Royal Buckwheats, For generations it has been the cus- tom to mix the butter for buckwheat cakes with yeast or emptyings, retain- ing & portion of the batter left over from one morning to raise the cakes for the following day. If kept too warm, or not used 4 promptly, this batter becomes exces- sively sour sud objectionable. Buck- wheat cakes raiced by this means are more often sour or heavy than hight and sweet. If eaten daily they dis- tress the stomach and cause skin erup- tions and itching. Instead of the old-fashioned way we have been making buckwheat cakes this winter with Royal Baking Pow- der, mixing the batter fresh daily, and find the result wonderfully satisfac tory. They are uniformly light and sweet, more palatable and wholesome . and ean be eaten continuously without the slightest digestive inconvenience. Besides they are mixed and baked in a moment, requiring time to rise, Following is the receipt used: Two cups of pure buckwheat (not ‘‘prepare I" or mixed), of wheat flour, two tablespoons of Royal Baking Powder and one-half teaspoon- ful of salt, all sifted well together, Mix with milk into a thin batter and bake at once on a bot griddle. Once prop erly tested from this receipt, no other wekwheat will find its way to your ~Domestic Cookery. no flour one cup es— ———— ee ——— The Main Thing. Little Henry's father and mother wish him to be a French scholar, and knowing that a foreign language most readily acquired in childhood. they have given him a French govern- ess, with whom he is expected to talk French. Henry gets along pretty well, but is not yet to be mistaken for a native ‘arisian. The other day dis- covered that the barn was fire. He ran into the house quite of breath. “) madamoiselle,” he exclaimed, rushing into the school-room, “I don’t know whether it's la feu or le but anyhow there's a big blaze in the barn!” Is he aon out fore i088, EE —— BraziL will greatly oblige the rest of the world by making up its mind as to what kind of government it wants and remaining in that fame of mind four or five consecutive weeks A — IT is easier to run ao engine w out fire than It is te uj spirituality of a church without prayer m etiog. ts i neep the 100 RB Whent Fram Twe Acres, Ths rem: dle vie Fra: vel "ne. WARE rEpOrie by two acres of Mare this wheat, tue greatest cropping Farmors who tries seventy five to one hand bushels ean be grown from one ace g to get this vie for 8M, eal bushel. pizer | largest pays at Je a grower of vege table and f Ir you Tc postage Lo the John A Crosse, Wis, you catalogue ahove wheat, A e world AND SEXD IT with Seed Co... L iki get {ree their mammot Wilt FHIR OU Salze a w b and a package of spring EvERY dollar a worldling makes an unanswered prayer for happiness. 1s Erare or Onto, Cry or TOLEDO, be Lucas Lousy Frask J. Cunesey makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Capsey & Co... doing business in the City of Toledo, aunty and State aforesaid, and that said firm wil y the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL~ LARS for each aud every case of Cuarrh that eannot be cured by the use of Hatr'sUATAKRE Core. Fras J. Causey. sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1588, ro i A. W. GLeasox, SEAL t BEA { Notary Pubyie. Hall's Catarrh Cure istaken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free, : F.J.Cnexey & Co, Toledo, Ou $F Sold by Droggists. 75. The Hawalian diffieulty--How to pro- pounce the Queen's name, For impure or thin Blood, Weakness, Mala. Neurnigia, Indigestion and Hiliousnees, ¢ Brown's Iron Bitters—it gives strength, making old persons feel young-and young persons strong: pleasant to take. A miner may be everso well off, but he can't heip getting in a hole oceasionally. Covons axp Hoanseness, The irritation which induces coughing immediately relieved by use of “Brown's Bronchial Troches.,” Sold only in boxes, Cupid never shows a wrinkle, G00D QUALITIES Possessed by Hood's Sarsaparilla are almost beyond mention. Hest of all, it purifies the blood, thus strengthening the nerves, iL regu. lates the digestive organs, invigor- ater the kidneys and liver, tones and builds up the entire system, cures Scrofuls, Dyspepda, Catarrh, Rheumatism, Salt Rheum, vic. REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN- DAY SERMON, “A Vision of Heaven.” Sabject: Text: "Now il came to pass as I was among the captives by the river of Chebar that the heavens were opened and I saw visions of God." Ezekiel §,, 1. Expatriated and in far exile on the banks of the river Chebar, an afMuent of the phrates, sat Ezekiel, mmortal dream, and it is givento us in the Holy Scriptures, He dreamed of Tyre and Egypt. He dreamed of Christ and the com- ing heaven, you or I ever have had or ever will have seated on the banks of the Hudson or Ala bama or Oregon or Thames or Danube, But we all have had memorable dreams, half awake, so that we did not know whether of shadow or sunlight, loose and disarranged as in slumber, or tion of faculties awake, Buch a dream [had this morning, the It was It was sg dream of God, a dream of k the Chebar: I had my dream banks of the Hudson, heaven, banks of tha not far from the The most of thestories many centuries ago, piace looked then, or how it will look centuries ahead, Would you not like to know how it looks now? That is what I am going to tell yo I was thers I bave just g back, Howl into that city of the sun I know not, Which of the twelve gates I entered is to me uncertain, But my first remembrance of the scons is that [ stood on one nues, looking this way and a. t ot of the main ave- that, lost in rap iil of music and redo- hit that I knew not an angel of God show me the of and i i: when accosted me and offered Jeots of greatest interest, from street to street, snd mansion, and from temple to temple, and from wall to wall. I said to the angel, ‘How long bast thou been in heaven? swer, “Thirty-two earthly calendar.” There was a secret about this angel's name that was not given me, but the tender. ness and sweetness and : fon and inter- est taken in my walk rough heaven, and more than all in the fact of thirty-two years residence, the number of vears since she ascended, | think was my mother, Old age and decrepitude and the tired look wers all gone, but | think it was she, was only on a visit to the yet taken up residence, Only in part, I looked in for a few moments at the great temple. Our brilliant and lovely Scotch es sayist, Mr. Drommond, savs thers is no church in heaven, but he did not look for it on the right street, St, John was right when in his Patmosic vision, recorded in the third chapter of! Hevelation, he speaks of temple of my God." I saw it this morning, the largest church I ever saw, as big as all the churches and cathedrals of the sarth put together, and it was thronged., Oh, what multitude’ I had never seen so many pen pie together. All the audiences of all the churches of all the earth put together would make a poor stendance ec assambiage to conduct from mansion to me years accordiog to the from affect $ t "t it You see, | and had could know city and I not ‘the n o pared with the here was a fashion in attire and headdress that immediately t tention. The fashion wae white, save one, And the gariand of rose and mingled with green royal gardens and b of gold my white Atl headdress was and Wik n mignonsits, | the Ger with bands lily jeaves und toy from And I saw some young men with a ring on the flager of the right band and sald to my accompanying ange!, “Why those rings on the flugers of the right hands?” and [ was told that those who wore them were prodigal sons and once fad swine in the wilderness and lived on husks, Sut they cams home, and the rejoicing father said, band.” Bat I said there was one ox seption to this fashion of white pervading all the auditorium and clear up through ail the galleries, It was the attire of the one who presided in that immense temple-—the chiefest the mightiest, the loveliest person in sil the place. His chooks seemed to be flushed vith infinite beauly, and his forehead was a morning sky, and his lips wers eloquence omnipotent, But his attire was of deep colors, They suggested the carnage through which he had passed. and I said to my at- tending angel, "What f= that crimson robe that he wears?’ and [ wan told, “They are dyed garments from Bozrab.” and ‘He trod the wine press alone. ™ Soon after | entered this temple they be. gan to chant the celestial litany, It was un. fike anything I had ever beard for sweetness and power, and I Lave heard the most sweet of the great organs and the most of the great oratories. I said to my accompanying angel, “Who is that standing yonder with the harp?’ and the aaswer was, “David And 1 said, “Who is that sounding that trumpet!’ and the answer was “Oabriel ™ And I said, “Who is that at the organ?” and the answer was "Handel ¥ And the musis rolled on till it came to a doxology extolling Christ Himself, when all the worshipers, lower down and higher up, a thousand gal- levies of them, suddenly dropped on their knees and chanted, “Worth is the Lamb that was slain.” Under the overpowering har- mony I fell back. I said: “Let us go. This is too much for mortal ears, the overwhelming symphony.” But I noticed as I was about to turn away “ut a ring on his like the lachyrmal, or tear bottle, as I had seen it in the earthly musems, the lachry- tals used to weep their griefs and set them away as sacred. But this lachyrmal, or tear bottle, in stead of earthenware, &s those the many splendors, and it was towering and of great capacity. And I said to my attending angel, "What is that That is the bottle to which David, the psalm- It And then iy sorrows, As I was coming out of the temple I saw WwW. J. Ba Kidney Troubles And severe pains in my back resulted from a cold contracied in the war, | received only temporary rélief from medicines, After the Iw hysionll down, Hood's . op on wonders Yor me, Ioo or Hood’s*s*Cures itd paras Sat Y bomorore Maca shelves, and golden vials ware being set up on all those shelves, And I said: “Why the setting up of all these vials at this time? They seem just now to have been filled,” and the attending angel said, ‘The week of prayer all around the earth has just closed, and Latimer and Ridlevand Polvearp, whom the flames refused to destroy as they bent outward till a spear did the work, and some of the Albigenses and Huguenots and conse- erated Quakers who were slain ligion. They ha! on them many scars, but thalr sears were illumined, and they had on thair faces a look of mspecial triumph, Then we passed along Bong row, and we met some of the old gospel singers. “That is Isano Watts," sald my attendant, As wa came up to him, he asked me if the churches on earth were still singing the hymns he composed at the house of Lord and Lady Abner, to whom he pald a visit years, and I told him that many of the churches opened the Babbath morning ser- vices with his old hymn, “Welcome, Bweet Day of Rest,” aod colebrated their gospel triumphs with his hymn, “SBalvaticn, Oh the i * . i | Joyful Bong !" and often roused their devo- | tions by his hymn, "Come, We That Love the Lord.” While we were talking he {to another of the song writers “This is Charles Wesley, who earth to a different church { we are all now members of the same church, | the temple of God and the told Charles Wesley that almost every Bab- and sald, belonged on the Lord, Awake,” or, "Come, Let Us Our Friends Above!” or, “Love { Love Exeelling.” And while we were talk- ine on that street called Bong row, Kirk White, the consumptive college student, now everiastingly well, came up, and we tuiked over his old Christmas hvmn, “When Mar- shaled on the Nightly Plain.” Aad William Cowper came up, now entirely recovered from his religious melancholy and not look ing as if he had ever In dementia attempted suicide, and we talked over the wide earthly eslebrity and heavenly power of hymns, “When | Can Read My and “There Is un Fountain Blood." And thers we mat Join Divine, All hia old Title ( Filled lear Wit With (eared hune of of how his comforting hymn been sung at obsequies all aroun he rorid—''it Is Not Death to Die” id Te came up and asked about whether the chorch was still making use of his old : Ages, Cleft For Ma And Song row Newton and Hastings and gomery and Horatio Bonar, and we floating from window to window suato} the old hymns whichthey started and started never to die, **Bat,’ sea anvthineg of yes, 1 did, BAYS RON yrels hymn We Riso say some of my hearers, * our friends in heaven “Did you ses my oh one, “and Are there | thelr last sickness still ane them, but thers was no pallor, no cough, no fever, no languor, about them, They ars all well and raddy and songfal and bound ing with eternal mirth, They told me to their love to you ; that they bour by hour, and that when they excused from the heavenly plavge: came down, and hoverel kissed your cheek, and filled with their giad faces, and st they woo al the gate 10 greet you when you to he with them forever, 5 “Bat.” say other volees, “did glorified friends?’ Yes, | saw they are well in the land acre pacumoning or palaiss or dropsies € The ar did vou Oh iidren thera? any marks of in them?" 1did wes give thought oly could be inds they you, and vour drensn Ove ascended 01 Ae our and no 1 holds ina blows over from or. ’ them wel which f ¥y i with trees bearing twelve fruits, and gardens compared Chatsworth is a desert The mingling of an earthly June and the balm of the one and the tonic o The social thst they are is superb and perfect? MAGDET | with whieh eiimate is Oretty 6 Vey f the other, life in realm whore No eontro or jealousios or hates, but love, un we, everlasting love, And theytold o tail you not to weep for them, forthe happiness knows no bound question of version versal | met it , Bnd hall ’ MIs oniv a reign with sf with them planets and the 4 > 3 them in the same 3 ’ in the same exph same tour ration of worlds, inder in this assem? turned face that seams to ages of those in heaven children remain ehil thelr childish jut ¥ vy is an up am chil {ren vivacity my departed parents remain aged, or have they lost the venerable out of their natures Well what I saw [ think chiidbhood has advanond to full maturity of Ia , refining all the resilience of childhood, and that the aged had retreated to midlife, fread from all de cadence, but still rotainioe the sharm of the venerable, In other words, It was fully de veloped and compiste life of all souls, whether young or old, Some one says, “Will you tli as what most impressed you in heaven?” I will, | was moat impressed with the reversal of earthly conditions. [ knew, of course, that there would be differences of aitire and residence in heaven, tor Paul had declared long ago that souls would then differ ““as one star dit fered from another,” as Mars from Mercury But at every step in my dream in heaven | was amazed to ses that some who ware rxpoected to be high in heaven were low down, and some wh expected to be low down were high up. Yoo thought, for instance, that those born of plous parentage, and of naturally good dis position, and of brilliant faculties, and of all styles of attractiveness will move in the high et range of celestial splendor and pomp No, no, 1 found the highest thrones, the brightest coronots, the richest mansions, were occupied by those who had repro hate father or bad mother, and who inherited the twisted natures of ten generations of milscreants, and who had compressed in their Pedy all the de praved appetites and ail evil propensities, but they laid hold of God's arm, they cried ! for especial mercy, they conquered seven devils within and seventy devils without and wore washed in the blood of the Lamb, and by so much as their contest was terrific and | awful and prolix their victory was consum- | mate and resplendent, and they have taken | places immeasarably higher than those of good parentage, who could hardly help be- ing good, because they had ten generations | of preceding piety to ald them. The staps by | which many bave mounted to the highest | places in heaven were made out of the ora- | dies of corrupt parentage. When I saw that, { I said to my attending angel : “That is fair ; that is right, The harder the struggle the | mors glorious the reward.” Then 1 Jointed to one of the most colon- naded and grandly domed residences in all the city and sald, “Who lives there?’ and from } Were mites.” “And who lives there?’ sod the | answer was, “The penitent thief to whom | Christ said, ‘This day shalt thou be with Me {in paradise.” “And who lives there?’ | sald, and the answer was, “The blind beggar | who prayed, ‘Lord that my eyes may be | opened.” | Bome of those professors of religion who | warendamous on earth I asked about, but no | one could tell me anything concerning them. | Their names were not even in the city direc- | tory of the New Jerusalem. The fact is that | ‘all, Many who had ten talents were living | on the back streets of heaven, wolle many and more supplications have been made than | with one talent had residences fronting on have been made for a long while, and thess | the King's park, and a back lawn sloping to new vials, newly set up, are what the Bible | the river clear as crystal, and the highest no- speaks of as “golden vials full of odors, | bility of heaven were guests at their table, : ail | bik al Eo 9 een which are the prayers of saints,” And sald to the accompraying angel, ‘Can it be possi ble that the prayers of earth are worthy of being kept in such heavenly shape?” "Why," said the angel, “there is nothing that so moves heaven as the Jrnyats of earth, and poi are sot up in sight of thess fofinite multitudes, and, more than all, in the sight of Christ, and He cannot fo them, and they ate betore Him world without end.” en wo came out, and as the temple is al- ways open and some worship at one hour and others at other hours we passed down the street amid the throngs coming to and going from the great temple, And we passed along through au strect called Martyr place, and we met there, or saw sitting at the win- dows, the souls of those who on earth went through fire and blood and under sword and rack, Wo saw John Wyellf, whose ashes were by decree of the eoancil of Constance thrown into the river, and who bathed his hands in the fife at though had beeii water, aud Bishop Hooper MeKail | and often the white horse of Him who “hath the moon under His feet” champaod its bit at their doorway. Infinite eapsize of earthly conditions ! All social life in heaven graded according to earthly struggle and usefulness as proportionad to talents given ! As I walked through those streets | ap- Rrusiated for the first time what Paul sald to imothy, ‘If we suffer, we shall also reign | with Him." It surprised me beyond deserip- | tion that all the great of heaven were great sufferers, ‘Not all?! Yee, all, Moses, him of the Red Sea, a t sufferer. David, him of Absalom's sunfilisl behavior, and Alitho- phel’s betrayal, and a Nation's dethronement, A great sufferer, Ezekiel, him of the captiv- iY: who had the dream on the banks of the C , & great sufferer. Paul, him of the diseased ayes, and the Meditereancan shi wrook, and the Mars Hill derision, and t ond andthe Mamertine . wh k, and the ‘s ax on the to A jie wires, You, all the aposties after lives of suffering died by viclener, beaten to death with falls on a barren island, or by decapitation, the high up in heaven great sufferers, and ealin and St, Agnes and Bt, { Lucle and women never heard of out- | needle, and the broom, brush, and the washtub, and the | warded according to how well they did their | work, whether to set a tea table or govern a {| Nation, whether empress or milkmaid, I could not get over it, as in my dream 1 | saw all this, and that some of the most un- | known of earth were the most famous In | est failures of earth | cesses of heaven, And as we passed along {one of the grandest boulevards of heaven | there approached usa group of persons so shade my eves with both hands becanss | i could not endure the luster, and I said, | “Angel, do tell me who they are?’ and the answer was, “These are they who eame out {of great tribulation and had their robes washed and made white in the blood of the Lamb! My walk through the city explained a | thousand things on earth that had been to | me inexplicable, When I saw up there the su- perior delight and the superior heaven of i many who hind on earth had it hard with | cancers and bankruptcies and persecutions and trials of ali sorts, I said, ized it at last ; excess of enchantment ¥ NERY “God has equals in en has more than made up for the de- ficits on earth.” I to It said my in angelic escort, “1 morning on in i-hy,” 1 for MAH INK I have Rann, an ! 1 have Wh me know seen only in part, but through the atoning mercy of Christ, I hone rn (ood-hy Phen 1 passed on amid chariots tion, and slong by « amid piliared on agate, and un r ed for returned vie toward the walls flashe nquerors th miesties, and hy nr hen that ha i be Ors, And 5106 walls n me wit I heard 5B pale and 1 and down lower i & ont throu v earthly home the » rong upon pitiow that eit it, xod in bewilderment as was and what I had Hefleotic heaven 1 the glory and a lated they anded rorids lower were with lowsr, and of th nll « raptures, and came within sight residence, and until my saen | awoke othe Pirst The superiority of our er henvens, 1 8 ina. vino hesven he d ing t 10 Does Lan + everiast. ut the skulls heaven parted are as restorad aft wine y r being * irink out © of their enomi fonlem R q » described by ‘ 4 i shinil t houris with large Linck »ves Hikes De Fhe Biav's hovers six iris hid den in thelr shells” heaven After death the soul vat the by : the nia’s hea thint they and after wets at and then climbs a ster of which is paradise. Th A Senr nosed by nay have som they te, 1 esting t fap while PRIS parted ar e African heaven ing ; speaking of the departe is done or ever hesven ian heay fabitiag hesven, J & heaven fisgusd by a impse of nf Paul's heaven Christ's hesven, of your heaven, of my heaven | had bettortake Tasmanian heaven aor tnneness and heaven, a soalierad int oe John & heaven, f : Reflection nd You patiently and sheerfuily all pangs, affronts iships, persecutions and trials earth, rightiy borane insure heavenly payments of ecstasy { the Mo - y Oo hin : since, I they Every {winge of jenl distress, every lie told about you, earthly subtraction, if meekly borne, wili be heavenly addition. If you want to amount to anything in heaven and to move in its best society, you must be ‘perfected through sul- fering The only earthly currency worth anything at the gates of heaven is the silver of tears, At the top of all heaven site the greatest irist of the Bethlehem saravansary and of Pilate s and tern iner. and of the Calvarean assassination. phiye every suferer, C aver What H » endured, ob, who can ell To save our souls irom death and bell? Oh. ve of the broken heart, and the disap pe inted ambition, and the shattered fortune, and the blighted life, take from | what | saw in my Sabbath morning doeam! Reflection the Third and Last How de- sirable that we all got there! Siart this moment with prayer and penitence and faith jn Christ, who eames from heaves to earth to take us from earth to heaven Last summer, a year ago, | preached one Sabbath afternoon in Hyde Park. London, to a great 1ititude that no man could number, But 1 beard nothing from it unthi a few weeks ago, when Rev, Mr. Cook, who for twenty-two years has presided over that Hyde Park outdoor meeting, told me that last winter, going through a hospital in Lon. don, he saw a dying man whose {aoe bright. ened as he told him that his heart was | changed that afternoon under my sermon in Hyde Park, and all was bright now at his departure from earth to heaven, Why may not the Lord bless this as well as i that? Heaven se | dreamed about it, and as | 1 read about it, is so benign a realm you oan- {| not any of you afford tomiss it. Ob, will it not betranscendeontly zlorious after the strug- gle of this Jife fs over to stand it in that eter. nal safety? Samuel Rutherford, though they ! vislously burned his books and unjustly ar- rested him for treason, wrote of that oceles. tial spectacie : The King (here in His beauty, Witnout a veil, 1s seen; it were a well speat journey, Toough seven deaths lay beiween. oom ior ynmfort The Lamb with His fale army oth on Mount Zion siasd, And glory, glory dwseileth in Imaanael's land EE ——— Snails as Food, For the last month the palate of New | Yorkers has craved the flavor of roasted | snail. The delicacy is known to every man who studies the problem of orig- inal flavors in edibles. But a month or sc ago the newspapers began to talk about these delicions comestibles, and such is the value of advertising even to a snail that the imported supply is | now scarcely equal to the demand. | These snails are not the snails we know of, familiar to mossy garden walls and rich loams, They are gathered in quantities from the Bay of Biscay and along the south- ern seaboard of France and sent to this conntry alive. They are prepared after having been washed in several waters by boiling and then packing back in the shells into a thick paste of butter, garlic and parsiey, and roasted. They are hearty, digestible and in. imitable ; but the taste for them is an acquired one and a great many primi. tive appetites never experiment with them more than once.~~New York Presa, ’ A NEGRO OUTRAGE. AN OLD »TPORY RETOLD, THE vioTIM ¥3 LIVIEG 1 SOW YEARS OLD AT THE LOUISE ROME, I nD { (From the shingion Post) Fight vears ag wero ouirages in this city were moras frequent than sow, thers occurred a case of assault in broad dayligint on our streets, wi , af the time, was noted in the city press ut which has forgotten, While the Louise Home vesterday he had a con versation with the that Mrs, Aun Atkinson, She now old. the seemed overjoyed nt her recovery NOW LBsen yar reporter was out at victim ol assault, ie B3 years She repeated story to me and “1 was porn in King George Va.. miles from i810, Eight who County, on 4 piantation about twenty Fredericksburg, in February, years ago I was attacked by little In the knosked along the [ B80 fest, a negro sutchel 1 struggle which onde a grab for a Was MITYINg On my arm, followed the ma me down and dragged me pavements for After and I was picked u a distance © the he arried 1 securing satchel ran off p and the H« my eft ave was sewed nn and my left arm, which was diss AS a resgit ny experien the bir nervous prostrat was I that I « Home al T 1 1 ain An of the “1 1¢ fei i i ne yelciane attached 1o the relieve me walked, a bom id to » . wh 1 gaering as | In inking spelis with pal sad wd in my riness of Marmec it Revers med pains agether this old fran In the e treating me with ut this 1 nie right whiet ider £0 below the el again into : hese | recongn ized 1a mesnt time st ioed arm he n Recorder, 8 res Philadelphia, of werson by Dr, Will People who had I sent for two boxes Frou Hing t« i promptly ihem the _OCOP di experi- of the see wan most entirely like Rory O'More, 1 bers and 1 sept lor ired me entirely and ile 1 ¢ I'he Were go 1 the I'he peared ie and | taking the ait was inst Mania Fru Ww, Hames’ Pink pimin, in & Js fie §oeq s BONS give new wi and re unis i HDL Or partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, scistion, neuraigis patisin, nervous heads the after « a grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and saliow complexion orme of wonkgess either in mae and a iting from mors in the blood i geniers. or will be sent oasnry t life and r De fie 1 hey Wo rest attored nerves fic § sh Aare ar i r 50 t dinamo ae io Lie Mil or Temale, vitiated Pills are » pad six bulk ¥ Williams’ Med: or Brockville fisnnaes fos ink by ail post eit ‘ for $24.4 3 are never sold In the 100: In Ir cine Or KX, Ontario, } cents a Dox, or MIXON dressing tudy, - - —— Ine friend « friend. msi rn i 4 r Pack Aches, or you are all worn ont, go for nothing, it is general of . Hrown's Iron Hitters will cure you, ake you strong. cleanse your liver, and give you a good appetite lohes Lio GeTvVes ¥ " everybody is nobody's ihe golden rule I'he power « f money Genunlue, dapanese Tooth Pawder, far Lappy Drag A large box Co. Phitlsieinh rind lewd 19 veils, in, Pa. The youth of the soul is everlasting. Beecham's Pills correct bad effects of over. eating. Beecham's—no others. BDoents a box More mountains would be moved if there were more people with agraio WELCGME WORDS TO WOMEN. Many times women call on their family Jhy gicians, suffering, as they imagine, one from fSrapepsia. another from rt disease, another from liver or kiduey digoase, another with pain bere or there, and in this way they ail present to their easy-going doctor, separate d for which he pre. ateorger. “Tob aut by some womb disorder. suffering pa tient gets no better, but probably worse, by reason of the delay, wrong treat p went complications. A proper medi. cine, ke Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, directed to the couse would bave promptly cured the disease. Mrs. Hanny Tarrax, of Reynolds, Jefferson (vo. Neb, writes: * For two years | was a sufferer. A part of this time had to be earried from my Was racked with pain, bad hysteria, Was very nervous, no a site and Pre prin’ fected 8 ported » A eure.” Sold by all dealers in medicines. am A Means Out of the Difliculty, Any strain or bending of the back for any length of time leaves #t in a weakened con- dition. A means out of the difficulty is al- ways handy and cheap. Do as was done by Mr. Herman Bchwaygel, Aberdeen, 8. D., who says that for several years he suffered with a chronic stiteh the back, and was given up by doctors. Two bottles of St. Jacobs Oil completely cured him. Also Mr, John Lucas, Elnora, Ind, says that for sev eral years he suffered with pains in the back, and one bottle of 8t. Jacobs Ol cured him. There are manifold instances of how to do the right thing in the right way and not break your back, in — I —————— MorE people would pray for a Lap tism of the Holy Ghost if they were not afraid it would burn up their money. == wp . ENOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet- ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to Pealth of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup 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 wet with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- peys, Liver and Bowels witbent weak- ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug- gists in Sle 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, yov will not accept any substitute if offered. “MOTHER’S -. FRIEND?” .- is a scientifically prepared Liniment and barmless; every ingredient is of recognized value and in constant uso 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, Bent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of price, $1.50 per botlic. BRADFIELD REGULATOR C0., Atlanta, 6a. A bw a" Arncyrists, i Greatest of Family Games Progressive America. The most entertaining and instructive game of the century, It delighfully teaches American geography, while it is to young and old a: fascinating as whist. Can be plaved by any num. ber of plavers. Sent by mail, wepaid, for fifteen a . rade Company, Boston, Mass. MEN AND BOYS! Want to Jearn all about PBorse ? Bow lo Pick Outs Good One’ Know imperfe: tops and so Guard aga" Fraud? Detect Disease snd fect a Cure when same is possible? Tell the age by the Testh ! What to cali the Different Parts of the Antal? How to Shoe a Horse Properly © All this snd other Va usable Information can be obtained Wy reading ow 100.PAGE ILLUSTRATED HORSE BOOK, which we will forwasd, pos paid, on receiptof only 25 cents in stamps. BOOK PUB. HOUSE, 134 Leonard St., New York oy. W. L. DOUGLAS 83 SHOE ale custom work, costing from to $6, best value for the money in the world, Name and price stamped on the bottom, very pair warranted. Take no sebsti. tote. Soe jocal papers for full description of our complete limes for ladies and gen. tiemen or send for NN. | der by mail, Postage free. You can get the best | bargains of dealers who push our shoes,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers