Eyes Ears and nose sre all more or less affsoted by catareh, The eyes become inflamed, red and watery, with dull, heavy pains between them; there are roaring, buzzing noises In the cars, and somotimaes the hearing is aflested; the nose is a severe sufferer, with its constant, uncomfortable discbarge, All these disagroeable symptoms may be removed by the use of Sarsaparilla The bost—1In tact the One True Blood Purifier, Hoed's Pills Money in Carrots, Roslyn, Long Island, has a woman farmer who raises such plebelan vege tahlog as carrots and turnips for the market. She is Mrs, Taber Willets, and her place is the pride of the na tives. She is a practical agrienlturist and makes farming pay to a remark- able degree. It is encouraging to know, however, that her strictly prac tical ideas do not prevent her from sur rounding her vegetable garden a border of box, in which sweet peas and wallflowers bloom, cure nanesa, indigestion, billousness. £3 cents Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away, : If you want to quit tobacco using easily und forever, regain ica: masaocod, be made well, stroug, metic, fall of new life and vigor, take No-To-Bac, the wonder.worker that makes weak men strong Many gain ten pounds in ten days. : No-To-Bac from your own drugist. { absoiute guarantes to cure. Hook aod san free. Address nrerilug Remedy Co., Chicag: or Now York. ne Calling name but we havo al it can't identify a thing 1 Cascaners stimulate liver, Kidneys and bow. els, Never sicken, weaken or gripe. 1c, g that some men making other people uncom How's Thia? Any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure, F.J.Cagxey & Co., Props. Toleds, O ney for the iast 15 y ears, and belisve him per- and financially able to carry out auy obliga tion made by their firm. Oh 10, Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur by all Druggista, Testimonials free, Hall's Family Pills ars the best, The Identification Needed Mrs, William Mayden tle, Wash. is a woman who deserves to go down to posterity as one with an ad nirable sense of ht y Known to fan ner: Une day ale entered tional fer, one Turner, a dravn Hank and present newcon a properiy demurred at paying not know h He would have to looked strangs succin pe she Beware! There {2 a new kind of bug, and 8 corker. It is spreading country from the Southwest, and pafl beings are its chosen ready it has Valley in great numbers, and persons have neariy died from {1s Not a whit mere cheerful prey. bites doea the insect In question is a giant cies of bed-bug. co and Texas, and It measures a full inch in length i I—— Crnical, “How mm that son asked the publisher's friend. “Bplendidly.” was the enthusiastic ply. “Itis going to be one of the hits the day. Every musician who 1} heard it says that it's vile, ton Star. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com. pound. It speedily relieves irregu- larity, suppressed or painful men- struations, weakness of the stomach, indigestion, bloating, leucorrhoea, womb trouble, flooding, nervous pros- tration, headache, general debility, ete. Symptoms of Womb Troubles are dizziness, faintness, extreme lassi. tude, ‘don’t care” and * want-to-be- left-alone ” feelings, excitability, irri- tability, nervousness, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy, or the * blues,” and backache. Lydia FE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will correct ali this trouble as sure as the sun shines. That Bearing-down Feeling, cavsing pain, weight, and backache, is instantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. It is wonderful fo. _ Kidney Complaints in either sex. { REV. DR. TALMAGE. The Eminent Washington Divine's Sunday Sermon. Subject: “Gospel Farming." Trxr: **My Father {8 the husbanaman, = John xv., 1, This last summer, having gone in different directions over bast wesn tivo and six thousand miles of harvest flelds, 1 cnn hardly open my Bible without smeliing + breath of new mown hay and seeing the golden light of the wheat fleld. And when I open my Hible to take my text, the Scripture leal rusties like the tassels of the corn, We were nearly all of us born in the coune try. Wa dropped corn fn the hill, and went on Saturday to the mill, tying the grist the osntre of the sack so that the contents on either side the horses balgnced each other: and drove the enttio afleld, our bare feet wet with the dew, and rode ths horses with the halter to the brook until we fell off, and hunted the mow for nests until the feathered occupants went cackling away, We were nearly all of us bora in the country, and all would have stayed there had not some ad- vepturous lad his waoation come back with better clothes and softer hands and set the whole village on fire with ambition for eity life, Bo we all understand rustic allus- fons. The Bible is full of them. In Christ's th itn 1 on i exalted to be a Prines and a Baviour to give repentance.” Oh, plow upto the Cross! Agafn, I remark, in graces ag in the field, there must be a sowing, In the autumaoal weather you find the farmer going aoross the flald at a stride of about twenty-three Inches, and st every stride he puts his hand tuto the sack of grain and he sprinkles the roru over the fleld, It looks silly to a mun who not kwow what he is doing. He is doing a very important work, He is soattering the winter gratin, and though the ARG may come, the next year there will be A great crop, Now, that is what we are do- Ing when we are preaching the Gospel wa are geattering the sead, It is the foolishness of preaching, but it is the winter grain; and though the snows of worldliness may come down upon it, it will yield after awhile glori- ous harvest, Let be sure we sow the right kind of seed, Bow mullen stalk and mullen stalk will come up, Sow Canada thistiex and Canada thistles will come up, Let us Lot and sxod- does us and us know the difference between ballsbore, oat and henbane, Again, I remark, in grace as in the farm theres must be a harrowing, 1 refer now not {to & harrow that goes over the fleld in order to prepara the ground for the sead, but a har- row which goes over after the seed is sown, Jest the birds plek up the sead, sinking ft down into the earth so that it eas take root, You know a harrow. It is mads of bars of wood nailed aeross sach other, and un- derside of each bar is farnished with sharp teeth, and the horses are hitehed to it, it goes tearing and Jeaping across the fleid, Brror. whoat the wings as it flies over Mount Olivet, David and John, Paul and Isaiah flad in country lite a source of frequent (llustration, while Christ in the text takes the responsibility of ealilng God a farmer, declaring: ‘My Father 6 the husbandman,’ about C th f the soll, a gardener on a large it to Noah was Riven all the acres of the earth, Elisha was an ten-aore twaive RC i t 34 uitive n ARTS plowing with he Eaves 1 of | and, that land { rs ralsed in th were ithadoerzar Ay think himss:! i 5 y A governs gUDLOrte Faomanry, Carthage, be harvosts ineyards of the Bible. and chards and ~iarger har- £atharad...] Frost ug ove 0 wth of grace ters making, #n A Amn vineyards voaats than want t analogy the and the gr these sacred wri or foul ai that saa) Ky ride, th ginns oall tarning ded and hia indnler 0 mviction 1s only the plow. the sips that There are » Ars in that fleid wad It very { y the erop had rahnadred dollars us year, thea the young At to what his father there were a hundred wn in that fleid, Desn plowing for a erop, Deép plowing for a soul, He who makes light of sin wii never amount to apythi nthe church or in the world, If a man apeaks of #in as ough it Were an inaceuracy or a mistake, instead of the loathsome, a ominnbie, consuming and damning thing that God hates, that man Will never vield a harvest of usefulness When Iwas a boy I plowed a fleld with & team of spirited horses, I plowed it very sickly. Ones some of the sod without turning it, but I did oot jerk back the plow with its rattling de~ viees, I thought it made no difference, Afisr awhile my iather came along and said, “Why, this will never do: this in’t ploweq dew enough; there you have missed this snd you have missed that,” Ana he plowed it over again, The diffiouity with a great many people is that they are only seratehed with conviction when the subsoil plow of God's truth ought to be put ia up to the beam, My word isto all Kabbath-gsehonl teachers, to ali parents, to ail Christian WOrKers— Plow deep! Plow deap! But what means all this srooked plowing, these crooked furrows, the ropentanes that Wnounts to nothing? Men groan over their #ins but get no better, They weep, bat thelr fears are not sounted. They get convicted bat not converted, What is the reason? I cemember thal on (he farm we set a Sane ard with a red flag at the other end of the fleld, We kept our eys on that, We aimed at tha', Wa plowed up to that, Losing sight of that wo made a crooked farrow, Keeping our sys ou that wa made a straight furrow. Now in this matter of convietion wo must have some standard to Kuide us, If ina red standard that God has set at the other end of the fleld, It fs the Cross, Keeping your eye on that you will make a straight farrow. Losing sigit of #t you will make a crooked furrow. Plow up to the Cross. Alm not at either end of the borizontal piees of the Cross, but at the ap right piece, at the centrs of if, the heart ot the Bon of tod who bore Yodr mins and made satisfaction, Crying and weeping will uot bring you througn, “Him bath God iA th £0 i i i : i § Bereavement, harrows heart. harvest, n are the Lord's the sorrow, persconti to sink the Gosps! truth in your These were truths that you heard thirty years ago; they have not affected you until recently, Soma grast trouble came over you, and the truth was harrowed in, and it has eome up, What did God mean tn this conn. try in 18577 Fora century there was the Gos pel preached, but a great deal of it produced no result, ihen God sroessed a wild panie to a harrow of eon inl disaster, and that harrow went down Wall stpoer, and un Wall street, dows Third street, an 1 hird atrast | up 1 | Aan » street, Ave the stre wa rasvivania ip ir iad than than was Pan fetters and amid the ends ct eg the i it him He wii] her was rise ifathe ioe has Heaveg, 1 sing in church, 2 : The thresh. 2 iat out of the straw, That {a His bosom. ime wil har and What locks out Fave io the ihe Baviou in he little 3 and her Wa the stairs jas ba muosie, * seatterad all ug 14 Sup iit naud oe that reail oO for the Saviour acrifioe, the oma for her marringe ly about thats Oh, n and the Bower shut, the straw, ‘sald a GTANRS Dios. ny Fhe sun went down wheat threshed “Dear L re a son of ile out of rd, me ¢ lying boy, th ford, give And he siosed his tyes and awoke in glory. Henry W. Longtell writing a condolsnce to those parents, said, last words beautifully poetie Mr. Longteliow knew what | poet Lord, give me sleep,” "Twas notin , not in wrath That the reaper came that day: "Twas an angel that visited the earth And took the Bower away, 80 it may be with us when cur work is all done. “Duar Lord, give ma stesp,” 1 have one more thought to present, | have spoken of the plowing, of the sowing, of the harrowing, o! (he reaping, of the threshing. I must now speak a moment of Lae garnering. Where is tas garner? Neol I tell vou: Oh, no. Ro many have gone out from your twa eircles—yea, from your own family, that you have hal your eves on that garner for many a vear. What a hard time some of them bad! la Gethsemanes of sullering, they sweat grost drops of blood. They took the “cup of trembling” ana they put it to their hot lips and they cried, “If it be possibile, let this cup pass from me" With tongues of burning agony they cried, “0 Lord, deliver my soul!” Bat they got over ft. They all got over it. Garnered! Their tears wiped away: their batties all endea: their burdens lifted. Garnered! The Lord of the harvest will not aliow those sheaves to perish in the equinox. Oarnered! Soma of us remember, on the farm, that the sheaves wore put on the top of the rok which surmounted the wagon, and those sheaves wore piled higher and higner, and after a while the horses started for the barn; and these sheaves swayed to and fro in the wind, and the old wagon eresked, and the horses made a strugele, and pulied so hard the harness came up in loops of leather on on their backs, and when the front wheel struck tie elevated door of the bam ft seemed as if the load would go no father, until the workmen gave sn great shout, and then with one last tremendous stinin, the horses pulied in the load; they were unbar. nessed, and forkfal after forkful of grain fail intorthe mow, Ob, ny [riends, our get. ting to heaven may be a pall, a hard pal yA very hard pail: but these sheaves are bound to go in. The Lord of the harvest has prom. sed it. I see the load at last cowmi to the coor of the heavenly garner, © sheaves of the Christing soul sway to and fro in the wind of death, and the old creaks under the load, and as the Joxd strikes the floor of the celestial earner, it seams aa iit can go no farther, Itis the last struagle, sloop, one o my elders, “dear me slesp, isttor of “Thoss . And ie, “Dear ow ware arae until the volees of angels and our departed kindred snd voles of God shall send the down the sky the cry is home! barvest home!" en ———— The People of 8 The people were as g 1% too gay 1O0 Com M But, fortunately, constant movement The Blerpes during center or Broadway or Pip the hottest hours were its court; awnings’ it was for, though peasay with thelr donkeys could ever dr ive #1 through on each side, thelr facas f It was willing to 1 people whit 'Inza Nueva, POTATOES Burb ONIONS HOGS PRODI Cone ritmides Hams Me ARDY A Best refls wx Pork (HERSE, HEESE -N. Y. Fanner... 8 N. XY. Fists Bkim Choesn Faoaw, EGGS North Carolina Kinte LIYE POULTRY. CHICKENS Hoppa vssall Ducks, per I TOBACOND, TOBACCO M4. Infor's.. 8 Sound common Middiiag 1 the volees of the welcoming harvest rolling and eville, ng the town? too modern, ville, might Be quite pro ale me in its and life the noise day was He's Corso It was hero Under pleasant ight pass ar carriage In the clubs le nothing but spend. its m Art chairs and entertain. ne gireet, an ie evening listen to of this 150 aw £00 LIVE STOCK, BEEF Dest Deoves......§ 420 360 MUSKRAT Hacooon Red Fox Bkunk Diack, Opossum Mink... Outer. .... XEW YORK FLOUR-8outhern....... 8 WHEAT No. 2 Rad. ..... RYE Western. ‘ CORN--No, 2 OATR. No, 3 or BUTTER Sate, , EGGS State. . ....... CHEESE--State. ..... ee rane FRILADELYHIA, bs FLOUR-8outhern.... ,.8§ WHEAT «No. 2Red...... CORN--No. 8............. OATE No. 2...........0 BUTTER -Btate, ......... EGOGS-—Penna. ft......... 36 8 560 & 4% 77 29 2% 19 19 SICK NEARLY THIRTY YEARS, ERILLIANT SERVICE IN THE WAR FOLLOWED BY PROLONGED BUFVYERING, High Private Briggs Briaogs Mig War tine Valor Into a Lite and Death Combut...lin Sposks His Strugzies Sluco the War, Hi Oneida ( of From the There is York, who higher In than Mr, H, farmer, and resident of Tribune, reellsvilie, N, no man in unity, taud the comm Wiliam Br promineut member of the Matemont will no! be news to his friends, they all kuow whereof he writes, but the o He, Mr, Driges srites as follows “lt gives me great ple commended 1 ynstde ration i WFlUre and tion to be able honor where and to tha hoping it may due, beanollted as I have been. “I wm a farmer residing near EBridgzewntor Oneida County, New York: my Williams H. Fe I am an 3. A. R., Oo. A. Int whole four uot ag pension, I mate, disense which [I suff forms, In continued degroa i ind § from that | by day name 3 gus, aud 1 Hier, and DBRvYing served New York if th gna on ont racted f am L6G years old old s« member of the privates in eo it Voss re SRR IOn er v throug ver and eonting Amiy 183 | had the jnundics, for yesrs, t« Dever was aipitation BOrvog« HIArIlios me they - ' the Tues! mae, of Cascnrets lor ever Of the ages, Hut we are Jdeal of wrat was leit us if a folow wed Dis Inherited wealth shows that "rt eed himself he can father UC Le turns to it to ip her out on “wash day” any other day when she re, honest » ap which cleanses everything it touches and doesn't in. jure an either fab. i¢ of hands, Less labor Greater comfort Lover Brow, 144, Huson & Hartison Sta, X.Y. i Aha needs a pt dei iel a RRR EL, Bpeechmakers are reminded that even the YW the ower from which Lie gets it. Ele tenis a trie raade precisely wid dosen't [reser ue yous wil pel it was first y it 1s Bony Lar Shd gualily now { your wor end il Le hanu'L 1, Le We are a thousand mes more impressed UY 8 Lrulu that we have discovered than by a thousand that Lave been told u 1 iave found ol infalilug n ' ’ 1 p Coy ib, umption rz. NES ihgt Lose that Ore money £ rel Xo f ’ nen Gunga WFTOUEM, ¥ ree 8 arinl built e and taal Send 10 Dr. hlive, Wi Arch Bt, Phila. Pr. 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