Mashed on Milly. . At one of the quiet summer hotels in the Adirondack region (says the Tribune), a husband and wife at- tracted by their pleasant manner the liking of the waiter detailed at the table. Madam, like a true Ameri- can, called for a little more of some particularly nice ple, whereupon her husband rebuked her jocosely in his care for her health. “No, no, Milly," he said; “you have had quite enough pie for your good.” “Never youmind him. Milly,” said Elnathan, the walter, leaning over her chair, a per- fect wass of sympathy: “you kin hev all the pie ther is; here's a hull one.” a How It May Happen, “Jominy crickets, she's got the rickets,” whispered one beau to anothsr in the com- pany of a very pretty girl, Truly she was very beautiful, but there was a twitching about the nerves of ths faces which showed suffering, “No,” sall the other, “It's neu- raligia and she's a martyr to it." St. Jacobs cure for it. Did she try it? Yes, anl was eured by it and—marrisd “one of the fel- lows" afterwards, The use of the great remedy for pain will not bring aboat a mar riage, but in its care of pain it will bring about conditions of health to make life more enjoyable, No man or woman ought to marry who Is n sufferer from chronle pains, We should not wed woe to win only wretoh~ olness, The French Government will spend 20,000 in testing the value of the new diphtheria serum, A Child Enjoys The pleasant flavor, gentle action and soothe« Ing effect of Syrup of Figs, when in need of a laxative, an! if the father or mother be cos five or bilious, the most gratifying results fol low its use; so that it is the best family rem ody known and every family should have a bottle Keys made of bronze and iron were in use in Greece and Italy as early as the seventh century. Deafness Cannot be Cured oy local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure Deafness, aud that Is by constitu. tional remedies. Deafne 8 is cased Ly an in. flamed eomdiiion of tie mucous lining of the fostachian Tube, When this tule gets in. flamed you have a ramuling sound or imper- fvct heariog, and when it is entirely closed Deafness i8 the result, and unless the inflam. mation can be taken out and this tabe re- stored to 118 normal condition, hearing will be estroyed forever; nine cases out ten are ansed by catarrh, which is nothing but an in- flamed condition of the mucous surfaces, We will give One Hundred Dollars for any of 1) -afoess (caused by catarrh) tha can not be eure! by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for c.reulars, free, F. J. Caexey & Co. Toledo, O $2 Sold by Druggists, TS. A grand plano was | ' at Sprix 2 o cave wit doy ie ning. } i li, Kilmer's twamr-Roor eurm ell Kidney and Bladder troubles Pamphlet and Consultation frea Labomtory Binghamton, N. L It is said tb bird ing a snake sther as a club, at the secretary in attack- wing as a shield and the uses one First-class Men and Wemen in Demand, “There are alway 1 openings for live, ene srgotic of good character in line devote all or part of . * That is what B, F. Johnson, of ti F. Johnson & Co., Richmond, Va. says in reference to their ad. vertisewent. men i of It is believed wires will soon be done awny with for eleectrieal transmission, A Uiright Eye Is a sign of good health and if the stomach Is not in the best of conditions the eyes will show it. Ripans Tabules will make the stomach right and Keep the eyes bright and clear. The sound of a syllable moves through the atmosphere 1,110 feet a second, Karl's Clover Root, the great blond purifier, ge freshness and clearness to the complex. 98 and cures constipation, I ots, Weta. Bi St. Louis, Mo., bas an electrio ance, Wounded in the War “1 enlisted with Co, D, Third Weat Virgiaia Infantry Volunteers, August 20, 1562, 1 was wounded in the knee, and Sept. 18th my limb was amputated, For thirty years | bavesuffered fromthe remaining part of the limb, whieh has never car ambu- healed, but continued to discharge. My health was greatly shattered, yet I kept moving about until December, 1881, when I was struck down by tthe grip, and again, a year ater suffered a : relapse, 1 had a i 2 smot hered feeling so Mr. ¥. M. Hoffman. that I could searcely breathe at all, I thea procured six bottles of Hood's SBarsaparilin, and I feel better than I have for ten years, We have used eighteen bottles in our lamily and bave ound ita per. y - Hood’s*=»Cures manent cure for Serofula, I owe my life and health to Heo t's Sarsaparilia” F. M. Horrmax, Marqu ss, West Virginia Hood's Pil gave the best a nily eathartic WALTER BAKER & CO, he Largest Manufactarers of (u/2 PURE, HICH GRADE , COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES L On (his Continent, have reesived HIGHEST AWARDS from the ' Industral and Food EXPOSITIONS In Europe and America. Unifke the Duteh Process, po Atka- Yew > other Chemicals or Dyes sen "en — yaeed of their PBREAKF AS Coco bs } li pnt Hd BLL Rg BOLD BY QROCINS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER & 00. DORCHESTER, MAGS. ONE DOLLAR PAYS FOR A 88 REY. DR. TALMAGE Ths Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun- day Sermon. Objections te Religious Revivals.” Subject: “The In —— Text: “Thay inclosed a great multitude of fishes, and their net brake.” —Luke v., 6.’ Simon and his comrades had experienced the night hefore what fishermen onll “poor Juek.” Christ stops on board the fishing smack and tells the sailors to pull away from the beash and directs them again to sink the net. Sure enough, very soon the net is full of fishes, and the satlors begin to haul in. So large a school of fish was taken that the hardy men begin to look red in the face ns they pull, and hardly have they bogun to re- jolea at their success when snap goes a thread, so there is danger not only of losing f losing the net, Without mneh ears ns to how much the toat tilts or how much water is splashed on deck, the fishermen rash about gathering up the broken meshes of the net, Out yonder there is a ship dancinez on the wave, and they hail it, “Ship ahoy, bear down this way!" The ship comes, and both boats, both fishing smacks, ars filed with the floundering treasures, Ah," says some one, “how much hetter it would have been if ther had stald on ghore, and fished with a hook and line, and taken one at a time, Instead of having this great excitement, aud the boat almost upset, nnd the net broken, and baving to eall for help, and getting sopping wot with the ™ The churel is the boat, the gospsl is the not, society 18 the sea, and a grat re- vival fan whole school hrought in at one sweep of the net, I bave admiration for that man who goes out with n hook and lings to fish, Iadmire ths way he unwinds the reel and adjusts tha balt and drops the ook in a quiet place on a still after poon, and hers ecatehes one and thers one, but I like also a big boat, and a large crew, and a net a mile long, and swift oars, and stout sails, and a stiff breegs, and a great multitude of souls brought —80 great s multitude that you bave to get help to draw it ashore—atraining the net to the ut- there, letting a few escape, but bringing the great multitude into eternal safety, In other words, I ballave in revivals, The 3050 prople joining the chureh in one day, and | 100,000,000 peo- nations shall be . Bat there are objections to People Aare opposed 10 them bee broken, and HH by the pressure of souls it dosst not get hroken, then they take their ¢ penknives and aiit ‘They Inelosed a great multiiude brake" # opposed to revivals of re. Ygion that ¢ who coms into the chureh #t such times do bold out; as long as there is a gale of blessing they have thelr sails up, tut as soon y winds stop biowing then they drop Into & dead calm, Put what are the facts in the case? In all our churches the vast majority of the use’ul pe ole saved in 24 hours, when torn in a day revivals, cause the net michr get wa the nat not As strong tie are those who are bre ught in uoder iwakenings, and they hold out, Wh sre the prominent men in the United States in churches, in prayer meetings, in Sabbath. For the most part they are the pro. great awaken ticed that those who are brought into the Kingdom of God revivals have more persistence and mors determina. tion in the Christian life than those who come in under a low state of religion. Peao- pie horn in an jechouse may live, but they will never get over the cold they caught in the icshonse! A cannon ball depends upon the impulse with which it starts for how Ia it shall go ani how swi and the greater the revival foree with which a soul is started the more farrenching and far resounding will be the exeeution, But it is sometimes objected to revivals that there is 30 mnoh excitement that peoples mistake hysteria for religion, We must aimit that in every revival of reo. Hgion there is either a suppressed or a demonstented excitement, Indead if a man ean go out of a state of condemnation into A stats of aceapiancs with God, orses others go. withoat any agitation of soul, he ls in an cahealihy, morhld state, and is as repulsive and atsurd asa man who should boast.he paw a ebill santeoed out from under a borse's boos and felt no agitation, or saw a man rescusd from the fourth story of a house on fire and felt no acceleration of tae puises, nes Ave hd through Balvation from sin and death and hell into life nad peace and heaven forever Is such a ean look on It without any agitation I doubt The fact is that sometimes important possible In eases of res ascitation from drown. ing or freezing, the one ides is 10 excite ani mation, Be ore cotiversion we are dead, It business of the chureh 10 revive, t makes us do. If it makes us dothat which our eternal welfare, make us pray, If it make us if it attend upon young people are brought into the church, Robert Hall, the prince of Baptist preach. fe »upposei he knew what he was about. Matthew Henry, the commentator, who did Beriptures, was converted at eleven years of Isabella Graham, immortal in the Christian church, was converted at be sung all down tha ages, was converted at enn pulpit ever produced, was converted at “Youre too y the church.” ant is a mistake as long as eternity, If during a revival two persons present themselves as onndidates for the church, and the ona is ten years of age, and the other fs forty years of age, I will have more confi endo in the profession of religion of the ons tan years of awe than the one forty years ol ung to conneat yourself with yes yoars of age has forty years of impulse in the wrong direction to eorreot, the child has only ten years in the wroag direction to eorrect, Four times ten are forty, Four times the religious prospect for the iad that comes into the kingdom of Gol, and into the church at ten years of age than the man ut forty, I nm very apt to look upon revivals as cone nected with certain men who foster them, ndmiration for the revivalists of the pt, for they worn revivalista—Jonathan Edwards, Jahn Wesley, George Whitefield, Griffin, Davies, Osorno, Knapp, Nettioton and many others whose names come to my mind, The strength of their intelloot and the holiness of their lives make we think they would not have anything to do with that which was Ephedra, h, it is easy to talk against ro a Do you know whers Aaron Barr started on the downward road? It was when ha was in college, nnd he became anxious ubout bis sout aud was about to put himesit Jude the influence of a revival, and a mins away. Mis serious impressions departed. He started on the downward road, And who is resnonsitile for his rain? Was it the minister who warned him against that re- vival? Now I coma to tha real, genuine eausn of objection to revivals, That fs the coldness of the objector, It Is the secret and hidden but unmistakable cause in every case—na low state of religion in the heart. Wide awake, consacrated, useful Christians are nover afraid of revivals, It is the spiritually dead who are afraid of having their sepulcher molested. Tha ahle! agents of tha devil dur- ing a great swakening are always uncon. verted professors of religion, As soon as Christ's work begin they begin to gossip against it, and take a pail of waterand try to put out this spark of religious influence, and they try to put out another spark. Do they snecoed? As well when Chicago was on fire might somo ons have gons ont with a garden water pot trying to extinguish It, The diMenlty ia that when a revival be- gins ina church it begina at 20 many points that while you have donsal ona anxions soul with a pail of cold water there are 500 other noxious souls on firs, Oh, how much bet ter it would ba to lay hold of the chariot of Onrist's gospel and help pull it on rather than to fling oursalvas in front of the whanls, Wa will not chariot, hut ourselves will be ston the we Did vou wyar hear tint thera was a oon. vention ones held among the fesberzs in the arctic? It s~ams that the summer was com. tar and hotter, and thers was danger that the whole tosfield would break up and flow away, so tha broadest the vory king of the aro. tha head a gavel ol len snote on a of all the feaberes, ties, stood at and with of the convention, table of Bat tha sun kept and growing in intensity of heat, and soon ail the feaflobl began to grind up, feaberg againgt {eoberg, and to flow away. the convention was, “Resolved, that we abolish the san.” jut the sun would not be abolished, The heat of the sun grew greater and greater until after awhile the very king of the bergs began to perspire under the glow, and the smaller lcebergs fell over, and the ery Wis ; “Too much execitament! Order, order I" Then the whaola body, the whols field, of ice began to flow ont, and athoun- sand voloes began to ask: **Where are we {ris Whera are wa floating to? rill all break to pleces.™ By this time jeabergs had roached the gall straam, and they wera melted into the bosom of the Atlantic Ocean, The warm sun 8 the eternal Spirit, © The lcebergs are frigid Christians, The warm gaif stream (sa great revival, The ocsan into which everything melted Is the heart of the parioniog and sympathizine God, Bat I think, alter all, th to revivals throughoat fs an uneconverisl Hi#ve that the vast officiate at Vea great, wide obstacle ny s rreatost Christendom 1« ministre. Wo must bo ajority of thoss who snor tars are regoncrated but I supposs there may float into the minis try of ail the denon fons of Christians men whose hearts a nevar bean changed Of course they are ail aistio to revivals, e eraes of Go autag How did they getiat haps some profession. the ministry? Par. ftheam chose it na oa rospoctable Perhaps somo chose it as » moans of Hyedlhood, were sincere, bul wers mist ers sald, be had "53 1 » + oy snl ban ls Ing The gospel De Perhaps some of them As Thomas MANY yours ken, ' preas) been changed, and, ns nr y gospel declare, taoy ware bad been ordalaed to and years befor: their hearts wera regense. ated, Gracious Gol, what asolemmn thought for those of us who minister at the altart With the present ministry in the present temperatures of ploty the world will never be enveloped with revivals, While the paws oh one side the altar ory for merey the puiplis on the other side the altar must ery for mercy. Ministers quarreling. Ministers trying to pull each nther down Ministers strugzling for ecimiastionl place, Ministers lethargic with whole congregations dying on their hand. What a spectacis ! Aroused pulpits will make aroused pews, Pulpits aflame will make pews aflame, Everybody i in a revival of trade, F ministers $ pressing and sacred orders years ’ * Gi thes believes everybody kes a revival in iltersture every. body likes a revival in art, yet a great maits tude enpnot understand a revival in matters of religion Dapend upon it, whers you find a man anstagonistie to revivals, whether he be in pulpit or pow, he neods to be regen. erated by the grace of Go I conld prove to a demonstration that without revivals this world will never be converted, and that in 100 or 200 years wilh- out revivals Christianity will be practically extinet, It is a matter of astounding arith. metic, In each of our modern generations thers are at least 32 000,000 ohiidren. Now add 32,000,000 to ths world's population, and thon have only 100,000 or 200,000 converted every your, and how long before the world will be saved? Never—absolutely never! During our war the President of the United States made proclamation for 75,000 troops, Some of you remember the big stir, But the King of the universe to-day asks for 800 000,000 mors troops than are enlisted, and we want it done softly, imperceptibly, gently, no excitement, ons by one! You are a dry goods merchant on a large scale, and I am a merchant on a small sdale, and [come to vou and want to bay 1000 vurds of cloth, Do you say: "Thank you you twenty yards to-day, and twenty to- takes me six months I'll sell vou the whole 1000 yards ; you will want as jong as that to examine the goods, and I'll want as long as that to examine the eradit, and, besidesthat, 1000 yarcs of cloth are too much to sel! all No, you do not say that, You take me into the counting rom, and in ten The fact is, we cannot afford to be foois in anything but religion ! Taat very merchant who on Saturday after. noon sold me the 1000 yards of cloth at one stroke the next Satbath in charch will stroke his beard and wonder whether it would not be better for 1000 souls to eome strageling along for ten years, instead of bolting in at one sarvioe, We talk a good deal about the. good times How long belorethey will coma? Hero Is a man whe says 300 years. Hers is some one more confident who says in filty years, Waat, fifty years? Do you proposs to let demption, Bupgose by some extra prolongation of all that walk find one person that you recog you would not know them. In other words, 3! you postpones the redemption of this world for fifty years, you admit that the majority of the two whole generations shall #0 off the stage unblessad and unsaved, I tell you the church of Jesus Christ cannot consent to it, We must pray and toll and bave the revival spirit, and we must strag- gle to have the whole world saved belore the wen and women now in middie life pass off, “Oh,” you say, “it Is too vast aL enter fies to be conducted in so short a time." you know how long It would take to save the whole world 11 each man would bring an« other, [t would take ten yours, Dy a eal culation in compound interest, oach man bringing another, and that one another, and that one another, la ten years the whole world would be saved, If the world is not saved in the next ten ua it will be the telegraph chart of the world, * On that shart the wires orossing the continent and the cables under the sea looked lke veins ved with blood, On that chart I see that the headquarters of the lightnings are in Great Britain and the United States, In London and New York the lightnings are stablad, waiting to bo harnesssd for some quick dis. Joien, That shows you that the telegraph s in possession of Christianity, It is & significant fact that the man who fnvented the telegraph was an oid fashioned Christinn—Professor Morse—and that the man who put the telegraph under the sea was an old fashioned Christiun—Cyrus W, Field—and that the president of the most fa- mous of the telegraph companies of this country was an old fashioned Christian William Orton-—-going from the communion table on earth straight to his home in heaven, What does all that mean ! 1 do not suppose that the telegraph was ine vented merely to let us know whether flour is up or down, or which filly won the race at the Derby, or which marksman beast at Dole vonted and bullt to eall the world to God, geam to share on a snall seale—for instance, i Iste foreknowledge omnlsclonse, ompispros. i ence, omnipotence, sesm to have been ox. slusively God's possession, God desiring to make the race like Himsslf, gives eles of foreknowledes in the weather proba. | bilities, gives us a spaciss of omuiscisnce in i encain the telaphone, RIVES US A SpHCies of i pmnipotencs in tha steam power, ! eries and Inventions all around poopie are asking what next! i I will tell you what next | stupendous rely movamant, | end of war, Neoaxt, the crash of « the world's expuarzation, lominlon, Next, the | What becomes of the world after that pot. It will bavs sufle ach enough for one wor drydocks of eternl gone $ of relief to carey ing planet, or t be demolish well, dear old world, began paradise and ended with jodgment flagration ! Ope summer I stood and I had pointed o the Euarydics sank men who were | pavy. You remember | went dows there was a io over the world, Oh world is only a wa are training ship sails up and mensity, now thr midanight, now thro wave of the mora, bu After awhile her work wiil bo done, and the fnhabitants of hesven will look out and find a world missing. The ery will pe: “W is that earth whe JOAN racs were floes of anges craft.” Lot the y and down wi toh ens masts about us, ous junigmoent, I cars up in the i sn-nl-war out of servies, or fit it up like a ship {to soma other sufler. L. Fare. with Col 1 onthe Isle of Wight, 230 300 young with 3 4 Eritish training for the OF { horror al friends, ship henven, Th down ths ocean of | ough the dark wavs of hrough the gold 7 11 salis on as for s Christ eps gg tind ante 7 SARC DRG (Gone down | id perished in the ia 6 taal ahie SOM rather may it was sald of the Alexan Mo the hreskers ol X i ' fuss d * ped sale Lo land, mms IIIs cassis MA KKETS. BALTIMORE GRAIN, ETO. FLOUN Balto. Rest Pat$ igh Grade Extra, WHEAT AIRN-Ng OATS KY E-~ “res HA Y~Choioe Timothy... 1250 Good 10 Prime, ...veeee. 120) STHAW—lye ingar ids.. 140) Wheat Blooks..ccvaweee 851 Cat Blocks, ... 700 shnaw >» 42 ‘3 3354 56 o Hod.ooae 2 White,..... Southern & Penn. PERE rREES | CAXKNED GOODS, TOMATOES —8tnd. No, 3.8 NO, Bevecrcrssnersssnsn PEAS -Smndards........ 100 CORN-Dry Pack...ccove Moist...... PEBIR TARE rae HIDES, { CITY STEERS.......cs..¥ 64D 8 City Cown...oocoenrsnns 4% Southern No. 2. .00000s Big POTATOES & VEGETARLES, POTATOES —Burbanks..# 4 @ @ ONIONS. ..ooovves La PFROVISIONS. | HOGS PRODBUCTS-sblde.$ | Clear ribaldes. .....cuo00e Mama, ... shaun haw FESR ARERR ERs i Mesh Pork, per bar..... | LARD Crude, ...cconenne Hest refined. ..oovvieciie BUTTER. Under fine..co.oeu ia. Creamery Rolls eiicines CHEESE, { CHEESE-—N.Y. Fancy...} N. X.8ats..c00000000e.s 1) Bhim Choost. coven cosine 6 BOGOR, BOOBBtate.ccoovvisreid North Caroling. .oeveens LIVE POULTRY. CHICKENS Hens, ......8 Ducks, por B..ciiiicise TOBACCO, TOBACCO-Md, Infer's.8 100 G§ Sound COMMON. coves 300 MIGAHDG.. scovvesssanes 600 Pancy.ooceessecscssnnss 1000 LIVE STOCK. BEEF-—DBost Deoves......8 435 Good to Falr...cooesnes 42 11 BHEBEP. coossesecivnrrsoan H 450 ogs FURS AND BEINGS, MUBKRAT....cooveevensd 10 Raceoo 40 MBssusencoss sans Red FoX..covuvinvnssees Skunk B Gene RREn une 1 12 @8 2 @t 18 4B ¢ 8 UIs cvsnvssinnninne ink, ERENT ABARAT -~ IRR + sonninn versie sumnsin vases KEW YORE. ———— FLOU R~Southern.......# WHEAT-No. 2 Red. cos BY Eee Western. , «wives CORN-No, I Sassen ERY OATE-No, Bissicsminiiin BUTTER-HState, hd EUOGE-State....... Br mrreviee CHEESE-~Btate.,... cn PRILADELPHLA. Se — ther “ 3 WF nd Veoding by Machinery. An electric horse feeder, is 8 new invention brought out by Mr. Alder- son, of Chesterfield, for securing the regular feeding of horses during the absence from any cause of the stable man or groom. The apparatus is de- scribed as being very simple, the law of gravitation being depended upon to accomplish most of the work. The first requisite Is an alarm clock, which should be good enough not tw stop casually, but oeed not be expen- sive. The electric plant needed for an ordinary electric bell, four cells of the Leclanche type of battery being sufficient for any dis tance up to 200 yards ‘The third portion of the apparatus is the feed- er—thut 18 to say, the vessel holding the corn and chaff, as the case may be. The clock, which {8 the prime mover of the whole concern, may be in the house, the harness room or anywhere, but if it be more than 200 the feeder a more will be required first thing is to set the alarm of the clock at the it is desired that the horses should be fod. The food is then placed in a tin-like biscuit box, which is turved upside down, and placed in the proper compartment of the shate, when the lid of the box is powerful Lattery arrange- ment, held in its place by a simple contrivance. When the alarm goes off a button is pressed and the cir- cult is completed. A weight falls, the hottom the feed box is re- leased, and the corn falls out into the manger. ’ O13 ees GI oo. High Speed on The real danger involved in the proposed increased speed of rallway trains—say ninety or one hundred miles an hour— 8 not, according to Kuhlows, in incidental risks, rather, in the curves of the existing | nes, which render any such speed impossible, uniess the weight of the engines and tralos be also increased far bevond what the bridges and per- manent way would bear—that is, at the first sharp curve, the one hundred wnile train would fiy off the rail. The necessary relation of these curves W speedg accurately known, and this it is, nd nol the lnck of power, or dangers from wind pressure, or exi the limit Wo molern train speed. Kub- jows further prewgrks that as the force tending to throw off the line a train running the speed of miles an hour would be about six and a half times greater than that which a steam express train resists at a curve when running at sixty-two miles an hour, it is plain thal the present could not be used for the *dightning express,” even though the electro-mutor were substituted for he steam engine: the lines must nct only be stronger, but straighter than would be possible by any moditica- tions of their present forms ailways, but, nove nosions which sets oR “ai lines FRRNSS———— A Tae devil always demands more than his dua IO. 55 teething ton, aiiays pain, cures wind colic. Ze. & botle Shipments of 1 from the « ABATY sian are being y Gireat Dritain maioes is 1 If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr, Isaac Thom pe son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 2c per Lote, There are 680.000 books in the Congres- sfonal Library st Washington, We have not been without Piso's Cure for Consumption for 9 years. — lizzie FraReL, Camp St, Harrisburg, Pa., May 4, 1864. Franco has 2.000, 000 Jdwe dings, The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery. DONALD KENNEDY, of ROXBURY, MASS. Got this Letter day before yesterday. Penn Yan, N.Y., Nov. 28, 1594. Your Discovery has done so much for me I am only too glad to tell everybody about my case, When I began taking it, one year ago last July, 1 had DYSPEPSIA in iis worst form. 1 was constipated, 50 much #0 as to always wee injections, and I had a constant PAIN in my STOMACH and LEFT SIDE. My knees were stiff, and I could not sit down on a stool or get down to fix anpthing on the floor. But mow I can sil, or get down on my knees. or do anything in my garden. 1 Jeel like a wew person. You must know I was discouraged, as I have lost two sisters and an older brother swith STOMACH TROUBLE. Bw Itruly believe $f they had known of pour remedies they would be well, as I am. You can fix wp my letter to suit yourself, only do publish ft, that women may know what the Discovery hax done jor mi. Yours truly, Mrs. MARY C. AYRES. Send a postal card for Dr. Kennedy's Book, { i | | : i i : THE BUSINESS MAN'S LUNCH. Hard Work and Indigestion go Hand in Hand. Concentrated thought, continued in, robs When a five horse-power engine is made to break. Very often the han few min. Then rill “bolt ' his food in 2 utes which will take hours to digest stomach as a keg of nails would be wa 8 The ill-used stomach s to do its work without the proper us which it gets from the blood and The nerves are weak and ready ' because they do not get the nourishment they require from the blood, finally the ill.used brain is morbidly wide awake when the overworked man at tempts to find rest in bed The application of common se treatment of the st system brings to the busy man 1 full en. joyment of life and bh y digestion when he takes Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Peliets to a bilious stomach aficr a 00 meal i i CGosaen i and ire Liny oncen h rile s canily taken stim nerves in the whole ymach 1 Ang relieve nrly mbranes and : The whole sv : PHre blood coursing the hh the | id the i not called cs do food they from indi ¥%1 and any ich come from impure blood red stomach can cure ’ Medical can b tained at any nerves a deads celery ia, ners 3 Dr. Pierce's which Them All, Every Tom, Dick and Harry's Buckwheat. : THEN TRY Certainly not. a headache or feel bilious---perhaps s This is little dizzy. the Warning. Ripans Tabules, tak- en at such times, will keep people well. rx Tv 50 EASTMAN . 7 National Business Col- /o ings and Shorthand 4 SCHOOL affords the owt preparation for business fe, Practionl work. Both sexes aositions / / ing, Pettnanship, Rag a tert: £28. ® NN ada reas CLEMENT / ” @ / GAINES, President, 5) Wash Ingon St, Poughkeepsic, KX. Y. * EASTMAN