REY. DR. TALNAGE The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun- day Sermon. I — Subject: “Home Again Text: “Brine hithsr the faitel call aad kill it." Luke xv., 28 Tn all ages nf the warld {ft has bean ene. tomary to ca'shrata jovial events by festive. ftv—tha sienine of treaties, the prociamn- tion of peace. the Christmas, the marriage, However mush on other days of the year our table may hava stintel supply. on Thankseivine thera must ha something Bounteons, And all the comfortable homes of Christendom have at some time oale. brated joyful events by banquet and fes. tivity, Somethine has happened in the old home. ®tead ereater than anything that has ever bapnened before, A favorite son, whom the world supposed would becomes a vagabond and outlaw foraver, has got tired of sight. seeing and bas retarnesd to his father's house, The world said he never would coma hack, The old man always said his son would come, He had been looking for him day after day and vear after vear. He knew he would come hack, Now, having returned to his father's house, the futher proclaims celabration. There is a eall in the paddock that has been kept up and fed To utmost capacity, so as to ba ready for soma occasion of jov that might coma along, Ab, there never will be a erander day on the old homestead than this dav. Let the butchers do their work and the housekeepars brine into the table the smoking meat. The musicians will take their places, and the gay groups will mova un and down the floor. All the {riands and neichbors are gathersd in, nnd extra supply is sent ouf to the table of the servants, The father presides at the table, and says grace, and thanks Gol that his long absent boy is home again. Ob, how they missed him! How glad they are to have him back! Ons brother indeed stands pouting at the back door and says: “This is a great ado abont nothing. This bad bov should have been chastensd instead of greeted. Veal is ton good for him!" Bat the father says: ‘‘Nothing is too good. Nothing is good enough.” There sits the youag map, giad at tha hearty reception, ut a shadow of sorrow flitting across his brow at the rernembrance of the trouble he had gop, All ready now. Lot the covers Jit, Music, He was dead, and he is alive again! He was lost, and he fs found! By such beld imagery does the Bible sat forth the merrymaking when a soul comes home to God, First of all, there is the new convert’s joy. It is no tame thine to become a Christian, The most tremendous moment in a man's life is when he surrenders himself to God. The grandest time on the father's homestead is when the bov comes back, Among the great throng who, in the parlors of my ehureb, professed Christ one nicht was a Young man, who next morning rang my doorbell and said: “Sir, I eannot contaio myself with the jov I fee!, I came here this morning to express it, I have found mors Joy in five minutes in serving God than fio ali the yenrs of my prodigaiity, and I came to sav 50." You have seen perhaps a man running for his physieal liberty and the officers of the Jaw after him. and you saw him escape, or afterward you heard the judge had pardoned him and how great was the gles of that res. ected man! But it is a very tame thing that compared with the ranning for onn’s ever. Instine life—the terrors of the law after him and Christ coming in to pardon and bless and rescus aad save. You remember John Bunyan, in his great story, tells how the pii- grim put his fingers in his ears and ran. coy Ing, “Life, life, eternal life!” A poor car driver, after having bad to struggle to sup. port his family for years, suddenly was in- formed that a large inheritance was his, and there was joy amounting to bewilderment, but that is x small thing compared with the experience of one when he has put in his bands tbe title deed to the joys, the raptures, the splendors of heaven, and he can truly say, “Its mansions are mine { {ts temples ars mine; is songs are m ne ; its God is mine Oh. it is no tame toning te become 8 Chris. tian, It is a merrymaking, It is the killing of the fatted calf, It is jubiies. You know the Bible never compares it to a funeral, but always compares it to something bright, It is more apt to be compared to a ban jue than anything else. If is comparsd in the Bible to the water — right, flashing water to the morning, rosaate, fire worked, moun. tain transfigured morning. I wish I could to-day take all the Bible expressions about Jasd n and peace and life and comfort and ope and heaven, and twist them into one garland, and put it on the brow of the hum- blest child of God in all this land, and ery: “Wear it, wear it now. wear ft forever, son oi God, daughter of the Lord God Almighty. Ob, the jor of the new convert! Ob, the Bindness of the Christian servies ™ You bave seen sometimes a man in a re- ligious assembly get up and give his expe. rience. Well, Paul gave his experiences, He rose in the presence of two churches the church on earth and the chureh in heaven—and he sald, “Now, this is my 8x perience, sorrowful,’ yet alwavs rejoicing, poor, yet making many rich; having noth Ing. yet possessing all things." If all the people who read this sermon knew the joys ot tie Christian religion, they would all Puss over into the kingdom of God the next moment. When Dante] Sandeman was dy- ing of cholera, his attendant sala, ‘Have sou mush pain?" “‘0b.” he replied, “since found the Lord I have never had any pain eXeept sin,” Then they sald to him, ‘Would rou like to sent a message fo your friends?” “Yee. I would, Tell them that only Inst night the love of Jesus came rush ing into my soul like the surges of the sea, and I hadtoery out: ‘Stop, Lord; it is enough! Stop, Lord--enough!” Oh, the joys of this Christian religion! Just pass over from those tame joys in wnish sou are indulging-—joys of this world-into the raptures of the gospel. The world cannot satisiy you: you have found out--Alexander longing for other worlds to conquer and yet drowned in his own bottle, yron whipped by disquietudes around the world, Voltaire cursing his own soul while all the streets of Paris wers applauding him, Henry 11. consuming with hatred against poor Thomas a Becket, all filustrations of the fact that this world cannot make a man ‘happy The very man who poisoned the pommel of the saddls on which Queen Hizabeth rode shouted in the street, ‘God Bave the Queen! One moment the world applauds, and the next moment the world auathematizes, Ob, come over into this greater joy, this fublime solace, this magnificent beatitude, (The night after the battleof Shiloh there (were thousands of wounded on the fleld, and fhe ambuinnces had bot come, One Chris tian soldier, lying there a-dying under the starlight, began to sing There isa land of pure delight, And wnen we came to the next line thers Were scores of voices united Where saints immortal reign, The sone was caught up all sver the fleld rmong the wounded until it was sald that ‘there were at least 10,000 wounded men uniting their voices as they came to the Yeree There everiestin spring abides And never withering flowers, Reath, like n narrow stream, divides That heavenly land from ours. Ob, it is a great religion to live and it $5 ngrent religion to dis by, There "in only one heart throb between you and that relig- jon this moment, Just look into the face of your purdoning God, and surrender yourself ot time and for eternity, and He fs yours, &nd heaven is yours, and all is yours, Some of You, iike the Fung man of the text, nave gone nstray, 1 know not the history, but You know you know it : When a young man forth into lite, he legend says, his an angsl wee forth with | 3 "ee arormd whers the young maa stood. It was n eirels of virtue and henor, gpd he must rot ste ond that eirdla, rmod foes esme , ut were obliged to halt at the airele, They could not pass, Bat ons dar a teraptress, with diamoned hand, atretohe ld forth and crossed that eirela with the hand, and the tempted soul took it, and by that one fell grip was brought beyond the circle and died, Some of von have atennad hayvond that eri. ele. Would you not like this day, by the grace of God, to step back? This, I say to voi, i8 your hour ol salvation. Thers was in the closing hours of Quesn Anne what is ealled the clock seene, Fiat down on the pillow, in helpless sickness, she could not mova her head or move her band, She was waiting for the hour when the ministers of Stats should gather in angry contest, ant warried nud worn out by the coming hour, and in momentary absence of the nurses, in the power—the strange power which de- lirinm sometimes gives one—she sross and stood in front of the clock, nnd stood} thers watching the closk when the nurses returnsd, The nurse said, “Do you see anything peeuls far about that ¢look?' She madeno answer, but oon died, There is a clock soene in every history, If some of you would rise from tha bed of lathargy and come ont of your delirium of sin and look on the elosk of your destiny this moment, you would see and bear gomething you have not seen or or heard bafore, and every tick of the minute, and every stroke of the hour, and every swing of the penduinm, would say, ‘Now, now, now, now!" Father's housa! Come home, ob, prodigal, from the wilderness! Come home, home} But I notiea that when thre revtnl there was the father's joy. H. Md not him with any formal “How do vou do?’ did not come out and say : enter, Go out and wash the well, and then youn can come in, have had encugh trouble with yon." Ah, no! When the proprietor of that estate pro- claimed festival, it was an outburst of a father's love and a father's joy. your father, I have not much sympathy with that de- anme grant He were a Turkish sultan pathetic and listening not to the ery of His subjects, A man told me hesaw in ono ofthe eastotn lands a king riding along, and two men were in an altegestion, and ous charged the other with having eaten post mortem examination find whet ier he has eaten the rice.” And he was slain, Ab, Our God is but a inther-- wand He a orodigal heaven ring again when o He says, back. “I baveno pleasure.” Ifa man does not get heaven, it Is beonnss No differanos ths col. ings, no difference the sin. When tho white horses of Christ's victory are brought out to oelebrate the eternal triumph, you may ride one of them, and, as God is greater than all, back there is In His heart the surging of an that gladness it takes all the rivers of pleas- ure, and all the thrones of pomp, and all the nges of eternity. Itis a joy deeper than all depth. and higher than all height, and wider than all width, and vaster than all im- mensity. It overtops, it uadergirds, £2 out- universe, Who can tell what God's joy is? You remember reading the story ola king who on some great day of festivity seat. tered silver and gold among the people, who sent valuable presents to his courtiers, bat methinks when a saul comes back God is 80 giad that to express His joy He fingsout new worlds into space, Kindles up naw sans and rolls among the waite robed anthems of the redeemad a greater halisiuiab, while with a voles that reverborstes among the mountains of frankincense and is echonl back from the everlasting gates He ories, ps At the opaning of the sxposition in New Orleans I saw a Mexican flutisr, and he piayad the solo, and thea afterward tae wight or ten bands of music, accompaniad vy the great organ, came in, but tas sound of that ons flute as compared with all the or- chestra was greater than all the combined joy of the universe when compara! with the resounding heart of Almighty God, For ten years a !ather went three times a day to the depot. His son went off in gravating circumstances, but the father said, “He will coms bask.” Tae strain was too much, and his mind parted, and thres times & day the father went. Ia the early morning he watched the train-its arrival, the step- ping out of the passengers, and then the de parture of train. At noon he was again, watching the advances of the trais, watching the departure. Ag. was sure his son would come badk, been watching nad waiting for soma of you, my brothers, ten years, twenty years, thirty ing, this morning the prodigal should come and how the great Father's heart would rejoice at your coming home! come, some of you, will you not? you will! You will, ligion. Oh, it is a graad thing to preach this gospel! I know there has been a great deal sald about the trials and the hardsnips of the Christian ministry. Iwish somebody would write a good, rousing book about the Joys ot the Christian ministry, Since I en. tersd the profession I have seen more of the goodness of God than I will be able to cele brate in all eternity. I know some boast about their equilibrinm, and they do not rise into enthusiasm, and they do not break down with emotion, but I confess to you plainly that when I sen a man coming to God and giving up his sin I feel in bo ly, mind and soul a transport. When I see a man who is bound hand and foot in evil habit emancipated, I rejoices over it as though it were ray owa emancipation, When, in our Communion service, such throngs of young and old stood up at the altars and in the presences of heaven and earth and hell attested their alleginues to Jesus Ohrist, 1 feit a joy something akin to that whic: the apostle describes when he says. “Whether inthe body I cannot tell, oront of the body I cannot tell, God knoweth,” Have not ministers » right to rejoice when a proaigfl eomes nome: They paw the trumpet, and ought they not to be glad ol the gathering of the host? They pointed tothe full supply, and ought they not to re. J0ilce when souls pant as the hart forthe water brooks? They came forth saying, “All things are now ready.” Ought they not rejoice when the prodigal sits aown at the banquet? Life insurances men will all tell you that ministers of religion as a class live longer than any other, It is confirmed by the Statistics of all those who ealeulate upon human longevity, Why is #? There is mors draft upon the nervous system than in an other profession, and their toil Is most exhausting. I have soem, ministers on m is atl pends b rsimonious ions who wondered at the callness of tho sermon: When the men of God were perplexed almost to death by questions of livelihood and had not enough nutritious food to k in thelr temperament, of them waek altar week enlertaining agents who have maps to sell and submitting them- selves to all styles of annoyances, and yet withont compiaint and cheerful of sou’, How do vou account for the fact that these life insurance men tell us that ministers as n class live longer than nny others? It is be cause of the joy of their work, the joy of ths harvest flald, the Joy of greeting prodigals home to their Father's house, -- We aro in sympathy with all innocent hilarsities, We can enjoy a hearty song, und wa ean ba merry with the merriest, but those of us who have tolled in tha servies are ready to testify all these joys are tame com- pared with the satisfaction of seeing men enter the kingdom of God, The great eras of every minister are the outpourings of the Holy Ghost, and I thank God I have sen twenty of them, Thank God, thank God! I notice also when the prodigal comes baok all earnest Christians rejoice, If you stood on a promontory, and there was a hur- ricane at sea, and it was blowing toward the shore, and & vessel crashed into the rooks, and you saw people got ashora in the life- boats, and the very last man got on the rocks in safety, you conld not control your joy. And it is a glad time when the eburch of God sees men who are tossed on the odaan of their sins plant thelr feet on therock Christ Jesus, When prodigals come home, just hear those Christians sing! It is not an dull tunes you hear at such times. Just hear those Christians pray ! It {s not astersotyped sup~ plication wa have heard over and over for twenty years, but a putting of the cass inthe hands of God with an importunate pleading, Men never pray at great length unless they have nothing to say, and their hearts ars bhazd and cold, Sr were short prayers, ‘God ba meroiful to me, a sinner.” Lord, may receive mv sight.” “Lord, save mu or I perish.” The longest o! the temple, And just hear them pray now Just heart soem to clinch the fingers of ons hand around the other hand, vo'ce that he sang fifty years gountry meeting house say, mine eyes have seen Thy salvation.” was a man of Keith who he and when beport off his shackles, and stood by the prison door, ted him. Passing slong the streets of wondered where his jamily was, London, Heo passing siong a tae Iamily from generation to He saw it in a window, that some day he would get lived as near as they could te house, and they set that Keith generation, the prison tankard in came along fly were all together again 0, I think some of you wo your friends and nearly all your around the holy tankard of the boly munion--{athers, mothers, around that sacred tankard which con Ob, it will be a great your whole family sits around the tankard! One on sarth, one in begven. Once more I remark that woen the prod Igal gets back the Inhabitants of heaven keep festival, I am very certain of #t, [If Bave to idea how many together and how msuy lands the neighborhoods of the sarth seem ratio iated, and news files from city to elly and from continanut to continent. But more rap before the throae of Gol, And if these souls to-day shon kingdom there would be some heavenly kingdom to say, father.” “That's my mother” ton,” “That's my daughter friend.” "That's the one I tes “That's tears.” and one so sod another soul “That's IR «7 1 to pray i *Halleluiah Pieasod with the pews, the saints bolo g In songs their tongae: emplor Beyond the skies the idings go And heaven is filed with jor. Nor angels can their jor contain, But kindle with new fire The sinner lost is found, they siag, And strike the sounding yee, orator. At the Macedonian festival Philip, the conqueror, gale, more than conquerors, The table is so wide its leaves reach across seas and across lands, Its guests are the redeemed of the earth and the glorified of heaven, The ring from every shoualder, The ments. thousa prodigale, Sing, sing, “Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to re. erive blessing and riches and honor and THE ARMY'S FINANCES, Paymaster General Smith Critio 2's the System of Withholding Pay. Pavmaster General 8mith, in his annual report (0 the Secrelary of War, ealls atten tion to the facet that the soldiers’ deposits have increased #79 582 during gratifying increase in view of the fact that the deposits had been falling off ia preceding years, and o, the further fact that a soldier with a deposit account rarely leaves the ser. vice without an honorable discharge. The expenditures on account of pay of the army show au increase of $275,663 over the preced. ing year, due in part to the fact that the en. listed force was more nearly kept at its maxi- mum Hmit, The facet that the expenditures on account of pay of volunteers were $408. 668 less than Inst year is taken as an indica. tion that these claims are being exhausted The Paymaster General questions the bogies ficial effect of system of withholding a poi« tion of the soldier's pay until be is disebarged, The travel allowanoe of the soldier is ample to take him home when discharged. Any system which makes the soldier a dependent detracts from his manhood and eMelency, Many men enlist, being told that their pay will be #13 per month, only to fad that through deductions on acoount of clothing, two of three months must elapse Le ore he can receive any gay. He regards this ase breach of contract and deserts, A sony has al L000 to be paid by Boro A Eleotrio Railway Company for tie taking Isnds required to keep the histori bettie ———————— Many-*¥1ded. These persons who believe that he would tind Kean. and curveted in a ing manner. a ‘Take caro” called a “You're a good actor, but--"’ “But what" asked Kean friend. ing three horses,” At another time a heard that he was about toglve read. ings from Milton, sald to him: “Kean, stick to Shakespearc. sI'‘on'ty meddle with Milton.” “Why not?” asked Kean readings from Milton week at Exmouth.” He seemed to be a universal gen. ius. He had been fenc ny-imnaster, duncing-master, singer, and at one time proposed setting up a school That he did not do so was only the fault of circumstances: none who knew him doubted that the p oject would bave been successful, — Youth's Companion, “] gave three tine a IIs ions Was Fixed for It It struck the agents when Z. A. Hubley of Mass, shot off a finger hand, 'cause he carried accident policies, a8 peculiar Worcester, of his left £130,000 in The Durden Bearer. There is a big Insulated wire in telegraphy which the buik of talligenco ; there is a big Insulated nerve in the buman system which ean bear the bur den of more pain than all the rest of the nerves combined, and Is known asthe seintio nerve, Sometimes the wire is cut to out off fe current ; somotimes the surgeon's knife is used 1o out tha nerves 10 relieves exe racing ing pain, But there is one thing which avoids this radical tremtment ; one which pensirates to the pain-spot, and sociation has been cured almost without fail by the of 8t, Jacobs Oil, It reaches misery's pent and dethrones it Thus attacked nod route! in its hidden soubhnseads, pala seldom returns to annoy, The great remedy its work well, fransmits daily ine ere Tine pene “ROW ax ihe nerally speaking. The Optimist women, gener HY speakion Disagresable Man “Yeu she's po Brats or Onto, Crry or Torzpo, | Lucas Cousry § Frawg J Ciaesey makes oath that he fs the fer of ¥. J, Cugxey & . 0 business in a Oly of Toleda, County and State aforesaid, and that sald firm will g the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL- r each and every case of Udarrh that becur 1by th fHAaLL sUATAWER Frank J. Cuener. efore ma and sulmeribed in my x, this 6th day «f Decomber, A. DD. 188, A. W, GrLeason, Nota Pubtie, Ps Cafarrh Care lstaken internally snd acts directly on the blood and mucces surfaces of Lhe system. Bend fur test moniala , J F.J. Caeser & Co, Toledo. 0, $2 "Said by Druggists, The, ’ # vay sar f the firs £0, ae worn fo Hygienic ltem. Dr. Emile A. Bruce declares that cause of faulty dress than from contagious diseases combined 7 of all cases of consumption can, if taken in the earlier stages of the disease, be cured. This may seem like a bold assertion to those familiar only with the means gener. in use for its treatment ; as, nasty cod. fs ail ails S4:% of malt, whiskey, different bypophosphites and such like palliative: N hovug by many believed to be incura- ble, there is the evidence of hundreds of carlier stages, consumption is a curable cendage of cases, and we believe, fully of £ cent. are cured by Dr, Pierce's Golden progressed so far as to induce repeated and extreme emaciation and weakness, Do you doubt that hundreds of such cases ical Discovery ”’ were genuine cases of that dread and fatal disease ? You need not take our word for it. They have, in nearly cvery instance, been 80 pronounced by t ec best and most experienced home physicians, who have no interest whatever in mis. representing them, and who were often strongly prejudiced and advised a trial of "Golden Medical Discovery,” but who have been forced to confess that fatal malady, all other medicines with which they are acquainted. Nigty cod. liver oil and its fithy emulsions’ and mixtures, had been tried in nearly all these a short ame, Extract of malt whiskey, phites had also been faithfully tried in wv The photographs of a large number those cured of consumption, bromchitie, lingering coughs, asthma, chroaic nasal catarth and kindred maladies, have been skillfully reproduced in a book of pages which will be mailed to you, on re. ceipt of address and six cents in stamps, You can then write those cured and learn their experience. Address for Book, WoRLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL AssociaTioN, Buffalo, N. Y. Ro Baking Powder THE MAN WITH A CALF, He Was Redheaded and Vigorously De fended His Rights. came into the Western hay father and son. The vehicle sooner come to a halt than scrambled down, and it seen that the young man's nose about twice ite normal size, and eyes were blackened and puffed until he could scarcely see daylight. There wis biood on his face and shirt front, and of cours there was a curiosity among the men loungiug around to knew what had bapj“ned. “No, William dido'ty bridge or have a tree fall on said the father, as ne wet his kerchief at the drinking trough and wiped away the blood “The fact is that he met with a disappointment on the road as we was omin’ in” “What sort of a disappointment” had no Was his recommend raw beef and | quiet for three or four days “Wall, yousee, William wasdrivin’ when we left home. We had slong about three nu when meets a red-headed man Jeadin calt A feller with a calt ti out and give the road to a | "hay, but this one wouldn't | turned out half way and stood and yelled that he'd be darned if moved asother inch hen 1 says Bil, says 1, Bill, he's a peppery 'd better turn out.’ 10 have out for a red-headed man.” oificer “1 says that to Bi Says Lo we, saves he, 1 do It he don't perfect como we mics 8 orier turned gaid TOU ougnt Bil be hang 1. but ‘1'11 turn out “en horn into this Then he hol him of what headed man don't skeer worth a cent. He the calf and spits on bands and screams for both of come down to once,” says the Det Free Press “You gave him asked the officer | “Noap. I wanted to, but Bill $ays Lo me says he ‘Dad, you the lines and I'll git down and that cuss one bat un the nose { put him to sleep fur two didn’t want Hill to do it, "iL he was sot. and down ke wen. He off with his hat and gina yell and bore down on the man with the «gif"” “And put him to sleep.” *“Noap He never ciosed an eve to sleep When Bill lighted hi | suthin’ happened to Bill. He stopped 8il of a sudden and laid down, and when Le go.upagain he was as you see t Bim now, The red-h aded man vited me to come dovn i him, but 1 di accept He been gone about ten minutes Bill woke up” “What aid officer *Nawthin, that 1 heared Bill, | did you say anythin’ when you come i to.” “Num,” replied Bill with a solemn shake of the head “And you duln’t say a“ ythin' | the next two miles, did you “Num” And then all you said was to ass me if you'd bin stru k by lightuia’.” “Yam.” “That's all, as fur as I can remem: ber,” continued the father, and now If you'll sorter look out for my hay. I'll lead Bill to a doctor. and whether he's mortally injured or only , crippled tur life tome om Bill You hala’ Lin savin' a word since | you was struck. and all you've got to do now is to step high and lean s arm.” sinfal wo id.’ £ Ww come, hat the red- Lies the he hoid gin and hours.” 3 Gr 1 ang ght on dn't had when Bill say: ” asked the fur See dadd af te least on § Fendi Bifull best Inluepoes; « CTive indies. Susser or fostra ton, Deparimen sof Do b Brewin p and Business t{wdien; Elo thand avd Tipe wwitiog: Kegiivh and Bodern Lawswoager, J ewmoan | ship and Drawing: (he clementary brorches, ¢ ¢ NO ¥ NCATIONK, Foriticus obtained for compete” sindenty, Address, for Catel poe CLEMENT OC. GAIXTS, Pros Ment, 4 Washington Street, Poughkeepate, New York, . ssi AR lS MB S58 soap. wit | part of the its best and there is no fear of cleaning is Prar/- ine. y doing away with the It shuts out washed with Peariine onger than if washed with Evoiythiog is done better o itt. These form but a small year. Let Pearline do Higbee. Miss Loveleigh always fires one with sweet thoushts Bradiord (sadly) “Her father doesn't,” : Ly. Kiimer's Swamr-Boor eurss sll Kidney and Bladder troubles Yamphiet and Consultation free Laboratory Binghamton, N. 1. There was not a public library in the United Busioess Men tn n Hurpy eat in restaurants and often food insuMelently cooked. WRipans Tabule ure dyspepsia and sour siomect and lmonedistely relieve head. ache, It's a good plan when you get the worst of ito make the best of it Kar] 8 Clover Root, the great Lion] purifier, goves {reshiness and clearness 10 the « AIRE. Crilfornia sen lions and jumpers, are champion climbers Mra. Win in syrup for children ter iin the gums, gee inflamma ton, all cures wind i 25c. un botile New a yr ¥ KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and fends to personal enjoyment when rightly BD 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 Liealth 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. tive; effectunlly cleansing the system, Jdispelliog 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 Dowels without weak. ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance, Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in Hc and £1 Lotties, but it is man ufactured 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 scoept any so hetitute if offered. W.L. DoucLAS $3 SHOE iS THE BEST, RO SGUEAKING $5. CORDOVAN, FRE NCHS ENAMELED CALF. 94.8350 FINE CALFAKANSARSR $350 PD SoLfs. ol $2.91.73 BoysScana SHOES, ARARIES. Best DONGOL, p SEND FOR CATALOGUE DROCKTON, MASS. You run cove mosey by wearing the W. LL. Deaclas £3.00 Chee. Berane, we avs the large! marufacturers of this gradec? shoe 13 (he world, and pusrantes their Yaiue by slamping the name and price on the bottom, which protect you scainet high prices and the middieman « profits, Our sboss equal costom work in style, esey fitting acd wosring qualities. We have them ssid everywhere st lower prices for the value given then any other make. Take no subs stitute. if your dealer cannot supply you, we Chill. aos imp ——— AN EXAGGERATED CAS Tor that full fecling That comes after eating Thers i2 a remedy, Bimpio but effective «and {Dmodiute A» Ripans » Tabulc. Take one! at the time, Bwallow it and there you are, One who pets just as full In nny ot her way Is not so uncom{ortable a: the time That Sugation, to bie, © prevent it Ken tabule ore going to bed WANTED--A LIVE MAN In each county for a few days’ work with theSaloons; will pay from $10 to $50, accordi 17 location. C.K. HITCHCOC Evansville, Ind, 410) » 0 “dirt doing its worst.”