Beanty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood meens 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- urities from the body, Begin to-day to nish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cancarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug- gists, satisfaction guarantded, 10c, 2c, 50. In certain parts of Africa croendiles, toads and spiders are eaten. Ancient Romans ate eaterpiliars, and some Africans do the same today. Poe Your Feet Ache and Burn? Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder {or the feet, It makes Tight or New Shoes feel Easy, Cures Corns, Bune fons, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Aching and Bweatiog Feet. Sold by all Droggists, Groeers and Shoe Stores, 250, Bample sent FREE. Address Allen 8, Olmsted, LeRoy, NY. Senator C. DD. Clark, of Montana, is to give a public library to his town of Evanston. Don't Tobaceo Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag. netie, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bae, the wonder-worlrer, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 500 or 81, Cure guaran. teed. Dooklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York The presents sent to Queen Victoria on her fh birthday almost equal those of the last jubilee. Feremn in the Feet, In fact, totter, ringworm and all skin diseases are cured by Totterine. Mr. Lee I. Martin. of San Antonia. Texas, says: “1am suffering with an violent cass of scgemain my feet Please send me a box of Tetterine Mr. Moore, ot Mone & McFarland, Mem: his, Tenn, says it cured Rim of a similar case.” Sold at druggists "0c. a box or sentposipaid by J. T Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga The degree of doct)ir of laws has Been con ferred on William R. Day, former Secretary of State, by the New York University. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Casearets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 83¢. 3% CC. C fall to cure, druggists refund money. A lobster of a rich deep bine color was caught near CHF Island, off the coast of Maine, a few days ago. find Hall's Catrrrh Cure a valuable Dirageists sell it, 750. remedy.’ The British Archaeological School in Greece has resumed the work of excavation in Milo. Piso's Cure is a wonderful Congh medicine Aves, Brooklyn, N. Y.. Oct. 35, 1804 The Emperor of China has to fast sixty four days in each year for the sake of re ligion. Ddueate Your Powells With Cascareta. Candy Cathartic, cure consiipation forever. 10c, 25¢. If C. CO. CO. fail, Aruggists refund money. Redlands, (al. has a giant mowing machine which cuts a strip of wheat fifty feet wide. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething. softens the gums, reducing inflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 2c. a botile dertaker lately fell dead conducting. A lan ashire un ata funeral he v ““ Better Be Wise Than Rich.” people arc aloo rich when they knot a perfect remedy for ail annoying diseases of the blood, kidneys, liver and bowels. It is Hood s Sarsaparilla, which is perfect in ifs action wr. woe entire system as fo bring vigorous health. USE CERTAIN ated, Ks 14 CORN CURE, FUTURE 250.25 2 ts What a Memory. One rainy day in spring, Stories, an old Yorkshire fisherman re- turned to his native village after an absence of fifteen years, and fearfully sought the house which sheltered his deserted wife, Entering without knock- ing, he sealed himself near the open door, took a long and vigorous pull at bis dirty clap pipe, and nodded jerkily to “t'owd woman.” he said, with affected unconcern, She looked up from the potatoes she was peeling, and tried to utter the scathing tirade she had fully rehearsed since his departure; but it would pot come. “Ben.” she said, instead, once more re- suming her work, "bring thesen o'er to t' fire, an’ Ah’'ll darn that hoie I’ thy jersey. Ah meant doin’ t' day tha went away, but summat put me off!” gays Stray ————— ET ——————. — — Other Interests. “Say, what has become of your mill tary enthusiasm? Aren't you going to endist?” “Me? ‘While the baseball season is on? 1 guess not!"--Indian- apolis Journal. From Hrs. Gunter to Wrs. Pinkham. [rerren vo mus. Piwmmaw wo. 75.044) “Ome year ago last June three doe- tors gave me up to die. and as 1 had at different times used your Vegetable Compound with good results, I had too much faith in it to die until I had tried it again. I vas apparently an invalid, was confined to my bed for ten weeks, {I believe my trouble was ulceration of womb), ** After taking four bottler of the Compound and using tome of the Liver Pills and Sanative Wash, at the end of two months I had greatly improved and weighed 155 pounds, when [ never before weighed over 138. Lydia BE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the best medicine I ever need, and I recom- wend ittonll my friends.” Mns. A¥ya Eva Gusrten, HiccissviLie, Mo. Mrs. Barnhart Enjoys Life Once More, “Dean Mus. Pixgnam—1 had been sick ever since my marriage, seven years ago; have given birth to four chiliiren, and had two miscarriages. 1 had falling of wow, leucorrhaa, pains in back and lege; dyspepsia and a nervous %rembling of the stomach. Now 1 have none of these troubles and ean enjoy my life. Your medicine has worked wonders for me. "—Mns. 8. Bauwuanr, New Castre, PA. * % REV. DR. TALMAGE, THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY DISCOURSE. Bulbjects Cholee of BellefeReligious Tol erance Advoeated « All Evangelical Churches Are Good and Are Seeking the Same Pralseworthy End, {Copyright, Louis Klopsch, 1889,) Wasmixarox, D, C,~—~In this sermon Dr Talmage discusses a tople which will in. terest domestia circles everywhere. The text is Genesis xiil., B; “Let there be no strife, I pray thee, between me and thee and between my herdmen and thy herdmen, Is not the whole land before thee?” Uncle and nephew, Abram and Lot, both fous, both millionaires, and with such argo flocks of bleating sheep and lowing oattie that their herdmen got into a fight, perhaps about the best pasture or about the best water privilege or because the cow of oue got hooked by the horns of the others, Not their poverty of opportunity, but their wealth, was the cause of con- troversy between these two men, To Abram. the glorious oid Mesopotamian pany him somewhere else, shange church relations, Take your hymnbook home with youto-day. Bay goodbLy toyour friends in the neighboring pews, and go till his soul is saved and he joing you inthe march to heaven, More important than that ring on the third finger of your left hand it is that your heavenly Futher come mund the angel of merey, concerning your husband at his conversion, as in the paga- ble of old, “Put a ring on his hand.’ No letter of more Importance ever cama to the great city of Corinth, situated on what was called the “Bridge of the Sea” and glistening with sculpture and gated with a style of brags the magnificence of which the following ages have not boen sable to successfully imitate and over shadowed by the Acro-Corinthas, a fortress of rock 2000 fect high-—1 say no letter sver came to that great ¢ity of more importancs than that letter ia which Paul puts the two startling questions: “What knowest thou, O wife, whether thou shalt save thy hus. band? Or how knowest thou, O man, whether thon shalt save thy wife?” The dearest sacrifice on the part of the one is cheap if it resous the other, Better go to the smallest, weakest, most insignificant church on earth and be copariners in in the middie of the Atinntioc Ocean. There fllimitable acreage. *‘let us agree to differ. Here are the moun- tain districts, swept by the tonle sea breeze and with wide reaching pro«pect, and there is the plain of the Jordan, with tropical luxurianee. You may have either.” Lot, who was pot as rich as Abram, and mignt have been expected to take the second choles, made the first selection and with a said to him: : i f : i i i | i prospect; 1 will take the valley of the Jordan, with all its luxuriance the genial climate measurable.” Ho forever settled and earried out the and the wealth the controversy great.-souled suggestion men and thy herdmen, land before thee? Well, in this the last decade of the nine. eternal bliss than pass your earthly mem. burship in wost gorgeously atiractive eharelh while your companion stays out- of wvangetieal privilege, Better buve the drowning saved by a scow or & sloop than let him or her go down while you sail by in the gilded cabins of a Ma- Second remark: If both of the married couples be Christians, but one is so nature. ally constructed that it Is impossible to enjoy the services of a partioaiar denom- fnution, and the other is not so sectarian or punctilious, let the one less particular As for myself, I feel as mueh at home in one denomination of evangelion! Christians as another, und I think I must have been I like the solemn rofl of the Episcopal liturgy, and I like the spontaneity of the Methodists and I like the importance giveu to the ordinance of baptisin by the Baptists and I like the free. dom of the Coogregationalists and I like the government and the sublime doetrins of the Presbyterians and I ke many of the others just as much as any I have pen. tioned and I could happily live and preach and die and be burled from any of them, should have been sorts of of government and all forms and all styles of architecture opulenos of ecclesiastical Now, while in be only kinds what one church, in s0 unbending, so inexorable fcr some de- pomination that it is a positive necessity they were intended to be In seclesiasticism was written in the sides of thelr cradle, i father and mother had eyes keen enough to see it, They would not stop erying until they had pat in their hands as with a riverful, IfAbram prefers to dwell where he can get only a that Lot have all the Jordan fmmerse himself, 1 pray thee, between me and thee and be. tween my herdsmen and thy herdsmen. in which to of Presbyteri- Baptists bigets, There are hundreds “Lot there be no strife, tween me and thee and beslween Is my herd. BY Zhe whole land before thee?” I undertake un subject never undertaken by any other puipit, for it Is an excsad. togly delicate subject, handled might give serious offense, but 1 approach it without the slightest Hep! ia- red. It is u tremendous question, asked all over Christendom, and iavoiving the peace of families, the sternal happiness of many souls, In matters of ¢harch attend. ances should the wife go or the husband go with the wile? First, remember that all the evangelioal ehurches bave enough iruth in them to on earth and in heaven. 1 will go with you sin and sorcow. That isthe whole Godpel. for the here and the hereafter. pations we like better than others, pow in Chicago on important business, and one goes by the New York Central Bail the Baltimore and Ohio Haliroad. One another takes this becanse the cause the speed is greater; another takes the other because he has long been acrus- tomed to that route, and ali the employes Ho far as our engagement to meet is concerned It makes no differences if Now, any one of the innumerable evangelical denominations; if you practice its teaehing--although some of their traine ran on a broad gauge and some on & parrow guange--will bring you out at the city of the New Jerusalem. It being evident that you will be safe in any of the evangelical denominations, | proceed to remark, first, it one of the mar. ried couple be a Christinn and the other where to a church where the unconverted companion is willing to go, il he or she will go to noother. You of the connabial parthership are 5 Christian. You are sale or the skies, Then it is your first duty to Is not the everlasting welfare of your wife impenitent, or your Busband fmpenitent, of more importanes than your ehureh relationanip? % not the condition of your companion for the next quadrillion of yenrs a mightier consideration to you than the gratifieation of your ecclesiastical taste for forty or fifty years? A man or a woman that would stop half a minute to weigh preferences ns to whether he or she bad better go with the unconverted companion to this or that church or de- nomination, bas no religion at all, and never has bad, and 1 fear never will have, You are loaded up with what you suppo=#a to be religion, but vou are lke Captain Frobisher, who brought back from his voy. age of discov a shipond of what his supposed valuable minerals, yot, instead of ng silver and id, were nothing hut common stones ol ths fleid, to be hurled ont as finally useless, Mighty God! In all Thy realm is there ne MAD or woman prolessing religion, yet #0 stolid, so unfitted, so far gone unto death that there would be soy hesitancy in surrendering sil ces belore such an spportunity of salvation and heavenly re. anion? If you, a Ohiristinn wife, are an at. tendant upon any , and your uncon. oes noi go thers because verted go he does not Hike its preacher, or its music, a to STE ero Worship, but Hy go if you weuld accom. The whole cur temperament and thought and character runs into one seet of relig- fonists aes naturally as the James Riverinto the Chesapeake. It would be a torture to such persons to be anywhere outside of that one church, Now, let the wife or husband who is not 80 constructed sacrifice the milder prefer. ence for the one more {nflexible and rigor ous. Let the grapevine follow the rugos- ities and sinuosities of the cak or hickory. riecner in foeks of Christian grace, should say to Lot, who a built on a “Let thers be no strife, I pray thee, between me and thee and pe- my herdmen and thy berdmen. is not the whole land before thee?” As you be edifled and happy anywhere, go with your companion to the ehureh to which he or she must go or be miserable, Roamard the third: If both the married conple are very strong in theirsectarian. fam, lot them attend the diferent churches preferred. It is not necessary that yon attesd the same church, Heligion is be- tween your consciesce and your God, Idke Abram and Lot, agree to dif. fer. When on Sabbath morning you come out of your home together and one Roe way aud the other the other, heartily wish each other a good® sermon and a time of profitable devotion, and when you mest again at the noonday repast jet it be evident, each to each, and to your culldren, and to the hired help, tha: you have both been on the Moant of ane you have both bread of life, though hands in different trays and baked in different ovens. “Bat how about the eniidren?” I am often Let them also They will grow ted by the been eticice, you, by holy Hives, commend those de- pomioatiors, If the father lives the bet. ter life, they will have the more favorable opinion of is denomination. It the mother lives the better life, tey will have the more favorable opinion of ber denom - ination. And some day both the patents will, for at least one service, go to the same church. The neighbors will say, “I wonder what Is going on today, for | saw to different churches, golug arm in arm to the sare sanctuary.” Weill, I will tell you what has brought them together, arm io arm, to the same Something very important has bap. pened. Their son is to-day uniting with the church. He ls standing in the aisle, taking the vows of a Christian, He had and mother a good deal of anxiety, bat their prayers bave been answered in his copversion, and a= he stands in the alsle and the minister of religion says, “Do you consecrate voursel! to the God who made aud redesmed you and do you promise to serve Him all your days?” and with manly voles be answers, ‘I do.” thers is an April shower in the pew where father and mother sit and a rainbow of joy which arches both their souls, that makes all gil ferences of cread infinitesimal, And the daughter who had been very worldly and gay and thoughtioss, puts her life on the of that Sanbath streams through the ehoreh window and falls upon her brow and cheek, she looks like their other daugh. ter, whose face was illamined with the brightness of another world on the day when the Lord took her into His heavenly keeping years ago, 1 should not wonder, if, after all, thesa parents pass the evguing of their life in the same chareh, all Wifereuces of church preferance overcome by the joy of being in the house of God where their children were Jura for usefulness and heaven, Bat ean give you a recipes for ruining our ehildren. Angrily contend in the ousehold that your oliureh is right and the church of your companion is wrong. Bring sneer and caricature to emphrsize your opinions, and your children will make up thei minds that religion isasham, and they will have none of it. In the northeast storm of domestic controversy the rose of Sharon and the lily of the valley will not grow. Fight about = ollie succession, fight about selection aud {ree agency, fight about baptimn, fighs about the bisnopric, fight about gown and sur- plive, and the religious prospects of your ebiidren will be left dead on the field. You will be as unfortunate as Charles, Duke of Burgundy, who in battle lost a diamond the value of a kingdom, for in your fight you will loss the jewel of salvation for your entire household, This is nothing against the sdvoency of your own religious theo ties, Use all forcible argument, bring all telling illustration, array sil demonstrative facts, but let there be no acerbity, nosting. ing retort, no mean insinustion, no super. eillonsness, as though nil others were wrong and you right. Licentintes May Use Tobacco, The Presbytery of Boston bas refused make total abstinence from condition precedent of ordinal onse of the young Heentiates u and of aiders-elect. Germans and the Nienragas Canul, Germans sre said to be trying to got trol of the Nicaragua route, AN INN'S SECRET, al Sample of How Warrants Were Prepared in Old Times. During the work of rebuilding the Royal Bull hotel of Dartford, England, an old hostelry and landmark, some (n- teresting discoveries were made last month, says the Baltimore Sun. In 1772 a murder had been committed at the house and the body disappeared mysteriously, A skeleton now dug up, three feet below the flooring of an old cellar, leads to the belief that it was the remains of the vietim of the tra- gedy. A secret staircase was brought to light, and, as this communicates by invigible doors in the walls of the cel- lar with the room in which the tragedy occurred, it strengthens the belief that the body was taken down the stalr- case and buried. At the same time a number of death warrants, bearing the glgnature of Portland, minister of (ieorge 111, were found in the panels of the walls in which the murder was committed. How documents of this character got into so strange a hiding place is a matter for conjecture, One, dated June, 1788, is a good sample of how warrants were prepared in those days. It reads: “Whereas, James O'Colgley, having been attainted of high treason and had sentence passed upon him to be drawn upon a hurdle to the place of execution and to be hanged by the neck, but not until he is dead, but that, being alive, he shall be taken down and his bowels taken out and burnt before his face, that his head shall be severed from his body and his body divided into four parts, and that his head and body shall be disposed of as we think fit, and where- as we think fit to remit that part of the sentence directing the burning of his bowels and dividing the body into four parts, our will and pleasure is that he shall be drawn and hanged and have his bead severed from his body.” onsen II What They Do with Them. A southern man who recently re- turned home after a visit Boston sald to a neighbor: “You know here little round white beans?” other admitted that he did, "We feed ‘em to hosses down our way.” “Yes” “Well, gir,up to Boston they take them beans, boil ‘em for three or four hours, slap a little sowbelly an’ some mo- lasses and truck in with ‘em, and what do you suppose they do with ‘em?’ “Gosh, | 40’ no” “Well sir’ sald the first speaker, sententiously, “I'm dd if they don’t eat em.” —Ex- change. to these By ae other Old She LOOKS Poor clothes cannot make you look old. Even pale cheeks won't do it. Your household cares may be heavy and disappoint. ments may be deep, but they cannot make you look old. One never fails. It is impossible to look young with the color of seventy years in your hair. thing does it and rmancntly postpones the Fil-tale signs of age. Used according to directions it gradually brings back the color of youth, At fifty your hair mzy look as it did at fifteen. It thickens the hair also; stops it from falling out; and cleanses the scalp from dandruff. Shall we send you our book on the Hair and its Diseases? The Best Advice Free. Io Sarge nigeede gi fn TR ne on weneral be enlly . of Avek with a i To make soiied mattis - they disappear. ! PI A WORD OF WARNING as the ‘Jvory': "" they ARE NOT. but like all of the genuine. Ask for “Ivory il Ol ed spots until white snaps, each represented tu be * just as pood k the peculiar and remarkable qualities getting it “Sach » Happy Remark.™ Wife of Patient—"I'm so sorry, doc tor. to bring you all the way to Hamp- stead see my husband!” Doctor Mayfair)—"Pray don’t mention dear madam. |! have anothe: patient this neighborhood, so I'm killing two birds with one sione' -— London Punch, to (from it, my fay iad For twenty years Mra A. R. Long has been posimistress at Chariotteville, Va ire]. Na fits or nervous. ness after fi dar’s use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer 88 trial bottle and treatise free De. RH. Kase Lid, Wi Arch St, Phila, Pa wtie ot SRY « ¥Vite perm Isunched on the inte to 32.000 The tonnage of vessels Clyde last month amor No To Bae for Fifty Cents Guaranteed tobacos habit cure, makes weak ten strong, blood pure. 0c, Bl. All druggists. WHAT THE WOMEN WANT. Things They Would Really Like ian Leadon. The women who go to London to make speeches at the international congress need not fear that they will gel lost in the big town, says the New York Commercial Advertiser, The hos- pitality sub-committee (isn’t that ex- pressive?) has drawn up a list giving minute information upon hotels and boarding houses. and such details es the lowest charge for rooms and meals per day or week and the distances from hotel or boarding house to the Wes! minster palace hotel, either by rail. Furthermore, Mrs the convener of the committee,” has prepared a map, show ing the positions of the various halls, where meetings are to be held. Now what the American visitors would appreciate more than a list of meeting halls, of which they have enough and to spare at home, would be a list of tea rooms, a diagram showing how to find the inn where “"Plockwick” was writ ten and the site of the “Old Curiosity 8hop,” and the house where Bill Sikes met his death. They would also like to wander through the abbey and stand long and worshipfully before the bust of Longfellow. They would pre- fer “lodgings”-—of which they have heard such picturesque accounts hotels where Americanized servants have learned to say “elevator” and “crackers” and “mail” and “dining- room.” And last, but not least, they will want to drive in Rotten Row, buy furs in Regent street and tast> the purely London joys of a cabman that can drive a hansom drawn by a well- fed horse—all for 18 pence, to &e bus or Broadey Reid “literature sub- the 10 SL sions II In the French navy not more than from 8 to 10 per cent of the men chew tobacco. The smokers number 50 per cent. 80 not less than 40 per cent must be total abstainers from “the weed.” i II. 35 The favorite sport of the Mikado racing. but he allows no betting, fs horse oA STV JUTLIING. hos (TRARY) as ouly bus. frost ooliepein Va. nul 24 10 the Seah tovuni tw buiid Aad . ? i “ Ly 3 He we | Thompson's Eye Water -_ DEWE §3ihe worlds prentont “ers hy Murat Halstead, AEIENT~ utr Dl MPSEY ¢ nN xn, a. R150, W ] s ROP Ys DISCOVERY; gives 0 Tr oan Pe. BR sony, in ami $75 EEE 11, Clhoinnati, 0. Al wCmee of bad health that RI. PA-X. a Er I Ms hee BXUS 1 i CH Tox % b Alcoholism In France, In a welghty paper just prepared for the French Bulletin Meuical, Dr. Bru- pon, an eminent medical , de~ clares that greatest peril | banging over France just alco- holism, and more than all, alcoholism | among women. Singulariy enough his | researches have demonstrated that the women picturesque Normandy are more compietely in the grasp the drink flend than the women of any oth- er province of France, Drink is sold by the grocer, the coal dealer—even by the green grocer; 14 what i= still more fatal, nearly every shopkeeper dispenses omers | worth cultivating the connection writer the nationa, vow LOW of of “wee drops” just to steady The question dark aspect in its relation infant mortality in which Dr. Brunon attributes « most universal prevalence of alcoholism among women of the peas- {ant and artisan classes. —London } Leader. y rible : ai chronic ie 3 aw JRE An Excellent Combination. The pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well known remedy, Syrur or Fios, manufactured by the Cavironsia Fie Sysur Co, illustrate the value of obtaining the liquid laxa~ tive principles of plants known to be medicinally laxative and [iesenting them in the form most refreshing to the taste and acceptable to the system. is the one perfect strengthening laxas tive, cleansing the system effectually, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers gently yet promptly and enabling one to overcome habitual constipation per manently. Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and sub stance, and its acting on the kidneys, liver and bowels, without weakenin or irritating them, make it the ide laxative. In the process of manufacturing are used, as they are pleasant to taste, but the medicinal qualities of the remedy are obtained from scans and other aromatic plants, by a method known to the Carronrsia Fic Syme Co. only. In order to get its beneficial effects and to avoid imitations, please remember the full name of the Company printed on the front of every package. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. BAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW TORE. WN. T. For sale by all Druggiste —Price 50c. per bottie It bas fonnd favor with all classes bes cause it gives po troable. It is always ready to ride, There is no deterioration of its ranning qualities no matter what the conditions of road or weather, A Colombia of the highest grade through. out, Com ure it Jane for part with any other bicyels and your invest will be rewarded by proof aiter greot of its admitted superiority. Examine it. Test it. Try it. That la what we did for months before it was CRAIN WHEELS, Columbians and ' lar chain
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers