“Do you believe the theory that char. acter is determined to some extent by what we eat and drink?" “I do. “Thea a person who drinks sage tea In likely to develop into a philosopher, I suppose."'—Boston Globe. Beware of Olntmouts for Catarrh That Contaln Mercury, As mercury will surely destroy the sense of waell and completely derange the wholessysiem whe entering it through the mucous surfaces. such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputavle physicians, us the Lamage they wiil dois ten fold to the good you an possibiy derive trom them. Hall's Ustarrh Lure, manufactured by F.J. Cheney & Co. Loledo, O., contains no mercury and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure to get the genuine. [tis taken internally, and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J, Cheney & Co. Testimonials free, : Sold by Druggists, pries Tic. per bottle. The more honesty a man has tho less he afllects the airs of a saint. —Lavaler. The True Laxative Principle Of the plants used in manufacturing the pleasant remedy, Syrup of Figs, has a perma~ nently beneficial effect on the human system, while the cheap vegetable extracts ani min~ eral rolutions, usually sold as medicines, are permanently injurious. Being wrell informed, you will use the true remedy only. Manufas. tured by the California Fig Syrup Co. to make friendship the chl'd, father, of virtue, —Sir P, Sidney. Le careiul wrd not the Tobacco-Twisted Nerves. Millions of men keep asking for stimulants because the nervous system is constantly irri- tated by nicotine poison. Chewing orsmoking destroys manhood and nerve power. It's not a habit, but a disease, and you will find iaranteed cure in No-To-Bae, sold by ists everywhere, Book free, The Ster- edy Co.. New York City or Chicago, Atlantic States a little over the jopulation is of foreign Notice. f want every man and woman in the Unite £¢t- tes interested in the Opium and Whisky i ooks on these die- ey. Atlanta, Ga. you (ree. Hits tO have Al Hox 381. an PARES , has now a three-cent trol riy miles of track. Hindercorns is a Simple Remedy, Bat it and Ww ¢ n + Pleas takes out corns Is! Makes waiking in sentiment slow’s *oothing Ssrup for chi teethis {tens the gums, reduces intlar pain, cures wind colic. 25¢. a botule *T' should be the lividuals, — Rivaro. Keeps Yon Moor, Indian Story B name iver,” Kiimer's il hidney Yamphiet rate oy will be Inherited « heaven in his eTery man Beecher, i with sore ayes nae Dir. Isaac Thom se-water., Dru a sell at 35 per boltie | Tired NEers } TO0 and Wo H d4' nde riot % Sarsaparilla, i. Hood's 1 au od’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True B ir rh Cret Ho the druggists, ninentiy in lay. Mx for &5, public yf sold by ali #1: Hood’s Pill The Greatest [ edical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery, are tasteless, mild, off tive All Arugrists, —’ DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS,, Has discoverad In one 01 our vommon are weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worss Berofuls dowa to a common pimple, He bas tried it in over elaven hundred eases, and never falled except in two cases (both thunder humor). He bas now in his possession over two hundred certifi eates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boaton. Bend postal card for book, A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warraated when the right quantity is taken, Wauen the lungs are affected it canses shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowela, This is caused by the duots boing stopped, and always disappears in 8 week after taking it. Head the label If the stomach is foul or billous it will Chase squeamish feelings at first Ao change of diet over necessary. Eat the beet you can get, and enough ef it Dose, one tablespooutul in water at beds time Bold hy all Druggeista OUTHERN BUSINESS UNIVERSITY REY. DR. TALMAGR day Sermon. Bubject: “Surpassi ng Splendor.” Text: “Eve hath not seen nor ear heard.” ~I Corinthians i1,, 9. “I am woing to heaven! I am to heaven! Heaven! Heaven! Heaven!" These wera the last words uttered a few days ago coin with God forever, and 15 it not natural as well as Christianly appropriate that thoughts be much directed toward the glori- ous residence of which Bt. Paul speaks in the text 1 have chosen? The city of Corinth has been eallad Paris of antiquity. Indeed for splendor the world holds nosuch wonderto-day. on an isthmus washed by two seas, the sea bringing the commerce of Earope, the other the commerca of Asia. From her kingdoms had been absorbed, war galleys with three banks of oars pushed out and confounded the navy yards of all the world, Huge handed machinery, snch as invention cannot equal, lifted ships from the fea on one gide and transported them side, The revenue down through t sandy aca i the other olive groves that lined the b » collect tariff from all Nations, The mirth of all Isthmian games, and the beauty sat in her theatres, walked her p threw itself on the altar of har stupendo dissipations, Column and status and bewildered the beholder, There wer marble fountains into whieh, from ag at the side, t 1 waters every for healt} a gported in her of all lands people tires where } Around t basing, f stone, there were all and architectu v + stat i y guard gualitie wreat the and th rustling leas and robust health that which those « gates have pened, is ness and ems t k nt standing before the throne. On earth she was a lifelong alid. Seo her step now and hear her voice w! Cuateh, if you ean, one breath of that celestial air. Health in all the Health of vision. Health of spirits, health, No racking Hore whot To . yt wie that soul prises! mimortal Health swinging in the air. Health streams, Health bilo men, flowing in all the ying * child that heat her volee now ringing That old man the anthem! { age, sea him walk now with the step of an athiete--forever young again! That when the needlewoman fainted away garret, a wave of the heavenly alr resuscitat- ed her forever. For everinsting vears, bave neither ache nor pain nor weakness nor fatigue. “Eye hath not seen it, ear hath not heard it." I remark further that we can in this world get no just idea of the splendor of heaven. Bt. John tries to describe it, Ha says, “The twelve gates are twelve pearls," and tha. “the foundations of the walls are garnished with all manner of precious stones, stand looking through the telese pe of Be, John we see a blaze of amethyst and pearl and emerald and sardonyx and chrysoprasus and sapphire, a motintain of Hght, a catar- act of color, u sea of glass and a city like the sun, 8t. John bids ua look agin, and we see thrones— thrones of the prophets, thrones of the patriarchs, thrones of the angels, thrones of the aposties, thrones of the martyrs, throne of Jesus, throne of God! And we turn round to seo tha glory, and it fa—thrones! Thrones! Thrones! Bt. John bids us look again, and we see the great procession of the redesmed passing, Jesus, on a white horse, leads the march, and all the armies of salvation following on white horses, Infinite cavaloade passing, assing; empires pressing into line, ages ollowing ages, Dispanantion tramping on after dis fon, lory in the track of glory, Europe, Asia, Africa and North and Bouth America pressing {nto lines, Islands of the sea shoulder to shoulder. Geners- tions before the flood following generations after the flood, and as Jesus rises at the head of that great host and waves Hissword in sifat of victory all crowns are lifted, and all ensigns flung out, and all chimes rung, and all’ halleluinhs chanted, and some cry, “Glory to God most high!" and sone, L'Hosanna to the Son of David!" and some, “+““Worthy is the Lamb that was slain!" till all the axclamations of endeurment and homage Hin the voeubulary of heaven are exhausted, ‘and there up surge after surge ef “Amen! Amen! Amen!” { “Eve hath not seen it, ear hath it kim from the summer brightest sparkles, and you will get no idea of the sheen of the everlasting sea. Pile up the aplendors of earthly cities, and they {| would not make astepping stone by which { you might mount to the city of God, Ever house i8 a palace, Every step a trix Every covering of the head a o Every meal is a banquet, Every from the tower is a wedding bell, | day is a jubilee, every hour a rapture and avery moment sn “Eye hath not sean it, car hath not hear n 1 remark further we of the reunions of heavy ever been across the ger even aun acqualt roamember come heard the not winters Sestasy, cian gel n | earth have strange city, you him. have the we re have were to /, after we BOO What, then, will be our jc passed the seas of death, of the sun those 1 separated; our is from } After s have long heen been away {ror frien nthem, kt. ‘The hair } ‘ome in their a changed!” ! throne, all , all marks of sor pl feeling the joy of te we sav, ‘Hq ny when we + the gone from Appeared, lemd, methinks we wifl with an exaltation azine, “H you i world goodby., 1 hear it at th boat whi face We Highlanders were on till the day reciate the p we app , and they das Wa wer ilar iate the { thing tire mm Hilted When wo old aims an i {f the they r t. Why, war father's house, Hing with the morning hristian ~ a! Ymthe They were sung gone now, by voi broken in the musio 18a all some of them memories were oradie songs They are all spark- dew of a thousand bw brothers that and sfe aced LB the ible and break, Zils ri Wer nd . voi yan a] did tren 1d songs sun woot hocatse they 1 I hear these « { the old country meeting homes joined horas, and Scoteh kirk and sailor's Dathel and Western oabins, until the whole ntinent lifts the doxology and the scopterd of eternity beat time to the music, Away then with your starveling tunes that ohill the devotion of the sanctuary and make the WE fe in the ¢ Hosanna. Sut, my friends, if music on earth is it bo in heaven? They all know the tune there, Methinks the tune of heaven will be made up partly from the arts of sll our hymns and tanes going to add to the song of All the best singers of ail the ages will join it—choirs of white robed children. Choirs of patriarchs! Cholirs of apostles! Morning stars clapping their Harpers with their harps! Great Other ame pires joining the harmony till the thrones are full of it and the Nations all saved, Anthem shall touoh anthem, chorus join chorus, and all the sweet sounds of earth and heaven be poured into the ear of Christ, David of the harp will be there, Gabriel of trumpet will be there, Germany re- deemed will pour its deep bass voles into the song, and Africa will add to the musio with her matchless voloes, I wish we could anticipate that song. I wish in the closing hymns of the churches to-day woe might catch an echo that slips from the gates. Who knows but that when the heavenly door opens to-day to let some soul through there may come forth the “train of the jubilant voices until we catoh it7 Oh, that as the song drops down 'from heaven it might moet half way a song cone ing up from earth! In the athletic sports which took place at Tipperary, Ireland, J. M. Ryan, the British champion, broke the world's record for the high jump, clearing six feet four and a half inches, ¥ i LIFE WITH THE HMOBOES. What the Tramp Eats and the Ec« centric Togs He Wears. As a rule, the '‘poke out’’ beggar has but one meal a day, and it is usually breakfast. This is the main meal with all vagabonds, and even the lazy tramp makes frantic efforts to find it. Its quantity as well as its quality depends largely on the kind of house he visits. His usual break- fast, if he is fairly lucky, consists of coffee, a little meant potatoes, and “punk an’ plaster,’”’ as he calls bread and butter. Coffee, more than anything else, is what every man of Lis kind wants early in the morning. The clothes of the ‘poke out’ beg- gar are not much, if any, better than his food. In summer he seldom more than a shirt, a pair of trousers, a coat, some old shoes and a battered hat. Even in winter he wears more, especially if he goes Soi While 1 lived wi these same ‘‘togs forget my The coat was i [ and was too large for me: bacl sOme has little laces and knees, and had London fashion ¢ me from old Derby settled Ami ishman visit and ican Engi notorious wag, and arranged that acquaintance should meet the An ican as his brother and } to the hotel. The American. who was aiso a great wag, on the trip de. cided to play exactly the same joke on his brother, asking an acquaint. ance whom he met on the ship to personate him for a few hours. I'he acquaintance entered into the spirit of the joke. and when the vessel arrived at Liverpool he was found by the personator of the Eng. lish brother and driven to the hotel. followed his his was mdence, Is He rres) the sot sail, conduct hi The real American brother more leisurely, chuckling over joke In the meanwhile the English brother had also gone to the hotel, bursting with merriment over his joke. It happened that the two real brothers met in the lobby of the hotel, and though they had been parted so many years, each other. At first, with blank amazement they greeted each other; and then, as they explained their mutual jokes, laughed long and heartily. But the climax was yet to be reached. An explanation in regard to the gentle men who had personated them, and who were now, as they imagined, playing a huge joke on each other, showed that they also were brothers, who had been separated from boy- hood, but who did not know each other when they met. The first pair of brothers hurried up to their sitting-room, and after the situation had been explained all round, the comedy of errors was pleasantly ended by an old-fashioned English dinner. El le Tradition asserts that a certain oak tree of Palestine grew from a sprout which Cain. planted on the day be- fore he kiligd Abel, REVEALED IN A DREAM. How a Doctor Diagnosed a Case and Cured His Patient, One vent unaccountable ad. in the phenomena of the lives of ures the most Jockman, of As- a meeting of thie Ameri- lated by Dr. Charles toria, 1. lL, can Medical day afternoon at Society in Tues. this city The scientific men pres. ent were much inters=zi=; In the strange freak closed. ble regarding cussed opinions on the conditions « mind or a subject “It seems to me.’ of nature the practitioner dis They believe it new and valua the muct evidence 1 brain in sleep, which of strong human interest, Dr. Bock ing the subject to his lis- ' sald Od Lie formal manter, “that it is a when a teners truly physician mysterious mals 1 hay nazement ill 4 irkable occurrence ro vy i HinO £ a clear diagnosis of a dy in dreamland. Yet utter character s- xamined into my a spokesman of fact, 1 but since 1 that or + done so—and done so to my 11 + W hen, purely { dream speechless lusion the IT stertous even i 10 attend a little rigid spas- for which to discover ORt cause infant on 031130 perfe tls do for it, fur mporary A PARALYTIC CURED, His Revolutionary Bel. dier, and His Father Both Died of Puralysiv, Yet the Third Gener ation is Cared..- The Method, 4 1 Grandfather, a nterviewer BsoOuEn * first shock . bul i Tew i A fow months after, w and drene with rain, I wen Very nervous state, The ona and more severe shock, «ft arm and leg were v grandfather, whe mary War, and for American f paralvais aithough Ulises, and » in Nuractes ur fami} wning AG eXDauste irk 14 resugit ve after sreditary in shock 1 took w # third = yded to me irr bal ITAME UE © rong as the other and ho para ner Highest of ail in Leavening I MONKEY HAD A SPREE. Acts Circus Pre That Were Krammae, Not mod Some the Perfor on 1 v ai lows pi O00 BL08T addy -Rooski vorformed performed n more those on the program. leered cunningly at his companions, tottered about ring. and take hig position among the other monkeys, the refused ft at the mame time bering and chatter. ing in a way that only needed words to make an intelligent drunk, Professor Andres tried every known to the subdue the hi but to no purpose ‘rom bh means trainers’ t larious idddy ' in gleelu £ state he soon merged | ang and proceeded to do up the other mem- bers of the monkey tribe In regular pugilistic style. One of the attendants secured a small net, and throwing it over the intoxicated monkey secured him and carried him into the dressing. room, As Paddy-Rooski vanished behind the dressing-roocin he let out a yell that would have done credit to a Kansas farmer full of “bootdeg whisky," 10 one O Walter Baker & Go. Limited, The Largest Manufacturers of PURE, HICH CRADE COCOAS «¢CHOCOLATES On tis Continent, have ravvived HIGHEST AWARDS from the great Industrial and Food EXPOSITIONS EUROPE AND AMERICA. SO i « 1 if Caution any Titans ®, COHN SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. | WALTER BAKER 4 00, LTD, DORCHESTER, WASS. A rt by ery If i't waited reason, miplete re. i cure. by many be incur. is the f hundreds nesses 10 in ali Wes, con- i“ 4 curable every re per age of cases, and believe, fully 98 cents are cured by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discor ery, even after the discase rogressed 80 far as to jnduce repeat sedings from the Jungs, severe ugh with Copious expectoration {incl £ tubercu. lar matter) great Joss of flesh aud extreme emaciation and weakness 1% » ingens ie the Yuwuriant growth, BR Mever Fouls 10 Restore Gray aa to ite Youthiul Calor, foe lp Qoaveoms heir Bing. Bow aod #1 0% mt Drouggioh Fonnetes Owes relies! in FITR minutes, ® Send BE wis vg * Hors ein Friesian CATTLE Wunarpaased for milk, butter, beet and beauty, FOR SALE BY J. W. MORRIS, Hagerstown, Md, A A IA