Cood Digestion Waits on appetite, or 1t should do so, but this ean be only when the stomach is in a bealthy condition. Hood's Sarsaparilla so tones and strengthens the stomach that i digests food easily and naturtliy and then all dyspeptic troubles vanish, Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is America’s Greatest Medicine. Price $l. Hood's Pills cure Liver Ills. 25 cents, - Sie - - Yoeor Poe Not Expelled from College. lowing letter to the Baltimore News: “1 see a paragraph going the rounds of honored by a bust erected in the uni- versity from which he was expelled, it Poe was never expelled from the Uni- versity of Virginia. Mr. J. HK, Ingram the author of a well-known life of the poet, wrote to Mr. William Werten: baker, secretary of the faculty, to In- ing, and that gentleman, who was librarian during Poe's residence and knew him well, replied, not from mem: ory only, but after searching the rec- ords, that ‘at no time did he fall under the censure of the faculty.” Mr. Wood- bury, another biographer; says that during Poe's residence ‘he did not come under the notice of the faculty which is stated to have been at that time unusually watchful and strict," ” teats meni coreene Anxious to Learn. She--They say the Clippersons have siways lived away beyond their means. He—1 wonder if we could get them to show us “ow? PERIODS OF PAIN. Menstruation, the balance wheel of woman's life, is also the bane of exist- ence to many because it means a time of great suffering. While no woman is entirely free from periodical pain, it does not seem to have been na- a ture's plan \@ that women \ otherwise \ healthy should suffer 80 severely. \ Lydia E. Pink- \ ham's Vege- table Com- pound is the most thorough fe- ° male regula- tor known to | medical sci- ence. Itrelievesthe condition that pro- duces so much discomfort and robs men- struation of its terrors. Here is proof: Dear Mrs, Pixgpam:—How can 1 thank you enough for what you have done for me 7 When i wrote to you 1 was suffering untold pain at time of menstruation; was nervous, had head- ache all the time. no appetite, that tired feeling. and did not care for anything. I have taken three bottles of Lydia E. of Blood Purifier, two boxes of Liver Pills, and to-day I am a well person. | would like have those who suffer know that I am one of the many who have been cured of female complaints by your wonderful medicine and advice. —Miss Jexxie BR. Mes, Leon, Wis If you are suffering in this way, write as Miss Miles did to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for the advice which she offers free of charge to all women. NEW DISCOVERY; xives D ~~ O } S quick relief and cures worst cases. Send ‘or book of testimonisis and 10 days’ treatment Free. Dr BH GREEN # 3088, Atlants, Oa BOTOrotosOnEbOSObBON on Established 1780. 4 Baker's Chocolate, celebrated for more than a century as a delicious, nutritious, Band flesh-forming beverage, has our well-known Yellow Label on the front of every package, and our trade-mark,“La Belle Chocolatiere,” on the ck. to NONE OTHER GENUINE, MADE ONLY BY WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd, Dorchester, Mass, GG OEOREHEIGEIEIIIAR DYSPEPSIA “Wor six years | was = victim of dys in its worst form. | could eat nothin milk toast. and at times my stomach wou not retain and digest even that. Last March 1 began taking CASCARETS and since then i have steadily Improved, until § am as well as I ever was in my life,” Davip H. Muursy, Newark, O. SOOLLBHLOBLBHLDLLHLLBLLOLLLLLGD 0003 Paver Dlonon Weaken or Gries: we 0%, Be +. CURE CONSTIPATION, ... Brorling Remedy Company, (Sioage, Mostresl, Sow York. 211 HO-TO-BAG 52 Swarr LILLILLLLLILLLALLL ALL LLLP QI QL QQ Qe THE EMINENT DIVINE’'S DISCOURSE, SUNDAY Bubject: “Life's Minor Chord’ =. 1%ials and Tribulations Are Necessary For the Froper Development of Character Man's Compensation For Salfering. Text: “I will open my dark saying upon the harp.” Psalm xlix., 4. The world is full of tho inexplicablas, the We cannot go three steps in any direction without coming up against a cannot solve, hieroglyphies that we epnnot decipher, anagrams wa eannot spell out, speak. For that to sweet musfe, ‘1 savings on a harp.” So Ilook off upon society and find people in unhappy conjunction of circumstances, and they do not know what it means, and they have a right to ask, Why is this? Why is that? and I think I will be doing a good work by trying to explain some of these strange things and make vou more content with your fot, and I shall only be answer. ing questions thar have often been asked me, or that we have all asked ourselves, while I try to set these mysteries to music and open mv dark savings on a harp, Interrogation the first: Why does God take out of this world those who are use- ful and whom we cannot spare and leave alive and in good health so many who are only a nuisance to the world? I thought I would begin with the very toughest of all the seeming inscrutables, most useful men and women die at thirty or forty years of age, while vou often find and try to set them and eighty. John Careless wrote to Brad- ford, who was soon to be put to death, saying: “Why doth God suffer me and sueh other caterpillars to live, that can nothing but consume the church, and take away worthy workmen in the Similar questions asked, Hore are two men. The one is a noble character and a Christian man. He chooses for a lifetime companion one who has been tenderly reared, and she fs worthy "of him and he is worthy of her, As merchant or farmer or professional man or mechanie or artist he toils to educate and rear his children, He is succeeding, 50 many Lord's vine. are often a full competency. He seems Indispensable to that household; but one day, before he has paid off the mortgage on his house, he fs coming home through a strong north. east wind and a chill strikes through him, and four days of pneumonia end his earthly career, and the wife children go into a struggle for shelter and food, His next door neighbor is a wife support him, He is around at the in the evenings while his wife sews, and swagger and swear, coffee is cold when he eomes to a his wife's looks. when he furnishes nothing for her wardrobe, The best thing could bappon to that family would be that man’s funeral, but he declines to die, lives on and on and on. 80 we have tenacity. might have gone down in the vortex 10.000 households. And so he went while he was humble and consecrated, and they Christ and fitted for useluiness here and high seats {a heaven, and when they meet at last before the throne they will knowledge that, though the furnace was hot, it purified them and pared them for an eternal career of life could have fitted them. @n the ther hand, the useless man lived on to fifty or sixty or seventy years because all the ease he ever can have he must have in this world, and you ough not, therefore, begrudge him his earthly longevity. In ail the ages there has not a single loafer aver entered heaven, There is no place for aim there to hang aroand; not even in the temples, for they are fall of vigorous, alert and rapturous worship. [If the good nnd useful go eatly, rejoice for them that iife, which at best is a struggle. And if ihe useless and the bad stay, rejoice that they may be out in the world's fresh air a good many years before their final inoar. Interrogation tha second: Why do good people have so much trouble, sickness, bankruptey, persecution, the thres black valtures sometimes putting their flerce beaks .into one set of jangled nerves? [I 1vink now of a good [riend I once had, He tas A aonsecrated Christian man, an elder In the ehureh, and a« polished a Christian gentleman as ever walked Broadway, First his general health gave out and he hobbled around on a cane, an old man at forty. After awhile paralysis struck him. Having quit business, he lost what property he Then his beautiful daughter died; ad enough troubles, you think, to erush No worldly philosophy could take such a trouble and set it to muasie, or You wonder that very consecrated peopie bave troyble? Did you ever know any very consecrated mau or woman who had not had great trouble? Never! It was through their troubles sanctified that they were mada very good. I! you find any- where in this city a man who has now, and always has had, perfect hesith, and never lost a child, and has always been popular and never Lad business straggle or misfor. tune, who is distinguished for goodness, pen your wire for n telegraph messenger yoy and send me word, and I will drop overything and go right away to look at him. There never has been a man like that and never will be, Who are thoss arro- gant, sell conceited creatures who move about without sympathy for others and who think more of a Nt. Bernard dog or an Alderney cow or a Southdown sheep or a Berkshire pig than of a man? They never had any trouble, or the trouble wns never sanctified. Who are thoss men who listen with moist eye as you tell them of suffering and who have a thos in their voice and a kindness in their manner and an excuse or an alleviation for those gone astray? Thev are the men who have (radunted at the Royal Academy of Trou. le, and they have the diploma written in wrinkles on their own countenances, 4 ny! What heartaches they bad! What tears they have wept! bat injustios they have suffered! The mightiest influ. snce for purification and salvation Is trouble, . There nre only three things that oan break off a chains hammer, n fille or a fire «and trouble is al! three of them. The greatest writers, orators and reformers uel of sthair force Foi teouble. wi » gave to on Irvin ox Tenderness and pathos which will make books favorites while the Ruglish ogasge continues te be written ad mentioned, and when thirty years after the death of Matilda Hoffman, who was to have been his bride, her father ploked up a plece of ombroldery and sald, “That is a piece of poor Matilda's workmanship.” Washington Irving sank from hilarity into silence and walked away, Out of that lifetime grief the great author dipped his pen’s mightiest re. enforcement, Calvin's “Institutes of Re. lHgion,’”” than which a more wonderful book was never written by human hand, was begun by the author at twenty-five years of Sfe, Josausg of the persecution by Fraunols, ng of France, Faraday tolled for all time on a salary of £80 a vear and candles. As every brick of the wall of Babylon was stamped with tho letter N, standing for Nebuchadnezzar, so every part of the temple of Christian achieve. ment is stamped with the letter T, stand- ing fortrouble, When in England a man is honored with knighthood, he is struck with the flat of the sword. But those who have come to knighthood inthe kingdom of God were first struck, not with the fiat of the sword, but with the keen edge of the scimeter, To bulld his maguificence of character Paul could not have spared one lash, one prison, one stoning, one anathema, one poisonous viper from the hand, one shipwreek, What is true of individuals is true of nations. The horrors of the American Revolution gave this country this side of the Alississ- ipp! River to Independence and France gave the most of this country west of the Miss- issippi to the United States, France owned ft, but Napoleon, fearing that England would take ft, practically made a present to the United States—for he received only $15,000,000 for Louisiana, Missourl, Arkansas, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, Minnesota, Colorado, Dakota, Mon- tana, Wyoming and the Indian Territory. Out of the fire of the American Revolation came this country east of the Mississippi, eame that west The British em. pire rose to its present overtowering grandeur through gunpowder plot and Guy Fawkes' conspiracy and Northampton in- surrection and Walter Raleigh's beheading and Bacon's bribery and Cromwell's disso- lution of parliament and the battles of Edge Hill and the vicissitudes of eanturies. Bo the earth itself, before it could become an appropriate and beautiful residence for the buwan family, had, nceording to geol- ogy, to be washed by universal deluge and scorched and made ineandescent by uni. versal fires, and pounded by sledge hammer of teebergs and wrenched by earthquakes that split continents, and shaken by vol- canoes that tossed mountains and passed years before paradise became possible and the groves could shake out their green ban- ners and the first garden pour its carnage of color between the Gihon and the Hidde- kel. Trouble—a good thiug for the rocks, a good thing for nations, as well as a good thing for individuals. So whea you push against me with a sharp Interrogation point, Why do the good suffer? I open the dark saying on a harp, and, though I can neither play an organ or cornet or hautboy or bugle or elarinet, I have taken some lessons on the gospel harp, aad if you would like to hear me I will play you these: “All things work together lor good to those who love God.” Interrogation third: Why did the good God let sin or trouble come into the world when He might bave kept them out? My reply is, He nad a good reason. He had reasons that He has never given us, He had reasons which He could no more make us understand in our finite state than the father, starting out on some great and elaborate enterprise, could make the two- vear-old chilld in its armed chair compre. deur of character may be achieved cn earth by conquering evil. Had there been no evil to conquer and no trouble to console, then this universe would never have known su Abraham or a Moses or a Joshun or an Ezekiel or a Paul or a Christ ora Washington or a John Milton Howard, and a million victories which have been gained by the consecrated spirits of all ages would never have been galoed. no victory, Nine-tenths of the an- thems of heaven would never have been Heaven could never have been a will not say that I am glad that sin anc sorrow did enter, but 1 do say that [am gind that after God bas given all His reasons to an assembled universe He will be more honored than ifsin and sorrow had never entered snd that the unfallen celestinls will bes outdone and will put down their trampets to listen and it will be in heaven when those who have cone quered sin and sorrow shall enter as it would be in a small singing school on earth if Thalberg and Gottschalk and Wagner and Beethoven and Rhelnberger and Schnmann should all at once enter. The immortals that have been chanting 10,000 years befora the throne will say, as they close their Hbrettos, “Oh, it we could only sing lke that!” Bat God will say to those who have never fallen and consequently have not been redeemed, ‘You must be silent now; yon have not ths qualification Yor this an- them.” So they sit with closed lips and folded hands, and sinners saved by grace take up the harmony, for the Bible says “no man could learn that song but the han- dred and forty and four thousand which ware redesmed from the earth.” A great prima donna, who ean now do anything with her voice, told me that when #he first started in music her teacher in Berlin told her she could be a good singer, but a certain note she could never reach, “And then,” she said, *' I went to work and studied and practiced for years until I did reach it.” Bat the song of the sioger re- deemed, the Bible says, the exalted har. monists who have never sinned could not reach and never will reach. Would you like to hear me ina very poor way play a snatch of that tune? [I ean give you only one bar of the music on this gospel harp, “Unto Him that hath Joved us and washed us from our sins in His own blood and hath wade us kings and priests unto God and the Lamb, to Him be glory and dominion forever and ever, amen.” But before leaving this interrogatory, why God let sin come into the world, let me say that great batties seam to be nothing but suffering and outrage at the time of thelr osenrrence, yet after they have been along while past we can see that it was better tor them to have been fought, namely, Bal- amis, Inkerman, Toulouse, Arbeh, Agin- court, Trafalgar, Blenheim, Lexington, Sedan, But here I must slow up lest in trying to solve mysteries 1 add to the mystery that we have already wondered at—namely, why preachers shovid keep on after all the hearers are tired. 80 I gather up Into one great armfal all the whys and bows and wherefores of your life and mine, which we have not hal time or the ability to an- swer, and write on them the words, “Ad. journed to eternity.” I rejoice that we do not understand all things now. for If wa did what would we learn in heaven? If we knew it all down here in the freshman and sophomore class, what would be the usq of our'going ap to stand amid the juniors and the seniors? If we conld ow down one leg of the compass and with the other sweap a eirele clear around all the inscrutables, if we could lift our little steelyards and Wolgh the throne of the Omaipotent, if we eon oternity, what would be left for heavenly revelation? So move that we cheer. fully adjourn what is now beyond our comprehension, and as, according to Rol itn, the historian, Alexander the Groat, having obtained the gold casket in which Darius had kept bis rare me, used that aromatic cusket thereafter to k * and at night put t under his Ww, 80 t this day into the aa Die a pA sotions perfumed casket of your richest aff: pes, this promise worth DPPPPPPePIOOPeONe From Factory to Fireside. Would we spend a million dollars yearly advertising OUR Catalogues if they were not worth having? Our general Catalogue contains Furni. ture, Crockery, Stoves, Clocks, Sewing Machines, Bilverware. Upholstery Goods, Mirrors, Lamps, Piotures, Bedding, Baby Carriages, Refrigerators, Tinware, eto. at prices that have surprised the entire civilized world, We publish a 16-color Lithographed Cat. alogue of Carpets, Hugs, Portieres and Lace Curtains showing the actual pat- terns in hand-painted colors. We pre pay freight on these goods, sew Carpets reo and furnish (free) Carpet Liniug. Here you can buy at the same prices that dealers pay. A millionand a half others have written for our Free Cata- logues., Do you want them? Address this way: Julius Hines & Son Dept. 214 BALTIMORE, MD. > oe a cr The Joys of Childhood. Johnny and Tommy, who are noisiest children in Yorkville, playing. “Let's play on this doorstep, suggested Tommy, “No,” Jimmy said, “there isn't any fun in doing that. That's an empty house, Let's go Gown the street and play. 1 know where there's a newspaper man's house, He works all night and sleeps in the day- time.” And the pair of cherubs started off to the spot where maker thoughts for seventy million ladies and gentlemen was trying to replenish his the were * the of process, — ——I—— Violence Unexpected. “Penelope's new wreck.’ “Did get caught in “No: she went to a millinery and it turned into a is Detroit FF Press. fall suit is a per- fect she a rain?” OpenJag, rush.” bargain ree ——— - 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- prrities from the body. Begin to-day to vanish pimples lotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, beauty for ten cents. All drug. gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25¢, S0c. . boils, One pound of Indian tea will 170 S100 Reward The readers of this paper that there is at jeas lence hans been § stages, and that ls Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh ire is the only positive cure now knows to the medical Iraternity Catarrh being a con siitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catareh Cure istakenin nr. ting direc upon the blood and mu- 810, i be pleasad tn dreaded dis * fo cure in sll r, and giv ing hot o its « dred Dollars Send for lis urative powers that they ALY ¢ Lentini J. Unpsey Drogeista, Ti s Family Pills are the best ase that it ninls & Uo Hold by Hal began life as 8 newspaper man, ® Pag Don't Tobaero Spit and Smoke Your Life Away, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag: eetie, full of life, nerve and vigor, take NoTo Bae, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, Be or #1. Core guaran teed Booklet . and Bierling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York Joseph Jefferson does not like to be pidered an luvalid, tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. Be.a on the sclentifie sethionl of Harvard Univers South Afries, To Cure A Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets All Druggists refund money i748 falls to qure. Bo, Southern Hille, near Deadwood, 8, D., at his oid home in Theresa, N. Y. m No-To-Bae for Fifty Conta. sarantesd tobacco habit cure, makes weal Soc, 81 AL + Lotd lichester has 11,000 swans upon his setate at Abbotaburg, near Weymouth, Eng- Innd, Fite Jermanantly enred. No fits or nervous. ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline s Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise 1) Du ROH Kans, Lad, @1 Arch Stu Phila Pa Some wonderful stalactite eaves have re. eantly been discovered eight miles from Krugersdorp, in the Transvaal, Te Cure Constipation Forever, Take Cascarets Candy Catharth 12 C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund moses: The two litte islands of Zanzibar and Pempa fursish four-fifths of the cloves cone sumed by the world, {ean recommend Piso's Cure fos Consnmp. tion to mifferers from Asthma, ¥ D. Towx. exxn, Ft. Howard, Wis, Mar ¢ 1804, * Among the Kole of Central India a sham Bubt always accompanies the wedding oer. emony. Edaeate Your Rowels With Casoarets. Candy Cathartie, cure constipation forever, 100,20. ICCC, fail, ArogRists refund money. raid to have Lecome one of the best judges of horseflesh in England, 2 3 233333 THREE H AS TRUE AS COSPEL. 8peak well of your friend, of your enemy, say nothing. He who says what he likes will bear what he does not like, A man’s manners are the mirror in which he shows his portrait, Learning is either good or bad ac- cording to him that has it—an excel- lent weapon, if well used; otherwise, like a sharp razor in the hands of a child, Life is no idle dream, but a solemn reality based on and encompassed by eternity, Find out your work, and stand to it; the night cometh when no man can work. All brave men are brave in initia- tive, but the courage which them to succeed where others dare not even attempt is never so polent as ness. first friends met. Friends, but friends on earth, and therefore dear; oft, and sought almost as oft in vain, vet always sought, so native to the heart; so much desired and coveted bY all virtue, virtue none but knowledge has any freedom, virtue nor knowledge hag any vigor of immortal hope except in the principles of the Christian faith and in the sanctions of the Christian religion. RI WHEN WELCOME 1S WORN OUT of Guests, An Ohio host, said: brother, who o'clock train this the subtler and reverent method of another the father William Dean the novelist His practice a visitor had worn out Away breakfast, and bless our visiting ug on morning.” 1 more Ohloan, will 10 prefer leave the of when to be called so 1 will wish you good-by and highly appreciated the boys was the formula used by Dr. Vaughn, when, as headmaster of Har- row he had highest in the at breakfast. Commiserating the bash of the lads how to leave and by entertain the batches 1 school io form school in who did not know wanted fulness yet to do so the doctor would say ing: “Must you go? signal heartily apropca of noth. Can't you stay?” for departure 1 the transposition of a blundering narrator, who, in tell- ing this gave the formula as “Can't you go? Must you stay?’ A fellow feeling makes one kind to this version wag the story, revised cad Ache ? Are your nerves weak? Can’t you sleep well? Pain in your back? Lack energy? Appetite poor? Digestion bad 7 Boils or pimples? These are sure signs of poisoning. From what poisons? From poisons that are al- ways found in constipated bowels, If the contents of the bowels are not removed from the body each day, as nature intended, these poisonous substances are sure to be absorbed intw the blood, sl- ways causing suffering and frequently causing severe disease. There is a common sense cure, YE They daily insure an easy and natu movement of the bowels. You will find thatthe use of Ayer’s with the pills will hasten recovery. It cleanses the blood from all impurities and is a great tonic to the nerves. Write the Doctor. or Medion) Department has one most eminen sieians in the United Staies on The dortor tb » suflering. You ril] Footed tire bast medica) advice without cont, BRIN a Be. Liked to Be Fooled Sald Mrs. Fondmother to her son, who is unduly partial to the softer gex: “Don’t you put any reliance on what the girls tell you. They are awful lars and will fool you every time.” “Yes, but how nice they do it.” replied the enamored youth, with a beatific emile, 4 Reputation. “At las(,” he sald, “1 have arranged THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific procekses known to the Carivorsia Fie Syrup Co. only, and we wish to impress upon true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the Cavirorxia Fic Syrup Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par- ties. The high standing of the Cavri- FORNIA Fl6 Syuve Co. with the medi- cal profession, and the which the genuine Syrup of Pigs has given tO millions of families, the name of the Company satisfaction mages a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken- nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. BAN FRANCISCO, Cal LOUISVILLE, Ky. NEW YORK. NY. The Potash Question. A thorough study of the sub- 5 ures can oe prt 3 Fusing fertilizers containing a large percentage of Potash; no plant can grow without Potash. We Potas? would have : he subject of written by authorities, we very farmer, free of cost, if be will only write and ask for it. that like to send to « GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York. One that will bring a pleasant monthly reminder of the giver is a subscription to the NEW AND IMPROVED Frank Leslie's Now HO cts.; $1 a Year. Edited by Mrs. FRANK LESLIE. . | Cover in Colors and Gold EACH MONTH: { Scores of Rich Hisstrations, CONTRIBUTORS: W I). Howells, Clara Bar. ton, Bret Harte, Walter Camp. Frank R. Stockson, Margaret E. Sangster, Julia C. RK. 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DDARD, [AGENTS WANTED Si, Ineo ma oll. af once. HOWARD BROS, Buffalo, I. Y. & XU 51 AR AA i 2, wr ~ A, "une ie' | Thompson's Eye Water
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