'" , c m. M aajHjHHx H S BKLLE, Prw. tod MwMiger. A -- a --k-r -r a tvtt tt a ivrrw O 1 VJTJ-vXZ -e.J.a-y x -c-.xv u. ri. t oao I opo Piirfciins. Rihhnns. Hosiery. Ladies' Uriderwear. Ftn. L.UVWO, I.WUW vwi ..., ....., jj LADIES' fl SoW Agnts for Laird, fcchbder & Mitchell, FINE FOOTWEAR.iiiPattern sheets free every' &" tl, k.., ,.,;) Sxr.n1 vmir nntnn Jilifl (TGt OI1G. .107 rjmn'l Kf.rnuf.. U1UULII UJ UliVU. Juv !A3G THE UPAJiEENAGLlS. i M. TALMAGE TJ-i!NS THE GOLDEN CALF IS STILL WORSHIPED. The Mcul Folly of tlio Israelites find tlift j Huge of Moe As ttio Peoplo Then r Wero Punished Bo Arc All Who Worship ( the Golden Calf In Tlicso Jjulltst Days. " I Brooklyn, Nov. 18. The subject of dfeoourse chosen by Rew Dr. Tnlmngo for his first sermon after the national election was one peculiarly appropriate jto the money making fepirifcof the tiinfed. it was "The Golden Calf," the text bo- lected being Exodus xxxii, 20, "And he (tbok the calf which they had made and ibarned it in the flro, and ground it ia powdor and strewed it upon the water sand made tho children of Israel drink bf it." People will havo a god of some kind, and they prefer ono of their own mak ing. Here come tho Israelites, breaking off their golden earrings, tho men as , Wll ts the women, for in those times ,, there were inasculino as well as femi' ' pine decorations. Whero did they got . ,i these beautiful gold earrings, coming T f tip as thoy did from the desert? Oh , they ' '."borrowed" thorn of tho Egyptians when khey '.left Egypt. These earrings arc piled up into a pyramid of glittering Iboauty, "Any more earrings to bring?" saya Aaron. None. Firo is kindled i She earrings aro melted and poured into u , a mold, not of an eaglo or a war charger, ' -, but of a calf; the gold cools off; the eiold is takon away, and tho idol is set pon its four legs. , , An altar is built In front of the shining ' calf. Then tho peoplo throw up theii n arms and gyrato and shriek and dance mightily and' worship. Moses has been V she weeks on Mount Sinai, and ho comes jback and hears tho howling and sees ft tho dancing of those golden calf fanat ics, and ho loses his patience, and ho .USKW bUO tVVU JJ1ULUO JL BbUMU Uil WUIUU jwero written tho Ten Commandments and flings them so hard against a rock Ithat thby spiit all to pieces. When n inan gets mad ho is very apt to break all "tho Teu CommandmontsI Moses rushes, in and ho takes this call 'god and throws it into a hdt firo until it lis melted all out of Bhapo, and then pul jverizes it not by the modern appliance of nitro-muriatio acid, but by tho anciont appliance of niter, or by tho old fash jioned file. Ho ihakes for tho people u moat nauseating draft. He takes this pulverized golden calf and throws" it in o the only brook which is accessible, and the people aro compelled to drink of that brook or not drink at all, FLOWED AROUND THE WORLD. But they did not drink all tho glitter ing stuff thrown on the surface. Soma of it flows on down tho surface of the jbrook to tho river, and then flows on i "down to tho river to tho sea, and tho sea takes it up and boars it to tho mouth of all the rivers, and when tho tides sot back tho romains of this golden calf are carried up into the Hudson, and the East river, and tho Thames, and tha Clydo, and tho Tiber, and men go out and they skim thoglittoring surface, and they bring it ashoro, and thoy make an other golden calf, and California and Australia break off their goldon earrings 'to augment tho pilo, and in the fires of 'financial excitement and Btrugglo nil theso things aro moltod togother, and " while wo Btund looking and wondering what will come of it, lol we find that Jthe goldon calf of Israelltish worship I'ihas bocomo tho golden calf of European and American worship. I shall doscribo to you tho god spokon of in tho text, his tomple, his altar of '" WcrlCco, tho music that is made in his Jtemplo, and then tho final breaking up of tho wholo congregation of idolaters. I Put asldo this curtain, and you bco tho jgolden calf of modorn idolatry. It ia pot like othor idols, mado out of stocks or stone, but it has an ear so sensitive xhat it can hoar tho whispers on Wall street and Third stroot and Stato street, 'and tho footfalls in tho Bank of Eng land, and tho flutter of n Frouohmnu's heart on tho Bourse It bus an oyo so Skeen that it can boo tho rust on tho farm f .Michigan wheat, and tho iuseot iu tha (Maryland pepch orchard, and tho tram pled grain uudortho hoof of tho Russian war charger. I its aonanons nram;, J It is so mighty that it swings any way it will tho world's shipping. It has its 'foot on all tho merchantman and the Bteanaers. It started tho American civil war and under God stopped it, and it decided tho Turko-Russiau contest. Ono poker in Septombor, 1600, in Now York, shouted, "One hundred and Bixty for a jualllic-nl" and the wholo continent ahlf Wed. This golden calf of tho text has "jite rijjht foot in Now York, its left front foot in Chicago, its right back foot iu jGtutfleston, its left back foot in Now Orleans, and whon it shakos itself it Mwken the world. Oh, this is u mighty Igod tha golden calf of tho world's wowhlpl But every god must have its temple, auwl this golden calf of tho text is no gjweptiou. Ita temple is vaster than St. Stairs of the English, and St. Peter's of im Itllatu, and the Alhambra of the Add, and the Parthenon of the a, ma the Tul Mahal of tho liin- aud all the other cathedrals put Ita nillars are urooved and td with gold, and ltd ribbed arches bovwriug gold, unit its chandeliers i dentendiug gold, ami ita floors are llte4 jfolil. and iw vaults are )CtowdI heap of gold, and ita epiree wd 4omm are soAriug goU, and its or- KWl ntpe aw reeouuding gold, and ite mmmm mn wtummin kwi, hhu iw pvujw ysited oat are flaehltig gold, while muting t the hwwl of the tw)le, as jnto prwUing deity ; are the hoof and houderi and eye and earn utd uotrtU ftiMOftlforgold, fwrtiier. vrry god mvub have ttot only ita u u.;!c, but iU ltr of saorlnce, aitd tble golden calf of tho txt jU uo ex wytkMi. Ito altar U not made out of 8MM m other alUre. but out of count teg room denke aitd ftnrproof eafoe, d ttlii hruail. a luum. a btgh tOUMT,,, TM '-. --' .- w- " m-- m ..-- Ml ipirHirtl irir It rut rmrr " -AWJOLUTK LKADHHa 1N- MISSES' AND CHILDREN'S CLOAKS. jv.. ...- o What docs this god care about tho groans and straggles of tho victims beforo it? With colOt, metallic oyo it looks on and yet lets them suffer. On, heaven and earth, what an altar, what a sacrifice of body, mind and soul! Tlie physical health of a great multitude is flung on this sacrificial altar, They cannot sleep, and they take chloral and morphlno and intoxicants. Some of then struggle in a nightmare of stocks, and at ono o'clock in tho morn ing suddenly rise up shouting, "A thou sand shares of railroad stock ono hun dred and eight and a half; take it!" until tho wholo family is affrighted, and tho speculators fall back on their pillows and Bleep until they are awakened again by a "corner" or a sudden "rise" in some thing else. Their nerves gone, thoir di gestion gone, their brain gone, they die. The clergyman comes in and reads the funeral sorvice, "Blessed aro the dead who die in the Lord." Mistake. They did not "dio in the Lord;" tho golden calf kicked thoml ITS DREADFUL SACRIFICE. The troublo is when men sacrifice themselves on this altar suggested in the text they not only sacrifice themselves, but they sacrifice their families. If rf man by an ill course is determined to go to perdition I suppose you will havo to let him go; but ho puts his wife and children in an equipage that is tho amazement of the avenues, and tho driver lashes tho horses into two whirl winds, and tho spokes flash in tho sun, and the golden headgear of the harness gleams, until Black Calamity takes tho bits of tho horses and stops them, and shouts to tho luxurious occupants of the equipage, "Get outl" They get out. They get down. That husband and father flung his "family so hard thoy nover got up again. There was tho mark on them for life tho mark of a Bplit hoof tho death dealing hoof of tho golden calf. Solomon offered in ono sacrifice on ono occasion twenty-two thousand oxon and ono hundred and twenty thousand sheep; but that wob a tamo sacrifice compared with the multitude of men who aro sac rificing themselves on this altar of tho golden calf, and sacrificing their fam ilies with them. Tho soldiers of General Havelock in India walked litorally ankle deep in tho blood of tho "honso of jnas sacro," whoiq two hundred women and children had been slain by tho Sepoys; but tho blood around about this altar of tho, golden calf flows up to tho knee, flows to tho girdlo. flows to the shoulder, flows to tho lip. Great God of heaven and earth, havo mercy I The golden calf has none. Still tho degrading worship goes on, and tho devotees kneel and kiss tho dust, and count their golden beads, and cross themselves with tho blood of their own sacrifice, Tho musio rolls on under the arches; it is made of clinking silver and clinking gold and tho rattling specie of tho banks and brokers' shops and tho voices of all tho exchanges. Tho soprano of tho worship is carried by the timid voices of mon who havo just begun to speculate, whilo tho deep bass rolls out from thoso who for ten ycurs of iniquity havo beon doubly damned. Chorus of Yoicos rojoicing over what thoy havo inado! Chorus of voices wailing over what thoy havo lostl This toinplo of which I speak stands open day and night, and thero is tho flittering god with his four feet on broken hearts, and thero is the smoking altar of sacrlflco, new victims evory mo ment on it, and thero aro tho kneeling dovotoes, and tho doxology of tho wor ship rolls on, whilo death stands with moldy and Bkoloton arm boating time for the chorus "Morot morol morel" Tin: CRAZE FOR aOLD. Somo peoplo tiro very much surprisod at tho aotlous of folk on tho Stock ex change. Indeed it is a scono sometimes that paralyzes description and is bpyond tho imagination of any ono who has never looked in. What snapping of fin ger and thumb and wild gesticulation, and raving llko hyenas, and stamping liko buffaloes, nnd swaying to and. fro, and running ono upon anothor, and deaf ening: uproar, until tho president of tho exchange strikes with his mallet four or ilvo timos, crying, "Ordorl ordorl" and tho astonished spectator goes out into tho fresh air feeling that ho has escaped from pandemonium. What does it all mean? I will toll you what it means. The dovotoes of ovory heathen temple cut themselves to pieces and yoll and gyrato. This vociferation and gyration of tho Stock oxohango is all appropriate This is tho worship of tho goldon calf. But my text suggests that this wor ship must bo brokou up, as tho bo huvior of Moses in my toxt indicated. Thero aro thoso who say that this golden calf spoken of in my toxt was hollow and meroly plated with gold; otherwise thoy say, Moses could not havo carried it. I do not know that; but somehow, perhaps by the assistauco of his frionds, ho takes up this goldon calf, which is an open insult to God and man, and throws It into tho flro, and it is melted, and then it comos Qut and is cooled off, and by eorao chemical appliance or by an old fashioned fllo it is pulverised, and it is thrown into tho brook, and as a punish ment tho people aro compelled to drink the nauseating stuff. THK ROOT OV UVIL TO UK UOOTKD OUT. So, my lioarors, you may depend upon it that God will bum and he will grind to pieces tho golden calf of modern idol atry, and he will compel tho people In their ugony to drink it, If not before, it will be bo on the last day, I know not where the fire will begin, whether at the Battery or Central park, whether at Brooklyn bridge or ut Bushwick, whether at Shoreditch, London, or Weet lCnd, but it will be a very -hot blase. All the government securities of the United State ami Great Britain will ourl up in tho first blast. All the money Mtfeeimd depciting vaults wilt multum tier (U tirat touch, The will burn like Under, and tke ekipplug will be ttUiMtdotted forever, Tte welted gold in tUe.btokw'4 window will buret through the welted window glwi and into the nirevt, but the lying population will toot Mou to woop it up. Th cry ur."ririr " tiu hwwhum ..- il HlBl u ... wwwtwwivimpi7"fwri H. K. IEAJM), Secretary rG?v r2.r.r,ir,.Qr x a vjvvu, , 307 Com'l Street. the plain. Ttfo conflagration will burn out from tho continent toward the sea, and tlfen burn in from tho sea toward the land. New York and London, with one cut of the red cythe of destruction, will go down. Twenty-fivo thousand miles of conflagration! Tho earth will wrap itibelf 'round and round in shroud of flame and lio down to porish. What then will become of your goldeu calf? Who then so poor as to worship it? Melted or between the upper and tho nether millstone of falling mountains ground to powder. Dagon down. Mo loch down. Juggernaut down. Golden calf down. But, my friends, every dy is day judgment, and God is all the time grinding to pieces the golden calf. Merchants of Brooklyn and Now York and London, what is the characteristic of this time in which wo live? "Bad," you say. "Professional men, what is tho characteristic of the times in which we live? "Bad," you say. Though I should bo in a minority of ono, I venture tho opinion that these are tho best times we havo had, for tho reason that God is teaching tho world, an never before, that old fashioned lipnesty is the only thing that will stand. Wo have learned as nover beforo that forgeries will not pay; that the spending of fifty thousand dol lars on country seats and a palatial city residence, when there aro only thirty thousand dollars income, will not pay; that tho appropriation of trust funds to our own private speculation will not pay. We had a great national tumor in tho shape of fictitious prosperity. Wo called it national enlargement. Instead of call ing it enlargement we might better havo called it o swelling. It has been a tu mor) and God is cutting it out; has cut it out and tho nation will get well and will como back to tho principles of our fathers and grandfathers whon twice three mado six instead of sixty, and when the apples at the bottom of tho barrel were just as good as the apples on tho top of the barrel, and a silk hand kerchief was nothalf cotton, and a man who wore a fivo dollar coat paid for was more honored than a man who wore a fifty dollar coat not paid for. THE RAOE FOR SPECULATION. Tho golden calf of our day, liko the ono of the text, is very apt to bo made out of borrowed gold. Theso Israelites of tho toxt borrowed the earrings of the Egyptians and then molted them into a god. That is tho way tho gpldon calf ia made nowadays. A great many house keepers, not paying for tho articles they get, borrow of tho grocer, und tho baker, and tho butcher, and tho dry goods seller. Then the retailer borrows of tho whole sale dealer. Then tho wholesale dealer borrows of the capitalist, and wo borrow and borrow and borrow until the com munity is divided into two classes those who borrow and those who ao borrowed of. And after awhilo tho capitalist wants his money and ho rushes upon tho wholesalo dealer, and tho wholesalo doaler wants his money and ho rushes upon tho retailor, and the retailer wants his money and ho rushes upon tho con sumer, and wo all go down together. Thero is many a man iu this day who rides in a carriage and owes the black smith for tho tiro, and tho wheolwright for the wheel, and tho trimmer for the curtain, and tho driver for unpaid wages, and tho harness makor for ' the bridlo, and tho furrier for 'the robo, whilo from tho tip of tho carriago tongue clear back to tho tip of the shawl fluttering out of tho back of tho vehicle everything is paid for by notes that havo been three timeB renewed. PULVERIZING CALF AND WORSHIPERS. It is this temptation to borrow and borrow and borrow that keeps the peo plo everlastingly praying to tho golden calf for help, and just at tho minute thoy expect tho help tho goldon calf treads on them. Tho judgments of God, like Moses in tho toxt, will rush in and break up this worship; nud I say, lot tho work go on until overy man shall learn to speak truth with his noighbor, and thoso who make ongagemonta shall fool thomselves bound to keep them, and whon a man who will not ropent of his business iniquity, but goes on wishing to sattato his caunibal appetite by de vouring widows' houses, shall by tho law of tho land bo compelled to ox change his mansion for Sing Sing. Let tho golden calf porish I But, my friends, if wo havo made this world our god, whon wo como to dio wo will see our idol demolished. How much of this world are you going to tako with you into tho noxt? Will you have two pockets one in each sido of yonr shroud? Will you oushlon your coffin with bonds and mortgages and certificates of stock? Ah, nol Tho ferryboat that crosses tliis Jordan takes no baggage nothing heav ier than a Bpirit. You may perhaps tako five hundred dollars with you two or threo miles, in tho shape of funeral trap pings, to Greenwood, but you will havo to leave them thero. It would not bo safe for you to lio down thoro with a gold watch or a dia mond ring. It would bo n temptation to tho pillagers. Ah, my friends, if wo havo made this world our god, when wo dio wo will eeo our idol ground to pieces by our pillow, and wo will havo to drink It in bitter regrets for tho wastod oppor tunities of a lifetime. Soon we will bo gone. Oh, this is n fleeting world; it is adylngiworldl A man who had wor shiped it all his days, in his dyiug mo ment described himself whon ho said, "Fooll fooll fooll" TUB KKYXll F-AD1XO TREASURE. I want you to change temples, and to give up tho worship of this unsatisfying and cruel god for tho service of tho Lord Jesus Christ, Hero is tho gold that will never crumble. Here are securities that will never fall, Here are banks that will nover break, Here is an altar on whk-h there has been one sacriSco once for all. Here ia a God who will comfort you when you are in trouble, and soothe you ' when you aw sick, ami save you vUeu j you die. ' When your parent hhvebmthed their laet, ami tho old, wrinkled iw4 VrewiUiag hAude can no wore be. put upon your head for a WUeetat;, he will be to yo fether awl mother both, giving yon the deeneeof then ud the oouifortot ffce' other; ftd wfcn your children go s) f H2f u Sfew away from you, the urveet darlings, you will not kisa them goodby forever. He only wants to hold them for you a little while. Ho will givo them back to you again, and he will havo them all waiting for you at the gates of eternal welcome. Oh, what a God ho 1st He will allow you to como so close this morning that yon can put your arms around his neck, while he in responso will put his arms around your neck, and all the win dows of heaven will bo hoisted to let the redeemed look out and see tho spectacle of a rejoicing father and a returned prodigal locked iu glorious embrace. I '"it worshiping tho golden calf, and bow tl i- '''ay before him in whose pres ence wo i ust all appear when tho world has turned to ashes and the scorched parchment of tho sky shall bd rolled to gethor like an historic scroll. In tlio Itlluo Together. Sixteen months of hard tunneling, and he had reached the bonanza. As he stood gloating over tho richest ore his eyes had over feasted on he becama conscious of a presence, and turning 8!tw the tall form of "Long Brown," th6 gambler. He wa"3 about to speak, wlfen a dull ramblo was borne in on tlieir ears, and o tremor shook the earth, as pieces of loosened rock fell at their feet. Both knew what it meant. Brown went back a few rods with his lantern, and returned with a blanched face. "We aro shut in by a cave, and it may tako days to dig us outl" After a pause he centinued: "How long will your provisions last?' "Four days for ono." "Then I'll be the ono." The click of his weapon sounded through tho drift as he covered his old enemy. "Havo you a pack of cards?" said the other quietly. "If bo, let's play a game of draw with the gun for tho stakes." They gazed in each other's eyes for a few moments. Brown had never taken advantage of mortal man. He would not do it now. He produced n pack of cards from his pocket. Ho always carried them. "Cut." "Deal." Tho gambler drew three cards; so did the miner. "Queens." "Aces." The gambler looked a second at hia opponent's hand as it was laid down. "You win," he said quiotly, and lifted tho weapon. "Click, click. Bangl" His body lurched forward sprawling over tho cards nfter the smothered re port. The miner, with a look of horror on his face, lifted the lantern and held it ovor tho body. As he shook his sleeve four cards fluttered down on the pros trate figure. "It was a close shave," ho said, "but I downed him I" Sam Davis in Short Stories. i Wires Along a Trolley Line. A great many peoplo wonder why thero aro so many overhead wires along an electric road, and which of them aro ulivo or dangerous. Ninety-nine per sons out of a hundred know nothing whatever about it. You havo noticed that alongside the pavement on both Bide3 of the street is strung a large, well insulated wire, almost large enough to bo n cable. That is the feeder. In other words, that wiro carries tho current from the power house and at cortain in tervals contributes it to tho trolley wire. It is $dl nigh impossiblo for an acci dent to happen to tho feeder, but oven then thero would havo to bo a direct ground connection before much damage could bo dono. If the feeder should break and fall to the ground it would emit a blazo which would provo a warn ing to all passorsby. On oither eido of tho trolley wiro aro two wires which seem to be useless. Thoy are dead, and are only intended to shield tho trolloy. Supposo theso wires wero not thero nnd a telophono wiro should fall across tho trolloy? Instantly the voltago which transmits tho cars would bo flashed into evry telephone which had a connection, a 'id the result would bo a very severe shook. As it is, falling wires of any kiud are caught by the side wires, nnd heuco nover roach the trolley wiro, Thero's your primer lesson in electricity. St. Louis Republic. Au r.x(erlenco ulth Snow. "Talking about snow," remarked Archibald Lennox at tho Laclede, "re winds mo of nu experienco I had with 'the beautiful' up in Vermont. I went up into tho Green mountains to spend tho holidays with a gentleman who had tho distinguished honor to command my regiment during tho war. On the even ing of' my arrival a heavy snowstorm sot iu. The house sat iu a cosy valley hemmed in by hills. Before morning tho wind rosa, tho snow began to drift, and by daylight everything but the high brick chimney was completely buried. Talk about tha darkness that overspread Egypt! It wasn't a marker to tho in side of that farmhouse "Wo had plenty of provisions, nnd wero not long in running a tunnel to tho woodpile und bam. Then wo dug our way up to dcylight. The snow had blown down from the hills nud almost filled tho little valloy. The weathor turned iiioicing cold, and for raoro than a month the family emulated the cava dwollors. A flight Of buow steps, over which water had been poured and al lowed to freeze, furnished egress to the upper world." St. Louis Globe-Democrat. A M range Luoljiug 3(onky. Ono of tho most singular and most un Blghtlyof'aU creatures is tho probocis monkey A traveler who saw a troop of thoui iu Borneo says it is impossible to imagine such hideousuess Onetuuet eeo it to believe it. This proboeie hi cartilaginous, nnd can bo inflated by the aniwal to a prodigious tixe, and sudden ly to encounter tuch a visage frown be hind tree in a Borneo wilderneea is to he horrified you never were before. Not n boy iu the world would be willing to Uke such h erf -a ore as a pet, Tbey are very active, ami in bounding from wee to tree will clear a saoe. of fifteen ' wr twenty feet, JJarper'i. YonngPeopk, A HIMorle Locomotive Wrecked. A famous locomotive was wrecked the other day just abovo tho city. It waa No. 1,140. tho engine that on tho memo rable day of tho Johnstown flood went rushing down tho Pennsylvania railroad tracks from Conemangh to Johnstown with its shrieking whistlo giving the alarm of tho oncoming deluge of water. After tho flood No. 1.140 was found, bottom upward, buried under the great bank of Band near where tho engineer had abandoned it to flee for his lifo from the flood. Relic hunters cleared away the sand, and proceeded to dismantle it of overvthinir thoy could secure. The bell nnd all tho bras? fixtures wero carried away, and even the big wooden bumper was hacked into splinters. After thinga had quieted down about tho flooded city the railroad company found tho disl mantled No, 1,149. It was set on its feet and brought to Altoona. After a week in the shops it came out again, showing no signs of tho ordeal It had passea through. Since then it has been run as a shifter. No. 1,149 was standing on the track. Just below it was a heavy coal train, stationary, with nil brakes set. En gineer W. D. Thomas happened to look back over tho track and saw anothor coal train, without an engino, come tearing down tho steep grade. The switch had not been turned to allow it to drop down on the next track, as was intended. Thomas jumped jnst before the crash and escaped, but No, 1,149 was demolished between the two heavy coal trains. Altoona Gazette. The Vunlty of Men nnd 'Women. One of those learned discussions on subjects of gravo import with which English newspapers and their readers concern themselves is at pi-ef ent raging in tho columns of a London newspaper on tho momentous question as to whether ugly men or ugly women are the more vain. Of course tho naturo and trend of tho discussion can easily be imagined, the men contributors strictly on ono side and the women on the other. But ono woman comes to art ingenious conclusion by way of proof that women are not vain. She says that men suffer very little disadvantage with the other sex on aceoui't of mere ugliness, often going through lifo absolutely uncon scious of it. "But whero are the men generous enough to seek out and pay court to ugly women" unless they are rich? Which, she concludes, is proof that women are above being influenced by mere physical attractiveness, and rnnqn.-,oTitlvnro thfT Hiioprior sex.- Is Life That depends upon tho Liver. If tho Liver is inactive tho whole sys tem is out of order tho hreath is bad, digestion poor, head dull or aching, energy and hopefulness gone, the spirit is de pressed, a heavy weighs cxistB after eating, -with general despondency and the blues. Tho Liver is the housekeeper of tho health; and a harmless, simple remedy that acta like Nature, 'does not constipate afterwards or require constant taking, does not interfere with business or pleasure dur ing its use, makes Sim mons Liver Kegulator a medical perfection. I havo tested Its virtues personally, and know that tor Dyspepsia, Biliousness and Throbbing Headache, It Is tho best medl cino tho world ovor saw. Havo tried forty other remedies before Simmons Liver lteeulator, and none of them rave more than temporary relief, but tho Kegulator not only rollevedbutcured. H. U. Jones, Macon, Ga Thoro tanotmro? Ilio tho RESTORATIVE NCR VINE discovered by tbo groat poclaUst, DR. MILCS, to euro all nervous diseases, as Hoadache, the Blues, Nervous Prostra tion, Qlooploasnoos, NouralGln, St. Vltust Danos.Flts and Hysteria. Many puyilclans use It tn their practice, nnd Bar tlio results are wonderful. Wo bare hundreds or testimonials like tbose from druggists. "We havo neTOr known anytblop Ilka It." Snow & Co., Syracuse. N. V. "Kvory nottlo sold brings words of praise," J. Q. Wolf, Hillsdale, Mich. "The best seller ttb oyer had." Woodworth & Co., Fort Wayne, Ind. "Aerrlne sells bolter than anything we eror hd." II. F. WyattACo., Concord, N. II. Trial bottle and book of testimonials i'reoatdrusglsts. DR. MILCS' MEDICAL CO., Elkhnrt.lnd. 'JTRIA1L EOTTIiE EBEE. Sold by D, J.Fry, druggIst,Fnleiu. mmvmm Act oa a new principle renulata tho Uver, stomach And bowels through the ntrwt Da. Mans' I'ilu $pedilv curt billouraMa, torpid llTor and constipa tion. Smallctt, mlMfft, BETCWtl 0030338,21) Ct3. brmoles tree at ilrujvlsu. U ':!Mei,C.EU!irLlJ!i eold by D, J. Fry, druggist, Salem - jfircDEXSPO ELib i"m 6! UTESTPATHTS2SpaWITH UECTCQ- WWfVtMEKTS.fg S9SPEKSC.1V. WMtw ,WHMl Vn4a 3HmWm nlilw f,,B HUMOM(t,ll,Hm r.Mtt4WMl4tlwiU. m ml M.kutfi, 4rU. kim.Hn, 4iMi:irTiw; tewMM, Iuiimt. itwsuUia, SMnr.lliw iMui MMiUiM.ika.Sut.lu.k.M s-U4iiriu"n tl7Hn l"lrUM UL4l. (..total l4r..-ui; sMWr(wlU(4w4u,u4iiirn aitSr tktk,. tHMtv..i rw4 ua mc wmt iu hoys "S?f iittif 'tirasU tMMaUM Ulli WW K,,, -' 'W UA1W ill X(SM, cutis. twM, Sim. AiSiii jj.fi. wntorr xizxtcrwizo oo.t wt'K rw k, retfTLMi. wg, Worth Imm? isptir DJLM!!!NiS!i M I -4 i43 1161 i j ' t i 7T f 7 There arc many other brands, V II each represented by some inter 1 A ' I I I I . II V A JL r I 2b" tHey We attach this tag to Prv hap of Wlmtlfl foBrUtteL pSrfof DURHAM TOBACCO 'CO. , SThis space is P -w - CD W 0 CO w cd o Oh & O W O a z5 I I I M 3 D 12! I I H Z O u I m CD rrmmri wngiiimrar Biinfi j win J' CLEAN! Ir you would be clean and have vour clothe Ann ,m , " je in tho neatest and dressiest manner, take them to the SALEM STEM LAUNDRY where all work is done by white labor and' in the most prompt manner. COLONEL J. OLMSTED. ' E.M.WaitePrintingCo. Largest MtablUhmeat In the city, OVER BUSH'S BANK, SA.X.KM, ... ORKOON. Front E. K. HALL, Paper Hangerwd Decorator. J&!?lt.xmv,umm,- The Tariff Has not r&tsed the price on BlackwelTs Bui! Durham Smoking Tobacco. ested person to be "just as good as the Bull Durham." They are not; but like all counterfeits, each lack the peculiar and attractive qualities of the genuine. tJJL.V.IJliWiiijL.S DUtUlAM, M. C reserved for the and CUB u u M T3 ri -' 5-i 5P o Ph fft H cd' 8 cd H M sis D h w 5 u CO 0 u ? m o H O d S3 o S 0 en en p o 00 , Cfl 1) rn v r iii ; ' y, vj H M S B tt T3 .0 k4 .2 k $?4 M K d 0 I? '5 H 0 X M v- ft k A S3 co (D 6 n o cd U o s l.ibertv Sfrnofc m Wood 'Saw. wSf7mwd?y5et,i,,uK, Smith1, stenm wood taw, -fhe KubUer." )rdtni at 9M street. White's No, 60, SALEM'S FINEST TJRUOK, l-H rn rn CJ1 CD CO 3 CD s o GO SL CD GO J, r WJaWH, " 'b r&4 ffi jjMxf: J",Jto xbi&9it I