~~ What is Tetterine? It 18 a fragrant, unctuous ointment of great cooling and healing power. tis good fp Totter, ngwor, Ecgema and all roughness of hoe skin It stops pain and ftel ing atcence and if properly get Will positively cure aven the worst of chronic cases. O0 conts at a dig store or by mall for 50 cents in stamps. J.T. suupteine, Savannah, Ga nation, Napoleon . Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag. netio, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-'To- Bag, the wonder-worlker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 0c or #1, Cure guaran- teed Booklet and sample free ' Addross Sterling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York Whilst we are considering when to begin it Is often too late to act, —Quintiiian, Experience And Not Experiments, Should be Your Alm in Buying Medicine. Ist others experiment; you should be guided by experience. Experiments are uncertain In result; experience Is sure. Ex- periments may do you harm; experience proves that Hood's Sarsaparilla will do you wonderful good. Thousands gladly tall what Hood's has done for them. They want you to know mad they urge you to try it. That is what is meant by the vast number of testimonials written in bohalf of Hood's Sarsaparilia. sults of experience and prove that Hood’s > parilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. Sold by all druggists. $&; six for $5. Get only Hood's. Hoed's Pills == gentle, miM, offoc- tive. All druggists, 2c. TRUMPET CALLS. Ram's Horn Sounds a Warning Note to the Umnredeemed. T art of gaining. magnet of peace Patience jg thi barometero faith, works are » volee of faith Influence is the ood Capability the polestar is ol revolution, Discipline 1s the erucible of respons! bility. In forgiving a fault, a virtue, We nay inspire The man who stands for God is safe to stand alone. The gospel means not law over men but Jove in them, Temptation | character is weig 2 where the 1 PES. balance cowards of only Conscience makes those who fall to obey tt. Emotional Christians, like jelly fish, float with the tide. ue CON con To put works against faith Is to trast the tree with its roots, tx 3ewsds RB orlaks § 1 to mit; a finished theol To define is ogy would make God finit o Love has emulatio without strife unity without unif n uniformity. One's faith shows less what h than what he Is trying to be, Beware of prosperity; the death-knell of Tvs " sUxur Rome's vigor, ' * y nr Tt i 1 r rien Knowledge and wisdom make strong team when rehed together wealth, Those who wor p n adoration bef good clothes, What European The Russian surdened than ler in the arm: ver 68 pounds. The she foot-soldiers of the European nation are French, 62 pounds; Britis! Berman, 61 pounds; {talian, 53 pounds; Austrian. 47 pounds OPEN LETTERS FROM soldiers Carry. soldier ther. A foot-sol Lie Is more heavily any « r of Czar carries welghts borne by other principal follows <Q as Hardy. Jessie E. Gueew, Denmark, lowa writes to Mrs. Pinkham: “1 had k at my monthly periods for n ars, and tried almost everything I ever heard of, but without any £t. Was troubled with backache, headache, pains in the shoulders and dizziness. mother | was induced to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it has done me so much good. Iam now sound and well.” 3 been sie Seve ye ve bene ii. Mrs. Harry Hanoy, Riverside, Iowa, writes to Mrs. Pinkham the story of her struggle with serious ovarian trou- ble, and the benefit she received from the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound. This is her letter: * “How thankful I am that I took your medicine. I was troubled for two years with inflammation of the womb and ovaries, womb was also very low. Iwasin constant misery. I had heart trouble, was short of breath and eould not walk five blocks to save my life. ‘Suffered very much with my back, had headache all the time, was nervous, menstruations were irregular and painful, had a bad discharge and was troubled with bloating, I was a perfect wreck. Had doctored and taken local treatments, but still wasno better. I was advised by one of my neighbors to write to you. I have now finished the second bottle of Mrs. Pink. hawm's Vegetable Compound, and am better in every way. I am able to do all my own work and ean walk nearly a mile without fatigue; something I had not been able to do for over two years. Your medicine has done me more good than all the doctors,” OR TAANGES SIRON. DISCOURSE. Its Mission and Its Doom" Mighty When Wielded in a Righteous Cause — Great Achievements Wrought by Arms, Trexr: “My sword shall be bathed in heaven.” —Isalah, xxxlv,, 5, “It has come at last—the war that we have prayed Almighty God might be averted, The prows of the battle-ships are cutting the seas, and troops from all the States of the American Union are on the way to the front. Allthe arts of diplomacy have fafled, and momentous questions are to be decided In battle on sea and land. Three results will be demonstrated —the in- dependence of Cus, the rebuke of Spanish cruelty, and the wsdumph of the United Btates arwy and navy. “Three hundred and fifty-one times does the Bible speak of that sharp, kee, curved, | inexorable weapon, which flashes upon us from the text—-the sword, Sometimes the mention is applaudatory, and sometimes | damnatory, sometimes us drawn, some- times as sheathed. Im the Bible, and in much secular literature, the sword repro. sents ail javelins, all muskets, all carbines, all guns, all polies olubs, all battle-axes, all weaponry for physioal defense or attack, It would be an interesting thing to give the history of the plow, and follow its furrow all down through the ages, from the first erop in Chaldea to the last crop in Mi sota. It would be interesting to follow the pen as it has tracked {ts way on down through the literature of nations, from its first word in the first book to the last word nne closed his manuscript. It teresting thing to count hammer from the first nail through all the mechanism of the last stroke in the carpenter's shop of yesterday. I propose to-day speaking of a would be an in- driven plow nor plished. sion, and its doom. “The sword of | heaven; that is, it pen nor hammer ever nooo the text was a sword of in hell, and the sword | wrong. There is a great differer tween the word of Winklereld and sword of Cataline, betwee the sword of Leonidas and the sword In our effort to hasten the end of Wir we have hung the sword with abuses an i erations, when it has had a divine miss] | 88 when in many erises of the world's 4 tory it has swung for liberty and jus Ivilization and righteousness and very of ergelt n a, Lt: ve ible and on n of Eden God pl a flaming sword to Of the officer of the | ‘He beareth Through Moses every man his sword by his | 1n his prayer, says ‘Gird Thy | Thy thigh, O most mighty, | battie-shouts of the Old { ‘The sword of the Lord Christ, in a great exigency & Weapon was more lt portant th for he declared: ‘He that let sell his garm { Agaln he declared some peace, but a sword.! Of ( coming, it Is sald: ‘Out of His no | 8 sharp, two-sdged rd.’ Tb times figuratively, but divine mission of the sword is “What rated thing in th world than Joshua's sword, or Calsh sword, or sword, or David sword, or W gton or Marion sword, or Lafayette's sword, or Welling | ton’s sword, or Garibaldi's n { dreds of | that have ag i heaven, Swo the best friends of the | have yrannies, pried | and eleared the way for nat onward march, It was better { take the sword and be free, than lle { the oppreseor’s heel and suffer {i "There is somet! ree than and that fs lifeif it n # and ¢ before th the world’s hist never been lestamen and , Said hat} him nd hrlat's often literally anon more conse PY “ Gideon's “ ashin 8 sword, B sword, or the rds ¥ ginin t * loath, a Wrong ira pt ted exon Kiog to you al to be, but about the { What foree dros | Tours, and kept Europ whelmeoed by Mc tr | sequently, all A Mobammedanism? | Martell and his mor ” n infinities to tell what was 0 i | for the world's good by the sword Joan of Are? Years ago [ looked off and saw in the distance the } attic (and I asked myself what { that ost nopped th { only Per Afghanistan, Armenia; a host th b and proposed to put { and, if 1 { have submerged by Asiatic | European civilization, and, as a conse { quence, In after time, Amerioan eclviliza- tion? The swords of Miltiades, and | Themostocles, and Aristides, Atthe waving i of these swords the eleven thousand lan. | { cers of Athens, on the ran, dashed against | the one hundred thousand insolent Persians { and trampled them down or pushed them { back into the sea. The swords of that day saved the best part of the hemispheres, a | trinity of keen steel flashing in the two | Hghts the light of the setting sun of bar. { barism, the light of the rising sun of eivil- | ization. Hall to these three great swords bathed in heaven! “What put an end to infamous Louis XVI.’s plan of universal conquest, by which England would have bean made to kneel on the steps of the Talleries, and the Anglo. Saxon race would have been halted and all {| Europe paralyzed? The sword of Mari. borough, at Blenheim, Time eames when ‘the Boman war eagles, whose beaks had been Fouched into the heart of nations, must be brought down from their eyries, i All other attempts had disgracefully failed, | but the Germans, the mightiest nation for { brawn and brain, undertook the work, and, under God, succeeded, What drove bask the Roman cavalry till the horses, wounded, { Aung their riders and the last rider per. | Ished, and the Heroynian forest became the | soene of Home's humiliation? The brave sword, the triumphant sword of Arminfus, “While passing through France my nerves tingled with excitement, and I ross in the ear the better to see {he battle -fleld of Chalons, the mounds and breastworks still visible, though nearly five hundred years go they were shoveled up, Here, Attila, beathen monster, eailed by himself the ‘SBeourge of God, for the punishment of Christians,’ bis life a massacre of nations, eame to Ignominlous defeat, and he put into { one great pile the wooden saddles of his | eavalry, and thespolls of the elties and kingdoms he had sacked and placed on top of thia holoeaust the woman who had ace cormapanied him in his devastating march, ordering that the toroh be put to the pile. Wint power broke that sword and stayed that red scourge of erueity that was rolling over Europe? The sword of Theodorie and Actias, “To come down to later ages, ali intel. ligent Englishmen unite with all intelli. gent Americans in saying that it was the best thing that the American colonies swung off from the government of Great Britain. It would have been the worst absurdity of four thousand years if this continent should have continued in loyalty to & throne on the other side of the soa, No one would propose a Governor General for the United States, as there is a Gov- ernor General for Canada. Wo have bad splendid Queens in our American Capital, a { accomplished ¢ of 1eid mm m tremendous # Persian hosts, Bel fi Asia under } Europes under foot th would i sucoessful ir at battle, barbarism, but we could hardly be brought to support a Queen on the other side of the Atlaniie, lovaly and good asVietoria fs. The only use we have for Earlsand Lords and Dukes in this sountry is to treat them well when they pass through so their hunting grounds in the far West, or when their fortunes have failed, re-enforce them by wealthy matrimonial alliance, Imagine this nation yot a part of English possessions! The troublothe mother country has with Ire. land would be a paradisale condition com. pared with the trouble she would have with us. England and the United States make excellent neighbors, but the two families are too large to live in the same house, What a godsend that we should have parted, and parted long ago! “But I ean think of no other way in which we could possibly have achieved American Independenaos, George the Third, thadalf-erazy King, would not have let us go. Lord North, his Prime Minister, would not have let us go, General Lord Cornwallis would not have let us go, al though after Yorktown he was glad enough to have us lot him go. The battieflelds of the American Revolution were proof posl- tive that thoy were not willing to let us go. Any committee of Americans going aeross the ocean to ses what could have been done would have found no better accom- modations than London Tower, The only way it could have been dome was by the sword, your great-grandfather’'s sword, Jaffarson's pon could write the Declaration of Independence, but only Washington's sword could have achieved it, and the other swords bathed in heaven. “*Arbitrament will take the place of war between nation and nation, and national armies will disband as a consequence, and { the time will come—God hasten ft!—when | there will be no need of an American | army or navy, or a Russian srmy or navy. Bat some time after that oities will have to keep their armories and arsenals | and well-dniled militia, because until the | millennial day there will populations with whom arbitrament will be as impossei- le as treaty with a eavern of iiyasnas or a angle snnkes, men who rob tores and give garroter's hug, and prowl ut the wharves at midnight, and rattle | the dice in gambling and go armed I pistol or dirk, will refrain from dis- i of the publie peace just in pro. n Aas they realize that the militia of a ing an awkward s juad, in danger of shooting each other by take, or losing thelr own life by looking in into ths gun barrel to see {f it {= load or gotting the ramrod fast in their boot Are prompt as the sunrise, keen as the th wind, potent as a thunderbolt, and and reguiar and ined in movements as the pianetary system, then, I say to the Legisiaturos and all oMeinls nories and be I j of These . hells dinely rd ean safely go bae stay there, the b inngs against the case (n t ment, lot the sword be kept {rea fr and its piislie Lore ig the edg by the han ' always ready bathed (n in rueity or bathed wd in outrage; bat soul whie tha Le right . whi + iy re. e is worth for a prin. i As At ive, § iteousness triumph.’ it feels [tsell to } ped a se {dea that i anything else, w to say it 18 not necesanry t! it it is necessary that ri here 3 ¥ Ml RIAN N I ve Uo are ninety among the an terans of our War w five por cont. irger and mightier lo soul than they would had they Inring the four ¥ . wean of national agony, turned oe and fortunes their back front sao foraj sword is ant will ye-poom, in every 1 in every 1 y vord is Disarmament, But nog ord away unt e agroad to An i » AR rood all rinely s 8 ona vot every every That vernment il i to any singis g foriresses, at AW lest rot] oaks its AZreemen her sword; 0 Waterioo? sgreemont sword away; Lorraine stay Czar of Bussia entshould throw itares gather pose in nited States, with. of disarm- sword, it Sappose the rh general agroen his sword, all the eag f European power woul the Russian bear ure Hime the 1 ns o jel general agreement , should throw away her would not be long belore the our great har- bors wonid be abias with the bunting of reign navies coming here to show tha lly of the “Monroe doctrine.’ What a horror is war and its cruelties was well illastrated when the Tartars, after sweeping through Bassia asd Poland, dis- played with pride nine great sacks filled when ! i f i wounded after the battle of Redan, sald: ‘Every moan that the hasan voles can ulter rose from that heap of agony, and cries of water! For the I9ve of God, water! A doctor! A doctor! uaver After war has wrought such cruel ties, how giad we will be to have {8 old Let his dyin: couch in some dismantled { riress, through which the stormy winds howl, Give him for a pillow a battered shield, and jet hils bed be hard with the rusted bayonets of the slain. Cover him with the coarsest blanket that pleket cver wore, and lot his only eup be the bleached bone of one of his war-chargers, and the last taper by his bed. side expire as the midnight blast sighs in- to his ears: The candle of the wicked shall be put out, “In this time of our national trial let us dedicate ourseives anew to God and our country. In the English confiiet, called the War of the Roses, a white ross was the badge of the House of York, and the red rose the badge of the House of Lancas- ter, and with these two colors they op- each other in battle, To enilst you in the holy war for all that is good against ail that is wrong I pin over your heart two badges, the one suggestive of the blood shed for our redemption, and the other symbolic of a soul made white and clean, the Rose of Sharon and the Lily of the Valley. “And as for our beloved countryin this orials, there are three reasons why we should do our best for that, Three reasons: Our fathers’ graves, our own eradies, our children’s birthright. When I say your fathers’ graves your pulses run quicker. Whether they Sieh in city cemetery or in village graveyard, their ashes are pre- eclous to you. They lived well and they died right, You will not submit to have their tombs dishonored by the foot of any foreign foe. Then this land has been our eradlie. It may have rocked us roughly, but it was a good cradle to be rocked in, Oh, how much we owe it. Dear land of our boyhood and giribood days! And it is to be our children’s birthright. We will after awhile be through with it; we will sen only a few more blossoms of the spring; we will gather only a few moreof the harvests of the summer; wo will plack only a little more of the fruits of the au. tumn; bat our children, they must get it through us, as wo got it from our fathors — land, a happy land, a Christian : A ————————————————— 8ines B. C. 4,000,000,000 men have been slain in battle, ing of the A Cheerful Woman. From the Democrat, Brasil, Ind, Every woman cannot be beautiful, bute theerful face often supplies the deflofency. But no one.oan be cheerful and brin joy 5 others unless they have perfect hedith, Fortunately, science has placed this price- less boon within the reach of every woman us the following incident proves: Mrs "Amanda Robinson, wife of William Robinson, farmer and stookman, near Howesville, Clay County, Ind., is thirty- two years old and had for’several years beon in declining health and despondeut, For thres months she wns not only unable to attend to her domestic duties but too feable tobe up and about. To-day she is In good health and able to attend to her household affairs. She relates her ex- porienos as follows: “1 was afiicted with female troubles and was in a delicate state of health, I lost my appetite, grew thin and was greatly doprossed. After taking various remedies without being benefited I was induced bya friend to try Dy. Willams’ Pink Pills, “Early in the sum'mer of 18¢7 1 pro- cured five boxes of them nad before fin. ishing the /” woond box }. began to fre ~~ prove and by the time I had taken the five boxes 1 was Abie to go about my A Priceless Boon, asusl work and stopped taking the piils. “Our daughter Anta, twelve years old, | was also afflicted with decline and debility. | Bho lost flesh, seemed to be bloodless aud had no argbition. Bhe took fwo boxes ol the Jia and they restored Ber appetits, aided digestion and brought color to her cheeks, She is now in the best of Lealth, I think Dr, Willlams' Pink Pills for Pale People the best medisine we ever had in | our family and recommend them to all nesdiag a remedy for tontug up and re- | bulldiag » shatterad system, | No discovery of modern times has proved | such a blessing to women as De. Williama' | Pink Pills for Pale People. They restore | strength and health to sxhacsted we a | when avery effort of the physician proves unavailing, These vegetable pills are evorywhere recognimed as a specillo diseases of the blood and nerves, yme fouw Gl A Cemetery's Best Pare, Probably fon people know that there | % a chol A y. Thus, | n some parts of the world, the eg without iz always deen * ¢ side to every cemeter $ rans ARLE softion, regard to ts situa ed the n wt desir the i, 3 This preference arises from from the cast the dead in the eastern portion will Ix he first to rise; then those in the south rn, western and northern, in order n England it was once the n England | : 1 i aying felons and other i} £ Lae norin mt Piso's Cure yactures Mra K ( i, October 20 1804 No fita or nervous. | Kiine's Groat i i i Ne-To Bae for Pifty Cents Guaranteed tobacco habit cure makes wosk | een BLOng DreOnnd Pure i plate glass w nument than th mage a e hardest | and larger ber- ‘ops are raised when liberally treated with Potash. Heavy applications of the complete fertilizers, containing not less than 109% actual Pot- ash, should be used. Onur books tell all about the subject. are free to any farmer, GERMAN KALI! WORKS, 63 Nassan Se, New York BAD BREA “I have been using CASCAR ETS and as $ mild and effective laxative they are simply won- erful. My daughter and | were bothered with sick stomach and our breaid was very bad. Afser taking a few domes of Cascarsts we Lave improved wonderfully. They area great help in the family.” WiLnRLMINA NacweL 1157 Rittenhouse Bi. Cinelnnaul. Oblo CANDY CATHARTIC They TRADE MARK SEMSTENED Pleasant, Palatable. Potent. Tests Good. Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. Mo, 35, we w. CURE CONSTIPATION. .., Borling Remedy Company, Chlonss, Montreal, Mavs Few York, 218 NO-TO-BAG fio deny - — abiu A man may be fast asleep but rather flow when awake, Beauty Is Bleod Deep. Clean blood means a clean ekin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar- tie clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- purities from the body. Begin to-day to anish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug. gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10¢, 25¢, Hc. People do not lack strength; they lack will. Vietor Hugo. +. Thompson & Co., Druggists, Couders. . BAY Hall's Catarrh {ure is the best y sure curd for catarrh they ever sold Druggists sell it, 75¢, No man is born futo the world whose work is not born with him. — Lowell, ST. VITUS DANCE, BEPASMER and all nerv- ous diseases permanently cured by the use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer, Send for FREE £1.00 trial bottle and treatise to Dr R. H. Kline, Ltd, 8] Arch Street, Phila. Pa Things don't turn up in this world til somebody turns them up. —Garfleld, To Cure Comstipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathsrtio 100 or 256. If C. C. C. fail to eure, druggists refund mousy. Naples Is to be connected with Mount Vesuvius by a direct ratiroad line, which will connect with the cable line runalsg to the top of the voleano, To Cure a Lod fu One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, { ails Lo cure All An bistorie landmark of the town of } Mass, the old Hooker hi w " burned (yepera § fad- ET that recently. It was in this house that Joe Hooker was born in 1814. Mra. Winslow's Soothing Syrdp for children toesthl ng, softens the gums reducing inflamma ile. Zoe a bottle In Egypt fans Rg monies, made of parchment or feathers fare used religious cere- Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartie, cure constipation forever, nHco Every man stamps his own , and wa are great or jittle will. ac samuel Smiles CINCO SMM mo Established 1780, Baker's Chocolate, celebrated for no than a a \ a century as delicic and beverage, Weii-i1t Yellow Label fe own nt of eve package, and NONE OTHER GENUINE, | MADE ONLY BY vd f Dorchester, Mass, a bone | | ! ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro. duced, pleasing to the taste od ac- ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, Prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popuiar remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50 cent bottles by all leading drug- gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro- cure it promptly for any one whe wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. EAN FRAKCISBO0, CAL. (DUIBVILLE, KY. KEW YORK, BLY. 7000 BICYCLES onryied over Crow 1897 muef rificed now, New : otyles, Haran read $6.7 to $17.00 DoS ha: BU sed wheels, ate modes ail makes, $3 to $12, We slip on approval wilk- a ol 0 gent payment. Write 2 Sor bargain let ard art catalogue ?ewell #8 models. BICYCLE FREE for | season 10 advertise them ud for one. Hider agents wanted. Lears how to Ears a Bley de and tusks money. | BK. FV. MEAD CYCLE COMPANY, Chicage. send for our B Metal Tiles, and High Grade Root ing Plates, ais ' LEAKY | ROOF S Ventilator mailer TLL | MERCHANT & CO., *7Az HE PAYS THE FRAYT BEST SCALES JONES OF BINGHAMTON N.Y. LEAST MONEY If af®icted with i Thompson's Eye Water vk Shilogies my J and Liguor Habit cured | 10 10 80 days. No pay til cured. Dr. d. L. Stephens, Dept. A, Lebanon, Ohi, cre eye, GR EEU1P Bevel Chainless ridden admits is a POPE MFG. CO. Bicycles. better hill climber Hartford, Conn. ning, evergeing, everiasting, power MOTORS FT. FON Sor eh a . 24s ter 12 MOTOR. 8 rus like n eye aad wre sade lien etek, movabie part on retiers. Doubles geared
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers