¥ealk The r enriched ~ i *d condition of the blood. be found in purified, blood, which will | Sarsaparilla, the great vitalized be given by Hood and blood purifier. It will tone the stomach, | and renewed | Remember | i create an appetite give strength, Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the only in the ood’s Pill Rood’s Pills Mr. Sage Cuts Off a Nephew, There is a in Wall New York correspondent of Enquirer, that Russell will. Mr. wrding to the income true blood purifier prominently public eye today. #1; six for 20. cure habitual constipa- | tion Price 25 cents. rumor street, writes the the ( Sage 'incinnati has anged his Nage has SOO. 0060 O00, ace tax to distribute to his heirs. It is understood returns, that he made his will He included in the Charles several vears ago. his relative Mr. It occurred to young Chapin is a newspaper him a few days Norcross had falled i up good thing Anatic purpose to would blow Uncle his n Russell 1 that 1 be a to Ca and write hin » wis supposed "=, Mr Cha- good » went a Mr. tWo how and n Mra, Winslow" teelhing, soften tion, aliays pair el thing Svrup for the yume, re oa Kaiser Wilhelm Is Hebuilding. Kaiser Wilhelm is spending $1,500,000 nents t his ill takes Year £350,000 wy pent in rebuilding the seven In Our Great Grandfather's Time, y pills were in the of Hew they um ke 1 cance I and C people would pay more = attention to prop erly regulating the action of their bowels, by the use of these little * Pellets” they would have less frequent occasion to call for their doctor's services to subdue attacks of dangerous diseases. The Pellets’ cure sick and bilious headache, constipation, in- digestion, bilious attacks and kindred de- rangements of liver, stomach and bowels, » *HIGHEST AWARD * v WORLD'S FAIR. % THE BEST % PREPARED FOOD SOLD EVERYWHERE. ft JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. REV. DR. TALMAGE The Eminent New York Divine's Sua. day Sermon. Subject: “Comfort.> away nll “or 10 wild flow- and hall wipo Revelation ‘estorn prairie, {the vi carringe wheel, or, nnd while the rain rents, Lhe Sn Was ever it shine, gnd 1 ela this is! midnight 1 God's spot not i tnelr grave Kept, ia the use of troubl nake ue Again, it ke 1 ir dependence un Go nu thin anything until God show } can do nothing at all, We lay out ir great plans and we like to execute them, God comes and takes us dows, As Prometheus was assaulted by his enemy, when the lance struck him it opened a great swelling that hai threatened his death, and he got well, Bo it is the arrow of trouble that lets out great swellings of pride, We never fepl our dependence upon God until we get trouble, 1 was riding with my little ehild along the road, and she asked if she might drive. I said, “Certainly.” I handed over the reins to her, and 1 had to admire the glee with which she drove. Bat after awhile we met a team and we to turn out. The road was narrow, and it was sheer down on both Bhe handed the reins over to me nj ¥ looks big. the horse,” this road of life we like to drive, one such an appearance of superiority and power. [t looks big. But after awhile we meet some obstacle and we have to turn out, and the road Is narrow, and it is sheer down God should take the reins and drive. Ab, my friends, we got upset 80 gften because we do not hand over the reins soon enough, with him a taking hold of the arm and erying out for help. I have heard earnest prayers on two or three occasions that I re. train, going at forty miles the hour, thetrain Himpey the track, and we were near a chasm eighty fost doop, and the men who, a few minutes before, had been swearing and blas- heming God, began to pull and jerk at the il rope nd pat up on the backs of the seats, and cried out, *'O God, save us!” There was another time, about 800 miles out at sea, on a foundering steamer, alter last lifebont had boen split finer than wl, They prayed then. Why is y often hear people, in reciting the experiences of some frierd say, “He the most beautiful prayer | What makes it beautiful? 1 ness of it. Oh! I tell you, + n his stripped and nak the shoreless, tomless ocann of eternity It is trouble, my friends, that makes us ool our dependence upon God. We do not WI We or God's strength lust plank breaks It is contempti when there is nothing else to take that we catch hold of G mi. vou do not know who the Lord Ho up in a palace, which He emerges once iu vear, preceded v heralds swinging swords t lear the But her willing, at our call, to and predic BO fy t yous mude heard nrnest in earnest wh ound our Aes untii ble in us hold of wd « Why. is fron way man He nrade in Writes his deces al #9 me ther ated her | Foge appre 1 away ix er Sarah § tery, 1 looked ind era is father, there § em and mother, thers is ndfather, there is grandm whole circles of kindred," and I th myself, “Together in the grave in glory.” 1 am impressed with ight that I do not think it i= any fanati- when ne 18 gH from this to the next if you make them bearer of dispatches to your friends who are gone, saying, "Give my love to my parents, give my love to children, give my love to my old comrades who are in glory, and tell them I am trying to fight the good fight of faith and 1 will join them after awhile,” 1 believe the message will be dee livered, and I believe it will increase the gindness of those who are before the throne, Together are they, all their tears gone, My friends, take this good cheer home with you. These tears of bereavement that course your cheek, and of persecution, i of trinl, are not always to be them, o motherly hand of God will wipe them all AWRY, hat is the use, on the way to such | a consummation--what is the use of fretting | About anything? Oh, what an exhilaration it ought to be in Christian work! See you ! the pinnacles against the sky? It is the oity | of our God, and we areapproaching it, Oh | let us be busy in the days that remain for us! I put this balsam on the wounds of your | heart. Rejolos Wika thought of what your | departed friends have got rid of, and that | You have a prospect of soon making your own escape. Bear cheerfully the ministry of tears, and exuit at the thought that soon it is to be ended, There we shall march up the heavenly stroet And ground our arms at Jesus's foot, yught { ne Fon my { Much of the corn belt has been benefited | by good rains, JESTS AND YARNS BY FUNNY MEN OF THE RRESS. Tale Signs-~ in= The Aftermath~--Tell Business is Business--Sad deed, Etc., Etc. HE AFTERMATH. What a sad | the matter Brown-— What wonder? Fogg—Why is He was disappo Brown—\ hat F [374 at mn her! te cessat i elf iterary man And Her | ing at aii; only ~noth- a 80 NAMIN Young father us a name for the and I can’t cs } self Elderly reiat almost. She's a her Atom. Young mother] think that's mean. She ought to be named for me, Elderly relative—Well, your name is Molly. Call her Molecule. orge, give It's a girl after mmy- CAN Call Co Y 08 you very little one. Relative Heights of Mats. “While the silk hat looks a good deal taller than the derby,’’ said a hatter, ‘the difference is really not very great, and between some hats it is next to nothing at all, When silk hats run 6 to 64 inches deep, derbies usually ran about 5} to H%; ‘so that the tallest derby is really very nearly equal in height to the lowest silk hat.’”’ He set out on the counter two stylish silk hats and two stylish der- bies; the lower silk hat, a young men’s style, measured 6 inches, the higher hat measured 6§. The lower crowned derby measured 54 inches, and the higher one bf. QYal Mis skete coun "y doubs two Most Determined Negative 8 Mollie Elliott Seawell has h of “Paul Jones HO t of 116 Cannot 1ded X00 agains le-hed Shi Vere ii ec) ¥ Remedy for Red Noses, gut Ce A : “Na x INJOYS 1 and results when it ig pleasant yd will pro- 'y one who not accept any Fi¢ SYRUP CO. LEW YORK. NV. st well, » a Lars or Five Dairs rie Collar and 7 T it io BUSINESS tn UNIVERSITY F080 S11 DENTS ehivy PRACTICA) i J «1 AK EF r I TY PEW RKITING 5 5 mitt x . RTIIAN 1] a 3 ERBIBLE RE BES WEIR Eh Sry ALL ELST PAILS. I Beton Gon OUR NEW ing Row really look. are make— or Chains, Tenn stamps i ha > Lig Williams of thousand-and-one You'll like that. Guns, Rifles, Piste 0! » Lu our LOVELL DIA Typewriter—y BOSTON, MAss s—— "Ho your washing! You don't get any strength and wear and tear, even then—but