§ so Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar- tie clean your blood and keep it clean, by gtirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- urities from the bodys 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¢, 50¢. Philip James Bailey, author of “Festus the nee popular poem, is still living in Eng- land at the age of 8 years, Are You Using Allen's Foot«Ense ® It is the only eure for Swollen, Smart ing. Tired, Aching, Burning, Sweating Feet, Corns and Bunions, Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes Sold by all Drugeists, Grocers and Rhos Stores, 250, Sample sent FREE, Ad- dress. Allen 8, Olmsted, LeRoy, N. X, Mire, Oliver H. P. Belmont, formerly Mrs W. K. Vanderbilt, is sald to be travagant woman in society. She spends quite SIO00 each year on trifles and Knick. Knacks. To Care a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, All Lruggists refund money fit falls tocare, 25. Mrs. John Jaceb Astor spends $50,000 na year. A great part of the money goes for disnmonds, of whi che {« fond, and she often spends £2000 in an afternoon she pping tour. H.H. GREEN'S thie only successful world. See their liberal offer in advertise went in another column of this paper Soxs of Atlanta, Ga, are For more than a year Presicent MeKinley has suffered from frequent toothache. Don't Tobacco Spit and Siaoke Your Life Away, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To+ Dae, the wonder-worlter, that meies weak men strong. All druggists, Cure guaran tecd. Dookles and sample free. Address Sterling Rewedy Co, Chicago or New York Arizona's oldest white resident is Charles I). Poston, who braved the Apaches in KW. Mao's Cure for Consumption is an A No. 1 Astoma medicine. W, R. WiLLians, Aunt. och, 1il, April 11, 1504. Helen Keller, the famous blind deaf mute has learned to ride a taodem bicycle. i The Prudent Man Setteth His House in Order.”’ Your human tenement should be given even more careful attention than the house you live in. Set it in order by thoroughly purifying your blood by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. Erysipelas—“ My little girl is now fat and bealthy on account of Hood's Sarsapa- rilla curing her of erysipelas and ecpema.” Mgrs. H. O. Wusariey, Port Chester N. Y Hoods Hood's Pills cure Hyver ills; the nondrritating and only eathartic to take with Hood's Sarsaparilia eases. Book of testimonisic and 10 da ve’ treatment Free. Dr. B.& ORIEN 8 5088 Hox D, Atlanta. Ou USE CERTAIN CHILL CURE. Astronomer in a Balloon M. Janssen, the now more th French astronomer, i n seventy vears old, and not so Vigorous vhysicalls ins he was on but he is for doi and i knowledg establishment of Momt Blane, and toi lsome ascent in order t i tion shether most das orig in the pursuit of vho proposed The he atory on top i himself de the na # of the sun. to Buy osygen the itis re ported of the November met bated for the cloud that ove rep completely him whether any meteors fell or not atinosp fv 3 bad that on t sky, and that prevented irom sewing There. upon he interested an acronautie friend the notice, and then made & night ascension. The display which he witnessed was not so brithant that places in America, but the «id repaid for his enterprise. I~ Most troubles will run wi squarely in the face secured use of a balloon oun short observed at fein Was is site en we look them OMEN are assailed at to their sex. symptom. J. €. Stimpson, Margness, W, Va. says: “Hall's Catarrh Core cured me ot a very bad cave of catareh.” Draggists sell it, 5c, Gen. John RH, Gordon has made considera- ble money as a lecturer in the past year or so, No-To-Bae for Fifty Conta. Cunranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. We, 81. All druggists. Ex-Congressman Funston, of Kansas, finds himself overshadowed by his son's rising fame, 3 Fits permanently cured. No fits oF nervous. ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. 82 triad bottle and treatise free Di. R. H. Kiang, Ltd, 1 Arch St, Phila. Pa. interview is pubs a recent Channcey Depew, in 1 “bhelioves in quoted as saying that lu heity.” To Cure Constipation Forever, Take Cascurets Candy Cathartie, 10¢ or £5. if C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. Mrs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup for ehildrén teething. sof tens the gums reducing inflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colle, 2h. a bottle, Mark Twaln is greatly distressed by the death of a favorite cat, which he had owned for many years, Iidueate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Casthartic, cure constipation forever, 10s, 25¢. If C. Q. C, fall, druggists refund money, The great French composer, M. Saint-Saens, fs by turn philosopher, COM POSEY, wrx haeolo- gist, and astronomer, The Malay Race. The Malay race is impassive, reserve and even bashful, that, until one knows the race better, one can scarcely eredit his bloodthirsty reputation The Malay is entirely undemonstrative. If he has any feelings of surprise he never them. Perhaps experiences none, no matter how wonderful the sight which meets his gaze. He is and deliberate in speech, and gircamlocutory in introducing a subject to be discussed Even the children and and scream at the sight of a European, Ww hile in the presence of the men they fre silent and taciturn. Even when alone, the Malay neither talks or sings, in this respect differing much from the Papuan, { who has all the negro traits of singing and chattering to himself for company. Overpay a Malay for some trifle, and his countenance betrays no sign of emo. tion; a Papuan will be grave for a mo ment out of perfect astonishment at the mistake made, and then burst into peals i sO shows he slow women are timid of grinning laughter, while he two. and finally rolls on the ground in ec stacies of merriment: The Malays, when canoe, chant a plaintive, at other times they as The Malay is cautious in gi bends in company in a HORMTOROUS SOD wre silent ino offence to anvone, and accordingly will hesitate to quarrel a and rather abahdon a just debt due him ; the risk fued wath his In his ordinary life he is as im. . ond boul! money matters, of ME un passive as the typical Seat, and as 1 . i ¥ 5 conduct unlike his nil admirari” line o us American Indian, him, the Malay though sot od ime pred wirt. He has intion of hamor, los i ol GF Dlay i renlis : ’ i ‘, it 2 and Fo SEs. le, if any appre : t hun understand a practical jest etiquette he is very jealous of nny is fot nll breaches « t , and equ five interfer ence with his own 01 clse's 1ib erty, To this idea that a Malay servant will tate fo waken another, « ter, though told ta do so. : classes are exceedingly anvone i w HM he CHRIrY such an extent Lies en his own mas The higher polits . ross wsing all the repose and quiet dignity of the There is, howeve another side to the character of tl Lie He is reckless, eB suman jite; host-broed Furops ni lay cruel and ear possesses but a tellect, and has neither ¢ I igre Tr any indige POs nim — Pledged to Marry Poor Girls There in Vienna inembers of which are ple ded 1 If. by chance or member marries a rich existe . vl PROT ITI i rr girl, which 3.1 3 sone respectable hia two thousand dollars, % § tine “lowed on Testis couple { ngaged to De marrio — ci I —— Profitable. he human hair is absolutely the most shile crop that grows, Five tons of : annually imported by the mer. chants of Landon Fhe Parisinns harvest "pw ards of two hundred thousand pounds cight, equal in value to eighty thous and pounds sterling pes annam are Ww every turn by troubles peculiar The history of neglect wasted figures of nine tenths of our women, every one of whom may receive the invaluable ad- vice of Mrs. Pinkham, without charge, by writing | to her at Lynn, Mass. { Miss Lute Evans, of for nearly three years, My heart trouble was 50 bad that some nights 1 was compelled to sit up in bed or get up and walk the floor, for it seemed as though 1 should smother. More than once I have been obliged to have the doctor visit me in the middle of the night. I was also very nervous and fretful. I was ute terly discouraged. One day I thought I would write and see if you could do any- thing for me. 1 followed your advice and now I feel like a new woman. All af REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY DISCOURSE. Subject “Looking Backward -1t is Well to Neview the Past and Arouse the foul to Reminiscences of Dangers Es eaped and Sorrows Saffered, Texr: “While 1 was musing, burned.” Psalms xxx1x., 8, the fire Here is David, the psalmist] with the forefinger of bis right hand against his temple and the door shut against the world, engaged in contemplation, And it would be well for us to take the same posture often, while we sit down in sweet solitude to contemplate, In n small island off the coast of Nova Seotin I onee passed a Sabbath in delight. ful solitude, for I had resolved that I would have one day of entire quiet before I en tered upon autumnal work. I thought to have spent the day in laying out plans for Ohristinn work, but instead of that it be enme n day of tender reminiscence. I re. viewed my pastorate; I shook hands with an old departed friend, whom 1 shall greet ngain when the curtains of life are lifted. The days of my boyhood came back, and I was ten years of age, and I was eight, and Iwas five. There was but one house on the island, and yet from Sabbath daybreak, when the bird chant woke me, until the evening meited into the Bay of Fundy, from shore to shore there were ten thousand memories, and the groves were a-hum with volees that had long ago ceased, Youth is apt too much to spend all its time in looking forward, oid age is apt too mueh to spend all {ts time in looking backward. People in midiife and on the apex look both ways. It would be well for us, I think, however, to spend more time in reminiscence, By tho constitution of ing forward. And the vast majority of peo. plo live not so much in the present usin the future, I find that you mean to make a reputation, you mean to establish yoursell, and the advantages that you expect to achieve nbsorb a great deal of your time, But] see no harm inthis if {t does not make you discontented with the present or dis- qualify you for existing duties. It is a use- ful thing sometimes to look back, and to see the dangers we nave escaped, and to seethe sorrows we have suffered, and the trials and wanderings of our earthly pligrimage, and to sum up oure ments I mean, so far as God may help stir up your memory of the past, so that in the review you may be encouraged and bumbisd and urged to pray. Among the greatest advantages of your past life were an early home and its sor. roundings, The bad men the most part, dip their beated passions out of the boiling spring of an unhappy home, We are not surprised to find toat Byron's heart was a concentration of sin when we hear his mother was abandoned and that she made sport of his lofirmity and often called him “the Jame brat.” He who bas vicious parents has to fight every {neh of hi® way if he would maintain his integrity and at last reach the home of the good in heaven, was In a oity. It may have been Pennsylvania avenue, Washiogton, residential as now 4 Canal street, New York, was That old hie demolished or changed into seemed like sacrilege to you—-Tor thers was more meaning in that small bie there is in a granite mansion or a t eathedral. Looking back, you see it as though it were yesterday-—the sitting room, where the Joved one sat by the plain lamp light, ther at the evening stand, the brothers and sisters perhaps long ago gathered into the skies, then plotting mischief ou the floor orn table: your father with firm voice ocom- wanding a silence that lasted ball a minate, Perhaps you were broughtup is ihe country. You stand now to-day in ory under the old tree, You clubbed it for fruit that was not quite ripe, Decanse you couldn't walt any longer. You bear the brook rambling along over the pebbles, You slop again into the furrow where your father in bis shirt siesves shouted to lazy oxen. You Irighten the swallows fro: the rafters of the barn and take just egg and silence your consciences Ly saying they will pot miss it. You take a again out of the very bucket that the oid weil fetehed up, You go for the cows at sarap stores, and it jae he eh sae In * our heart, In the breath of the hill ana | n the waterfalls dash you heard the voles of God's love, The clouds and the tree: hailed you with gladness, You eame into the house of God. You remember how your hand trembled as you took up thécup of the communion, You remember the old minister who consecrated it, and you re- member the church officials who carried it through the aisle. You remember the old people who at the close of the service took your hand in theirs in congratulating sym- pathy, as much us to say, ‘Welcome home, ou lost prodigal!” And, though those wands be all withered away, that com. munion Sabbath is resurrected to-day, Put I must not spend any more of my time in golug over the advantages of your life. I just put them in one great sheaf, and I call them up In your memory with one loud harvest song, such as the reapers ging. Praise the Lord, ye blood bought immortals on earth! Praise the Lord, ye crowned spirits of heaven! But some of you have not always had a smooth lle. Bome of you are now in the shadow, Others had thelr troubles years ago; you nre a mere wreck of what you ones were, I must gather up the sorrows of your past life, but how shall I do it? Yon say that it is Impossible, as you bave had so many troubles and adversities, Then I will just take two—the first trouble and the jast trouble. As wheén you are walking along the street, and there has been musie in the distance, you unconscious iy find yourselves keeping step tb the mu- sie, so when you started lle your very life was a musical time beat, The alr was full of joy and bilarity; with the bright, clear oar you made the boat skip. You went on, and life grew brighter, until, af- tor awhile, suddenly a volee from beaven sald, “Halt!” and quick as the sunshine you balted, you grew pale, you confronted your first sorrow, You had no idea that the flush on your child's cheek was an un- healthy flush. You said it cannot beany- thing serious, Death in slippered feet wniked around the cradle, You did not but after awhile the truth finshed on you You walked the floor. Ob, it you could, with your strong, stout hand, have wrenched that chiid from the destroyer! You went to your room and you sald, “God, save my child! God, save my child!” The world seemed going out in darkness, You sald, "Il can’t bear it, I can't bear it,” You felt as if you could not put the long lashes over the bright eyes, never to see them again sparkle, If you could have taken that little one In your arms, and with It lsaped the grave, how gladly you would have done it! If you could let your property go, your houses one treasure! But one day there came up a chill blast that swept through the bedroom, and in. stantly all the lights went out, and there was darkness—thick, murky, Impenetrable, shuddering darkness, But God did not leave you there. Mercy spoke. As you took up the bitter cap to put it to your lips God sald, “Let it pass,” and forthwith, as by the band of angels, another cup was put into your hands. It was the cup of God's consolation. And as you have some times lifted the hoad of a wonnded soldier his lips, so God puts His left arm under your head and with His right hand He pours into your lips the wine of His comfort and His consolation, nd you looked the your broken heart, and 1 the Lord's chastisement, and “Even Father, for so it ut smpty eradis and vost 4 looked at said, 80, Aly, It was 3 did You trouble, How confronted vou. ever since, You ever since. In jer sapuicher wir fOrst God efter man pefler woman sitrew sof ging oft $ # opening gates it frresistibie drawing sed. Xe have been spirit belt sever sines that night wien the little one for the last time put t= your neck and said: Good night, mammal € an Hen iG arms around “Good night, papa’ Meet me in Heaven!” Perhaps your | embarrassment, set & rrow was & Snanelsl I congratulate some through the bars, Ofttimes in the dusty and busy ‘strecis your wish rag carpeted hall of the farmhonse through which there came the breath of new mown bay or the blossom of buckwheat. You may bave in your windows now beau’ifal plants and Sowers brought (rom norons the seas, but not one of them stirs in yout soul so much charm and memory as the old ivy and the yellow sunflower that stood sentinel along the garden walk and the forget-me-nots playing hide and seek mid the long grass, The father who used to come in sunbursed from the fleid and sit down on the doorsill and wipe the sweat from his brow may have gone to his everlasting rest, The mother who used to sit at the door a little bent over, cap snd spectacles on hier face meliowing with the vicissitudes of many years, may have put down her gray head on the piliow In the valley. but forget that home you never will. Have you thanked God for it? Have you rehearsed all these blessed reminis. cences? Oh, thank Ged for a Christian father! Thank God for a Christian moth er! Thank God foran early Christian aitar at which you were taught to «neal! Thank God for an early Christian home! I bring to mind another passage in the history of your life. The day came when you set up yur own household. The days passed along in quiet blessedness. You twain sat at the tavie morning and night and talked over your plans for the future, The most insiguificant affair [: your life became the subject of mutual consultation and advertisement. You were so happy you felt you never could be any happier. Ose day a dark cloud hovered over your dwelling, and it got darker and darker, but out of that cloud the shining messen- ger of God descended to incarnate an im- mortal sp rit, Two little feet started on an eternal journey, and you were to lead them, a gem to flash in heaven's coronet, and you to polish it; eternal ages of light and darkness watching the starting out of an newly created creature. You rejoiced and you trembled at the responsibility that in your possession an immortal treasure was placed. You prayed and rejoiced and wept and wondered; you were earnest in supplication that you might lead it through lite into the kingdom of God, There wasn tremor in your earnestuess. There was an double Interest about that home. There was nn additions! interest why you should stay there and be faithful, and when in a fow months your house was filled with the musie of the ehild’s Innghter you were struck through with the fact that you had a stapendons mission. Have you kept that vow? Have you neglected any of these duties? Is your home as much to you ns it used to be? Have those anticipations been gratified? God help Jou , your Siem rominis- cence upon your soul If your Kindnaot how been I el h eroy nn the t on the of 8 child's sin! God have m on the mother who, in addition jo other ge, has the pang of a ehild’s iniquity! bs, there are many, many sad sounds in this sad world, but the saddest sound that Ja svar lmard fo the breaking of a mother's 1 find another You 4 Bhpther po 0 ond. You could Nut Just residence wovervthing you y turn to gol 3 who are like and by the viclenes of the By an unadvised indorsemest, or aro waves, HroKen or A senseless panic, you have been flange headlong and where you once dispensed great charities now you have hard work to win your dally bread, Have you forgotten to thank God for your trials some of you have made investments bank of this world has expioded, and the sliver and wold are molten in the fires of 8 burning world? Have you, amid all your josses and diseonragements, forgot that there was bread on your table thismorning, and that thers shall be a shelter for your head from the storm, and there is air for your lungs, and blood for your heart, and light for your eye, and a glad and glorious and triumpbant religion for your soul? Perhaps your last trouble was a bersave. ment. That heart which in childhood was your refuge, the parental heart, and wlich bas been asource of the quickest sympathy ever since, bas suddenly become silent for. ever, And now sometimes, whenever in sudden annoyance and without deliberation you say, “I will go and tell mother,” the thought flashes on you, “I have no mother,” Or the father, with voice jess tender, but with heart as loving, watohful of all your ways, exuitant over your success without saying much, although the old peoe pls do talk it over by themselves, his trems sling hand on that staff which you now keep as a family relie, his memory embalmed in grateful hearts is taken away forever, Or there wax your eampanion in life, sharer of our joys and sorrows, taken, leaving the enrt an old raiv, where the {ll winds blow over a wide wi! erases of desolation, the sands of desert iviving across the piace which once bloomed like the garden of God. And Abralbiam mourns for Sarah at the eave of Machpelah, As you weremov- ing along your path in life, suddenly, right before you, was an open grave. People jooked down, and they saw it was only a few feet deep and a few feet wide, but to you it was a ¢avern down which went all your hopos and all your expectations, But cheer up in the name oi the Lord Jesus Christ, the Comtorter. There is one more point of absorbin reminiscence, and that is the last hour ol ile, when we have ty lovk over all our ast existence, What a moment that will so! I place Napoleon's Ying reminis. menos on St. Helena besides Mrs, Judson's dying reminiscence in the harbor of St Helena, the samo island, 20 years after. Napoleon's dying reminiscence was one of delirium-—~"Tote d'armes” "Head of the army.” Mrs, Judson's dylag reminiscence, ot inissionary toll and her lite of self sacrifice for God, dying in the cabin of the ship in the harbor of St, Helena, was, 'l always did love the ford Jesus Christ.” And then the his. torian says she fell into a sound sleep for an hour and woke amid the Jonge of nngels, I place the dying » of Augustus Cesar 8 reminiscence of the noo PT ———— ————————— daa) soap fresh from the hot water on it for a moment, the cake into the the free bright colors. A more careful and there where examination y see where a cake of common crubbing bucket has-been laid having eaten an impression of will snow small “‘pin holes’’ here This is what cheap soaps do. Use Ivory Soap, it will not injure. Factory Loaded teatesty destestmAmenste sto tr itentoateaing ¥ Shotgun Shells. t RIVAL” t other brands for Superior to all Lazy Liver “E have been troubled a great deal with a torpid liver, which produces constips tion. 1 found CASCARETS to beall you claim for them, end setured such relief the first triad, that I purchased another supply and was com pictely cured 1 shall only be too glad to rec ommend UCiscarets whenever the opportunity J: A SNe 20 Susquebauns Ave, Phllsdeiphia, Pa CANDY CATHARTIC TRADE ann BEOISTERED Pleasant, Palatablis. Potent. Taste Good. To Good. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. Jc. 2. ic «ws CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Pisrllng Beowely Company, (hlespe, Wanireal, Sow York. "9 NO-TO-BAG 55% U0 Ciao il Wan™ BOYS Bpalding's Athletic Library should be read by every boy whe wenits 10 beovtoe an sihie Ye. 4. Bazin flete. No 8 Official Foot Ball Nos. Hew tobean Ath Guide { Esl] Gunde No.2 H wtaplay Foot No. 8. Offical Bashe! Ball, by Walter Dninp. No #0. Ath etic Primer No. 3. CollegeAthistion So. 9, Oficial A A No # How to play Base Jinles Ball {ie des Noi Athletic Records No. 5. Al Around Ath. Now Oficis! Base Ball No.4. How to Funch Gude the Bag. Neo. 100 How to bea Bi Ne. #2. How to Train eye ¢ Champion. PRICE, 10 CENTS PER COPY. tend for catelogee of all sporfs, A.C. SPALDING & BROS, New York. Peonver. Uhten go, The Potash Question. A thorough study of the sub- ject has proven that crop fail- ures can be prevented by using fertilizers containing a large percentage of Potash ; no plant can grow without Potash. We have a little book on the subject of Potash, written by authorities, that we would like to send to every farmer, free of cost, if he will only write and ask for it. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 03 Nasseu St., New York. What : wont the world do withow ink? 0 . ge ¥ CARTER'S INK ¢ IS THE BEST INK. mas. Why bevel RAKE SEPARATOR ba # Lightest draught [| most duratie, pe fect in operation and ches post. Farquhar Vibrator Separator £reatost capacity | wastes Bo grain, ceans resdy for hr ket specially adapted Ser merchant threshing sad large crops. Thiwshes roe fax and millet Pocwived pedals and awards al three i worlds faire, Farquhar Celebrated Ajax Engin : Feooived medal and} out award ot Worlds Loe lumbisn Exposition. Far gtubar's (hreshing engines are the mont perfect in gee, Havesogts, foot brakesand two injectors. Are very strong and durable and sre meade as light us is consis tent with safety. There w | po record of a Farquhar beller ever exploding. Farquhar Variable Friction Feed Saw Mill, Most arcurstie set works made. Quick re.’ ceding head blocks and } Hegkining oe ack, i Engines Bollers Saw Mills and Agricuiturad Vuplewents Generally. Send for illustrated eatalog. . A.B.FarquharCo.,Ltd. YORK, PA Hartford and Vedette BICYCLES. Public appreciation of the un- equaled combination of quality and price embodied in these machines is shown in the present demand for them which is entirely without pre- cedent. NEW MODELS. Ghainlgss, . . . Golumbia Chain . Hartford, . . . $ Yodettes, . . 825 26 A limited namber of Columbia. Models 45, 46 asd 49 Gmproved) and Hartlords, Patterns 7 and 8, at greatly reduced prices, BEE OUR § ATALOGUR, 376 50
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers