TRUE PHYSICAL TEST. The Softest Bed Not Always the Best Ald te Comitort. There is an old story of an Indian and 'a ‘‘pale.face,” who, after a long day's journey, lay down in a deserted cabin at nightfall to rest The Indian, wrapping himself io his blanket, stretched himself on the floor of the cabin, with his feet to the fire, and was soon asleep. His companion, meantime, has espied a feather-bed in another room, and con- gratulating himself on his discovery, jumped in and was soon in a doze. With the first rays of the morning light the Indian rose refreshed, and ready for the day’s task. He went to arouse his comrade, when lo! he found him dead from the exhaustion of the previous day, Luxurious physical rest. To enjoy that blessing to its fullest extent, freedom from restraint must be allowed every part of the body. A firm surface is required—one that will tend to Keep the body stretched out at full length, that the lungs and heart may feel no sense of restriction by compression of the chest-walls, and that the blood may have unin- terrupted course inevery direction. We should never be guilty of sup- posing that the person whom we saw sitting in a chair, with his chin press ing on his sunken chest, was enjoying true physical rest, no matter how fast asleep he might appear to be. The tendency of the body to gravi- tate toward the lowest part of a feather-bed is bevond remedy. repose is never true free from constriction. The chest. walls are caved in, and the whole body suffers from the consequent lack of proper uxygenation and the restriction which is placed upon its general circulation. blood moves sluggishly, and as a re- sult the condition of “fat and flabby” is superinduced. This condition is never likely follow the constant use of a firm hair to get dropsical from too sluggish a circulat on Perfect physical repose, like perfect physical activity, is dependent upon a proper equilibrium of the bodily functions during slumber. The story of the Indian and the white man might easily have been founded on fact — Youth's Compan. on. mentee ———————— Where He Made His Money. Mr. Coleman of Norwich, before he was made a knight, was one day in a Paris hotel, when an inquisitive- damsel asked: ‘‘Are you the Mr. Coleman who has made so much money out of the mustard we take off the sides of our plat s?” “Ng " was theanswer; *‘I am the Mr. Cole- man who makes money ou mustard you leave on the your plates.” sides of remanence grate or Omio, Cry or TorLeDo, 1 JUCAR COUNTY. y- Fras J. Cuexey makes oath that ha is the Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State afore=aid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL- LARS for each and every case of Cuarrh that eannot be cured by the use nf HALL sUaTavug Cure Frask J. Cnaxey. worn to before me and subseribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A, 1). 1986, tm | A. W, GrLeasox, : SEAL ¢ . Notary Publie, Hall'sCa'areh Care istaken internally and acts directly on the blood and mo sous surfaces of the system. Send for test monials, free, F.J.Caexey & Co., Toledo. 0. t# Sold by Draggists, Tic, ——— The best preparation for behaving right is to think right. Malaria cured and eradicated from the sys. tem by Brown's Iran Bitters, which enriches the blood, tons: the nerves, alds digestion, Acts like a charm on persons in general ill health, giving new energy and strength. Choose rather to punish your appetites than to be punished by them. For Rroscmiar, AstavaTic Asp Prososa- RY Compr ArSTe, “Aroawa’: @eomevin’ Troehe bave remarkable curative properties. Sold only in bere Beware of the man or woman whom a child wi | not love, Brown's Iron Bitters cures Depa a, Mala. ria, Biliousness and General Debility, Gives strength, aids Digestion, tone« the nerves tes sppetite. The best tonle for Nursing thers, weak women and children. If you don’t want to be detested don't be a chronle growler, Beecham's Pills are better than mineral wa ters. Beechasn's—no others. 25 cents a box. Childhood shows the man, shows the day. as morning Cuarantees The Future The fact that Hood's Sarsaparilla has cured thousands of others is certainly sufficient reason for belief that it will cure you. i 75 i Y fi fi i “AI When 7 years old began to be troubled with eczema on the heed, causing Intense itching and burning, and affecting her eyes. Her mother testifies: *“ We gave her six bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilia and she is entirely well. Ihave taken it my. polf for that tired feeling and it does me great good." Mus. Wirriam McKeroix, 404 Stock. holm 8t., Baltimore, Md. Get Hood's, Hood's Pills cure all liver ile, billonsness, jaun dios, indigestion, sick headache. 2 conta, REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN- DAY SERMON. Subject: “Oblivion and Its Defeats. be no more remenm- The righteous shall salma exif, Texte: “He shall bered, ' Job xxiv., 20 ; be in everlasting remembrance,” 8. “Oblivion and Its Defeats” is my subject to-day. There is an old monster that swal- lows down everything, It crunches indi. viduals, families, communities, States, Na. tions, continents, hemispheres, worlds. diet ia made ages, of oycles, of all the other dictionarians oblivion, It is a steep down which everything rolls, conflagration in sumed, Iny and a period at which everything stops, t is the cemetery of the human race, It is the domain of forgetfulness. Oblivion! At times it throws a shadow over all of us, and I would not pronounce it to-day if 1 did not come armed in the strength of the eteraal God on your behalf to attack it, to rout it, to demolish it, the earth disappear. gether, inseparable and to each other indis- pensable, and then they part, some by mare riage going to establish other homes, and some leave this it and obliterate it, ish, Walk up Broadway, New York ; Slate street, Boston ; Chestnut street, Philadelphia ; the Strand, London ; Princess street, Edinburgh ; Champs Elysees, Paris ; Unter den Linden, Berlin, and you will meet in this year 1883 not one person who walked it in 1793, What engulfment! All the ordinary effort at per- Walter Scott's “Old Mortality” may go round with his chisel to recut the faded epitaphs on tomb- stones, but Old Oblivion has a quicker chisel can cut out athousand epi- taphs while “Old Mortality” iscutting in one epitaph. Whole libraries of biographies de- voured of bookworms or unread of the rising generations All the signs of the stores and warehouses firms have changed, the grandsons think that it is an advantage to 80 the generations van- unless sendant., The elty of but dig down deep to another Rome, still farther and will find a thir! Rome. Jerusalemstands to- day, but dig down deep enough and you will find a Jerusalem underneath, and go on and Alexandria on the top of an Alexandria, and the second on the top of the third, Many of the ancient cities arc buried thirty What was the matter? Any special calamity? No The winds and waves and sands and fying dust are all undertakers and grave diggers, and if the world stands long enough the present Brookiyn and New York and London will have on top of them other Brookiyns the name of the des tome stands to-day, epough and you come you the “45 PH i ee 7 1 digging and boring and biasting will archmolozist of far distant centuries down as far as the highest spires and domes { present American and European cities, Call the roll of the armies of Baldwin [., or of Charles Martel, or of Marlborough, or of Mithridates, or of Prineon Frederick, or of Cortes, and not one answer will you bear Stand them in line and eall the roll of 1.070, . 000 men in the army of Thebes, Not one answer, Stand them line, the 1.700.000 infantry and the 200 000 cavalry of the As- syrian army under Ninus, and call the roll. Stand in Hoe the 1.000 000 men of Sesostris, the 1,200 000 men of Artax- the 2.641.000 men under Xerxes at Thermopyiee, and call the long roll, Not one answer At the opening ot our civil war the m i mn that if they fell in battle their names b hele 00 fell in battin military hospitals, you cannot call the names yf 100, nor the names of Any Oblivion ! Brussels All still tichmond at Are the ayes that Oblivion! A hundred years from now thers will not be a being on this In some old family record a descendant eyes born last night goaia. grandfather. What were his features? What did he do? What year was he born? What year did he die? And your great-grand- Will you describe the style of the hat she wore, and how did she and yoar great-grandfather get on in each other's companionship? Was it March weather or June? Oblivion! That mountain surge rolls over everything, Even the pyramids are dying. Not a day passes bat there ls chiseled off a ehip of that granite, The sea is triumphing over the land, and what is going on st Coney Island is going on all around the world, and the continents are crumbling into the waves, and while this is transpiring on the outside of the world the hot chisel of the eternal fire is digging under the foundation of the earth and entting its way out toward the surface, It surprises me to hear people say they do up, when all scientists will tell you that it has for ages been on fire. Why, there is only raging to get out. Oblivion! The world itsell will roll into it as easily as a schoolboy’s india rubber ball rolls down a hill, and when our world goes it is so interlocked by the law of gravitation with other worlds that they will go, too, and #0 far from having our memory perpetuated by & monument of Aberdeen granite in this world there §8 no world in sight of our strongest telescope that will bea sure i ment for any slab of commemoration of the fact that we ever lived or died at all. Our earth is struck with death. The axistree of the constellations will break and let down the population of other worids, Stellar, lunar, solar mortality, Oblivion! It ean swallow and will swallow whole galaxies of a frog. Yot oblivion does not remove or swallow anything that had better not be removed or swallowed, The old monster is welcome to his meal, This world would long ago have been overcrowded if it had not been for the merciful removal of Nations and genera tions, What if all the books had lived that were ever written and printed and puab- Hshed? The libraries would by thelr im- mensity have obstructed intelligence and made all research impossible, The fatal epidemic of books wus a merciful epidemic, Many of the State and National libraries to-day are only g in which dead books are walting for some one to come and recognize them. What it all the opie that had been born were still alive - would HAYS haan Sibowad by our scutes of ten centu ago, and people w . to have sald their {ast word 3000 yonrs ago would snarl! at us, saying, "What are you doing here?’ There would have been no room to turn around. Some of the past generations of mankind wers not worth re- membering, The fiest useful thing that many lo did was to dle, their ® mist and their von tolire in before the of ittale Pinos to be glad they wera put out, healthful deaft, eannot be depended on. Hiustrated by n few straggling facts, In all the goddess of history, and Instead of being arutches, Faithful history is the saving things out of more things lost, The immor- granite shaft, eyelopedia {| one's ambition, for it will cease and is no fm- mortality at all, Oblivion! A hundred submergence of things earthly who wants to be forgotten? Not one of us, Absent for an few weeks or months from home, it cheers us to know that we ars re. membered there, It is a phrase we have ail pronounced, “I hope vou misssd me.” Meet. ing some friends from whom we have been parted many years, we inquire, ‘Did you | aver gee me before?’ and they say, Yes" | and call us by name, and we feel a delight | ful sensation thrilling through their hand into our hand, and running up to shoulder, and then parting, the one cur- rect of delight ascending to the brow and the other descending to the foot, moving round and round in concentric circles until { every nerve and muscle and capacity of body { and mind and soul is permeated with de- light. A few days ago, visiting the place of my bovhood, I met one whom I had not seen sinee wo played together at ten vears of age, and I had peculiar pleasure in puzzling him a little as to who I was, and I ean hardly deo bled out: “Let me see. Yes, you are De | Witt,” We all like to be remembered, Now, I have to tell you that this oblivion of which I have spoken has its defeats, and that there Is no more reason why we should not be distinetly and vividly and gloriously remembered five hundred million billion jarillion quadrillion quintillion years from now than that we should be remembered six weeks, [am going to tell you how thething can be done and will be done We may bualld this “everlasting remem- branes,” as my tex! styles it, into the super. nal existences of those to whom we do kind. nesses in this world, You must remember that this infirm and treacherous faculty which we now call memory Is in the future state to be complete and perfect, “Fier. Insting remembrances!” Nothing will sl p the stout grip of that colestial faculty, Did you heipa widow pay her rent? Did you find for that man released from prison » place to get honest work? Did you pick up a child fallen the curisione, and by a stick of candy put in his hand stop the hurt his soratehod knee? Did you assure a business man, swamped by the stringency of the money market, that tims would after awhile be better” Did you lead a Magdalen of the stront a midaight mission, where the Lord her : “Neither do I condemn thes ; go and sin no more? Did you tell a man, clear couraged in his waywardness aod hopeless and plotting suleide, that for him was near by alaverin which he might wash, and a eoronst of oternal ses he might wonr’ What ary epitaph in graveyards, what are Riums in presence of (hose whose breath is in their nostrils, what are unread blogra phios in the sleoves of olty library, pared with the {imperishable have made in the jllumined those to whom vou did such Forzet them? They eanno them Notwithstanding all their might and splon- dor, there are some things the glorified of heaven cannot do, and this ls one of them, They eannot an earthly kindness done, They have cutlass to part that They have no strength to hurl silivion that henelaction Has Paul the inhabitants of Malta, who extended the sland hospitality when he and others with him bad felt, added to a shipwreok, the drenching rala and the sharp cold? Has the victim of the highway man on the road to Je 0 fo the Good Ramaritan with a medicament of oli and wine and a free ride to the hostelry Have the Eaglish soldiers who went up to i from the Crimean battlefields on on nid said to 3 iis bilessadn ag le Om records you memories of kindnosses throat Orged forget no Sms nlo ’ ut rorgolten £9 wy mien Go Floren Through all sternity will the Xorthern and Sout soldiers forget the Northern an Southern women who administerad fo the dying boys in blue and gray after the awful fights in Tennesses and Pennsyivania and Virginia and Georzia, which turned every house and barn and shed into a hospital and insarnadined the Susquehanna, and the James, and the Chattahoochee, and the Sa. vannah with brave blood? The kindnesses you do to others will stand as long in the sp- preciation of others as the gates of heaven will stand, as the “House of Many Mansions” will stand, as long as the throne of God will stand Another defeat of oblivion will be in the character of those whom we resous, uplift or save. Character is sternal sup pose by a right influence we aid in trans forming a bad man ato a good man, a dol- orous man into sx happy man, a disheartensd man nto a courageous man --every stroke of There may never be 80 much as one line in a news. paper regarding #. or no mortal tongue may ever whisper it into human ear, but where. ever that soul shall go your work upon it shall go, wherever that soul rises your work apon it shall rise, and so long as that soul will last your work on it will last, Do you suppose there will ever come such an idiotic lapse in the history of that soul in ¢ orgoiten forgotten o Nightingale? § i ern 3 found And God never was jealous of a Joshua, never was jealous of a Paul, never was jealous of a Frances Have gal, never was jealous of a man or woman tears and and while abnegating us, not unto lft burdens and souls, all is of grace, and vour self. utterance will be, “Not unto us, but unto Thy name, 0 Lord, wive glory!” you shall always heavenly satisfaction In every thing you did on earth, and if leono. borne from beneath, should break effuce one methinks nails of His own cross and write somewhere on the erys. tal, or the amethyst, or the jucinth, or the chrysoprasus, your name and just under it the inscription of my text, “The righteous shall be held in everlasting remembrance.” Oh, this character butlding! You and 1 4 ve olasm, of your earthly fidelity, occupation, You are making ma better or worse, and I am making you better or worse, and we shall through all eternity bear the mark of this benediction or blasting. Let others have the thrones of heaven-—- those who have more mightily wrought for God and the truth—but it will be heaven on the boulevards of “You helped me once, You encouraged me when | was in earthly struggle. 1did not know that I would have resched thisshining place had it not been for you," “Ha! really rememberthat talk? ber that warning? Do vou Christian invitation? What have! in Brooklyn or thousand million years ago. And the an- swer will be, “Yes, it was as long as hut 1 remember it as well as though yesterday.” Oh, this character building! ha! Do YOu remem a memory New Orleans at least ten in- dependent of crumbling mausoleums, inde pendent of the whole planetary system, Aye, universe, which bound together like one piece of machinery, Bes should send worlds crashing into each other like telescoped railway trains, and all the wheels of consteliations and galaxies shoul stop, and down into one chasm of imme all the suns and moons and stars shoul tumble like the midnight express at Ashita buia, that would not touch us and w hurt God, for God is a spirit, and character and memory are mortal, and over that grave of a wrecked material snlverse micht truthfully be written, “The righteous shall be held in everlasting remembrance.” 0, Time, we defy 0, Death slamp thee in the dust of thine own chers! O, Eternity, roll on has stopped rotating, and the last sun is ex tinguished pathway, the Inst moon has Hlumined the last n and a< many vears | ns scribes that ever took pen as many figures as they could turies of all time, but thou shalt have power to offaon any soul memory of anvihing we have it to God and heaven There is another and a more cong feat for « and that 3 the You have soon a sailor rol his arm tattoos orite ship perhaps ever salind, You nu his slesve an {11 in thee! wea wep! till the last star on G the sapphire o passed ail the could deseribe | 3 write in all the oF no fron glory the ote de divion ia heart o God himenlt his slenve and sho you with the figure the Bret « in a soldier ne rol tattoo he have show yvoa his arm * wer 5 i with the figure of a fortress whic! was garrisoned, or the face of a great general under whom he fought You have seen many a ha tooed with the face of 5 loved after marriage This tattooing is almost as old asthe world, It is some colored liquid panstured into the indelibly that nothing can wash it yu It may have been there fifty years, but when the man goes | his coffin that ple ture will go with him on band or arm Now, God says that he has tattooed us upon his hands. There can be no her meaning in the forty ninth chaj ter of Isaiah, where God says, ‘Behold, I have graven thee on the palms of my hands 7 It was as much as to say. “I cannot open My hand to help, but | think of you. can not spread abroad My hands to bless, but | think of v« Wherever | go up and down the heaven take these two pictures of vou with Me, They inwrought into My being that 1 eannot jose them As long as My hands last the memory of you will last Not on the back of My hands, as though to announes you to others, but on the paims of My bands for Myself to look at and study and love. Not on the palm of one hand alone, but on the paims of both hands, for while I am looking upon one hand and think ing of you, 1 mus have the other hand free to protect you, free to strike back your enemy, free to lift if you fall Palms of My hands indelibly tattooed! And though I bold the winds in My first no cyclone shall uproot the inseription of your name and your face, and though I bold the ocean in the hollow of My band its billowing shall not wash out the record of My remembrance. ‘Behold, I have graven thee on the palms of My hands. "" What joy, what honor can there be com- parable to that of being remembered by the mightiest and kindest and loveliest and ten derest and most affectionate being in the universs? Think of it, to hold an everlasting Mace in the heart of God. The heart of God ! Ihe most beautiful palace in the universe, Lot the archangel! bulld some palace as Let him erumble up one are so such a palace floor. Let him take all the sun- upholstery at its windo ws, Lot him take all the rivers, and all the BHIPS AND WHA®ES. Many Euvcounters Between the Two Are Recorded, The steamship Petersburg of the Russian volunteer fleet had 4 unique experience near Minicoy, in the South Indlan Ocean. A sharp shock was felt by all on board and she stopped as though gripped in a vise. The sea was found to be colored with the life. blood of two huge whales, which lay floating in their last agony. One was cut through by the steamer's | sharp stem, and the other killed by repeated blows of the screw pro- peller. The German steamship Waesland, bound from Antwerp to New York, ran into and killed a sleeping whale. A smaller steamer, the Kelloe, col- lided with a whale near Seaham Harbor, and wounded it badly. The celebrated yacht Genesta narrowly avoided collision with a dead ceta. cean during the jubilee race around our islands. In 1889 a Shields’ steam ship, the James Turple, nearly cut him to Christ ; that you, by prayer or gospel word, turned him round from the wrong way to the right way? No such insanity will ever amite a heaventiy oftizen, It ia not half as well on earth known that Christopher Wren planned and built St. Paul's as it will be known in all heaven that you ware the in. strumentality of building a temple for the sZy. We teach a Sabbath class, or put a Chris. | tian tract in the hand of a passerby, or tes. | lakes, and all the oceans, and toss them into | the fountains of this palace court. Let him take all the gold ofall the hills and tin | ts chandeliers, and all the pearls of | palace, and then invite into it all the glories | that Esther over saw at a Persian banquet, or | Daniel ever walked among in Babylonian | sastles, or Joseph ever witnessed in Pharaoh's | throneroom, and then yoursell enter this tity for Christ in a prayer mesting, or preach a sermon, and go home discon sd, as though nothing had been accomplished, when we had been. chargeter bullding with a ma- terial that no frost or earthquake or rolling of the centuries can damage or bring down, { There Is no sublimer art in the world than | architecture. With pencil and rule and com- i pass the architect sits down alone and in si | lence, and evolves from his own brain a ea | thedral, or a National capitol, or a massive | home before he leaves that table, and then he | goes out and unrolls his plans, and calls car. | petiters and masons and artisans of all sorts { to execute his design, and when it is finished | he walks around the vast structure and sees the completien of the work with high satis. faction, and on a stone at somb corner of the {| building the architeot's name may bo chiseled, | Bat the storms do their work, and time, that | gakes down aterything, will yet take down phat structure until there shall not be one | gtons left upon another. But there is a soul in heaven, Through your instrumentality it was put there, Une der God's gence you are the architect of its | sternal happiness, Your name is written, not on one corner of its nature, but inwrought into its every fiber and energy. Will the storms of winter wash out the story of what you have wrought upon that spiritual struc. ture? No. There are no storms in that land, the riled od . hich Phi ty? nw we your No. Time is past, and it Is an a atny! now. Bullt into the foundation of that imper- istinble structure, built foto its pillars, built into its capstone, is your name--either the name you have on earth or the name by which colestials shall call you, greater palace that some of you have already found in the heart of a loving and pardoning God, and into which all the music, and al the prayers, and all the sermonie considera. to introduce you Oh, where Is oblivion now? From the dark and overshadowing word that it seamed when I began, ft has become something which no man or woman or child who loves the Lord ever fear. Oblivion defeated. Oblivion dead, Oblivion sepulchered. Bat I must not be so hard on that devouring monster, for into its ve go all our sins when the Lord for Christ's sake has forgiven them. Just blow a resurrection trumpet over them when once oblivion has sna them down. Notone of them rises w again. Not a stir amid all the oned in- iquities of a lifetime. Blow n. Not one Orion Tetra Seton. Teas pet ttot resurt a voice pol oy half hat divine, and it must be man an God, say- ing, Phat tiny and their iniquities will I re- member no more.” Thank God for this blessed oblivion! So soe 1 did not invite you down into a oel- , but upon a throne : not into the grave. ad to which all materialism is R into a garden all abloom with everlasting remembrance. The frown of my first text a whale in two one starlight night. | The schooner O. M. Marrett was almost wrecked by passing whales in { the North Atlantic Many the struck her repeatedly with violence that her whole hull articles in the officers’ of such In 1890 a small safling vessel, the bound from Galveston to England, struck a sleeping whale and received damage. On the morn- h of July, a whale fifty ! feet long made his appearance close alongside the steamship Port Adel. alde, Capt. C. M. Hepworth, R. N. in forty-two degrees south, degrees east. He fol- vepsel for four days, never than seventy vards away, and generally close astern. much to the edification DUINETOUS passengers. forty-one rinety-seven degrees traveling 9%0 status of south, east, after apparently fasting. In November the Parson, was Earnock, call In ship under south, twenty when a Ig the sea into foam with near the ship that the who happened to be be- forward, came quickly on deck to see what had happened. He t the impact of the water one iarge whale lashed his tail, chief offic r degrees west, wi her majesty fou {1 In June, 1861, while chip Immortalite was steaming Arosa Bay to Gitraltar of twelve 1% an hour, at the Ks It was presently had cut deeply into necessary « rid the Four months later the Anchor Line steamship Ethiopis | collided with a whale when about miles frém New York. —Cham bers’ Journal lortated ghe | had been found that a whale, #nd it became go astern in order to incumbrance get of =O nn. Renand's Exploits, In February, 1848 when the French sapital was in the throes revolu. tion, a mob surrounded the Hotel de Ville and menaced the deliberations if the Assembly, which was sitting within. At the Theatre Historique, where Chateau-Renaud, an actor if no great cousequence at the time | happened to he, he heard of the tur moll, and a bright thought came to | him. He put on a costume a representative of the people in the year 1783. Then he hunted up an i 2d white horse, mounted it, and, of of straight to the Hotel | through the mob which was shouting its doors Dismountisge. he went into the hall, where Lemartine | was presiding “Citizens,” he | shouted, ‘deliberate in peace! | noe shall come in while I am here! | He went out and remounted his | white horse, and no one did come in. One fantastically attired man, with | 4 terrible onuntenance, had complete "” bly would have defiled successfully a - i ———— Gold in South Africa. The goid flelds of the Transvaal Republic, in South Africa, yielded pver 136,000 ounces in August, which any one month lo round figures a year's output at the same rate world which is about equal to the annual production of gold in either the United States or In the countries last named, however, the gold yield is atout stationary, whereas it Is rapid- ly increasing year by year in South Africa. If the Transvaal mines pro- 1593 there will in 1804 in all probability. Where the top limit will be reached can hardly be guessed. Good judges say that hundreds of square miles of territory are underlaid with gold-bearing rock and that the total yield of the region will not fall below 81, 500,000,000, BO . Don’t Forget itis BAKING POWDER that makes the deli- cious biscuit, griddle i * KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet- ter than others and enjoy fite more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced the remedy, Byrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas- ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- neys, Liver and Bowels without weak- ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug- gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man- ufsctured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, vou will not accept any substitute if offered. “August Flower” Eight doctors treated me for Heart Disease and one for Rheumatism, but did me no good. I could not speak aloud. Everything that I took into the Stomrch distressed me. 1 could not sleep. 1 had taken all kinds of medicines. Through a neighbor I got one of your books. I procured a bottle of Green's Aug- ust Flower and took it. I am to-day stout, hearty and strong and enjoy the best of health. August Flower saved my life and gave me my health. Mrs. Sarah J Cox, Defiance, 0. @ “MOTHER'S .. FRIEND” .- is a scientifically prepared Liniment and parmless; every ingredient is of recognized value and in constant use by the medical profession. It short- ens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to life of Mother and Child. Book “To Mothers" mailed free, con- taining valuable information and voluntary testimonials. Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of price, $1.20 per bottie. SRADFIELD REGULATOR 00., Atlanta, Ba. Bold by all druggists, with Pastes., Enamels and Paiute which stain the banda, injare the iron and bare red The Rising Sup Stove Polish » Brillant, Oder ions, Durable, and the consumer for mo tin or glass package with svery CHEPPARD'S oll FANGES The Best for Eitber Heating or : Exoel in Style, Comfort and Durability. 260 KISDE AND 8:ZES. EVERY ONE WARRANTED acarser DEF CTS, ASK YOUR STOVE DEALER To show rou SHEPPARD'S LATEST CATALOGUE iM no desler sear you write to ISAAC A. SHEPPARD & CO., BALTIMORE, Mb, LARGEST BAAUFACTURERS IN TRE SOUTH ngleside 3 Por Dichscs of Women. Selenite Fo Br dn, pee tr A Roshi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers