JAPANESE ART. fhey Wiped Up the Blood and Sald Ne More About It. “From Sea to Sea,” by Rudyard Kip- ling: Long ago a great-hearted king tame to Nikko river and looked across at the trees, upstream at the torrent and the hills whence it came, and jownsiream at the softer outlines of the crops and spurs of wooded moun- tains. ‘it needs only a dash of color in the foreground to bring this all to- gether,” said he, and he put a little child in a blue and white dressing- gown under the awful trees to judge the effect. Emboldened by his tender- ness, an aged beggar ventured to ask for alms. Now it was the ancient priv- tlege of the great to try the temper of their blades upon beggars and such cattle. Mechanically the king swept off the old man’s head, for he did not wish to be disturbed. The blood spurt- ed across the granite slabs of the river ford in a sheet of purest vermilion. The king smiled. Chance had solved the problem for him. “Build a bridge here,” he said to the court carpenter, “of just such a color as that stuff on the stones, gray stone close by, for 1 would not forget the wants of my people.” So he gave the little child across the stream way. He had composed a landscape Ag for the blood, they wiped it up and sald no more about it, and that is the story of the Nikko bridge You will not find it in the guide *hica-~ go News, books.—( His Offer, A generous if not alluring o was that made by an exasperated physi- clan to the penurious father of an sane young man. The old man wishe to secure his son's admission insane asylum, but seemed to pay for the necessary After hearing his which the doctor knew and hearing him also t expenses to which he his ungrateful children, the waved his hand to end ti “Now, see here,” he said sh you just pay me for this one, and 1 give you a certificate for yourself whenever you wish to use it, for od aer of to false ell of the many plea he had been put by physician ital. ie r arn irpiy, nothing At the Dianer Table. “Georgie, don’t Mr ley that way. t is " just waitin’ to glass of water, ma you that he drinks li land Plain Dealer stare at see he city of Rochester ulation of 180,000, § i "wr i pop ek for the collection and di Do Your Feet Ache and Burn? Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease powder for the It tig pew shoes feel easy. Cures Corns, Bu Swollen, Hot, Smarting and Ingrowing Nails, Bold by and shoe stores, : Address Allen 8, ’ + ry ; see. NAKES all druggists Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. The Japanese tea merchant plating establishi Japanese style, United States, a) It requires no experience to dye with Por wax Faperess Dyes, Simply boiling your goods in the dye is all that's necessary. Sold by all druggists, ’ Most kinds of ble lav % i 1a 4 CIAY © a naIGerat ’ REV. OR, TALMAGE. THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY PISQOURSE Subject: The Koll of Honor—A Tribute to Everyday HeroesIn the Final Read. justment They Will Neceive the Crown of Valor, [Copyright 1900. Wasminarox, D. ( Dr. Talmage, who is now preaching to large audi in the great cities of England and Scotland, sends this discourse, mm which he that many in this world pass as little importance will in the day of nnal readjustment be crowned with high honor; text, 11 Timothy ii, 3, “Thou therefore endure hardness.’ Historians are not slow to acknowledge the merits of great military chieftains We have the full length portraits of the Cromwells, the Washingtons, the Napo leons and the Wellingtons of the world. History is not written in back ink, but with red mk human blood. The gods of human ambition do not drink irom bowls made out of silver gold or pre cious stones, but out the bleached skulls of the fallen ut 1 am now to un- roll before vou a roll of heroes that the world has never acknowledged faced no guns, blew quered no cities, noes shows who ol Of OF of those who no bugle blast, chained no capt oon ou i i 1 i i i { wheels, ar d ver n the greed will stand higher th whose names startled and rapt-spirit il an the of eternity those and seraph day some nations 01 niverse. 1 pean the heroes of everyday life this roll in the first piace | ETOCS ol WW i had failed 1 ome Jot (iod, “Put Fay hand bones and his flesh, and Ihy : which sickness is the gre A 1 inyth as th a (8 $1 com moh, In the | ina wn Satan sad t * ®ICK room 0 Over forth hee to = that face satan acter stand ng na $ 1 a baste the to have luscious Ir fast Ugh 11 were nervous anno endure 1 for example, is due t » presence o of iron. To Curve a Cold In One Day, Take Laxarive Bg Q FABLETS druggists refund Bey t fails E W. Grovi's siguature is on each o QuiNise AD Oo cure LOX. 3 Clgarettes are smoked almost in Germany, Austria, Hu snd gesernily through Europe. ar “4lR AD Piso'e Cure is the best medicine we ever nse for all affections of throat and ungs. O. ExpsrLey, Vanburen, Ind 10 Wa 1969, he first to create a department whose ole object is the abate. ment of the smoke nuisance, The city of Cleveland iat directly on Hiood of the system. Writ Manufactured by Toledo, O aternaily, and acts the and mucous surfaces for testimonials, free, F. J.Cuuxey & Co, Chief Kipley, of Chicago, bas proposed ap- pointing reporters of the city as mem the detective force, are the the advertise. HH. H. Greex's Sows, of Atlanta, Ga, only successful Dropsy Specialists in world, See their liberal offer in ment in another column of this paper Sheets, bian ke) sounlerpanes wi quest in the mi FITS perma ness after firdt day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveHestgrer $2trial bottle and treatise free Dn BH, Krive, Ltd. 1 Arch 8t., Phila, Pa. die ages. One of the men sarving in the Imperial YeomAnry in South Africa is worth $50,000 u yodr, f | 31 pe. Winslow's Soothing Ss} yfor children teething softens thegums, reducinginflamma- tion, aliays pain, cures wind colic, 5c. a bottle. Charles Frohman will have a dramatiza- tion of Mary Cholmondeley’'s novel, ‘Red Pottage.”’ The Best Prescription for Chills and Fover ia a bottle of GuovE's TASTELESS Cunt Towne, It ia simply iron and quinine in & tasicless form, No cure-—-no pay. Price be. Sadie Martinot will play with Henry Miller io his summer season in San Francisco lodigestion is a bad companion. Get rid of it by chewing a bar of Adams’ Pep- sin Tutti Frutti after each meal, Olga Nethersols has closed her season. She will return to New York next year, Better Blood Better Health 1f you don’t feel well to-day you can be made to fesl better by making your blood better. Hood's Sarsapariila ia the great pure blood maker, That is how it cures that tired feeling, pimples, sores, salt rheum, serofuia and eatarrh, Get a bottle, of this great medicine and begin taking it at once and ses how quickly it will bring your blood up to the Good Health point, Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is America’s Greatest Blood Medicine, 7 ameist ih | Thompson's Eye Water BOTY eye, Use gry and 1k great la and tics, where a six pence Th 3 They had no in the name of mj names died fune feed { their i world i needle! Heroes O { Heroes of the aft lar! Heroes and for them! 1 In this roll 1 also find the | have uncomplainingly endured | injustices. They are men who for | tal and anxiety have no symbathy | their homes. Exhausting apphecation ! business them = livelihood, but an He is fretted at waa in to gets of it Ihe exasperations of augmented by the exaspera life. Such men are laughed at, but they have a heartbreaking trouble, and they have long ago gone into appalling dissipation but for the race of God | he” comes out | business life, would to-day ts strewn men who, under the 1 storms of domestic felicity, have driven on the rocks. There are tens o thousands of drunkards to-day, made such by their wives. That is not poetry; that is prose. But the wrong ie generally m the opposite direction You would not have to go far to find a wife whose life is a perpetual martyrdom-—somet hing heavier than a stroke of the fist, unkind words, staggering home at midnight and constant maltreatment, which have left her only a wreck of what she was on that day when in the midst of a brilliant as semblage the vows were taken and full organ played the wedding march and the carriage rolled away with the benediction of the people. What waa the burning of Latimer and Ridley at the stake com- pared with this? Those men soon became unconscious in the fire, but there i= a thirty years’ martyrdom. a Hity years sutting to death, vet uncomplaining, no Pitter words when the rollicking compan ions at 2 o'clock in the morning pitch the husband dead drank into the front entry, no bitter words when wiping from the swollen brow the blood struck out in a midnight carousal, bending over the bat. tered and bruised form of him whe when he took her from her father's home prom: ised love and kindness and protection, yet nothing but evmpathy ed pravers and forgiveness betore they are asked for; no bitter words when the family Bible goes for ram and the pawnbroker's shop ete the last decent dress. Some day. esiring to evoke the story of her sor rows, vou say, "Well, how are you get ting along now?’ and, rallying her trembling voice and quieting her quivering lip, she says, “Pretty well, I thank you; pretty well.” She never will tell you. In the delirium of her last sickness she may tell ull the other secrets of her lifetime, but she will not tell that. Not until the books of eternity are opened on the throne of judgment will ever be known what she has suffered. Society wrecks of | | | i i { i find also mn this roll the Christian charity We all Peabodys and the James heroes of the Leno LEN adimire thousands of dollars obje tw t I am speaking now of those who, out of their pinched poverty, help otherso sich men as those Christian { the who proclaim Christ to people, one of them, writing to the tary in New York, saving I thank vou for that #25. Until vesterday we have had no meat in our house {mn months We have suffered terribly children have no shoes this winter.” to good MISNIONAries west HEC TY three My And half loal bread, but give a who are hungrier only nn scutthe fuel, and ot then io of prece of it io and of of coal, others who help who have and g Olse those have others Oniy a enty that and ol Hut those rx ket iy in Ye Iw d of coat wears = faded may be well pane rs I call them and ve oF and thes them than you will have a ‘nis woe bot an vears a sha who hid children mother then You call them fins emigrant heroines You they knows hovering Oovel ind they i hey O give a dress, that eled appar Or yagamul O1 het nnd not ther ni Hore OF Hays fant have where God and higher se in hea have only a « old traveler from th POG splinter {hie Asi ing more td led 1 3 Blessed snivehng.” y had enough of it Take aim! “ire! ¢ Tohn Brown scattered ground While the wife up in her apron the fragment of hand's head gathering them up ¥ { laverhouse looked her Now, my good woman haw do vou about vour bonnie man’ Oh “1 always thought weel of hum He has been very good to me I had no reason for thinking anything but weel him, and I think better of him now Oy, what a grand thing it will be in the last day to see God pick out His heroes and heroines! Who are those paupers of ter nity trudging off from the gates of ho i? Who are pf The Lord Claverhonsss and Herods and those who had ews iers and crowns and thrones, but the for their own aggrandizement, broke the heart of nations earth. but paupers in eternity drums of their eternal despa woe, woe! be the name of Claverhouse Soldiers, do that said head t he And the was n was go ney 4 bes ou ty ip $ ng he bur ial mto face and said feel now she sad nT hved and they Heroes of i beat the Wor What harm can the world do you wil the Lord Almighty with unsheathed sw fights for you? preach this sermon for comfort. Go home to the place just or the heroes. Do not envy any man his money or his apviause or his social po sition. Do not envy any woman her ward: robe or her exquisite appearance. Be the hero or the heroine. If there be no flour in the house and you do not know where your children zre to get bread, listen, and vou will hear something tapping against the window pane, Go to the window, an vou will find it is the beak of a raven, and open the window, and there will fly in the messenger that fed mijan. Do you think that the God who grows the cotton of the south will let you freeze for lack of clothes? allowed His discivles on Sabbath morning to go into the grammfield and then take the grain and rub it in their hands and Did you ever hear of the experience of that old man, “1 have been young and bread?’ ment, O troubled soul. O sewing woman, O man kicked and cuffed by unjust em plovem, 0 2 who are hard bese. in the wattle of life and know not which way to turn, O bereft one, O you sick cne with complaints you have told to no one, come and get the comfort of tise subject! Lis ten to our great Captain's cheer, “To him that ove 1 give to eat of tl froit of the tree of life which is in t sidst of the paradise of God. Neuter. Particularly polite and gallant was the young man who wae sauntering down Witherell street one day not long ago, when the sidewalks were covered with slush and the ditches were flood: ed to the top of the curb, pink carnation in his coat trousers were definitely creased; shoes had lately been polished, al though the wealth of slush on walks had dimmed their brilliancy was approaching a crossing. ahead of him young woman lapel; his Just a way direction. ankle deep with ice cold water. young woman hesitated. To the cue came the young man, “Can’t | as- gist you?” he asked. “Thank you so much,” wae the reply, so appreciative in its tone that the voung man boldly The ros- ried the lady across, up the carriage and “There,” he said, as t “I guess | haven't wakened it" gafid "it" because he didn't whether there was a girl or boy under shawl. “Oh, it isn't a baby.” unteered the young lady. “Il was down markoting and this is such an easy way to get the groceries home, you know.” Detroit Free Press. Then he picked carried it he sat it know the vol- The Trouble with Slsakian “1 haven't heard anything from Slankins for a long time. He went out ~vest and got to be a county treasurer sr something of that kind. How was ¢ getting along last ‘Hig last accounts, | am informed, 10t balance.”"~ Chicago Tribune, LIKE MANY OTHERS Clara Kopp Wrote for Mrs. Pinkham's Ad. vice nod Tells what it did for Her. accounts?” did at Dean Mes, Pixgaam I have seen so many letters {rom ladies who were sured by Lydia E. Pinkham s remedies that I thought I would ask yo 3 10 my ir advice condition. % een A four taken di % at ent received benefit i am troubled with back. in fact octoring for vears and have ferent pat- but Yteel ttle meGiCines, very sur ache my w hie body stomach fe bs wv f +3 “in ret specie § « breath ang Yery nerve tion ar , bearing us strua iS Yery regu back , cramps and ache from t once.” you Kory } 8 CLARA 1 RUN ind “i Sept “1 think it 3 ity to letter to you in regard to what Lydia BE 3 for me. 1 write a Pinkham's Vegetable Compo wrote you some Lime mp describing my sy toms your advice gave. Iam begin to praise your remedy enough I would say all suffering ‘Take Mrs. Pinkham's advice, man best understands a snd asking which you very kindly now heaiths 0 ferings, and Mrs. Pinkham vast experience in treating female i can give you advice that you can get from no other source CLARA Korr, Bockport, ind., April 13, a week and FOR MALARIA, CHILLS AND FEVER. ‘The Best Prescription Is Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic. The Formula Is Plainly Printed on Every Bottle, So That the People May Know Just What They Are Taking. do not advertise their formula knowing that you would not buy their medi- cine if you knew what it contained. Grove’s contains Iron and Quinine put up in correct proportions and is in a Tasteless form. The Iron acts as a tonic while the Quinine drives the malaria out of the system. Any reliable druggist will tell you that Grove's is the Original and that all other so-called «Taste- less” chill tonics are imitations. An analysis of other chill tonics that Grove's is superior to all others in every respect. You are not experimenting when you take Grove's—Iits superiority and excellence having long been established. Grove’s is the only Chill Cure sold throughout the entire malarial sections of the United States. No Cure, No Pay. Imitators shows A ii e, 50C A Foreign Tongoe. gtrength of a Washington S On the story nr z 7 it may be ga that the in Lhe { that it war if A Wise Derscn Knows ywn vernacular after me with it meatier wid voh talk? { canniny Jim's mother I was jes’ “Yassir.” “Oh, dat talk! Ev'y- body's golter speak in school an’ de teacher is learnin’ me a negro dialeck 1 plece.” IE « dinlect- writer is d¢ What on earth asked Plc- “Dat talk what is de now talkin'? no \ : HIRES Rootbeer I ont bw tous ain't sho-nuf ite more Lan f ice and a grove of Bae § gallons for Z His Great Opportunity. AN Trtie for % vine HIRES OD slivers, Fa. there ar £ ms Applicant ployer Is Appil EDAaTp . cCani r 0 { for a { What you a FER EVER MADE can {conf dently —Anvythin cha you do? Vers WILLS PILLS---BIGBEST OF For only 10 Cents we» mie Ares i & trent ten if fhe j oh anc put 3 i Of the track hus Fo a nrofta- 1 ; uel 0 wis dress al » | ey right s ing re | K. HB. Wi i well, Take my how to ru tell te On Mon. t ‘ A The fis Medicine Company, 23 Eliza | beth st... Hagerstown, Md. Brasch é#¥ices | 129 Indinos Ave... Washington, PD. OC. : my We've b » on VER ¥ w born ries O0KS! SAMPLES of 6 diff erent + interesting books worth $1.50, snd ilnsirsted Ostalog sent fc any address for BO cents, stamps. Try us ANDERSCH, 436 Wes: 38th Me, N. V. | DROPS NEW DISCOVERY: giver quick relief and cures worst oases. Book of testimonials and 10 days’ Lreatinent CUR 5 § s A Tastes Good, Ww. Use Puffs under the eyes; red nose; pimple blotched, greasy face don’t mean hard drink- ing always as much as it shows that there is BILE IN THE BLOOD. lt is true, drink- ing and over-eating overloads the stomach, but failure to assist nature in regularly dis- posing of the partially digested lumps of food that are dumped into the bowels and allowed to rot there, is what causes all the trouble. CASCARETS will help nature help you, and will keep the system from filling with poisohs, will clean out the sores that tell of the sys- tem’s rottenness. Bloated by bile the figure becomes unshapely, the breath foul, eyes and skin yellow; in fact the whole body kind of fills up with filth. Every time you neglect to help nature you lay the foundation for just i] troubles. CASCARETS will carry the poisons out of the system and will regulate Start to-night—one tablet—keep it up for and you will feel right, your blood will be rich, ASCARETS, take as directed. If you are not Bile bloat is quickly and permanently CURED BY
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers