’ De Your Feet Ache and Burn? Bhake into your shoes Allen's Foot- Ease, A powder for the feet, It makes Tight or New Shoes feel Easy, Cures Corns, Bune fons, Bwollen, Hot. Calloas, Aching and Bweating Feet, Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Shoe Stores, 25e¢, Sample sent FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Lelioy, . * An enactment of the Texas Legislature provides for the teaching in the public schools of a course of human treatment of animals, Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood mesns a clean skin, No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar- tie clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- purities from the body. Begin to-day to nish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug: gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25¢, 50¢. The Americal locomotive seems to be ior popularity with foreigners. Are You Itchy? If so, something is wrong with your skin. Ask your druggist for 'H etterine, and you can cure yourself without a doctor for 30 cents, Any skin digease, ringworm, eczema, salt rheum, ete ir send 30 conts in stamps for box prepaid to J.T. Shuptrive, Savannah, Ga. Try a box. Juan Seminary in Manila he edited a boys’ paper called La Republica. ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Dr RH. Kring Ltd, ®] Arch St, Phila. Pa George Harris, a Boston eab-ariver, has accumulated a fortune of $100,000 during his lifetime by the investment of his faves. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag: netic, full of lite, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bae, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50 or $l. Cure guaran teed. Dooklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York Kansas for her blackberry jam. “Suffered with eatarrh Hall's Catarrh care cured me.” gists, 8c. for fifteen years Sold by Drug W.J. Bryan is among the subscribers t« the Bland monument fund. Edacate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipa Warren C. Coleman, of Concord, N, C., is the richest colored man in the South. His income is invested in cotton mills, After physicians had given me up, I was saved by Piso’s Cure. lismsport, Pa. Nov, 22, 180Q, has gone to Turkey harem of the Mme, Annette Howl to practice dentistry Sultan. “A Good Name the Is a Tower of Strength Abroad.” In Lowell, SMass., where Hood's Sarsapa- rilla is made, i still has a larger sale than all other blood purifiers. cures and sales have spread abroad, and ii is universally recognized as the best blood medicine money can buy. ’ - Never Disappoints 4 Arn Eiaborately Illustrated Eible. Toronto (Canada) Globe: of Mr. W. Williamson, the Yonge street book-seller, consists of twelve great with in page being accompanied tions, of which there are 15000 in the whole work. tion is the result of lifetime spent by cone of the greatest Biblical scholars in Canada. He sought all over succeeded lection that instructive, is gravings, and chromo-lithographs, ete. greatest masters, engravers are in many lese noted. ED. me A Compliment. Little Johnny--Mrs. Talkemdown paid a big comrlknent to me today, Mother Dd she really? Well, there's no denying that women has sense, What did she say? Little Jobhony-—— She said she didr't see how you came to have su'hi a nics little boy as I was. Tit- Bits, [rterrem 10 Mes. rinmoaw wo. 38.46) “I was a sufferer from female weak- ness. Every month regularly as the menses came, 1 suffered dreadful pains in uterus, ovaries were affected and had leucorrhaa. 1 had my children very fast and it left me very weak. A vear ago I was taken with flood. ing and almost died. The doctor even gave me up and wonders how [ ever lived, “1 wrote for Mrs. Pinkham's advice at Lynn, Mass. , and took her medicine and began to get well. I took several bottles of the Compound and used the Sanative Wash, and can truly say that I am cured. You would hardly know rae, I am feeling and looking so well Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound made me what | am. "Maa J, F. Sraprcu, 461 Mecuasic 8z, Camupex, N. J. How Mrs, Brown Was Helpad, “I must tell you that Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound has done more for me than any doctor, “I was troubled with irregular menstruation. Last summer | began the use of your Vegetable Dompound, ‘and after taking two bottles, I have MEV. DR. TALMAGE. THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY DISCOURSE. — Subject: An Ancient Eplgram-As 014 Saying Used to Illustrate the Ladierous Behavior of Those Who Maguify Small Sins and Ignore Great Ones, [Copyright, Loni Klepsch, 1800.) Wasmxoron, . C,.—Ip this discourse, founded on an ancient epigram repeated by Christ, Dr. Talmage fllustrates the folly of belag very particular about {insignificant things, while negleatfaul of vast conesrns, The text is Matthew xxiii, 24: “Ye blind guides, which strain at a goat and swallow % ¢amel." A proverb is compact wisdom, knowledge in chunks, a Hbrary in a sentence, the elee- tricity of many clouds discharged in one boit, a river put through a mill race, When Christ quotes the proverbof the text, He means to set forth the ludicrous behavior of those who make a great bluster about small sins and have no appreciation of great ones, In my text a small insect and a large quadruped are brought lato eom- parison—a gnat and a camel, You have in museum or on the desert seen the latter, a great awkward, sprawling creature, with back two stories high and stomach havin a collection of ressrvolrs for desort travel, an animal torbidden to the Jews as food and in many literatures entitied “‘the ship of the desert.” The gnat spoken of in the text is in the grab form. It is born in pool or pond, after a few weeks besomes a chrvsalis and then after a fow days be. somes the gnat as we recognize It. Bat the insect spoken of in the text ia In its very smallest shape, and it yet inhabits the water, for my text is a misprint and ought to read “strain out a guat.” My text shows you the prince of lncon- sistencles, A man after long observation has formed the suspicion that ina cup of water he is about to drink there ls a grub or the grandparent of a guat., He goes and gets a sieve or strainer, He takes the water and pours it throughthe sieve in the broad lHght., He says, “1 would rather do anything almost than drink his water un- til toi larva be extirpated.” This water is brought under inquisition, The experi. ment is saccessful., The water rushes through the sieve and loaves against the side of the sieve the grub or gaat, Then the man carefully removes the insect and drinks the water in plasidity, Bat going out one day and bupgry, he A RI RAI. SO, A SHAE Jews were {orvidden to eat. Heo suffers from no indigestion, the lower jaw nnder the camel's and his upper jaw over the hump of out a goat; he swallowed a camel, While Christ's audience was yot Christ practienli said to you.” Punetilions about them, small No subject ever winced under Christ's sealpel of truth. examination, so Christ finds His out and puts it under the glass of inspec. tion for alli generations to examine, Those Pharisees thought that Christ would flatter ye blind guides, which strain out a gnat and swallow a eamel.” Jowed, and it is the objest of ly engaged In that business, First, I remark, that of the gospel who are very abogt the conventionalities of religion, but vast importance, are photographed text. and solemn, There is no room for friv in religious con rocation. Instrations, and that of Christ in the text, that ate with smiles any intelligent audience, There are men like those blind guldes of the text who advocate of the mouth Jown and denounce all those things which have a teadeney to draw the corners of the mouth up, and these men wiil go to instaliations and to presbyteries and to associations, thelr pockets full of sieves to «ira'n out the goats, while in thelr own churches at home every Sunday there are fifty people sound asleep. They make their chinrehes a great dormitory, and thelr somniferous sermons are a eradie and the drawied out hymns a lullaby, whilesome wakelnl soul io a pew with her fan keeps the fies off unconscious persons approximate. Now, seyit i= worse to sleep in chareh than to smile in chureh, for the latter implies at least attention, of the hearers and the stupidity of speaker, In old age or from physical infirmity or from long watehing with the sick drowsi. ness will sometimes overpower ome, but when a minister of the gospel looks off upon an audience and finda healthy snd intelligent people struggling with drowsi- pess it is time for Him to give out the doxology or pronounce the benediction. The great fanit of church services to-day is not too mush vivaeity, but too much somnolence. The one is an irritating gnat that may be easily strained out: the other i= a great, sprawling and sleepy- eyed camel of the dry desert, I take down from my library the biogra. phies of ministers and writers of the past ages, inspired apd uninspired, who have done the most to bring souls to Jesus Christ, and I find that withont a single ex. caption they consecrated their wit and their humor to Christ. Elijah used it when he advised the Baalites, as they could not makes their god respond, to eall louder, as their god might be sound asleep or gone a-hunting. Job used it when he said to hig seif-conceited ecomlorters, “Wisdom will die with you.” Chtist not only used it in the text, but when He ironically com- plimented the corrupt Pharisees, saving “The whole need not a physician,” an when by one word He described the cun- ning of Herod, saying, "Go ye and tell that tox.” Matthew Henry's commentaries from the first page to the last corruscated with anor, as summer clouds with heat Hight. o the ng. Again, my subject photographs all those who are abhorrent of small sine, while they are reckless in regard to magnificent thefts, You will find many a merchant who, while hie is 80 careful that he would not take a yard of cloth or a spool of cotton from the rounter without paying for it, and who, if & bank cashier should make a mistake and send in a roll of bills $5 too much, would dispateh a messenger in hot haste to re. turn the surplus, yet who will go into a stock Sompany, in which after awhile he gots control of the stock and then waters the stock sod makes £100 000 appear Hie #200000, He only stole $100, by the operation, Many of the men of fortune made thelr wealth in that way, One of these men engaged la sueh une righteous acts that evening, the svening of the v y when ho watered the stock, from the basem out and eatoh the urchin Jurist the eoiinr so tight oan pear 1thres blooks, will out, ‘''Pollee, police” That same man the evening of the day in which he watered the stock will kneel with his family In prayers and thank God for the prosperity of the day, then kiss his ehildren good night with an air which poems to say, “I hope you will all grow up to be as good as your father!” Prisons for sins insectile in size, but palaces for crimes dromedariap. No mercy for sins apimaleuls In proportion, but great len. fency for mastodon iniquity. A poor boy slyly takes from the basket of a market woman a choke pear, saving some one else from the cholers, and you smother him in the horrible atmosphere of Raymond Street Jall or New York Tombs, while his cousin, who has been skillful enough to steal £50,000 from the city, you make a eandidate for the State Legislature, There Is a good deal of uneasiness and Nervousness now among some people in our time who have got unrighteous for- tunes, a great deal of gneasiness abont dynamite. 1 tell them that God will put under thelr unrighteous fortunes some. thing more explosive than dynamite, the earthquake of His omuoipotent indig- ration, It Is time that we learn in Amoriea that ain Is not excusable In proportion as it declares lnrge dividends and bas out. riders in equipage. Many a man is riding to perdition postillon sbead and lackey behind, To steal one copy of a newspaper is a gnat; to steal many thousands of del- jars is a camel, There is many a fruit dealer who would not consent to steal a basket of peaches from a neighbor's stall, but who wonld not seruple to depress the frult market, and as long as I can re. member we have heard every summer the each orop of Maryland i= a failure, and EF the time the erop comes in the mis roprosentgtion makes a difference of mil. ions of ollars, A man who would not atenl one basket of peaches steals 50.000 baskets of peaches. _ Go down into the publie library, in the reading room, and see the newspaper re- ports of the crops from all parts of the country, and their phraseology is very mueh the same, and the same men wrote them, methodically and infamously earry- ing out the huge lying about the grain ¢rop from year to year and for a scores of ery yvoars, After awhile there will be a “cor. ner” in the wheat market, and men who and some of the men will sit in churches and strain out while in thelr grain elevators and In storehouses they nre fattening camels whieh they expast alter { Society has to he entirely re. ueted on th's subject. We that a sin Is inexemsable in pro- as it is great, | know in tendency is to charge is upon good men, They the SAY, fer of a church. or a tor of the gospel, KRabhathaanhog display heads new 1 apers ling el deacon, or a minis | turns out a defauiter, what Groat primer type Five line pies, “Another Naint Abseon “Clerical Scoundreiism.” “Religion Discount,” “Shame on the while there are a thousand se side tha church to one inside the church, and the mishehavior of wh sae the inside of a chareh Is 80 great it isenough to tempt a Christian fo gst Bat in all those out of their company na it is mam “Paradise Lost gives such a grand deseription of him you bave hacd work to withhold your tion Ub, this straining out of small sins ike gunts and this gulping down great inl qguitios like cnmeis, joth, one or two persons, but Is whish thousands of people fu galiery in may For Instance, all who, while they would nol rob their neigh. bors of a farthing, appropriate the in¢ and the treasure of the publie] A man has a he and he tells his enstomer it fs worth $20 000. Next day und, and the owner LOS AT worth £15,000 The Goverasment of off the tax from aes their VY gas 10 sali oh fays it is the per United Biates took so few people would tell the truth, and of dollars nn day made statements wi seemed to Imply he was abou! tobe banded aver to the oversesr of the poor, Careful te pay their passage from Liverpoot {oh io trunk ten silk dresses from Paris ball dozen watohes from Geneva, tha custom house offleer on tha “There is nothing in that trank ing apparel’ in his hand to punetuste the statement, Such persons are also described in the text who are very mush alarmed about the small fauits of others and have no zlarm their own great transgressions, in every community and in avery church watsh-dogs who fesl ealiad upon to keep their ayes on others and growl, They are full of suspicions, They wonder if this man is not dishonest, if that man is not apeiean, if there is not some thing wrong about the other man. but wear. wrong. Vaoltures are aiways the first to smell carrion detectives, | iny this down as a rule with. out any exception that thosa peopin who liave the most fanits themesives are most merciieas in their watehing of others, full of jeaiousies and hypereritictams, cape the serutiny of the text 1 have to tell you that ws all come under the divine sat. ire when we make the questions of time more prominent than the questions of eternity. Come, now, let us all go into the confessional, Are not all tempted to make the question, Where shall greater than the question, Where shall | live forever? here? greater than the question, How shall 1 lay up treasures in heaven? the question, Flow shall I pay my debts to man? greater than the question, Howshall I meet oblign- tions to God? the question, How shall I gain the world? greater than the question, What if 1 lose my soul? the question, Whe did God jet sin come Into the world? greater than the question, How shall [ get it extirpated from my nature? the gues. tion, What shall 1 do with the twenty or forty or seventy years of my sablanar ex. istance? greater than the question, What shall I do with the mililons of eyeles of mv post terrestria: existence? Time, how smail it ie! Eterafty, how vast it is? The former more Insignificant in comparison with the intter than & goat is issigeificant when sompared with a camel, We dodged the text, We said, “That does not mean me, and that does not mean me,” and with a ruinous benevolence we are giving the whole sermon away, Bat let us all surrender to tha eharge, What an ado about things here, What poor | preparation for s great igo As though 6 minnow were iarger than a beliemoth, as though a swallow took wider elroait than an albatross, as though a nettle wore taller than a Lebanon cedar, as though a gnat were greater than a eamel, as though a minute were longer than a century. as though time were higher, deeper, Lirondor than eternity, Ho the text which fashed with lightning of wit as Christ uttered it is followed by the erashing thunders of awful eatastrophe to thoss who make the questions of tirns greater than the ques. tions of the future, the oncoming, overs shadowing future. Oh, etornity, eternity, eternity! Chaplain in the British Army. In the British army the Chureh oi Eugs the Preabytorinn Jana hae B14 of Hg 1% na +h . ed i ~ Baptist five, and the total ls 018 "+ “five vesrs YOU WALK VERY FAST. 85,080 Miles an Hour About Your Usus) , Gait. Have you ever thought of the dis- tance you travel while you are out for an hour's stroll? Possibly you walk three miles an hour, but that dees not represent the distance you travel. The earth turns on its axis every twenty- four hours. In round figures call the earth's circumference 24,000 miles, and you must have traveled during your hour's stroll a thousand miles in the axial turn of the earth, But this is not all. The earth makes a journey round the sun every year. Pul the] distance of our planet from the sun at | 92,000,000 miles. The diameter 18 therefore 184,000,000 miles, and the clreumfterence described by the earth | 578,000,000 miles. In other words, the | earth travels eround the sun each day | 1,584,000 miles, and every hour—for in- | stance, the hour during which you took | your walk~the earth moved through | 66,000 miles. Bo, adding your miles of leg travel to the hour's axial movement of the earth, this to the! earth's orbital journey and that azain to the earth's excursion and you will find you within the kB.0930 three | with the gun, have traveled | miles. hour sos ee Beau Door. Buffalo Commercial: in old England farmhouses, in addition to the regular front entrance, it was { tom to have a second outside d opening directly into the front parlor. | A knock on this door usually that a bashful young man was outsid, who wanted to call on the the family. Now more bashful young men hair is usually roiled aga door, and the family entrance ne Cul Wr | meant ! ¥ daughter of there that are n a sofa or a net the gauntiel SCaRn callers run the : -— sm 5555 No-To-Dae for Fifty Cents, Guaranteed tobaoeo habit cure, makes weak Lion strong. Dood pure 0c, 81. All druggists To Cure Constipation Forever, Take Cascarets Cundy Cathartic 100 or 5. UC CC fail to cure. Cruggists refund toons. Renntor Hanns hiss bought s ki Ls OTHE PRIGLILES - an ——— Johnunle Knew. The superintendent of a city Sunday was making ao collection for a Shut-in society, “Can any boy or girl tel any shut-in person Bible? Ab. 1 see several hands ralsed That is good. This litlle boy right in of me may teli me Speak up good and loud so that all will hear you ghrieked Johnnie school BO eald mentionad front ” Johnnie, “Jonah! i I: "A Warm Pat-tat “Excuse me, but | thought you were thew who Is for his eceuntry whether it be right or wrong.’ “i would if she ever coqld be srong. Indianapolis Journal one of fellows be, We never did; but we have seen the clothing at this time of the yesr so covered with § dandruff that it looked as if it had been out in a regular snow storm. No need of this snowstorm. As the summer sun <JYould melt the falling snow so will Ayer’s Hair vigor melt these fakes of dandruff in the scalp. It goes further than this: it prevents their formation. It has still other properties: it will restore color to gray hair in just ten times cut of every wen Canes. And it does ever more: it feeds and nourishes the roots ef the hair. Thin hair becomes thick hair; and short hair be- comes long hair, We have a book on the Hair and Scalp. It is yours, for the asking. A ) tor 1. y Br te ea re is rie from the g i A gLugieq fever takes 118 12 it was first Among troops in the Island of Mal- along shores ong the islands of the entire in interest from the fact + and Medit has that It occurs the CrTALCAN Ben this country it become of a + wer Progam Cubs among the troop: returning from LUSK 1 autumn cases were disease resembled faut several found of a it. Indeed. it is now believed that Mal- ta fever prevails in the Mediterranean of the western hemisphere as well as i the eastern. Jt occurs in Hongkong and doubtless also in ihe Pp hillppine Islands, which closely that LEER of Malta fever prevails all the yeer round, but by far the greatest number of cases in summer. It is pot believed to be contagious; the specific microbe, as in the case of typboid fev. er, is ir wialer. occur supposed to be conveyed The symptoms are like those fever, namely: wakeful- a large and flabby with a thin yellowish te. and sometimes There is a toward from a early of any other ness and tongue headache covered fur, loss of appeti vomiting. night, suffers DAUSPL, OF even slight cough. and morning patient profuse perspiration. every the After about 8 week of these symp- toms, the fever, whick has till now been very slight. begins to rise. It rises # few degrees above the normal, sei- dom to a dangerous height, and then | goes on and on, sometimes for months | until the patience of everybody Is ex- | bausted. The patient does not seem 10 be very | sick; indeed, he often feels fairly well, i but the wrelched fever continues, DOW | up, now down. and the sufferer loses | flesh and strength, and takes on a | dirty, sallow look. Occasionally he hag | rheumatic symptoms, which resemble | very closely those of real inflammatory i rheumatism. One of the larger joints | will suddenly become painful, red and i swollen, remain 80 for a day or Iwo, jand then get suddenly well, while an- | other joint begins to suffer in the same (way. This may go ¢: indefinitely from jjoint to joint, till the patient is as | weary of the rheumatism as he is of i the fever. | Malta fever may last only a few i weeks, or it may continue with inter vals of apparent freedom for a year, or even two years. Very few peopie die of the disease. Bo far as doctors have yet discovered, there is no medi sine that will cure or shorten the dis- sane; all that ean be done is to nurse the patient and keep up his strengih until the fever dies out. Quinine is use- less. We shall probably hear more of his tiresome allection during the pres. nt summer. inne III sai, Reading Setters from Home. The American soldiers in the Phillip pinee have some difficulty sometimes in reading letters from home. “The boys were all anxious to read their letiern,” writes one of them. “bm the question was how to obtain a light Our squad thought they had solved tha difficulty with some gum oli In a dish and a rag. but no sooner had we got a good light burning than the bullets begun siuging around us at a great rate. The light was pul out. 1 had plenty of matches, however, and 1 § head with a poncho and scratched matches till the letier was read. ale though 1 almost sulfocated in doing 80.” 3 ret A II Soak one pound of prunes over night, gtew them and remove the wiones, Fit slices of stale sponge cake around & soap. although it lathers hard, even in hot water. ir leave it to waste in the race tor GANAS 25 GAMBLE OO. TIMCIRNATE Sour Stomach HATLer I wos Induced to try CABCA~ RETS, | wl r be wit t then: tu the bose. My liver wis & ached and : Be them wil JOE KERERLING TRADE MARK WEQGISTERID Pleasant. Palastable Potent. Teste Good. De Good, Never Sichen, Weaken. or Gripe, 0c. 2. 800. CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Flerling Neomety Componr. Chloape, Montreal, Sew York, 48 wae NO-TG-BA pleed by all drag. EL Tovaooo Bad Sold and guar gine to ox =n {LETTER 10) PINKHAM NO. 46,970) «] had female com- plaints so bad that it causcd have me to its; have had as many as nine in one day. of Pinkham’s Compound “Five bottles Lydia 3. Vegetable cured me and it has been a year since I had an attack. Irs. Edna Jackson, Pearl, La. If Mrs. Pinkham's Compound will cure such severe cases as this surely it must be a great medicine—is there any sufferer foolish enough not to give ita trial ? : f Gtsue {PG frees Send your mame and address on a . postal, and we will send you our 156- & ) page Mlustrated catalogue free. WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS 00. » 176 Winchesier Avenue. New Haven, Conn | : ELRIB Lee) Doren ’t f write well Perham dg Nett good ink. CARTER'S INK I8 TRE REST INK. More used (han other. Dont cost you any more than poot ink. Ask for it. PSY sty sucenm Dr. BE GAREX'& SORE, Box ¥, Athaia, Ga. BN Um
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers