Purely a Local Disense. Eczema is a local disease and needs loeal treatment. The irritated, disoased skin must be soothed and smoothed and healed. No use to dose yourself and ruin your stomach just because of an ftehing eruption. Tetterine is the only simple, safe and certain cure for Tetter, Ec. soma, Ringworm and other skin troubles. At druggists or by mall tor 5 cents in stamps 4. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga —————— sr {ate re is no In the lexicon of youth, whieh serves for a bright manhood, there such word as fall, ~Bulwer Beauty is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar- tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- pratities from the body. Begin to-day to sanish pimples, boils, blotches, black heads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—~beauty for ten cents. All drug- gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10¢, 25¢. 50¢. A hundred years ago native sold in Eoglaud at the price of five, Oysters were a peuany for ST. VITUS DANCE, SPASMS and all nerv- | ous diseases permanently cured by the use of | Ir. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Send for | FREE $100 trial bottle and treatise to Dr, #1. H. Kline, Ltd,, @1 Arch Street, Phila. Pa Snalls are becoming more popular io Europe every year as lood, A Medical Miracle. Cancer, Tumor, Malignant Ulcer, load, Rectal Diseases, cured at he x nife or plaster. Most difficulte WW rite for free book and advice to Mason Me end Co, 131 W, £4 Rt, Dept. 21, N. XY. « LEeS SON I find nothing so singular in life as this, | Bat everything opposing uppears to lose fis | substance the moment one uctually grapples with it.— Hawthorne, — What You Get When You Buy Medicine isa Miat- ter of Creat Imoortance. Do you get that which Las the power t eradicate from your biood al poisonous dis Do you buy HOOD'S Sarsapariila and only Hood's? Uf you do, you may it with the ntmost confidence that it 1c Re pa Je, 3 ‘ause of taints and thus remove the ese 7 take will g you good, ood’s Sarsa Is America's Greatest Medic! mem! er | rilla x for 8 Hood's Pills ure biliousness, indigestion Warned Gould of the Cost. Paul Gore, now clerk at Audit rium Annex, w at tt Grand Pacific for tells a story [0 « zould’'s first visit Chleago. €>ould bad regis at the Grand cific, and was standing in the with his hands in his coat pockets ing like a countryman in town The little millionaire approached J. 1° Yidal, who was clerk at t modestly esked him v best way for him to go Vidal, gave him t to streel toh and through an the HE cierk several room Year pranection io i i tered he house, would not Know Gould I think nd the expen all I charge "asked the clerk. 1€¢ quiet an to the floor age.—~Chicago 6 { 10 Whom si 1" came ewer. Vidal almost fell but Gould got the ca Times-Herald, AN OPERATION AVOIDED. 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Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound in relieving every derangement | of the female organs, demonstrates | it to be the modern safeguard of wo- i man’s happiness and bodily strength. | More than a million women have becn | benefited by it, us | Every woman who needs advice | about her health Is invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass, Sour Stomach, ** After I wos lnduced to try CARCA- ER ETS, | will never ba without them in the house, Bly HNver was ina very bad shape. and my head sched sod | bad stomach trouble. Now. since tak fog Cascarets | fool fine. My wife bas also nsed shem with beneficial results for sour stomach. JOB. KEERLING, 101 Congress 8u., ¥¢. Lovis, Mo. indeed, hy — ne le oo Pe & CANDY CATHARTIC Gah ha ant, Gripe, ie, 3c. og «+=« CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Beweling Remedy Compeny, Chitage, Montreal, Now Yook. 218 MO-TO-BAC [i WR ial ates 'E 1. FULTON, Att Dentan, Tox. WB a Te sxas or Bousth. PRY © WBBKLY SERMONS. AN IMPRESSIVE DISCOURSE BY REV. DR; TALMAQGE, The Subject, “Alleviations of War," Mest Pertinent to the Exciting Times Through Which We Are Now Passing— Cheer For Those Whose Hearts Are Sad Text: “Though war should rise against Je, in this will I be confident.” — Psalms 27, 1, The ring of battle-axes and the clash of shields, and the tramp of armies are heard all up and down the Old Testament; and vou find godly soldiers like Moses, and Joshua, and Caleb, and Gideon, and scoundrelly soldiers like Bennacherib, and Shalmaneser, and Nebuchadnezzar. The High Priest would stand at che head of the army and say: “Hear, O Israel, ye ap- proach this day unto battle against your enemies, let not your hearts faint; fear not, and do not tremble, neither be ye terrified because of them!” and then the offlcers would give command to the troops, say- ing: “What man {s there that hath bullt a new houseand hath not dedicated ft? Let him go and return to his house, lest he die in the battle and another man dedicate it, And what man is he that hath planted a vineyard and hath not eaten of it? ILet him tlso go and return unto his house, lest he die in the battle and another man eat of {t, And what mun {8 there that hath betrothed not taken her? Let him Great | In the time of Moses and Joshua all the men wers sol. diers, When Israel came out of Egypt men. Abijah battle and another man take her.” ng ie 800.000 men, of whom 500,000 were slain in one battle, Some of these wars God ap. proved, for they were for the rescue of op- pressed nations, and some of them Ils ment upon both victors and vanquished, was when he David is here encouraging himsell in Fiaciple of liberty, which will yet engirdle he earth, Not only will this war free Ouba, but nally will free Spain. By what right does a dynasty like that stand, and a corrupt court dominate a people for cen. turlos, taxing them to death, riding in glided chariot over the necks of a beggared population? Another alleviation is that the war opens with a great victory for the United Btates, in the most jubilant manner ist the victory of ournavy be celebrated, With the story of the destroyed battleship fresh in the minds of the world it would require no or- dinary courage to sail into the harbor of Manila and attack the Hpanish shipping, That harbor, erowded with sunken wea- ponry of death, to enter it was running a tisk enough to make all nations shiver, But Manila Is ours, and the blow has shaken to the foundation the palaces of Madrid, and for poliey’s sake the doubtful nations are on our side. For Commodores Dowey and all who followed him let the whole nation utter (ts most resounding huzza; and more than that, let us thank the Lord of hosts for his gulding and pro- teoted power. *‘Praise ve the Lord! Let ovorything that hath breath praise the Lord!" Another alleviation is the fact that in this war the might is on the side of the right. Again and again have liberty and Justice and suffering humanity had the odds agalust them. It was so when Ben. hadad's| Byrian hosts, -who, were {n the wrong, at Aphek, came upon the small regiments of Israel, who were in the right, the Bible putting it in one of those graphic sontences for which the book is remark- uble—"The children of Israel pitched be. fore them like two littis flocks of kids, but the Byrians filled the whole country.” It was #0 {0 the awlal defeat of the Lord's people at Gliboa and Megiddo., It was so recently when gallant and glorious Greece was in confliet with gigantie Mg danism, and the navies of Europe hi about the Bosphorus were yrotection of the Tarkish government, rosh from the slaughter of one hundred thousand Armenians. It was so when, In 1776, the thirteen colonies, with littls war shipping and an few undrilled and poorly. clad soldiers, were brought into a contest with the mightiest navy of all the sarth nnd an army that commanded the admira- in practical the consolatory, | War is organized atrocity. It is It is the con all horrors. It is butchery] It is murder glorified. Its] human skeletons, It] It is diabolism | time {s coming | How | buat there which a voeation of wholesale, futurs I cannot fosities in Say, ‘What and is that sharp | father wil And the son piseas of | the pi BY, "Fh balls and bombshe! whish in the! other.” Yeo rk to make the things were aver n of human le arrived, and roasions spoken to you | lone of War,” now that it is to speak of ro Pp MES Aro ls, le killed each the feldr, will bave hard we believe that for the destruetic sue of the “Aggravat @ time its alleviations, First, I find an alle it has consolidate after longo is thirty-throe rlosed. an i the vi in in the factthat | rth and South i reintis It | ar Civil War gone aud Bat ever wn, fu news | articles, essional hall, ! has lifted its oe within my mem. | hears i the! years wind N iG AiTRIAe ne YEAS Lh n ences are all the severities have been hushed, and anon, in ¢ paper editorial, in ration, in sero magazine ou or g differences rat ti ory, or the memory of or roads these words, t South are on t was not a four are’ war; war of printing press, {¢ any one who he North an ¢ “ re I ‘ tongue, Bat by the family srnment t fro war of pen, war of pProvic ition to our Gov is represented this present war. N done the worig of un 4 A could have suddenly At Tampa,| at Chattanooga, st Bi nd. and 1 many other places the regiments are forming, and | it will be side by side, Massachusetts and tk and Georgia, Illinols| Caroling, | men will together | ualimber the guns and rash spon the fortl. fleation and charge upon the enemy and The voices of military | under Bidney Johngon| and Joseph Hooker will give ti remand | on the same side, The old sectional] grudges forever dead, The name of Grant | =] of Leo on the wmged for the sa me side, | +} ae BO { ao Bowuthern sido will BE stretehing their | are ¥ : find whether an | the gun-barrel to saocess. The old war ory | of “On to Richmond!” and “On to Wash | has become the war cry of “On “On to Porto Rico!™ “Onto Islands!” The two old rusty hey y take aim and fire, 3» : ine the Philips uth Mountain and Atlanta, | to strike down Hispanic freesboro and So Rie now Jifted omiaations, Another alleviation of the war is the fast that it is the most unselfish war of the While the commercial rights of our will be vindicated, that this war. It is the sands of people multiforma maitreat. went out under the end who from starvation friend gud who has been on the same missin, under thie same flag, in Cuba, says that the sufferings in Armenia were a comedy and a farce com. pared with the greater sufferings of Cuba, At least two hundred thousand graves are calling tous to come on and remember by what process their cecupants died. It is the twentieth contary orying out to the nine. teenth: "Doyon mean to pass down to us the curse with which you have been blasted? Or will you let me begin under new aus pices and turn the island of desociation into a1 [sland Edeale}” It is a war [2f}ired by merey, which isan attribute in man imitative of the same at. tribute of God, In no other age of the world could such a war have been waged, The gospel of kindness neadad to be recog nized throughout Christendom in order to make such a war possible. The chief rea. son why most of the European nations are not now banded together aesinst us is be. cause they dare not take the part of that behemoth of cruelty, the Spanish Gover. mont, againet the crusade of mercy which our nation lias started. Had it been on our part a war of conquest, & War of angexi. tion, a war of aggrandizement thers Would have bedh by this time enough fyisg squadrons coming to this country across the Atiantic to throw into panie every eity senboard The wars of the Crusaders were only to htared men, were projected and sarriod oad fo aps pease the ambition of one man: of thetwen. ty-five million slain in Jewish wars, and of the sixty million slain in the wars under Julius r; of the onshundrad asd Sights milifon slain in wars with Tarks and Sara. cong; of the fifty million slain in wars with Xerxes; of the twenty million slain in wan of Justinian; and the thistitwe milion slain in the ware of Genghis a, not one man was sacrificed for mercy; but in this Hispanio-Ameriean war every drummer boy, or pleket, or gunner, or : bearer, or skirmisher, or sharpshooter, or cavalryman, or artiileryman, or engines who falls, tails in the cause of merey, tion of nations, It was so when Hungary wont under, It has buen so during all the struggles heretofore for Cuban indepen- dence, But now ft is our powerful navy with enough guns to send the opposing fleot ns completely under as when the Red Son submerged Pharaoh's army. nother alleviation is the fact that we have a God to go to fa behalf! of all those of our coyntrymen who may be in especial exposure at the front, for we must admit It is no trifling thing for 100. 000 young men to be put outside of home restraints and sometimes {ato Msny of the brave earth aro not the good of the earth. bein the same tent with who no regard for God or home: of To those have to one reckless; to have no Sabbath, except As in most eacampments amounts to no Sabbath at all; to go out from homes where all observed into surroundings where ques. tions of health are never discossed; to in. vado tlimes where pestileace holds posses. #lon;to make long marches under bilster. ing skies; to stand on deck and in the flalds under fire, at the meorey of shot and sheil—we must admit that those thus ex. present God we have a right to commend them, and will commend them, Postal communication may be interrupted, and lattars started from camps homes may not arrive at the right dJdestiaastion, but oved ones may be {rom ns, and however ‘wide and deep the seas that separate u we may hold com. munication with them via the throns of God, A shipwreaked sail on a mft, near coast of While in the bospital he told his experi. ence, and sald that he had a companion on the same raft for some While that companion was dying of thirst he said to bin: "George, where are you going?’ and the dying sailor said: “I hope I am golngto God." “Ff you 40.” sald the res. ound satlor, “wild nak Him to send fter the death of his com. pasion, the survivor said the rain came In torrents, and slaked his thirst and kept him ailva until he was taken to safety, The sarvivor always thought it was in an. swer to the message he had sent to heaven asking for water. Thask God we may have direct and instantaneons communi cation with the Lord Almighty through Jesus Christ, His only begotten Son, and in that falth we may secure the resene of our imperiled kindred. Is not that a mighty alleviation? Morning, noon and night let us commend this beloved land to the care of a gracious God, That He answers prayer is so cer. taln that your religion is an hallueination it Ho does not answer it. Pray that {a re. ply to such sappliention the farmers’ boys may get home again fn time to reap the harvest of next Jaly; that our business or ® found floating IT Was the f California ¢ tims you fall trade sich as has never yet filled the stores and factories with ecastomers, and dened by the departure of father or brother ing and Christmas holidays be full of joy at thearrival of those who will for the rest of thelr ives have stories to tell of double. quick march, and sparrow escape, and charges up the parapets, and night set on fire with bombardment, and our flag hauled up to plaggs from which other flags wero hauled ow “Ay t Hi mouth, England, on the 19th of July, th T¥ominent ofMeers of the navy were in a bowling alley, bowling with great glee~Lord Howard, the High Admiral; Bir Martin Frobisher, the daring explorer, and Bir Francis Drake, the frst circum. navigator of the world-—whea word came to them that the Spanish Armads was ad- sancing, ' The officers continued at the game of the bowling alley until the game was finished, and then went out to investi. gata the tidings, and, sure snough, that mighty fleat, which was considered invin. cible, and which was to bombard and over. throw England, was approaching. but the invading navy was destroyed, for the Lord Almighty appeared in the fight. A tora 8% oY bad never swept the const 0 hn of Archsedl the ocean swooped upon the Spanish Armada. Most of the ships soon went down under the sea, while others were drivem helpless] along to be splintered on the coasts of England, Ireland, Bootland, and Norway. Another Spanish Armada is orossing the Atlantie, and we are ready to meet them. The same God who destroyed the Armada in 1588 relgnain 1908. May He in His might, oither through haman arm or dumb ele. Hoag defeat their squadron, and give vie. tory to the Hine - mi : To i orld most wants is Chrirt, who ls coming to take Jostumsion of all hearts, all homes, sil ations; but the world blocks the wheels of His chariot, I would like to see this santary, whish is now almost wound up, find its on in somo mighty overthrow of tyrannies ahd a mighty bullding np of iiberty and justices, Almost all the osnturies have ended with some stupendous event that transformed Nations and changed the map of the world, It was #0 at the close of the fourteenth cen. tury; It wna so at the close of the fifteenth conttry; it was so at the slose of the six. tosnth century; it was so at the olose of the sevenfeonth century; it was so at the close ofthe aightesnth century. May it be more gloriously so at the oloss of the nineteeth snjurgt “Blossod be Sos Lord Sod of 1s let the whole earth be filled with His glory.” Amen and amen. Amerienns ra Falls - —- w Victoria's Birthd.y. . ¥.) Council will as. the 's has declared ita becomes a martyr for God and his i Another tlleviation of this war is thet Brihday and ha day. The maid who binds her warrior's sash With smile that well her pain disseme bles, The while beneath her drooping lash One starry tear-drop hange and (reme bles, Though Heaven wlone records the tear, Aud fame shall never know her story, Her heart has shed a» drop as dear As ever bedewed the field of glory! The wife who girde her husband's sword, Mid little ones who weap or wonder, And bravely speaks the cheering word, What though her heart be rent asunder, Doomed nightly in her dreams to hear The bolts of death around him rattle, Hath shed as saered blood as ver Was poured upon the field of battle! The mother who conecenls her grief Whiie to her breast her son she presses, Then breathes a few brave words and brief, Kissing the patriot brow she bs With no one but her God To know the pain that weighs Bheds holy blood as ¢ or the sod LRecelved on Freedom field of Thom as 1 op ger ret upon her, honor! PITH AND POINT, Biggs- w= "Then it is about Harlem Shall “I'm all broken up,” Diggs tirne you mended f E.afe 1 f 1 Foren t do your ways.’ ‘Yeu, newspaper man, “He must lead “Did you hear Mr, Smith told? shout?! “His Truth, “What 1 song the singe: if cago Record sir, it only a rentleman,’ ife,” Life, ¥ § creepy story n 7 what was it . 11 1 " 51 X 1%-0ld baby, she isn't aske John ‘The 5 gray in the service James—"'1 wonld Trauscript “What is your defini ism?’ "“Itis a dete Hojack Fro ks is.’ er geare Reggy— ‘Aw rwace, youah | always in my mind, onteher know “Goodnes that 1s worse | £3 ng 1 Tit-Bits, han liv ng “Ah,” in a big the old snid the veteran, ae) % 1xiliary eruiser | port, “‘me the | Phi ielpbia North | Sam's latest Ww comes ints War. of American iB anncs -Dot's BO i Pu «1 HOCK some men, ghty proud ob ef de ol bont 3 e feelin Washingt C fer say bon Fat Wel Wash “Henry, feel well ti y cut the grass this afternoon?’ "Ne ear; but if you I'll take among the flowers 2 . , hicago Record Some men i neie “will hab a heap dey’ 8 ly silent when it's a #h ral ington Mar, keeps ‘em awake don't = 11 en i 1 5 ERY BO A Hoe a while on your new hat “By George, ‘t been able to! war began." to be drafted but BinOe 2 “Why? You're too d “Yes _ the captain | of our militia company owes me $250.” i Chicago News, “Why i= it that itis usally | write articles | Dizon unmarried women on ‘How to Mansge =u Husband?’ Hixon-—""Oh! you don’t suppose a married woman groving to give her | little plan away, do wou? "~Tit-Bits, | An Admiral of the Turkish sensick in a storm, was distarbed bya | He inquired whence it | :s being told it was the rudder of the skip, he desired it | might be immediately taken off —Tits | Bits, “What's the matter between Meekly and his wife?’ “He enlisted without i consulting hier, and mow she's threat. | ening to overthrow the Government because she can’t get ont a writ of re- plevin and recover him." Detroit Free Preas, who is foet, | r £ The Savage smd £¥ee Bird Cage, A gentleman went out with | Stanley to Africa took with him a num. | ber of bird cages, im which he hoped to bring back some specimens of the rarer birds of the imterior. Owing to tha death of his carriers, he was obliged to throw away the bird cages with a uumber of other articles, These were seized by the mnatives in great glee, though they did not know what to do with them; but they eventually decided that the small circular cages wero a kind of head gear, and, knock: ing off the bottom, the chiefs strutted about in them with evident pride, One chief, thinking hisoasell more wise than the others, and having seen the white men eat at talyle ont of dishes, thought they were receptacles for food, and took his mmeals from one, ceremoniously opeming snd shatter ing the door between each mouthful, a a who No Ready Money Needed In the British settlement in the great Chinese city of Shanghai ready money is practically mmknown. After you have had Ilnneh at a restaurant you calmly get up and walk out with. out a thought of payment in cash, Some time later in the day a coolie strives at your residence with a tiny slip of paper—a ‘‘chit.”’ as they eall it—siaply a memoradum of the amount. You get a sBave at your bai- ber's; the same sy stem is carried out. You purchase a new per or a bou- quet; a ‘‘chit” is result. The very shoeblack does mot ask for cop- pers, but brings in his bill at the end of the month, Denmark has an exportation egg company, with 18,000 members. The eggs are sold by the pound. In Honor of Vasco da Garman, i Vasca da Gama's discovery of the toute to the East Indies by way of the ender the ausplees of the Portuguese Government, in Lisbon, from May 17 0 20, A naval review will be a feature of the celebration, RI A —s Said the married man who likes to be iympathized for: "My wife never wmppy unless she hay a grievance. ‘How happy she must be!” said the yretty girl, and then the married man rew strangely silent —Cincinnatl Eu- julrer. iw Don't Tobaers Spit and Smoke Your Life Away, To quit tobaceo easily und forever, be mag- Bue, the wonder worker, tuat makes wea ll nen strong. All druggists, Wc or fl, Cure guaran. tweed Booklet sod sample free. Address Brerling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York Character i power; It makes friends; ates friends; draws patronage and support aud opens A sure ard easy wav Lo wesith, honor and bap piness, J, Hawes, ore. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxat) Fromo Druggiste refund muons All Fa Tablets, re ve uinine fit falls tocy There le un Hit to the work that can be gotout of a bawman 1 ora humay braip, and he bv a wise man wio wasts no enerey on pursuits for which bels pot fitted, — Glad. i i 3 an 4 A WORD OF WARNING $ pond a3 pood a5 the “Ivory SOT. 4 remarkable guaiities * ‘® bite Bsnssrssrssshrsssse. POOR i Wi els, and «¢ instantly available i this vais- edge at your fingers tional advantages. When reading. erences you fail to understand? st hand? when? Maren Polo invented the compass | ai Ings "t 50x Do vou know who Cravens was mn 120 such matllers as FOU ”. ili. © nition aii. ¥ 200.0 Lepeco00 s00es00re white soaps, each represented to be just ke a snterfeits,. lack the pecolisr and sist upon getting Cian tie ero 0000000000000 00000000 ENCYCLOPEDIA might well be the name of the 620. page book sent postpaid for 5x stamps by the BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, able book you have a world of knowl. ® canily suppl inck of early educe. ronstantly come across rel. = don't you o g such knowledge Who built the Pyramids, and What ust the Gordian Knot 50° Ald Huy it at the very Spring We are sure we a Hartford or Vedette. eek wr possible by the immense edition Anal ato ii 2 ing to Jee ever, , and ng of enithy Families: oer ant Rotargel New Edition, jee | and the house there is no excuse for wait nati have iliness in for this volume, poten or stamps of any By J. Hamilton Ayers 4. XN, N.D, This is a most Valuable Book for the H teaching as it does the easily -distingaished Symptoms of different Diseases, the Causes snd Means of Preventing such Dis Stste and the Simplest Remedies which will alleviate or cure, 698 PACES, TROFY BEY 3 MU ATED, e Book is written in n " day and is free Le tersns which render most Doctor Books so valucles to the ity of rea jers. This Book ts tended to be of Bervice in the Family, an 1 is so worded ae tobe readily understood by all. Oply G6OCTS. POST-PAID. (The low ioe On ing made Nol doe 0) Ct but ve . ves A vg 3 the Production with Valuatde Recinms anl Pre Corrent nee of Ordinary Herbs. e Index, With this Bonk in before vou owder, bat sen i al once POST-T"AID. Send postal
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers