—— 2 “Taner years ago I was badly afflict ed with Eczems, and used Tetterine with the most gratifying reeplt. 1 made a permanent cure after doctors liad failed to relieve me. I have symp- tons of it breaking out on another part of my person, so you will please send me one box Tetterine by return mail for the 50c. enclosed. W. L. Monnce, 124 £t. Marks avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.” fold by druggists or by mail for 50c. by J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ua, Up In Greenland. “No.” continued the Eskimo sadly, “there isn't so much money in the hotel business in Greenland as the volume of travel would indicate. The average Arctic explorer is so par- ticular these days! He has to have boot for dinmer every day, and fresh boot at that! Canned boot won't an- swer at all! No, 1 don’t know as I blame the explorers so much, They've got to have such experiences as the public taste demands, if they are to uo anything lecturing, 1 suppose. Yes, '— Pak. = Kindness in ourselves is the honey that blunts the sting of unkindness ia another.—Landor. “Take Time by The Forelock.” Don’t ait untd sickness overtakes you. When that tired feeling, the fost rheu- malic pain, the first quarrungs of impure blood are manifest, take Hood's Sarsapa- #flla and you will rescue your health and probably save a serious sickness. Be sure to get Hood =, because 3 Sarda NeverDisap patter of Length. “How long should mourning gowns be worn by a widow of 227" was the question that came sobbing through the mails. Now, it chanced to be the sporting editor's day off, and the ro- ligions editor, therefore, was attending to the “Side Talks With Young Per- sons.” “There {2 no hard and rule.” wrote the religious editor con- fidently, “but they ought to come down to the boot tops at Jeast.” This in- stance illustrates the occasional awk- « .rdness of a newspaper standing as . bulwark of morals to the exclusion of evervthing else —Detroit Journal. fast Made Him Feel Hetter. Johny (sobbing)—"Doecs it re-ally t-h-hurt you to whip me mamma?” Mz—"Yes, my son; very much than it hurts you.” Johnny (drying his eyes)—"I'm glad.”"-—-Stray Stories. Facts For Sick Women First—-the medicine that holds the record for the largest number of abso~ Jute Curos of female ills is Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Gompound. Second Mrs. Pinkham can show by her letter files in Lynn that a mil- lion women have been rostored to hoalth by her medicine and advice. Third -All letters to Mrs. Pinkhain are received, opened, read and an- swereod by women only. This fact is certified to by the mayor and postmas- ter of Lynn and others of Mrs. Pinkham’s own city. Write for free book con- taining these certificates. Every ailing woman Is invited to writo to Mrs. Pinkham and get her ad- vice freo of charge. Lydia BE. Plakias Hed Co, Lynn. Mass. WO hundred bushels of Potatoes remove eighty pounds of “actual” Pot- One thou- more 80 ash from the soil. sand pounds of a fertilizer con- 07 70 taining “actual” Potash will supply just the amount needed. If there is a de ficiency of Potash, there will be a falling-off in the crop. We have some valuable books telling about composi- tion, use and value of fertilizers for various crops. They are sent free. GERMAN KALI WORKS, York REV. OR, TMLMAGE. THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY DISCOURSE. Subject: Lights of the Face—The Marvels of the Human Eye Prove the Infinite Wisdom of the Creator-—Divinely Con- structed Lighthouses of the Soul. {Copyright, Louis Klopsch, 1800.) Wasnisorox, D, C.~—In this discourse Dr, Talmage, in his own way, calls attention to that part of the human body never perhaps discoursed upon n the pulpit and ehallenges us all to the study of omnis- efence. Text, Psalm xeclv., 9, “He that tormed the ave, shall He not see?” The imperial organ of the human system fa the eye, All up and down the Bible God honors it, extols it, Hinstrates it or ar- ralgns it. Five hundred and thirte-four times is it meationed in the Bible, Omni. presence—‘‘the eyes ot the Lord are in every place.” Divine care—''as the apple of the eye.” The clouds—''the eyelids of the morning,” Irreverence—*'theeye that moecketh at its Father.” Pride—''oh, how lofty are their eyes,” Inattention-—"‘the fool's eye in the ends of the earth.” Divine inspection —""wheeis full of eyes.” Sud. denness—‘‘in the twinkling of an eve at the last trump.” Olivetic sermon—‘‘the light of the body Is the eye.” This morn- ing’s text, “‘He that formed the eye, shall He not see?” The surgeons, the doctors, the anato- mists and the physiologists understand much of the glories of the two great lights of the human race, but the vast multitudes go on from cradle to grave without any appreciation of the two great masterpieces of the Lord God Almighty. It God had lneked anything of lafinite wisdom, He would have Iniled in creating the human evs, Wo wander through the earth trying to see wonderful sights, but the most wonderful sight we over wae ls pot so wonderful as the instrumouts through which we see li. It has been an strange thing to me for thirty years that some scientist with enough sloquence and magoetism did not go through the country with fliustrated lecture on eanvas thirty feet squares to startle and thrill and overwhelm Christen. dom with the marvels of the human eye, We want the eye taken from all its tech. niealities and some one who shall Iay aside all talk about the pterygomaxillary fls- sures, the sclerotica and the chiasma of the optic nerve and In plain, common par- lance which you and I and everybody ean understand present the subject. Wa have jearned men who bave been telling us what our origin is and what we were, Ob, if some one should come forth from the dissocting table and from the classroom o! the university and take the platform and asking the help of the Creator demonstrate the wonders of what we are! It 1 refer to the physiological facts rug. gested by the former part of my text, itis only to bring in plainer way Lhe theological lessons of the latter part of out He not see?” I suppose my text referred to the human eye since it excels all others in structurs and adaptation. The ayes of fish and rep- tiles and moles and bats are very simpie things because they have not much to do, There are insects with a hundred eyes, but the hundred syes bave jess faculty than the two bumsn eyes, The black beetle swim- ming the summer pond has two ayes under the water and two eyes above the water, but the four insectile are not equal to the two human. Man placed at the head of all living creatures must have suprome equipment, while the bilad fish in the Mam. developed organ of sight, an apology for ha eye, which If through some crevices of light might be developed into positive eye- sight, the light, created the trees, created the fish, ereated the fowl, but to make man Ha called a convention of di- vinity, as though to imply that powers of Godhead wore to be enlisted in the achievement. “Let us make man. Put a whole ton of emphasis on that word “gs.” “Let us make man.” ealled 2 convention of divinity to create man I think the two great questions in that conference were how to create a soul and how to make an appropriate window for that emperor to look out of, Ses how God honored the eye bhafore He ereated it, He cried until chaos was irrad- {ated with the utterance, "Let there be light!” In other words, before Ha intro. duced man into this tempie of the worid He lllamined it, prepared it for the eye. sight. And so after the last human eye of the world stars are to fail, and the sun is to cense itsahining, and the moon is to turn into blood. In other words, after the human eyes are n~ more to be profited by their shining the coandeliers of beaven are to be turned out, God to sdueats and to bless and to help tu” human eye set oa the mantel of heaven two lamps—a gold lamp and a silver lamp—the one forthe day and the other for the night. To show how God honors the eye look at the two halls ballt for the residences of the eyes, Seven bones making ths wall Jor each eye, the seven bones curiously wrought together, Ringly pajacs of ivory Ia consid. ered rich, but the halls for the resiaance of the human eyes are richer by 80 much as Buman bone is more sacred than elephan- tine tusk, See how God honored the eyes when He made a roof for them, 80 that the sweat of toll should pot smart them and the rain dashing against the forehead might tot drip Into them; the aysbrows not bend. ing over the aye, but reaching to the right and to the left, so that the rain and the sweat should be compelled to drop upon the cheek instead of falling into this di vinely protected human eyesight. + Sea how God bonored the eye in the fact presented by anatomists and physiologists that there are 8500 contrivances in avery eye. For window shutters, the eyelids opening and closing 80,000 times a day, the eyelashes so constructed that they bave thelr selection as to what shall be admitted, saying to the dust, “Stay out.” and saying to the light, “Come in.” For inside cur. tain the iris or pupil of the eye, according as the light is greater or less, contracting or dilating. Tae eye of the owl is bilnd in the day time, the eyes of some creatures ars blind at night, bat the human eye so marvelously constructed it can ses both by day and by night, Many of the other creatures of God ean move the eye only from side to side, but the human eye, so marvelously constructed, bas one muscle to lift the eye, and another musele to lower the aye, and another mus. ale to roll it to the right, and another mus. ele to roil it to the left, and another mus. ole passing through » juiley to turn ft round and round, an slaborate gearing of iw musales as perfect as God could make them. There is also the retina gathering the rays of light and passing the visual im. pression slong the optie pervs about the thickness of the lampwiek, passiog the visual impression on to the sensorium and on into the soul. What a delicats lens what an oxquisite screen, what soft sushions, wimt wonderiul shemistry of the puman eye, The eye washed by a slow stream moisture whether we slesp or wake, rolling imperceptibly over the pebble of the eye and emptying into a bone of the nostril, a contrivance so wonderful that it oan see the sun $5,000,000 of miles awa and the point of a pin, Telescope an microseope in the same contrivance. The astronomer swings and moves this way and that and adjusts and readjusts the tele. scope until he ft to the right focus, it. Oh, this wonderful eamera obscura which you and I carry about with us, #0 from the top of Mount Washington we can take in New England, so at night we can sweep into our vision the constellations from horizon to horizon. So delicate, so semi-infinite, and yet the light coming 95, 000,000 miles at the rate of 200,000 miles a second is obliged to halt at the gate of ‘he eye, waiting until the portonllls be lifted, Something hurled 95,000,000 miles and striking an instrament which has not the agitation of evea winking under the power of the stroke, There also is the merciful arrangoment of the tear gland by which the eye Is washed and through whizh rolls the tide which brings the relief that comes in tears when some bereavement or great loss strikes us, of consolation. Incapacity to weep is easily opened, lle apparatus of the human eye! harbor of the immortal soul under the drops anchor, human eye! The tangue is speechless and pared with it. Have you not seen the eye thusiasm, or expand with devotion, or meit with sympathy, or staro with fright, ot leer with vilialny, or droop with sadness, or pale with envy, or fire with revenge, or is tragedy and comedy and pastoral nnd Iyrie in turn, lifted brow ol surprise, wrath, or its contraction of pala? or its frown of If the or thing, you would believe the eye rather than the fips. The eyes of Archibald Alex. ander and Charles GG. Finney wero the mightiest part of their sermons. Whitefield enthralled great with bis eves, though they were erippled with strabismus, Many a military chief. tain has wita a look hurled a regiment to victory or to death. Martin Luther turned his great eye on an assassin who came to take his life, and the vUlaln fled,’ Under the glance of the human eye the tiger, with five times a man’s streagih, soarls back into the African jungle, Bat those best appreciaie the value of the eye who have lost it. The Emperor Adrian by accident put out the eye of his servant, and he sald to his servant: “What shall I pay you, in mousey or is lands—any- thing you ask me? I am so sorryl put your eye out,” But the ssvant refused to put any financial estimate on tte valae ol the eye, and when the emperor urged and urged again the matter he said: *'Oh, em- peror, I want nothing but my lost evel” Alas for those for whom a thick ard Im- the heavens and the {ace of one's owo That was a patbetic scene when a blind man lighted a torch at night and was found passing along the highway aad some toreh when you can “Ah.” said he, “I ean see, but I earry this torch that others may ses me and pity my heipiessness an i run me down.” Samson, the giant, pou?’ dwar! Syme He All the were stirred when viston undamaged, pathies of Christ of was a mixture of dust and saliva and a prayer with which He cured the eyes of a blind man from His pativity. The walue trophe as by its beaithfal action. Ask the sun rise, Ask the mas who for half a century Ask in bospatal the vietim of ophthaimia. Ask the man whose eyesight perished in a powder blast. Ask the Bartimeus who pever met a Christ or the man born bilond Ask him, How it adds to John Milton's sublimity Jf ehinracter when we find him at the eall Through preserve his sight pad for twelve years been coming toward and after awhile ons eye was entirely gone, His physician warsed him that if be continued reading and writing ut be Kept he “The elioise lay belore me joss of eyesight, fu sush a case I could not listen to the physicians, nol if Esculapios himself had spoken from bis sauctaary. 1 sonid not but obey that Inward monitor. 1 rifles our eyes at the call of daly? Bot, thank God, some have been anabled to sew without very good eyes, Havelock, the son of the more [amous General Havelook, told me this concern. ing his father; in India, while his father and himself with the army were sncamped one evening time alter a long mareh, Gen. eral Havelock called up bis soldiers and addressed them, sayviog in words as near as I ean rocollect: ""Boldiers are their 300 or 300 women, children apd men at Cawaput at the mercy of Nana Sahib, and his butehers, Those poor people may any hour be sacrificed. How many of you will go with me for the rescue of those women and ehildren® I know you are ail worn out, and so am I. Bat all those who will mareh with me to save those women and children hold up your bapd said: “It is almost dark, and my eyesight is very poor, and I eannot ses your raised hands, but I know they are all Forward to Cawnpur!” That hero's eyes, though almost extinguished in the services of God and his country, could see across Iodia and across the centuries. But let ful and all who have two good eyes be twice as thankful, Take care of your eyes open them for capacity to seo the light. 1 do not wonder at the behavior of a poor man in France, He had been bora biind, but was a skillful groom in the stables, dous, esumlersnce of observation, No privacy, On us, eyes of cherubim, eyes of seraphim, eyes of archangel, eyes of God, We may not be abies to ses the inhabitants of other worlds, but perhaps thay may be able to see ug, Wo have not optical lustruments strong enough to descrv them; perhaps they have optical instruments strong enough to desery us, The mole cannot see the eagle midair, but the sagle midaky can soe the mole midgrass, We are able to ses mountains and caverns of another world, but perhaps the inhabitants of other worlds enn soe the towers of our cities, the aah of our seas, the marching of our prooss. sions, the white robes of our weddings, the biack searfs of our uies, It passes out from the guess into the positive when we are told in the Bible that the inhabit. ants of other worlds do come to this, Are they not all ministering spirits sent forth to minisber to those who shall be heirs ol salvation? Bat human inspection and angelie In- spection and stellar inspection and lunar inspection anl solar inspection are tame as compared with the thought of divine inspection. “Yon converted me ty yours ago,” sald a colored man my father. “How so?’ maid my father, “Twenty years ago,” said the other, “in the old sehool-house rm Bound Brook you aald Ia jour prayer, od, sesst mo,’ and I no peace God until I became e ayes of the under the eye ‘of § Christin, Pou — > he the Lord are in ov, he eyelids the ohildeen of fire” His 4194 Naty oa. flames of fire.” “1 will guide h ¥Mine eye,” Oh, the eye of God, so of pity, 30 full of power, so full of love, so tall indignation, so full of compassion, fall ot meres} ow it peers through the ness KEYSTONE STATE. LATEST NEWS GLEANED FROM VARI OUS PARTS, TRAGEDY AT DRIFTWOOD. Young Man Slain in Cold Blood Hunning ¥ight For Two Miles Between Farmer and Marauders in Lancaster County Enrth Sinks Under County Commissioner Finn at Wilkes-Barre. ~Other Live News. Stephen Carey, a young man of Drift- wood, was shot down in cold blood in the Lafayette Hotel at that place. Lobert Kane, a young man about 20 years of age, 1s charged with the crime, Carey, who was about of the same age ag Kane, was sitting in the hotel about 10 conversing with several young men, when Kane walked in. It is said he spoke in au fusulting wan- ner to Carey. A dispute foliowed, and Kane, it is alieged, without warning, pulled n 88-caliber revolver from his pocket, pointed it at Carey's head and fired, The ball eu- tered Carey's forehead and passed through his head. He fell to the floor and died with out uttering a word. Kane ran from the hotel and went to his home, where he was eapiured a short time later by a posse ol citizens, He made no resistance, Word was immediately sent to Sheriff Swope, at Em- porium, and while awaiting bis arrival the prisoner was kept under close guard. The shooting created Inwense excitement among the citizens. A large crowd soon gathered about the houses where Kane was being held prisoner, and for a time it looked as though serious trouble might occur. A prominent citizen of the town, however, addressed the crowd and ecounselad them to permit the law to take {ts course, Sheriff Swope wept to Driftwood on the first train, and Kane wes turned over 10 bis custody. O'eciovk, Almost Engulfed in Cave-in. As County Commissioner I"atrick M. Finn was leaving his stabie ground suddenly sank he got outside the (ie had sunk up to bis waist in veneath In instant he He threw out his arms, but the earth on each side of Lim was slidipg downward, He realized thal was a cave-in and that he was workings of the Plo he had worked as a Loy ing around him, bes gle to get out, and managed partly Au Ge, Ridge colilery, where With death creep ade a desperale sirug- great ricate himsell barn, and mad aller & *2 ext and reach the side of the aught hold « fa projecting bean to this, but SAIL 20g uld jet nd atinued to slid ie beneath Lim as the Fin- and tii he reachiod a point where When daylight was {« cf It s & steep pitch ¢ vid chamber, and had Finn gone down | with earth and foothold, ally he drew himsell upon the beam, crawied along u he could got « Lave been covered Lar : during the disturbance Is expected, d by the iid nothered ihe propped up and the hole filed day. No further he cave workings Ialling Is yd was of CRIA the rr oir flown until it filled the place After Horse Thicrves, A desperate chase alter Borse thieves of t # urred near Gap, Lascaster y, and for over an hour s running fire and pun ip. TW been made to steal 8a b sud on ad Willi ac watch |! have recently ; Thurs 2 3 nging to William Travaer able . tr the thief. His patience ws about midnight (we arn, bu locked shortly with a crowbar, with tempted to bread Sunners raised his gun and fired rauders dropped the bar and fed, Sunnen giving chase, At frequentintervais the pur ger shot at the retreating figures, discharg: ing his gun about fifteen times, Théthieves were armed with revolvers and shot a hal! dozen times at Suppers, but sone of the bullets took effect. The chase was kept uj in the rain for about two miles, and just be fore the men entered a heavy woods one of them screamed that he was shot, He mar aged to serambie to the shelter of the woods where Suuners abandoned the chase, ADE » approache the d ru AWAY the bb and which they at At this point The ms went the padioek ——— unin Treasurer Neacom Injured. State Tronsurer Bescom had A LARrTow os cape from serious 'pjury at Harrisburg. He was leaving the administration buliding and slipped on the ice, falling heavily and rik fog on the back of his bead. He narrowly missed hitting the edge of the stone sie] and as it was he was tanned for some time Hie was taken into the wreasury, where he soon recovered, Mine Fire Extingnished. A party of officials inspected some of the upper workings of the Dodson colliery whiol was on fire for several monthe, and found that the flames had been quenched by the water pumped into the mine, As 8000 we the water is all out the debris wii be re moved aad a large foree of men will be put to work to make repairs acd rebuild tue breaker. Purchased Stave Works The plant of the Raymond Jd. Camplwli Manufacturing Company, al Middletown, was sold at sheriff's sale to Al:xander J. Baitour, of Philadelphia, for #34200. Li ineludes an extensive stove works and foun. dry. Mr. Balfour will make improvements at once and start the works. _. PEF . . Ashland Miners Are Satistfiea, Rumors of a strike among the employees of the Reading Coal and Iron Company, in this section, lack confirmation, The men bave steady work at the mices and expres« no dissatisfaction over thelr wages, ae th y are working on the $2.57 basis with a sliding scale which materially increases their earn: ings. The company pays every two weeks, furnishes powder at $1.50 per keg and keeps NO COMPANY stores. Wind Blew Him OF Bridge. While crossing a foot log over the Youghlo. gheny river, at Indian Creek, David Linder. man was blown off by the high wind snd fell to the rooks in the water, a distance of forty feet, His brains were dashed oul. Linderman was 26 years old and jeaves a wife and one child, News in Brief. ft. HH, Sayre, Jr., has resigned the position ot assistant general superintendent of the Bethlehem Steel Company. The directors of the company have Arebibald Jolinston to the vacancy. Mr. Johsston had been tof the arrmr plate do partment at the works, skin of a young child. I A DEVONSHIRE WITNESS. He Didn't Mention His AlL The difficulty of discriminating be tween the first and third persons has been amusingly {llustrated by the late Lord lddesleigh, who used to be fond of telling Devonshire stories, says the Westminster Gazette. One of his fa- Lordships Name at who was a witness in a horse stealing “Tell us what you know about this case.” said the prosecuting coub- sel. “Well, zur,” was the reply, “I zeed the prisoner and | zed to he, how about tha* ‘oss, and be zed he didn’t know nort about the ‘oss’ “No, no” the counsel sald, “be didn’t say he pardon, zur,” said the witness, “there wasn't no third person present, “You don’t under- was the counsel's “He spoke to you In the first person.” “You'm Wrong agen.” sald the wiiness “1 was the fust pusson as spoke to he” At this point the judge intervened and put the “You saw the pris- that horse?” and the prisoner answered: °l know nothing about the horse . “i beg pardon, my lord.” said the wit- ness. “He didn’t mention your lord- ship's name at all” petulant reply High Rent The lete Cornelius Vanderbilt, while passing two winters in Washington, largest rent known in that city, where all re: ts are high He gave $2 500 a month for his house There are hun- dreds of cough medi- cines which relieve coughs, all coughs, except bad ones! The medicine which has been curing the worst of bad coughs for 6oyearsis Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. Here is evidence © “My wife was troabled with a deepacated cough on her lungs for three years, One day 1 thought of how Ayer's Cherry Pectoral saved the life of my sister after the doctors had all given her upto die. So I purchased two bottles, and it cored my wile completely. It took only one bottle to cure my sister. So you see that three bot- tes (one dollar each) saved two liver, We all send you our heart. felt thanks for what you have done for us." J. H. Bunz, Macon, Col, Jan. 13, 1899. Now, for the first time you can get + tral bottle of Cherry Pectoral for 35 cests. Ask Your : Comma TY Russia in Europe has a forest ares of 500,000,000 acres, One-third of the « indeed, is forest, about sountry, { can recommend Pino's Cure for Consume tion to sufferers from Asthma —FE. D. Tow. 1 ihe nesoln was 4 State paid at 1 RG tion of beet-sugar in Min. 166 pounds, on which the snty of §20,000 Mrs. WN teething. soitens the von, slisys pain, cures wind 0085 pelow’s Nox for children ifiammac a bollla, The Woman's West Ride Republican Club, of New York, has undertaken to see thst the Raines liquor law is enforced on Sunday. Dr. Bulls Cough Consumption. Cures Syrup Coughs, Colds, Grippe, Bronchitis, Hoarse- ness, Asthma, Whooping- cough, Croup. Small doses ; quick, sure results, Div. Bulls Psi cuve Constipation, Trial, 20) A REAL GRAPHOPHONE sone FOR ver’ yo NO BOTHER, MUCH FUN AR the Wenftrs and Plessures of a High Priced Telking Machine. When accompanind by sa Recorder this C raphe.’ sme can be used to make Records. Price scorder, as Reproduces all the Records. Send order and money to our meavest ger COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPH CO. Dept. |. 1 10 E. Baltimore St., Baltimore, Md. 1032 Chestnut St, Philadelphia, Pa. 10 DOLLARS WORTH FOR 100. Bush, the Boned vals werk - pete mert Potato $1. » Land ue YEERLESS CON x, X THE LATEST SCI SnD pho FEMALE DISEASES. o Days Treatment $1.00. 1octs, Writeus fidentisily. THE PEERLESS COMPANY, STIR 65rd 8, CHICAGO, ILL. JBouK AGENTS WANTED FOR Puipit Echoes 2=
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers