Se More Deer than Sheep in Maine. Twenty-five years ago there were very few deer in Maine, especially In Franklin and Oxford Counties. They were there unknown, In fact, I never saw a deer track in the State tll] about IBS. Since that time they have in- ereased very fast, | have no fear for deer in the future, They are to-day In every county of the State. Indeed. 1 may safely say, I am sure that are more deer than sheep in the State today. And that is 80 Is due, In my opinion, to protection afforded them.— Boston Herald, Oh, What Splendid Coffee, Mr. Goodman, Williams Co,, IIL, writes “From one packnes Salzer's German Cofles Perry costing 150 I grew 800 lbs, of Letter coffee than I can buy in stores at 30 cents & Bb" A. C8, A package of this colfee and big seed and plant catalogue is sent yon by Jobn A, Balzer Reed Co,, La Crosse, Wis, upon re- eelpt of 15 cents stamps and this notice, there this The true prophet {s seldom a prophet to bis own people, Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag: Betic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Bae, the wonder worleer, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, S0¢c or #l. Cure guaran. teed Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York ‘lose their mind’ given often, Ram's Horn, The reason mest be that pleco of their mind" so mone Jeft for them me folks thny AVE solves, To Cure a Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tableta. All Drugcgists refund money (fit failt iro. 38a ey ifitinll CO. Dont't try to raise too Bion ou too small eTense yi seed r territory Mrs. Win teething, softens Sion, allays pain, HH stolen d¢ America’s Createst Medicine 2 1 111 its peculis tars would ronsider the n the disease whic pegple, prod {o many Jable to ry Scrofula isthe thehuman family above bo neel SWeo made, this and repeated Hood sBarsaparilia has, right to the title of Medicine, De America got ts. $linixf IRE vi sure nay Sarsa- parilla 1 hw ros td hea Yee if anid by Gar harmonious] A MArsapar p - - ” * Heod’s Pills 3. The Dlind Orzanist, Scores of pe the Meridian Str A pal Church have wonds possible for a n sight to play thems, hym an gervices. Hensen, who d this, is one of the wonders of the city and people hs to seeing and hearing ! does is a matter of course with scarcel; tof what it be for him to arrive al the fie bas reach t is a rare thing for an organist or an accompanist to pl without mistakes, and yet Mr. Hans note, M: institution for t blind in Indlanap {ons 1 songs for t 1 arles | 4 taken as mug! nus gtate which rarely misses the correct tiansen education of the when he was about 10 years of a four years later he began the ergan. red the srr dt used The first work was not mu that which Mr. Hansen 3 He bas two ways of learning a plece of mraaic, and reader MRS. PINKHAM'S ADVICE What Mrs. Nell Hurst has to Say About It. # does Dean Mrs. Prxenay:—When I wrote to youl had not been well for five had doctored all the time but got no better. . 1 had womb trouble very bad. My womb pressed backward, causing piles. I was in such misery 1 could scarcely walk across the floor. Men: struation was irregular and too pro- fuse, was also troubled with leugorrheea. 1 had given up all hopes of getting well; everybody thought I had consumption. : After taking is five bottles of Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegeta- ble Compound, I felt very much better snd was able todo nearly all my own wark. Icontinued the use of your medi- sine, and feel that I owe my recovery to rou. Ieannot thank youenough for your advice and your wonderful medicine, Any one doubting my statement may write to me and I will gladly answer sll inquiries.~Mrs. NerL Horst, Deep- water, Mo. letters like the foregoing, econ. stautly being received, contribute not a little to the satisfaction felt by Mrs. Pinkham that her medicine and connsel are assisting women to bear their heavy burdens. Mrs. Pinkham’saddressis Lynn, Mass. All suffering women are invited to write to her for advice, which will be given without charge, It is an ex perienced woman's advice to women. FYOCAars; WEEKLY SERMONS. Address by Evangelist D, L. Moody in New York, “Peace in the Soul” Is the Title of the Rev, Qeorge HH, Hopworth's Sermon, Preached in the New York Herald's Columns—An Address by DD, L, Moody. “For the kingdom of God is joy and peace. —Romaus xiv, 17, The Bible is the most practical book in the world. There is very little theology in ft-—not as much as some people think-—but a great many inspired bits of advice as to the conduct of every day life, as though the writer loved the men and women who would read his word and was actuated by no other motive than to help them over rough places. For this reason the Book has maintained its hold on mankind, It is friendly, kindly and encouraging, a book not to be read through at a sitting, but to be taken up at odd times and glanced at just as you would look at a handful of jewels for a moment and then put them AWAY. I have noticed that it makes many, very many references to peace and joy--not the peace of a nation, that busy peace in which we compete for personal gain, but the peace of the heart, which creates content. ment and keeps in polss and equilibrium; the peace which makesa man foel that everything will come out right in the end because nothing can ¢ # out wrong when God Is guiding our affairs. It is ones spoken Ld very saxtreme lan- guage as ‘the peace that passeth under. standing,” the soul of OL cape, or lika that which the lover of As when be Is listening to some su- rhestra, or like that which a m 0 shies 18 sitting by the erfadle of $i Wi peace that refuses to be $00 who has I am talking t when I say that mors Wa ex; well as to you got a great deal trivial energy wean recently he Gen was n all sides, : 12. Tho waves nm two I on very yy } 5 ind that ugh a thou . ah +» 1 1 ha ‘raft there was : a3 to hi nav { pp sti nae] hat ali culty wa s AURL fi ana ft squal to the em f all heresies (ies at » undation of our relig We may as well face this ourselves accordiogly rast gious rest eas. fact The hiz fate Yel 13 shear! ene oo a at 8 of angels w necessily? 1 Bethany before the oruei- fixion and He could go tarough the y's experience? the contrary, He was seil-possesand, cheerful, and if the bean won I opportunity to avoid offered He would not as a doubt of that Father's love, cannot follow that example ex sept In He sald Thy will be done 80 much We The highest excellence {a repose, soul, but you cannot be i Know that you are possessed of God, The essence of religion ia the soul's consclonsness that as its day After hold of God's it Is the most cheerful He who has Geonoe H. Herwonrtn, ODWICHT L. MOODY SPEAKS. Address by the Evangelist at a Crowded Meeting in New York. Dwight IL. Moody has been holding a #eries of crowded meetings in New York. The following account is from one of the famous evangelist’s addresses there: “In Luke xix., 10, ia the keynote of this whole meeting: “The Son of Man is come to seek and save that which is lost.’ Even now lam cast down, A life-long friend has come to me saying that his health is lost and that it is only a question of time when he passes away. Iamsad, I say, yet he has the promise of a beautiful life here. after. Bome friend of yours has lost his wealth, is reduced in life. You sympathize with him, [ sympathize with him. And vet with all this misfortune shere is a hope for a better life, “To-day I passed the eye infirmary, across from where { am staying, where I am told are many little ones hopelessly blind, I cannot look at that batlding without apang in my heart, A doctor told me that a mother brought her beautiful little child to him and said that it hadn't opened its eves for several days. [le looked at the liitle ehiid and told her that it was blind, ‘Yes ' eaid she, ‘ithas beon blind tor several days,’ ‘It. will be blind forever,’ he told her, en there came a wail from her heart that near- ly broke mj heat to hear of, Her ehild could nevef see ita mother, Yet there is the hope that the child will be glorified in supine ord. I passed the Hospital “On my way hers . the a for Oripples, I could not help but sym- athize with them. And Lot thane is hope is the hope glorifled likeness of our is so bard for people to realize what ft means to bo lost-—yes, 1-00-87!" The evangelist's voles thundersd as he upon the audience, A low murmur in recognition of its foros, “What la it to be lost! When I eame to Now York twenty years ago little Charlie Ross had just been lost, The whole nation was moved as it had not been movad since the war, They gavefine the pleture of the ohild, asking that I search my congrega- tion for some trace of hin, Devoted friends of his mother came day after day, search ing for the little child, Many and many a mother wept at the thought of the anguish of that boy's mother. And yet there are millions of mothers that have lost their sons, for these sons have missed the word of God! “Again, T will tell you another story, In one of the towns in the West where I was preaching two little children had wane dered into the woods—a brother and a sis- tor. All day men searched for them and they wero not found. The day following these men could do nothing at their labor. So they formed a line—a thousand of them ~all a few foot apart, and scoured the woods, Then when the word came down the line that the little ones had heen found safe and well, how that town was stirred, “And yet, I tell you, hers ure hundreds and hundreds of drunkards, young men lost In vice, lost forever, and yet this town Is never stirred. Think of the young men going down, down, down, deeper into vice, while no one seems to be moved, “Exeapt that man be born again he can- not sea the Kingdom of God. “Thers is not a poor drunkard fallen woman that God does not want, | perhaps, that God Go hunt them up, Tell them came nor a | wants them, “A certain woman has ten pleces of sil. Does she let it go? Nol rots a broom and raises a dust and a She doesn’t walt for the silver Then when she is ice with me, I have found silver’ “There will ba a groat one, mmol soma back, THES. ul she says wu 3 aj joy in New York Luke sald: ‘Then 1 hdicans and sinners, ted the lost ones { and sin. you must ks the red of § the ’ ut that Chr me unto Him, EE sinner, sin, [ The Rhepherd isthe He is still seeking you. “A mother wrote to her infidel son, ‘Go te Moody and Bankey's meeting. That 1574. He said ‘Yes ' and that all she could get t The first to be within He sald yo much troubles, IKiyn chanced He came, year, but it was Was con. | it he your mother? ve cabled, NOTES AND COMMEN)A Dafore 188G the average number of Inbor strikes of all kinds in this coun try was about 500 a year, Since that date the sverage has been 1,000, One blg club of wheelmen in York has decided not to let women or children participate in century runs This is taking the right side in anothe: good road movement, thinks the Phila deiphia Times. Official reports show that the at- tendance at the Indlan schools has in- creased from 3,030, in 1877. to 18,6706 in 1807, It appears that the real so lution of the Indian question has been found in the spelling book. In 1704 English more New users of the language did not number than 30,000,000; in 1807 their number waa estimated at 110,000,000 The German emperor talks much about the time when it will neces sary to shed blood for the fatherland the possibility of fatherland without the habitual be Mby not talk the about preserving bloods hed from Klondike indi that in that I been taken and that gold who now will go hun The iiread y he Reports ate the d territory region esirable has al EO to that country compelled to in common labor wnich bound t 18 in costly dis appointment for thousands of n who Fifty Texas to Guerrero town, t Ameri 0 City The sect} of the richest Potosi, and that was really | I told &« man I} he day and nour | ‘Ho,' sald he, ‘I Was a prophet in your | er Is sald 1. ‘When?’ there » pockets, ieaning against a be saved? I asked tion,” he answered . rd whers | found ere to-day? ( 3 Can the Lord be found here to-day? i “Yes, yes, zen v Ihe evange led his hb pieasure o found, erie ily phy “Reak the I. NOME AR IT id int Lake lot » ’ re as us ay are to { be saved | anxious | anx; y AS mi to be for 3 i it fad Him easily | a saved, is a heart. f work or | ‘ hear vou. I know, ¥ rause I ha bousands saved yot one of the i 10 to be saved up your mind, us pray that 11 all ain &l gelist [ited bis face, | Oresst the go resticssnoess, audience settled io a deen It was broken by the avangelist and asking that a hymn be sung. spoke agai “Come be saved eo groat | intense sileanoa, ATISILR | Then he | ith mel” he eried; “come and | Let'nll that wish to know the | word of God come with me into that room Iw rounss] with them, 1a one beside you speak with them, bring them with over there, 14 i ynads thera Any t converting they be timi ¢ '" ome, Arising, the evangelist moved down from It | you, The crowd turned, and dozens of individaals followed in the svangelist’s wake, There in that room they obtained COUNTERFEITING IN PRISON. and Colin Nickels, A counterfeiting plant has been discov. The work was done in the engine room by Convicts LL. H, Coyne and James Brown. So far as known only nickels were coined, presumably because no silver could be obtained When the officers a window and threw their dies and cruel. bles into a canal leading to the American River, A large number of well executed five-cont pieces were found. They were made from Babbit metal taken from the engines which run through the prison grounds for tha purpose of hauling rock from the quarries, It is thonght that the dies or moulds ware not made by the men who coined the money, but by some of the expert counter. feiters in the prison. Several of the bogus coins bave been found in eirculation in the town of Folsom, SHARK CATCHERS DROWNED. Four Japanese Loss Thelr Lives in the Surf in an Exciting Hunt, Four Japanese fishermen were drowned near Pacific Grove, Cai., while harpoonin sharks. Japanese catch sharks for ofl, which nets twenty-five cents a gallon. Two boats went out, with threes men in one and four in the other, The boats were lashed together with cross pisces 80 that they would better withstand the Junges of sharks when A sohool of white sharks Appes early in the afternoon, and one, fully twenty-five feet long, was harpooned. Instead of rashing out to sea as wounded sharks usually do, this one made for the shore and drag the boats into the surf. ¥our huge rollers were en- countered and capsized the boats. Three men in ons of the boats ronched shore. The others wera drowned, A AAA. War on Food Adulterstions. The pure food congress mt 31ashington was atishded bY about 200 delag, tes, ar against food adult was declared in strong terms, Prosperous American Parmaso, I Amatisah Satan Soo more for their produ did ia 1806. i sa marks large 1 BVen pv ple 1auts and polar explor. extends that An- is lost, and that no Ff i "x of it may ever be discovered. conviction dree’s expeditio remnant thought airship WTAR®OUs voyagers have been among the icy Arctic wastes, and that authentic news of them mas hand. The balioon left Spitzbergen on July 11 of year, bearing Messrs, Andres Strindberg and Fraenckel. The only trustworthy from them was brought a carrier pigeon, and was dated two davs after their departure, stating that good progress toward the North had been made From that point on all is silence and mystery, affording the best grounds for surmise | that the silence will never be broken nor the vell of mystery pierced. The chance of hopeful news is, of course. not entirely exhauated, but it is at best a slender one, not calculated to en- | courage the further use of the balloon in Arctic discovery probable that the £ away no ever come to jast message According w a Washington corre. | spondent, “the long-standing occupa- | ion of one of the White House clerks | is gone. Back through several admin. | istrations it has been the duty of one man to read the newspapers for the President. This man read and clipped | and pasted. He filled scrapbooks with | sch articles as he thought the Presi-| dont might want to see at some futire | time, But, besides this, he read with | reference to what might be of imme. fiate concern to the President. When he found anything he thought the President would like to see at once, he clipped it and pasted it an a gheet, with the date and the name of the ni. per. These sheets were laid before the President as regularly as the mail re. quiring his attention. The reader for | | | ten by the late John N. Edwar( is of Missouri, which she acknowledged ion that 1 The 3 touched her moat for the President Mr. Porter Is a velieves that he the the Pre ber of new go through himsel.” deeply. has been new a better wa) paper has Ame ident spapers which he prefs purpose, has a select 1 labor, employment? ra Does displace of its Constitution, the labor a machinery the scope asks the Atlanta narily, this question evokes that machinery displaces that most of our present ills are answie due |r but a writer: undertake 1 mechanical inventions; Donahoe's Magazine prove that such is not true, Th first deals with the printing states that when the printing was invented some three or dred years ago, its immediate wag to displace some few copyls that its ultimate effect wa the labor of publication for books, newspa the world o er He demands ver, magazines ployment to millions of borers ab respect to the locomotive engir ntends that where it | one laborer Mr. Buchanan Argentine Ce Administration, the Cleveland turned from that that the Argentine will be country year an export (WHY Od hue! have not as it will cor world’s supply South America country are area remains aimost to be opened up tem is completed there it will devel a wheat belt almost as own rich one in the far northweas too, in Boliva and Peru, a will United States for the wheat ma:lets Limited Partnerships. The word “limited,” so after the business title of a firm, is a precaution against disaster, Under the English law there “re two kinds of stock companies; in one the liability of the stockholders is unlimited, that is to say, if the stock of the company has a nominal vaine of 100.000 and the company fails for $500, JO, the pri- vate property of the stockholders may be taken by process of law to satisfy the difference between the amount of the stock and the amount of the lia. bility. When, however, the company is “limited” the liabilites of the stock. holders are limited to the amount of stock they hold, and in case of the fall. often seen House staff as far back as Grant's time, if not earlfer. He went through all the papers of the country. It was in this way that Mrs. Grant saw the beautiful tribute to ner daughter at the time of the Sartoris wedding, writ- erat, A squad of cyclists is now attached to every corps man army. PR ee A Ri — mer ——— LOVELL DIAMOND STAND THE TEST. Board of Ex perts So Decide. amarkable Investigation From Whis the Lovell Diamond Bicycles Gams Out Ahead of AI Compeliters. { i { | | | Ty wh cyels grent val mor of prod Xtiits of Mad. 0 expene: sver fo Western Csunty, nuessey, g on the see a sick rolle Over encount- eguiar gal- We took ] torm, the on the road again 108% ime passable, the blue clay clogging up under the insteps of our shoes uan- til we conldn’t walk at all, “The further we went the more of the sticky clay we picked up, and our loads of ‘stickum,’ as my friend called it, got so heavy we positively couldn't navigate. When we cleaned off the mud we would make a few steps, only to find ourselves loaded down again, At various times I was walking with the clay clogged up on the soles of my nearly fifteen inches thick, and it raised me up like stilts. As long as wo stayed on that mountain our prog- ress was hindered in that way. We met a farmer walking up the hill who said the mud would stick just like gumbo, and it was always #0 in rainy weather. It took us five hours and a half to get down one mountainside, and we were so tired after that half- day of nerve-exhausting toil we had to stop for the night. I never saw such clay before or since, and I hope I never shall have to walk in any again,” Wedding Day Superstitions, Tt used to be thought by the super- stitious that to try on a wedding-ring before the ceremony was unpropitions, 1f the shaking hand of the bridegroom dropped this symbol of love in the act of putting it on the bride's finger, it was held that the ceremony had better be stopped then and there. To lose it was o of evil, and to remove it after | unlucky. reiage u r A tree dus the & but cioud nasred resins our wer we found it al stiff Journ after When we got v
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers