Cood Blood 1 And blood. diseases Hood's That and makes better than ever before, well, hall sick, tired, may be made well by taking Hood's Sarsaparilia America's Greatest Medicine Sarsaparilla makes is why it cures sO n 80 many people If vou don’t feel are worn out, Hood's 6 Pills cure all Liver Ills, = cent A Good Reason. “Now, don't say went off with my umbrella because it had a hook han. dle, just like yours." “No; I went off with it because it has a silk cover bet- ter than mine.” —Detroit Free Press. you Ever Have a Dog Bother You making you wonder ou are t Wouldn't vou When riding a wheel, for a few minutes whether get a fall and a broken neck ? b ve given a small farm then means of driving off the t st A few drop of ammonia sl from a Liquid Pistol wot do it effectua and still not permanent injure the ani Such pi stols sent postp for fifty cents in stamps by New York Un supply Co, If Leonard St... New York Cit Every bicyelist at he | The hapg her {athe er or not ¥ just for some rot times wishes sed 01 girl is the ono who the best man on earth, fest Letters Patent. . Patent Att Protect Your Ideas by The firm of Yi 3 nevs, No, § ir tisement w ure patents either ments. Write for wiles & 7 rm # The merry hearted bave thieves cannot steal, No-To Bac for Fifty Cents Guaranteed tobacen habit cure men strong, blood pure. Uc BI All druguisis Racing eig Mre. Winsle teething, sof uein tion, allays Lb ain, cures wind colic, ——. SHE WANTED FLOWERS. ns the gu ms, rec it Ki xc: int the Congressman Had to Draw Line Somewhere. Asbury Veppers catchir finishe feet the ‘who d from first man,’ hung summer Revolutions, How doeth Improve As Yor eve her "NO WOM. \N “IS EXEMPT. vegrnis re vip Pp wWrong derangement that may monthl ne fore their ion of woman's heaith is ! and regular per- normal The GER- Excessive pain will unsettle old be The foun a perfectly formance of nature’ s function, statement we print from Miss TRUDE Sikes, of Eldred, Pa., is echoed in every city, town and hamlet in this country. Read what she says: “Dear Mars, Piseaay:—I feel like a new person since following your ad- vice, and think it is my duty to les the public know the good your remedies have done me. My troubles were pain- ful menstruation and leucorrheea. 1 was nervous and had spells of being confused. Before using your remedies 1 never had any faith in patent medi- cines. I now wish to say that I never had anything do me so much good for painful menstruation as Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound; also would say that your fanative Wash has cured me of leuecsrbusa. | hope these few words may hep suffering women.” The oresert Mrs. Pinkham's experi- ence in treating female ills is nnparal- leled, for years she worked side by side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and for sometime past has had sole charge of the correspondence department of Air great business, treating by letter as many as a hundred thousand ailing women during a single year. All suffering women are invited to write freely to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., for advice about their health, WANTED Case © of bad health that RIP A-N-g will pot benefit Bend & ots 4 Higa ox Theretogl $o., NewXork, for 10 samples sud 1000 the rves and make womer ime. dat DR. TALHAGE'S SERMON. THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY DISCOURSE. Bubject: *OnrOwn Times How We Can | Serve Our Generation—Our Responsi« 3 bilities Chiefly With the People Now | Abreast of UsHelp Your Neighbors, | Text: “David, after ha had served his own generation by the will of God, fell on sleep. "Acts xii, 36 That fa us text which has fora long time been running through my mind, Bermons have an time to be born as well as a time to die: a eradle as well a grave, David, rowboy and ston slinger, and fighter, and dramatist, and blank-verse writer, and prophet, did bis best for the people of his time, and then weot and laid down on tho southern hill of Jerusalem in that sound slumber which nothing but an archangelis blast ean startle, “David, after he had served his own generation by the will of God, fell on sleep,” It was his own gens eration that he bad served; that is, the peo- ple living at the time he lived Aud have vou ever thought that our responsibilities are chiefly with the people now walking abreast of us? There are about four generu- tions to a century now, but in olden time, life was longer, and there wae, perhaps, only one generation “ satury. Taking these facts into the cal- culation, I make a rough guess, and say that there have been at least one hundred and eighty generations of the i buman family. With reference to them we have no responsibility. We cannot teach {| them, we cannot correct their mistakes, we cannot soothe their sorrows, we cannot | heal thelr we pus. Their sepulehres are eal and dumb to anything we might sav » them. "he last regiment of that gre at rs as passed out of sight We Balloo 1d a8 we cot ald avert he 4 ol, I admit that with the ehil , and who nt Rs to ns jot his oe inn int i At Gl wanted to o« in prayers ired and eighty gener Passed up. FP srever. Then thers are gen- ne after our earthly exis. We shinll not ses then y thair v ay But the one hun ns have ps WD Got a- 1 DS, elir in But ir living, and whose , Lis pot It is a iles a g with ur on Goin 'R BOr We ns LR y 180 generat] the erat erat wa gen 180 geny now iis, and od to that furnish t added t witile wealth tt tributions 160 000 ti. been skulls world's wr uncounted ilat] earth Don't sit down at v urres of abusdas ok nothing of that family Ir who id take any ove « gurees Let soup and ai end feel they wore in Heaven t right kind of f of much of the drunks drinking what many of our y coffee, sweeten.d with wh | sugar, and eating what mans { ors call meat, and chewing what many ¢ ! our bakers eall bread, many of the labor. ing class feel so miserable they are tempted { to put into ir nasty § what the i tol iiet inco ti drinkis 1a nhers aght nur ne of the Mt next street fle tyn wo ey its BATE PE RIE ee pd eh ea of the CRUSE | nine ipes a0con g sal Go y ints y "th » ram ould do mue CAD We serve our generat] enough to eat? By sitting down | broidered slippers and | | arm-chalr, ourn i a Havan a of the sest brand, and through | elouds of luxuriant smoke reading aboat { political economy and the philosophy ! strikea? No, no! By finding out who in this eity bas been living on gristie, i sending them a tenderloin beefsteak, { out some famiiy, who th in em rough sickness ot tiplying the loaves and the flashes, quit the surfeiting of ourselves until we cannot choke down another crumb of cake, and begin the supplies of others’ necessi- ties. So lar from helping appease the world’s hunger are those whom [salah de. seribes ns grinding the faces of the poor You bave seen a farmer or a mechaaio put a scythe or an axe on a grindstone, wuile fume one was turning it round and round and the man holding the axe bors on it harder and harder, while the water dropped from the grindstone and the edge of the and keener. So I have seen men who were put up sgainst the grindstone of hardahip, and while one turned the crank, another would press the unfortunate harder down and harder down until he was ground away thinner and thinper—his comforts thinner, his prospects thinner, and his face thinner, And Isaiah shrieks out: “What mean ye that ye grind the faces of the poor?” It is an awful thing to be huugry. It is an easy thing for us to be in good humor with all the world when we have no lack. Pat let hunger take full possession of us and we would tli turn into barbarians and eannibals and fiends, Bugpose that some of the snergy we are expending in useless and unavailing talk about the bread ques- tion should be expended In merciful ailes viations. I have read that the battlefield on which more troops met than on any other in the world’s history was the Gattie- fleld of oy 0 160,000 men under Na- leon, 250 men under Sehwarzoberg, a, noi The greatest and most terrific battle is now being fought all the worid over, It is the battis for bread. The ground tous of the Za st passage of ona of the great musical measier Places, the artist says, was suggested to him by the ery of the hungry populace of Vienna as tha king | rode through snd they shouted, ‘Bread! Give us bread!” And all through the great harmonies of musical aeademy and cathedral I hear thg pathos, the ground tone, the tragedy of uncouhted multi. tudes, who, with streaming eyes and wan cheeks and broken hearts, in bshall of themselves and their families, are plead. ing for bread, Let us take another look around and ses how we may serve our generation, Lot us see, as far as possible, that they have enough to wear, God looks upon the human race, and knows just how many in. Cabitants the world has, The statistics of tio world's population are carefully taken in civillzed lands, and every few years officers of the government go through the land and eount how many peo ple there are in the United Btates or England, and great accuracy 18 reached, But when people tell us how many inhabit. ants thers are in Asia or Africa, at best ft must be a wild guess, Yet God knows the exact number of people on our planet, and He has made enough apparel for each, and if there be fifteen hundred million, fifteen thousand, fifteen hundred and fAftecn peo- ple, ther there is snough apparel for fife teen hundred million, fifteen thousand, fif- teen hundred and fiftesn, Not slouchy aps parel, not ragged apparel, not insufMcient apparel, but appropriate apparel, At least two sujts forevery belong on earth, a sume mer suit und a winter suit. A good pair of shoes for every living mortal A good coat, a good hat, or a good bonnet, and a good shawl, and a ¢ masculine or feminine outfit of apparel. A wardrobe for all nations mnpiete adapted to all climates, and not a string or a button or a pin or a Look or an eve wanting. jut, al where are the good el three-fourths of the human rae her one-fourth have appropri ated th The fact is : there needs to be rill a redistrita n. Not by i oatlowry had rend and tear and diminish, until the world 1 would be for w the redistrit 3 y gener sity « ! have a surpius, the part thes for se? The fry ns! AnNAr lence, its way, we wh on swallowed rho are in and by gener wdid wardr nity ew K mortals we the art part we | finally bis wal Be wil Hix n iostant on th ek 0 got saved? then accept i 3 rever, Get and then you will be upon the same rock. Mean and women hay been saved quicker than I have been talk- ing about it. What! Without a prayer Yea, What! Without time to deliberately think it over? Yes hat! Wit a tear? Yes, balleve, TI is ail Believes what? That Jesus to save you from sin and de ath and Hel Will you? Do you? You makes me think you have, elanto vourcountenan weleon Hail! Hall! ed yourselves, how are you to save others? By Tell itgto your family. Tell it business associates, Tell it every. We will iy preach no religion, and will successfully talk no religion than we ourssives have, The of that which you do to benefit the of this generation you will effect through your own behavior. Go and that wil induce others to ® wrong Go right, and that will in- duce others to go right. When the great Centennial Exhibition was being held in Philadeiphi, the question eame uj among the directors as to whether they should keep the exposition open on Sun- days, when a director, who was a man of the worid from Nevada arose and said, his voice trembling with emotion, and tears running down his cheeks: “I feel liken re. turned prodigal. Twenty years ago [ went West and into a region where we had no but to-day old memories come back to me, and [ remember what my glori- ied mother taught me about keeping Sun- day, and I seem to hear her voice again aud feel as I did when every eveniugl knelt by her side in prayer. Geatlemen, | vota for the observance of the Christian Sabbath,” avd he carried everything by Ane Aprat . $ $d ahis to heip otl ore bout a ya ome! jo! atimony. » your here, successful nore sre ¢ yat vii ls wrong, “Shall we open the exhibition on ghe Bab. bath!” it was almost unanimous, “No” “No.” What one man can do if he does | right, boldly right, emphatically right! I confess to you that my one wish {ato serve this generation, not te antagonize it, not to damage it, not to rule it, but to I would like to do something toward helping unstrap its load, to stop its tears, to balsam {ts wounds, and to induce it to put foot on the u ward road that has as ils terminus acclamation rapturous and gates peariine, and garciands amu. ranitioe, and fountains rainbowed, and *~minions enthroned and eoroneted, for | cannot forget that lullaby in the Slosing words of my text: “David after he ha porved hisown generation by the will of God, feli on sleep.” What a lovely sleep It was, Unfilial Absalom did not trouble it. Anbi tious Adonijah did not worry it. Persecut. ing Saal did not harrow it. Exile did not All ft with nightmare, Sines a red-headed | boy amid his father's flocks at night, he ' had not bad such a good sleep, At seven. ty years of age he laid down to it, He had bad many a troubled sleep, as in the cav. | erns of Adullam, or in the palace at the time his snemi®s were attempting his sap. ture. But this was a ful sleep, eaim sleep, a restfau: sleep, a glorionssienp, “After he had served his generation bythe will of God, he fell on sleep.” In Slam a magnate’s dignity ana power are reckoned according to the number of umbrellas he possesses. One of these magnates is proud to begin his titles with, “Lord of Thirty-sevez Um- brellas.” Among certain African tribes the grandeur of the individual increas. es with the size, not with the number of umbrellas he possesses, An African chief determining to all his rivals in this respect, up his | mind to procure the umbrella ! in the world, the article made to order Its ribs were for- ty feet a 1%, and other parts in propor. tion, surpass made largest and got 1 London, distended its effect machine resembling a green circus-tent In China the inks of mandarin are en- #lik umbrella with three gmaller nobility being al- lowed two, Gentleman-commoners of the two highest ranks have a red state umbrella surmounted by a gourd-shap- ed knob of block- When lime, the gingham four highest was sub- titled to a red flounces—the tin, The two next degrees hav 1 i ¢ the knob painted red rank um- ith d-painted and only two of wood on y. though Then come the fifth breilas wooden kne with of b re lue I Yeon flounces eneral of of the honor rE —— Way practi f clos Novel Cienn Machinery, ining machi otting paper ha man w nery been The received of irkshops "31 terview Lie “I had A sufferer for a number of voars and { hie was very ntonse, tary medicines I received no relief “I finally pl vhysicians me time wi Fma arly exhausted g Dr ian which induced m Sn Poon to get rid and bought two boxes o | using them about March After 1 bad | taken two boxes 1 was completety cured and the pain has never returned. 1 think | it is the best medicine [I have ever taken nd am willing at any time § sign my name to any testimony setting forth its | good merits.” (Signed) Subtweribed and sworn to before me, 20th day of September, A. DD. 1897, Fraxgrix C. Fosx, Nolary Public Mr. Vangundy's statement ought to be regarded aa the criterion of the good merits of these pills. What better proof could a person Wau than the above facts, coirmo—E— ici Dollars Flew from His Plek It was not gold, but silver, that work- men in a nfw building adjoining the First National Bank, on Bennett ave- nue, Cripple Creek, were after Tuesday afternoon. A pick in the hands of stalwart fellow threw out a silver doi- lar, another blow and a dozen were fly- ing in the air. Then there was a geramble. One workman gathered up| $32, another $80, another $8, and the rest of the boye took what they could in all $98. At the time of the fire in Cripple Creek the First Na | tional Bank lost a sack containing 100 gilver dollars, and the bie find by the workman was the identical anck. Long snl ld said oul of an but nee iy 10} $ article regard for Pale Po then I was liseaqun pills I begs read ar ik FP try Pin — a *N the terrible f1the , 1897 Apax Vasxovspy this fts profit and loss accounl.—Denver News. LS A kind hearts a fountain of gladness, making everything in Hs vicinity to freshen. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty Sithout it. Cascarets, Candy Candy Dit he Lay ioc and Arving a a Srving i $d that sickly bilions complexion bj jak Cuaranteed. 10c. Bc. 86. Well, Why Not? Digegs—1t this annexation business keeps on the United Biates of America will soon be a thing of the past, Biggs ~Why, how do you make that out? Diggs-~We'll have to call ourselves the United Btateg of the Earth, -w i ————-. Feminine Charity. What did you think of Kate's gown ylish, } Helen new tea it didn’t vou think Helen—Y¢ yery rather st colors rather weak? matched her they tea Maliway Enterprise in Japan, The prog:ese of railway enterprise in Japan in 1587 is phenomenal. Since 1872, when the pioneer rallway was constructed between Yokahama and of eighteen miles, Own al an average During 1887 icted, making present nearly owned by greater The art by part by tance gr miles a Were constr mie Tokyo, a dis system 100 has a year age nt "we ine AdNneAeNGAeNe - . MEAG AGAW rene ne L }, ea Ae Aen @N'e v ARE ROT, ¢ Aok § penuine Cf @AGR@ NENG NEN YO PPP PLP LP Keep the Malr Curly, nd m ligh it, nin dry, fufly curl It 1 this sticky Even this, not change time to confine MUugey, this with the intense heat the curls into strings them into papers Queen Le ouise of Denmark, who is degper- ately ill at Copenhagen, was 81 years of age eeday. Thiz goad 10 ther- in-law many Earojran poles Wr f# the best 1 AMODR Toys Her daughter, | joved amd the Princess of w with ber, belie be. nen. is ht ®Keld Bs Hall's ¥ Jackson E. Reyauolds wellkn Stanford University fcotball player, bas ins appointed a piember of the law faruity « bis Alma Mater, He studied law at ( bia. the To Cure a Cold In One Day, Take Lazative Promo Quinioe Tablets All | Druggists refund mon=y if it falls to cure. Jo. Kir William Ruseel!, the veteran WAL COT. respondent, is as keen a golfer at 78 as most men ball a century bis junior, apd infuses into the game ail his usual vigor, Don't Tobaoro Spit and Smoke Your Life Away, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag petio, full of life, nerve and vigor, take NoTo Bac. the wonder worker, that roakes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or Fi, Cure guaran. | teed Beoklet and sample free. Address ' Brerling Remedy Co. Chicago on New York You may depend upon it that be is a good man whose intimate Iriends are &ood. i comid not at along — Piso's Cure for Consumption. Italways cures Mr E. © Movrrox, Needham, Mass, October 2, EI The confession of pi past folly jay be only 1 the profession of present wisdom, To Cure Constipation Foreven Take Cascarets Candy Cathartio. 00 or Ba It CC. C fail to conve, druggists refund evuey. The man Is usually in the right who owns himself in the wrong, rmanently enred. No fits or nervons. | pee aber v first da a of Pe. , Kline's Great | rve Restorer. ue free " RM. Kam Lode 1 Arch & Pa. a SS A A One pint of milk produces, roughly speak. ing, one canes of butter. Bdeeate Your Bowels With Casearsts, Candy Cathariie, enre constipation forever e885. HCCC Tall, Grupetars ferond moner. A Russian dows sot beecme of age nati he is twenty-six, PEPE » L RE ASE RSS AS LEMUR AYALA PLY ¥® %. each represente f like &ll ¢ wiesfeity r * Ivory” Soap and UPL UAUMLB LALA PUPP UPPED PPTL - GONS JL PATION 14 days at me without a — of the Aid og wt ” ex bave gone CANDY CATHARTIC TRADE MARK BEOIETIRED Pleasant. Paistad ¢ Never Sicken, W Bix CURE CONSTIPATION. .. Biorling Remedy Company, Chirngs, Boutros, See York, 302 Food taken. or Gripe. Mx 1S JUST AS COOD FOR ADULTS. WARRANTED: PRICE 50 cts. TIA, ro Nov. 18, isi. Pare Mattoon Co. 8. | bought. thees gross a we of I years, In Beverwoid un arficle hat gave » a your Tonic. iready this year. In all our ep VIL SN SLAG Va Bll BUSINESS Stray er’s coiiece, 215 KE. ayer %t., Baltimore, Md. For BrigWt Stadents, (her Sotpalprahips afered for wey Tire Books Free Baguisry mithon eee Jew Therongs Courses Shers YING. Pockkerping. Ble Siaalion for every Graduete or TaiGon Refunded Mall re WAR... nd -ym n free to ae yhody wen, reg es £1 sacl to the Liver ponsly ilinetrated price B»0 3s —— 0 NEW DISCOVERY: sives relinf and curen DROPSY zi iis and te TO are Sreatanent Free. Pr BR GKELN 8 BORS,