
of the smoke as it arises from the coal,
the carbon thus solidified falling back
into the furnacev
The bacillus of cancer is hard to find,
nd Dr. Sender reports to the Berlin
Clinical Society that he has been unable)
to verify observations claimed to have
revealed the organism. Cancer appears
to be peculiar to man, as it has never
been inoculated in the lower animals.
The new machine just invented for
printing postal cards prints them from
the roll, and turns them out in packages
ready for delivery. It runs them oflTat
the rate of 800 a minute, with paper
bands pasted around each twenty-five.
It is said one man can look after two
machines. -
"Dry rot the enemy of builders is
a contagious disease of timber. Good
authorities state that it can be carried by
saws and other tools which have been in
contact with infected wood, and that
such transition and impregnation is often
the cause of the mysteriously rapid decay
of originally sound timbers.
An Austrian has patented a process for
getting a thread that ean be spun and
Bleached from wood, which is cut in long
lengths and boiled till it will cleave apart
in fibrous bunches by shaking in water.
It is then shredded by hand or by ma
chinery, and spun like hemp. Thts gives
a very fine thread, and less, boiling gives
a coarser one.
It is found that, besides gas, a ton ; of
ordinary gas coal will yield 1500 pounds
of coke; i.0 gallons of ammonia water,
and 140 pounds of coal tar. Now, de
structive distillation of this amount : of
coal tar gives about 70 pounds of pitch,
17 pounds of creosote, 14 pounds j of
heavy oils, ; and about 9 pounds ! of
naphtha yellow. -
Paper bottles are now in extensive use
for containing such substances as ink,
bluing, shoe dressing, glue, etc. ( They
are made by rolling glued sheets of paper
into long cylinders, which are then cut in
suitable lengths, tops and bottoms are
fitted in, the inside coated with a water
proof compound, and all this is done by
machinery almost as quickly as one can
count. ;
Heavy machinery is now run by ar
tesian well power in many parts of
France, and the experience of the French
chow that the deeper the well the greater,
the pressure and the higher the tempera
ture. The famous Grenclle well, sunk
to the depth of 1800 feet, and flowing
daily some 500,000 gallons, has a pres
sure of sixty pounds to the square inch,
the water being also so hot that it is nsed
for heating the hospitals.
A Steep Climb In Ceylon.
. For the first time for a number of years
the Sigiri Rock in Ceylon has been
scaled by a European, the feat on this oc
casion being performed by General Len
nox, who commands the troops in the
bland. It is said, indeed, that only one
other European, 5Ir. Creasy, ever suc
ceeded , iu reaching the Himmit. The
rock is cylindrical in shape, and the
bulging sides render the ascent very dif
ficult and dangerous. There are galler
ies all round, a groove about four inches
deep being cut in the solid rock. This
rises spirally, and in it are fixed the
foundation bricks, wh:ch support a plat
form about six feet broad, with a
chunam-coated wall about nine feet
high. The who'e structure follows the
curves and contours of the solid rock,
and is cunningly constructed so as to
make the most of any natural support the
formation can afford. 'In: tome places
the gallery nas fallen completely away,
but it still exhibits flights of fine marble"
steps. High up on the rocks are several
figures of Buddha; but it is a mystery
how the artist got there, or how, being
there, he was able to carry on his work.
The fortifications consist of platforms,
one above the other, supported by mas
sive -retaining walls, each commanding
the other. Owing to the falling away
of the gallery the ascent in parts had to
be made up a perpendicular face of the
cliff, and General Lennox and four na
tives were left to do the latter part of
the ascent alone. The top they found
to be a plateau about an acre in extent
in which were two square tanks, with
sides 30 yards and 15 feet respectively in
length, cut out ot the solid rock. A
palace is believed to have existed on the
summit at one time; although time,
weather and the jungle have obliterated
all traces of it. During the descent the
first comer had io guide the foot of the
next into a safe fissure ;'bot all reached
the bottom safely in about two and a hall
bonrs. '-.
The head paraener at the Alleghany
(Tenn.) City Tark has planted in a bed
there a f ortrait of Mr. Lincoln that is
startlingly true to it great original.
NERVES! NERVES!!
What terrible vtaioss this Iittl -arord briacs
fceliare the 1
Headache. Neurafcia.
eyes of to
laatgesuoa, sieepiesaDess, '
Nerroua Prostratioa.
M state tbeta ia Ute tcc Yet ad tbeae aercj
txoubiea can be ewed by usuif
iramzs
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
The Aged.
THIS GREAT NERVE TONIC
Alao ceartaiaa thm beat mtetiir for 4'tt-4 coa.
dttmaaertaelCidaeys. Liver, aad &lood, which
ala-f tecoK-ttay aem traaUct, :
It ta a Nerve Tonic, an Alterative, a Laxalive,
and a IMaretic. That i wfev it
CURBS. WHEN OTHERS FAIL.
fl-OO a Bottle. Sest fee full MrticsUra.
lfU9, RlCKiRDiOM t CO . Prcpristfrs,
cuRLniCTcrit vx
An Old Whim. '
Two gentlemen were conversing in the
United Statea Circuit Court room, sajt
the New York lh;ramt when one,
pointing to Lawyer Gilford, who ia coun
sel in a patent suit involving $4,000,C0C
or $, 000,000, said: ,
"How man rooms do you suppose there
are in that man's houef
The other gentleman would be blessed
if he knew, and then asked how many.
"One hundred and eleven, was the
reply. Man No. i! sovled, sa d that wis
one on him, and asked if the house war
a hoteL -
"No. no! exclam?d man No. 1.
There's no hotel about it. , He lives in
his own private dwelling on Jersey City
Heights. I don't know what they dc
with so many rooms; suppose they en
tertain a great dcaL This is the way
they came about:
"Mr. Gifford's father, Livingston Gil
ford, the cra'nent patent lawyer, had
hobb for building a hew room. Every
time he won.a case he built a new room.
Thus the dwelling gradually grew, from
extensions to wings, until it reached ill
E resent hotel dimensions. Now th
ouse is as big as a New England village,
and the stranger needs a pocket compass
and calcium light to find his room.V .
New Zealand Sport
.New Zealand now contains great num
bers of wild, cattle, which liave descended
from those lost by the f trn crs during
the Maori wars which ended iu li-.
Hunting these animals is an exciting and
dangerous spore The game is not easily
secured, as the animals hover seemingly
for protection about thicket filled
with long, twining creeperr, in which
progression is very difficult. ,'nto these
vines they dash at the slightest alarm,
seeming fully aware that neither horse
nor man can follow them.
i. a . i
.
Then let t he moon usurp the rule of day .
And winking tapers sh-w he sun his way;
For what my senses can perceive,
I ned no revelation to believe."
Ladies suffering from any of the weaknesses
cr ailments peculiar to their sex, and who
will use Dr. Peirce's Favorite Prescription
according' to directions, will experience a gen
uine revelation in the benefit they will rrc -ive
It is a positive cure for the most complicated
and obstinate cases of leucrrrTiea, excessive
flowing. Tpainful, menstruation, unnatural
suppressions, prolapsus, or falling of the
womb, weak back, "female eakoe,' ante
version, retroversion, bearing down sensa
tions, chronic congestion, inflammation and
ulceration of the womb, inflammation, a in
afid-tenderness in ovaries, accompanied with
"internal heat." 7
There are 4000 women in Government
employ at Washington.
. ii
Ilaaplaess.
The foundation of all happiness is health.
A man with an imperfect digestion may be a
millionaire, may be the husband of an angel
and the father of half a dozen cherubs, and
yet be miserable if he be troubled with dyf
pepsia, or any of the disorders arising from im
perfect digestion or a sluggish liver. Dr.
Heroes Pleasant Purgative Pel lets are th
safest and sure t remedy for these morbid
conditions Being purely vegetable, they are
perfectly harmless.
There were 1460 books published in
the United States last year.
Thousands of cures follow the use of Dr.
Sage's Catarrh Uemedy. 50 cents.
Whero hunger commands, va!or must
obey.
Ceavealtenal aioaea Keaelatlen.
Whereas, The Moaon Route (I N. A. &
C Ry. Co.) desires to make it known to the
world at large that it forms the double con
necting link of Pullman tourist travel le
twesn the winter cities of Floiida and the
summer rv sorts of tbe Northwest ; and ?
Whereas, Its "rapid transit" system Is un
surpassed, its elegant Pullman Buffet Sleep
er and Chair car service between Chicago
and Louisville, Indianapolis and Cincinnati
unequalled; and
o- Whereae, Its rates are as low as the If west:
then be it
liesolved, That in the event of starting on
a trip it is good policy tg consult with b. O.
McCormick, Qen'l Pass. Agent Monon Honte,
185 Dearborn St., Chicago, for full particu
lars. Io anv event send for a Tourist Guide,
enclose 4c pobtage. i l -
Farmers and others who have a little
leisure time for the next few month i will find
it t their interest to write to B. F. Johnson
&Co., of Richmond, whose advertisement
appears in another column. They oflVr great
inducements to persons to work for them all
or part of their i me
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Tfromn
son's Eye-water. Druggist sell at 25c per bottle
la Ceaeral Dekllitr, Eanaelatlen,
CoNsritrTioiv, An Wasiiwo Children.
BCOITS EMULSION of Pure Col Liver Ujl
with Hypophosphites, is a mt valuable food
and medicine. It create an appetite for fond,
strengthens tbe nervous system, and builds
up tbe body. Please read: "I tried Kcof ts
Emulsion on a young man whom Physicians
at times gave up bope, Bince he began u(pg
the Emulsion his Coiib ceasod, gained flh
nd strenirth, and frum all appearance his
life will be prolonged many yearn' Jons
BuiXJVAW. IIoFpit"! Steward, Slorganzs, Pa.
FOIi SWIKE.
Hog Cholera and a!!
Disoasos of Hssd.
tnrGEXZJtAL LIRECTIOXS.-V frrcljr
In the bfg awilL If llicy will not at 'In-m b
with milk into which trail! q a:t:tjr ot
the Oil is put.
So'J by T)myi;t$ nwi Penlrrf Fmfi.-h"-e.
the cHactES a. vnert rn cr, nH.a . g
5IOO to G300 ZtZVJiUZ: z
mm. Afrm prut mrrm t who can f ur-iiah uvir
horses aod atr tbtrwboie Umm to tbe bu
Fpara motbeBts mar r profliair voa'oTe4 aia
A few vavcaact In town and d,l. B. K JOtiX
ttOS X CO., lull Kal a au, Rtcaa.axt, Vt,
f- 11 Smiraa
ill ; l I Ma4ra Pw
W k-L-lai Ctttea HOC
aaarft. fall Daawrtita
Taflar Sraia ml m
MOOD T CO. tiatlaaiH. v
nrtess
aim.
tataea aoa Im.imr t mm mmrmm m favc. r'a
WW
Waw lUW HoifW Caa. Hotif. Vana
G
OLD S
tMB-tW.
Bmlmm
i iy neaiai
i mom as 15. a wax
ninnaiin- fiftihheel
Umi Brr
aavt Ctmvi
UKUBRASU COM
D!cir'cPn!d,c.-Vra.c2r
UtiI iiat.Jli rmmmm, 14 1111.
Ui. 3t ft, 14 11 Ha
rt. Ha r
Umm a mmm aa4 aaaaa mwrm a-y .vta,; f .a i.a
I aa aa rLia iaa aa W wartit f rttwr mn CaatSo
a at" a m Km lipai. ttaaaja.
oncAnn.
WVVt Hoaai, mt kj Ortrnt Wertt e gtXftimnaa mtm
tSTf. bSat7iar(a ajo. roe caaa. kMmf laravrata.
PiAnon,
Xbana A Rmmtim mm aot aeanata toatakatsa rrtrfrm
an eaaua taat Uta fwmam are aeparWw ta a.) oUtara.
Taia tay Kr.tta mtAr-r wa tla rt-m.mrk.mt-i ttrttt
lwnrmavr4) ay ismrm ta 1 -T. rwm k tr-rwm aa ta UAHjk
A BJLimJUS tLmMQ aZaOOlvai." WmU aartatauan mt
IPII.V.I0JI11I
dflOn. 1 Waiaar.
t ta. ti,' aittt k-i.memi.
taaa. lMUi. A In
A Good flame.
AthomUatowrrortrfn; b !- t?.
tnt Ur proerh. cd It U rsJSy t'.'.-,j trih k .-r
ftf HooJ a 8rprt!U. Tb Crt crl of foso.
aelTt from o-r M-ml al 1 frrj
tbe time It w Ulrly nrrvJd uj to tt ;ri P
is era has been. n4 it ao-y, n .one of
' Hood's Sarsaparilla
SoM la LjwU. i! ., her It 1 ra1e, tba ,j
otlir jLTMpArtllas aJ t lood yurtflT comt lai
rhlsi;oot onno3- ptc;Xe bi kao
tlomt's Srarl?: sr. 4 St pwtrftar tit tr
iKmlJ certaicty te tion !! to ta
etber cxirs and t.wo o. !& t itv'.len - ant tnrriu
OT OiU tnedtrtoe. fend for t. k rontaUclat tut,
stent c cures.
Salt nhcum
AffT the fiJare Of thre UHful f tsj-U1n t
eur Djr toy e; U r leum, I Ul l Hood ' fU'nj--rlll
and OUe Oiotm-ot. I hv bow t;ed tot
box. of OtaloMtot ml u nj a fca'.f tKXO of
f arapriKa. so 1 tbe Lot U to 'l appearance ront
!felr cured. He U Bow four yeart 11 tad haa
heo afSicted nn -e b w. a l t luor.tMi of ac -lilts.
E. &asii.RK.s, Si New ha 1 St, I owe '.I,
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Sold bf all Jrasa- $! ; al f.jr $.1 Iipard oa:y
tbO Doses Ono Dollar
Sifted Satin ni':'::r.3
17
;
xvjiii2itiiis is rtiiixor-
"K a w f'ft ia a.iw.
w&mm wnwwj mm wmrm
t aiW. B4 ftt
mvf
mm
'. fL'tmm f m &
n k f m
4 i
ta., Ik U
M lM
a jm. 1 mm
i nul kini4 mt
j M mmmmA ft it mm
I mA4 &JT, w I 4
( mm 4
t f tmmt tnmmf frmt
aKM la I k I
Inn Ikat kr
r r laMMdl
m mmmm'it 4
V rwwit mt rk.
J m b mmmtr Ik
t . lar i
S.. 4 t t "" i a . ..I, ot a in .ft a
wEUua,a4tiipmfhi btitk, t"T m iitaTI k,,n.. ml n,
fc mnf MM rpalt of mrr kuli i ( Ur .l r, mm l".tl MM.
rwilmf tw Otf l'ii. itiiMV mm . I i . M - k. mt Nltlli mm
atailn It lhi ItrmaaaUff ' il.. ufr i
III l kmii, mitm imtfmtnmi turn Curat mmt o-i mm
m4mptm44 mpm ma mtrr t an u . " c tm m tJ.
tm tbm mrnty beat orr mt awrba. I at ibr mrm (im
, rr-; Mvi hiMir 1 1 k . it r kn.. u A a ,a '' wwfli .il ik
Mmi hauii(il.JrfBi, cb.rfr. r-"-' l..liit.l. I rrm. V
hmwm ll4 llxKwuklt mt 4l!ats In ttom dtrrt I raa
m.m imaianalf , Ml, atttl mat rcittiawrf uMsi mi nt.
katn. in mry enurt.att ah.i. ami w kii h, mnl ail oaiaiirnft
fsaliijr, alajtnl tv Mrk.tM,liM ,! Irtauutar.
iia, ma, lira Uimmi.rt, aiikauili airt.w .tv. ka
Y tfeaa mMniiin lmtrm y al. a4 ,Hnli to l(k.
VbaHail aamBanla.all lha fnn mrm new al lata wjt"m. aa4
Ba t d-pw!! aa a Imalilul. rrenni, btiiuiiiit mmm aia. :
ut, 1 1 aMr lafrl n roalulniac a uwlria i
A M,rlmat mt brt -leaat ri ' rr a.
I'kje lrat'liral llant-krrrr mtttt laaiira
Ylr-mttf Cawpa lun, .btiai.4 awainr t. -a. taaa.
anawtnlrxl, tf llsuaa rw. etil la )u.l-, mx ll. boat al
k)cal mt ium kind M lb utll. try lattf. an. I l,.r..lalf U.
Hatralrdi tmmml wicm 7 5 r. (trrywi arJ il . n mm4 w
Will anul It to JO for a trial yrmr, and ll J lrt a
Wok of Ika (tbboaai )g Mbariu saaiul lxn. t .1 ra. i 4
HbarrliKioM mni 4 !-, I , na-rnl 4ag. -t-wrm tmmr
Vara f.i fcraa (haa tl. i.mt it fHnMlat -ta ff r--ttn
4 aBbarriilM knii 4 Ijoim Uf aalf 1 1 tmm outtol Immr
aaiiuilaa. I k. al.a Hid la ttmmmi oa U.u U.I buaa ba tm4
tita prrhxtit'al rafcarrd o. mum ymmr, mmul ll ItmtW, mmt
fmr ' Iba full prva f. ii ; it la Iu kflar rara, an4 rf .
Itaat wa maka m'm'nsJ a maka Una rruU crti la a to
at one WrwtZ'lUU otV aaUart-ibara, b, mrm, hut a.ll
Tear, and in rara ikmanrt, at. 1 1 iwc4 aa wt.h a inlli. ba.
aaaaa Iba maloriia v tbaaa ill Uh torrorw lb.lr ai-r-
bam, and will On an. THa numrf trturmt tm but a u.ail tsv u-m
ml il,a yrrm jroa waata ha ia par at ai.wa lu a mum a
aauiuwaaanrimm mt lar lufrrt.w ribbuna. lirai Uataaia
I 1
fcaowai yom win not lull airr biia il andl a(ir .a aiU
a fa aU.ary fvarantwl. Htrf raxlJ wim ut.mmot mmr
ttnlf aatlanad. Htirr rat tbianui, vt aaa4 at aao, 1 ,iv4m
aaUV it ana t rT-af araim. a!4raa,
at. wai. i k i t a ut, rvauatikaa. roTla, Maiaa.
k..... , J
nn
Vf7
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out
DIGCOVEV
9
VSlly amlilte nrilllrlal aralrma.
t'urrnf mliial rn ntir rl na-.
Amy hmmk It-Mrat-al In an readlns.
nMMof K1S7 M H!ttmor. Iflfll at fK lroit
1 SllO at 1'hlUailphia, lilt at Vati.n, llll
at iKwton. lamr i-lntn-m f '. In in Ma I a w h hIit . a t
Vale, Wf ilfult-y. 'la rlin. Vnlvt-rtit f Ivim.. il- h
lifan VnlvTll v, t'bautii(ii. Ac. 1 n l"ri-l I f
KlCHA& l'B'f-ff, till" fM'l-Iltl-l. H'll. V W A ml''',
JVVmM V IO "UtWIV Jll'ikf" l.lf1. It Iio, y.
H C'X:. t'rln N V MUj Normal " ii'i., -.
Taiitcbt l rorr''ril-ti-. Ir"-i' In i-.t r"R
from J'llOi' IvUlM-.llK. ,i Jiliii Ave. .S Y.
HUGHES' TOniC
aHa CESTUI nEDT ros
pILLS AIID FEVER
my IT WILL
Cure Iti3 f.Iost OBslin:! Cisss.
asaa ALTER ATI VK, It H-an- o,.ri"m ar4
Tl ItfVm l!i'U (UwiT.Wa,
4s TONIC, UgiratooaaJKl alreagvav
TRY ITI
rYpf1Vr have many l-( u-rt tcV.tjUt to tb
rit ot thia vaiiinM rsmed,
la Malarial aairlriaa-r famUyabouM ba
tt la Um ttuiaav J war a rtu-J y fur u.
Price per bottle, St. O bottles, fS
ThoDUYEItO'aUIDCts
issued LlArch snd Bept.,
each year. It is an ency
Iclorxxii of useful infor.
nation lor Jl vho pur.
cbaao the luxuries or the
noccesitics of lif. We
can clothe you and f'-imis.'i you with
all the necaasarjr and unneccaaar
ppliir.cot to rld, walk, tlxnce, rleev,
eat, fish, hunt, work, tto to ciurch,
or stay at home, and ia varioui aue:
styles and quanttiJo-, JuU f.zurs out
what ia required to do oil theao thlns:
COarOP.TAELT, and ycu can int. fair
eatimat of tbi valuo of tho llUYKMi'
OUIDi:, whicU will be sint upon
receipt of 10 cents to pay poatare,
MONTGOMERY WARD & CO.
111-114 MlitiUaa Avcxi'i. CMcto.LX
T "Obtj'OOD"
J?'. rrt tm trial. Ttt i t
i l'a"d- I u..)r Wariaitad.
V 3 TON $35.
ateljr low. Arff!i w-n pili. iMUui Ci-l
tree MentwMi thts t.
Lc'.j'a on
ROUGH CM RATS."
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l box t-t n t i - t tit
VaU-r Bii. lit-y U. Itfv-l. fat
Ac. I'or two yr ti-iw. nt.' t
T-fnlo ltn--nn on KtT 'rTw r
rKiwtV-r. in. mi tut r !n I
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mttrtstt-Z tran 11 ts.il JT r" : ,.J
d nra line drain I' ," wl-n 'l y
ttvs iTW-trt trma ;- -rr- t ViC- VuT mj X
wiil rlt-nrifr. 1 !: w-r.-t m ta
WATER OUQSL.'SSIfTS
Vatmtn Ixutt a Vlr-. --J?L'l
mrmKiful of iir-.'f . w il p fl A f: !! F S
tiuak-n ia 4 V t n vt. arl 1 U M W 1 1 fc
apr wuh t-iinkLrv l t;i rrrU-r-
whitAt broom. h--p it nimdf'ir'. i
SSe.- atvl II5oi. .rr JtT.lJl ilu
tttt;l!)KJf1. Cr.CUK3 CQUlS V
RABBlTSa Crw. (i'lilnw
ct'ar.-l out b? iuiairh. on 11. I'- c.f
HOUGH CIS FIALAFJAk
V.V-rm
aJj na.
I i ! n m
;:st.
40ferCeaU S
Kr.nti-rio.xf
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Irnmtmm VJtt. I.TU -V.Y,
ttmi tm
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