More Carclessness, Excited Wife—-0Oh, professor, the cook has fallen and broken her collar bone! Professor You told her brokq anything Press, once! if she Free Discharge her at what to expect more. Detroit A Beautiful Blotehy Face, Right off you say, “Impossible!” And so if is Totten seman, Hingworm or any other scaly. ugly skin dacase makes the handsomest face aideous. “Tetterine” will cure them. [t's the anly cure certain, aafe, sure 5 cents at drug gists, or by mail for price In stamps. J. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga heen out A partridge with white wings has eluding the best English sportsmen Ledbury. al Conservative Investors their income hy pla hands. Twenty in addition to reliable enables me to advis Write for particular oly increase i ons In Wall Street experience, INSIDE INFORMATION, ms Years ol you most successfully, which are int to invest { to those having HU GHES, Stn resting HARLES Wall [19] cel, lis of Labra- thirty miles the Grand F a chasm The waters of have excavated Oh, What Splendid Coffee, Mr. Goodman, Williams Co.. Ill, “From one package Salzer's German ( Berry costing 15¢ I grew 300 lbs. of better coffee than I can buy in stores at 30 cents a ib. kK. ¢,. 6. A package of this coffee and big se ved and plant catalogue is sent you by John A Salzer Beed Co., La Crosse, Wis,, upon re- ceipt of 15 cents stamps and this notice. writes offee Indiau ink cones from China, and consi of lampblack and glue. How's This? Dal that cannot indred We offen ANY CA € 0 Hall’ 3 One £C teed nd ton mm West & Oh « WaLDING Druggists Fall ig air sont It was feag: every lx members tice. an Ch y wal is to treat To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Qui » Tabl Dragiists refund money if { Lurupay is a Paraguayan v color and extremely hard under gr yund or in water and | for railway sleepers, Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Sy « the gums red Lion, allays pain, cures wind in *) The largest egg is that of three t Ain pounds, int to twenty-fou weighs equa in Toba dgaret Chew Star Fiat ke Sledge ( ye male ostrich which the m at yands lige LINDAMAY, Bethany, Mo. January *Russian ratiroads have no dining Was Nervous Troubled with Her Stomach- Could Not Sieep—-Hood’'s Cured. “ About & year ago I was troubled with my stomach and could not eat, I was nervous and could not sleap at night, | grew very thin. I began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla and am now well and strong and owe it all to Hood's Sarsaparilia Mary Perers, 90 South Union Street Rochester N. X Remember Hood's Sarsaparilla 1s ths best in fact the One True Blood Purifier, 25 cents, Hood’ s Pills cure all liver ills DEOREOOEEE XEOOR Foovou SUFFER . The tortures of the damned from Kheumatism, Neural gla and Kindred diseases Have voustruggled against a0 army of pains 1 until you are hear If so. Relief I% yours Colost 1 for the nuk ial Oil will surely ct Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Lumbago, Backacone, Pleu risv. Pains in the ‘heat, Throat, Stiff Joints, Barns, and Inflammation Thousands have tried it Tiousands have found snccessful--Be on the win niug side be had of all Druggists, 2 will be sent postpald on 28 receipt of Price. Address 2 X CELESTIAL OIL co 106 North Howard Baitimore, Md. € Write us for nn Heantiful ween glondar for 1808- will be mailed free. 4 s Bel; 4 os Ser v bushels ‘Ladles Wanted. oe, SEALE FAor old established house, Hon, month and all ex sen PR ERO ER b CO Tecan Ht. "Philadelphia. Netting. Also farm yard, cemetery fences Freight LSHELLABERGER, MF 8t, Atlan. Ga. For Poultry. half costof ENGING 4. Catalogue free, WEEKLY SERMONS. Rev, T. DeWitt Falmage's Weekly | Discourse, “Four Anchors’ is the Title of the Thir- | teenth Sermon in the New York | Herald's Competitive Series—Dr, Tal- muge Preaches a Sisters, Sermon to Text of the | stern,” “They cast four anchors out Acts xxvii, 29. I'he symbolism of the text fs striking and suggestive, Many lives have been ship wrecked for the need of anchors holding them to steadfastness, However deep we may feel the waters to be through which we | are salling, we are often nearer the shoals | and reefs than is imagined. The firet anchor which «hould be out is fixedness of purpose. The inner- |, most secret of successful lives in the | concentration of power along certain de. | finite lines, Paul says, “This one thing I | do,” and the world will ever do rey. erence, Dr. Hudson Taylor says, one thing I do,” and China opened a never before to higher fdeals and larger visions of life, The Earl of Shaftesbury says, “This one thing I do,” and he goes down to the Holborn vianduet, in London, and the bootblacks and hueksters and street arabs and costermongers are trans formed. The great names in art, in science, in philosophy and in flnance sre identified with pain and purpose. Life is power, but power undirected is lost, Only constant striking on the same spot makes an impression. Purpose connects and unifies our months and years and makes of them all but parts of a single whole, Eaol day ouglit to be a link tempered and welded into the chain of a completed life Three-fourths of men's failures may be attributed to the lack of purpose, The house can scarcely be constructed without a plan; how much less ean a human i fashioned without a conception of what it will be when finished? Plan must precede construction; the ideal bef« the realiza tion, the purpose before the accompl ment. Only the man who aims will i k. Turn life a definite ' h terri giream is him his is re she your 1 ana at strean he analysis central difficulties seen ) eat and ruin them, Mans us star in the east, but « t 1 possessed nto follow it ntil it led him t earnestness who is ever nneconsel some day has one y his trons wh he He in spite temy enemies who h rm, fering i i n and his reward, Shall difienities when a thou gers are pointing at wonderful nents, made after overcoming tre wus obstacle il :len Kellar, without without hearing, without langaag: i = on until He pas $ xanminations t« Har vard University, Jo Bunyan, the drun tinker of Belt ri to the auth« ‘14 } ‘A aes the entra rh bu ker rd Ses of *Plig: in half heartedn which doing with thy might" whi coeds, Po determined will passionate devotion men will stand and jet 3 th annot help it 1 sannot wit! crushed rahis ress but a] ui pass 5 A persever ofte the oat 1 hort of what "Trust t {lose phy, for hese a firm If we rate our i ower at fifty the seccomj but one-half. The grest crin mit agninst themselves i not ing. but in underjudging. My self-set limitations aetermine the extent of y nchievement, And what right has man born in the image of God, and undeveloped powers standing before a hidden future, to measures and to efrcum- scribe his capab dlities and to limit his pos. sibilities of success in the construe ( life? Only God ma measure man God knows the height the individu oy reach, Men who t« o-day are almost meas. ureiess in their intellectual sweoap who have not dared wit npass and to set their bounds. TI is not but a respect forthe untouched undre of potency of your 8 beliave not only in your ideal, but | possibility of realizing it. Aud then the fourth anchor, faith in God We may imagine Paul as the last ancho ris thrown out calling to the sallors, “Men does it hold?” and the answer coming back, “Yes; the rope is taut; we do not see the ledge down below the waves, but anchor holds.” Ah! perience of life; this anchor always grasps the solid rook, the unseen rock of God! Faith connects man with Omuoipotence, 0 hyse ne may belief leal at is 100 and hment will 18 men come in overjudg- ne a rule sis eon own so { i disposal divine grace and power, This the testimony of every child of faith. “I can do allthings through Him.” This is the power not our own which may be ap- | propriated, safety of the whole life depends upen this anchor. The anchor of purpose may be fe storm and tempest; the anchor of perse- yvarance may be worn away by the fretting tide and the cutting sands, the anchor of faith may snap in twain in some fearful crisis when the strain is great and the heart i# sick, but awav down below the crashing billows of passion and temptation rests the anchor of faith embedded in the heart of God. Bo let uslive with a noble purpose worthy the patient endeavor and unfalter- fag devotion we bestow upon it, mindful of our own undiscovered resources and hoid- ing fast to the might of God. Rov, Caantes Arwoop CAaMrsrLl, FOR CIRLS. Bev. Dr. Talmage FPreaches Directly to the Sisters, Text: “And his sister stood afar off to witness what would be done to him.” ~Ex- odus ii, 4. Princess Thermutls, daughter of Pha- roah, looking outthrough the lattice of her bathing-house on the banks of the Nile, paw a curious boat on tue river, It had neither oar nor helm, and they would have been useless anybow. There was only one passenger, and that a baby boy. The boat was made ofthe broad leaves of papyrus, tightened fofetier by bitumen, ill all the Hebrew children born,” had been Phas. roah's order. To save ber be , Jocheobed, the mother of little Moses, had put him in in that queer boat and launched him, His sister, Miriam, stood on the bank watching that precious craft, She was far enough off not to draw attention to the boat, but near enough to offer Le There she stands on the bank--Miriam, t ess; Miriam, the quick-witted; Siri, th the faithful; though very human, for in after time she demonstrated it, Oh, was not Miriam, the sister of Moses, doing a good thing, an important thing, » i asphaltum, enrrying ? Did she not put all rinlty defended ber perils aquatie Bhe wns that its one PAssal. the ages of time under obligation helpless brother reptilian and brought that the it aved at all from mild have been God-defviag Pha- utis, would have inherited the crown and, as she had no ehild of her this adopted child would have Had there been no Miriam been no Moses, What a ra falthfal sisterhood! was the oldest of 1t family; Aaron, her brothers, Oh the power of the decides the brother's ¢ isefulness and for heaven ‘brother 1 iriven bac i ark of buin 181 ‘ides the dire shall sail By g« it by Christian principle when otherwise, if ¢ he w one of the nly moras soronation, Miriam nud pd io ils than Miriam fowl oreroco- I'he *h [O85 re AY ive Jem in of ex boat Hion wisi the she can not of but of & holy Go oss than Thermutis sho religion, nt ahd all ber # brighter ft him ont WAYS are paths are much the vet the family “8 he had { } unger brothers, that ex and f even fasuntness The older world owes her! limited Jorn Ww eire ARTY there is anything it is a little girl great fat child ana getting boxed because she can not keep hin the time she gots to young w is pale and worn out, and | tiveness has been sacrificed « lity and she is wlibacy, and society call her by ? « Hut in heavy siste jie in umsianc of har vou 14 mind GCArs ar ner lugging naghood * nitrac- altar of igned to an unfair en they call her Miriam, egrudge the time and brother It is hard to vy that vou kn y BO i ean ever th Well, he is only one of Let eare destowed ve that 3 ire anvihing very a Moses Mere i SiX 100 usand vears, brother will be fy Ine mi either nd ac I'hat {llastrates ho and for selfish purpose may arhieve Bat supp a magnitude o lars as dolug good, and making gion, and raising this much more ennobling” your part, and brother will do his Miriam will lovingly w Nile, Moses will help he asters strike General Baner, of the Russian id in ea fe wandorsd off § and the family supposed he was ter he gained a fortune he snes day in Husa his native § a banquet; and among the salutar - Sister sunken hthe § ti vi i Lhe lace great invite 1 a Her and his wife, 10 lived near { , aflrighted, came, fearing id be done them, The iller wile were placed one on each side The General the miller all about bis family, and the miller said that be had two bhrot od a “No other brothers?” “My vounger brother went off with the army many ago, and no doubt was long ago Killed Toen the General said 8 this man's younger brother, whom he ght was dead.” And how Joud was the cheer, and how warm was the embira wo! Brother and sister, vou need as mue 1 of an introduction to va sh other as they did, You do not know each other. You think your brother is grouty and eross and queer, are seifish aad proad Both wrong! That brother and queen in the sastimation of That brother is a magnificent BOL in FETS BN {atar siatar, vOArE “Soldiers, | and unlovely some man, fel Come, lot me Introduce you; is Miriam.” “Miriam, this is Moses, Moses, this Add preciation of each other, and when you kiss good morning do not stick up your cold ehieok, wet from the recent washing, as thou h you hated to touch each others ters kise, I read of a child in the country who was detained at a neighbor's house on astormy being told him, and then iooked out and The incident impressed me the more be. cause in my childhood I had much the same experience, The boy asked his com. rades to go with him, but they dared not, It got jater and later-—-7 o'clock, 8 o'closk, 9 o'clock. “Oh,” he said, “I wish I were home!” As lie opened the door the last time a blinding fash of lightniog and a deafening roar overcame him. Bat after awhile he saw in the distance a lantern, and Jo! his brother was coming to feteh bim home, and the lad stepped out and with swift feet hastened on to his brother, who took him home, where they were #0 glad to greet him, and for a long time supe per had been waiting, Bo may it be when the night of death comes and ofr earthly friends can not go with as, and we dare not go alone; may our Brother, our elder Brother, our Frirud closer than a brother, come out to meet us with the Hght of the prowmisce which shall be a lantern to our and then we will go In to join our loved ones waiting for us, supper ail ready, the marriage supper of the Le Lamb! San Jose Rug .a Germany. Dr. Heinrich Dorhru, of Stettin, writes that the San Jose bas long been known in Germany as the and that the present soare is AMERICA'S TU RQU OISE MINES. Worked by ndians Long Before the Arr val of Columbus. not long since ip Fe, N. M,, that turquoise had The ag- value of It was announced Clepatches | shipments made from weight Santa Of place, Om two large heen that yorted ge, and 1 from a Arizona never the American gem has from the mar- quality, is lim- true, ence and reg { WHS locall- before the intima ty in Bon gems ‘were very iar ted that he A Persian stone qual if not superior fort they came exploited driven the ket by its and as the demand ited, the alleged ery, might exercise an important on the 1 hese gEeMS, Viffany of the urquolise if inflt rice of 1 & Co., the United ung 0 eX George ng gem States Jead! was asked tl per an these examples yatches, These of and at the been turquoise, amount of un Arg € Hit Rr : and many fn gen od } i up without value i has Be led in making pay even pense of operat altho sunk in present one mine ing it were At A desu in the neigh The method against the CTACKE fg thrown UO se IEAnds o experiment in mines are worked by { white the 1884 the itor ¥y manne when upon it the tur. ruined in not stand is pic Led Process heat of the es of on rail- indian ped for a stone As What seams on ie in gem will remains with sharp pointed pie sold passing travelers road often pay the Hore five times as much them ir to i! who A would ask one, The turquoise iz di American gem The blo Ind ans of New Mexico znd it now as their did {ow nler jeweler gtinctively as highly long ago The Moon and the Earth Among the theories one regarding the origin vaine § Ors ats of scienti molten, fluid and gaseous, th earth and moon took such shape that the mass Was divided into two parte Each had ita own axis on which it gspun.each also revolving about the other. The months were but a few hours long; the days not much shorter, Then the gravity mutually exerted by these rap- idly revolving bodies disturbed them, tidal friction held them back, and the earth moving more rapidly of the two held its course, while the moon slowly receded. During ages of time, the earth took on its present shape and hardened, thus paving the way for such conditions as would make it hab: itable. It is thought that the moon has never become entirely symmetrical, and thet one and the same side is al ways turned toward the earth, A A Doll Buried With Her A pathetic inciden’ occurred at Rich- mond a few days ago. The ttle daughter of Edward Emerson, two hours before her death culled for her favorite doll and could not be per- suaded to part with it again. When the child died the doll was f-mly tiasped In her arms. Tue mother fressed the doll in a white gown and siried it with her little daughter, ¥ A Vigorous Battie, From the Neu The following is & statement by n veteran of the late war, KN comrade will need further proof than thelr friend's own words, as fr given, Bquire John Castor, of Newpoint, Ind, is the narrator, and an honest, respected citizen he is too. He said troubled with rheumatism io all ever sines 1 went to the war brought on by my exposure there on me gradaally, and kept getting until I was unable to do any work. [tried several physicians, but they did me no good, They sald my trouble was rheuma tiem resulting in disease of heart, aud that there was no care for il Neverthe the disense for a to die mu Fra, Greensburg, Ind my joints It WOrss He and fought and did tuey not inte sald thirty simply VOArs, because i and and Pink me of my ¢ t had ip some remedies for myself yr Dr. Williams Pale People I naked re medicine, for it had per in the of nity and they recommended it highly I proeu I'he me rig tin the taking then s gixt finklivy for happens { Pils ribs nelg about been used by severa mi Jr n and i months tiie inking ust few fail, OUT OF THE FIRE. of the Life, The Obedience Horee Baved His doo stall was and 4 23 ov} through RAN and : oat-bin overhead, HA rness-rooim the fire hay and shingles w showers, past on of oa GOW n Blinded hy tugging at his new threater ki an danger gave a mighty t aster sprawling a month “Whoa, yon’ t Dexter aly vou ki fellow, oar OW now. old and his. Recognizing his ter turned his head man and uttered a co unlike his previous loud cries alarm. RKpowing fear no kicks, the governor crept up and vat the halter, and calling Deter to follow him, limped blindly through the smoke filled entry and the two $ azing rooms beyond. And after him went Dexter, his nose pressed against his master's shoulder, reaching the safe onter air together, mast In toward tl x Pros axing whin oT EE Youre, 4 trate ny quite of hie need nore close him.” said the governor. “I could not lead him, and bad he shown the least | obstinacy, or any less readiness to fol- i left him to perish in the flames, furnace almost as safely as Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego did from “heirs.” in Drown.ang Uases, ron by sinking near it. tom is practiced In Norway, to and fro with a cock in the boat, fully NAPOLEON'S LAST WORDS. Thoughts gf the Man Whose + Kurope Feared, Dying On hig death bed Napoleon expressed his conviction that England would end like the proud republic of Venlee, With perfect composure, gave directions “1 desire that you will my heart, put it in spirits of wine it to Parma to my dear Maria will tell that 1 ver her rel ! respecting he his lant tue and « Lovin you arry hey ne aused to love and icular Dar every ing upon this miserable and dreary Xo vill Hoy Napoleon expired ved ndoned to himself 2 mother abie state, dep An ans and tha bequeathed wi breath i pred fLaogany, § T. A. WALDEN, Gttasn, Ga. writes: P NCE A. WOLFE, Ohio, writes! Pisgnav x . FLORE + Lancaster, sig Mulberry soorrhaa r part of the want to know wha 1 donot he Jng them w great change. E. Pinkham's Vegetable wh, Jtis the greatest of the age.” Tobacco have a bright, rich color and flavor, with good ng wWiny FL bow Ao nakes me man has brought $ ww vn state one $ Ghd I cannot will cure well burning properties, if liberally upplied with a fertilizer con- taining at least 10% actual Potash. in the form of sulphate. The quality of tobacco is im- Our books will tell you just what to use. They are free. Send for them. GERMAN KALI wi ORKS, FOR 14 CENTS jokes EE ie Me! Werth sy asia 3 0 Phen. worth $1.0 ve wit) rani] with eur fret tr _— Felner ST. JACO =y
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers