Deceive: ! Mabel—I must say that for absolute untrustworthiness there's nothing lke A man, Kate—Why, that? Mabel—Well, you remember when 1 rejected Mr. Bullfinch about three weeks ago? Kate—Yes, Mabel—Well, he sald he should cer- tainly pine away and die, and I should pe his murderess. Well, I just met him in the street walking with another girl, and actually I belleve the fellow has gained twenty pounds in weight, what makes you say Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There 1s only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu- tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in. flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in. amed you have a rumbling sound or lmper- feot hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam. mation can be taken out and this tube re. stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroved forever. Nine cases out of tah are caused by catarrh, which is nothing bgt an in- flamed condition of the mucous surfades, We will give One Hundred Dollars for any not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free, KF. J. Caexny & Co, Tolade, O. Bold by Druggiats, Te. Hall's Family Pills are the best. fore a presidential election, owing to the fact that many so-called “sports” pledge their personal effeots toward the close of the campaign in order to raise money to bet on the result. Sweat and fruit “solds will sot discelor goods dyed with Purxam Faosimes Dyes, Bold by all druggists. The London Daily Mail says that the days of the banjo are numbered in England, and that that instrument will soon be included in the same category with the mouth organ and the accor- dion. The zither will probably be the favorite instrument during the coming Winter. Good Pesition. once not absolutely necessary. Por Sddress Poeoriess Tob. Wika, Bedford Cy, Va The potato, hitherto grown as a tuber under ground, is now being pro- duced like fruit from the stem of the plant. The flavor of these potatoes is excellent. The Best Prescription for Chills and Fever is a bottle of Guove's Taisrrves Cults Toxie. It ts simply irom and quinine in & mmsteless form. No cure—nb pay. Price Ma China has not yet learned to its full extent the use of the check and the bank of deposit, the money order or the bank draft in her mercantile transactions. Youre Gambling! It’s too risky, this gambling with ‘your cough. «You take the chance of its wear- ing off. Don’t | The first thing you know it will be down deep in your lungs and the game’s lost. Take some of Ayer’s Cherry Pec- toral and stop the gambling and the cough. “] was given up to die with quick consumption. 1 ran down from 138 to ¢8 pounds. I raised blood, and never expected to get off my bed alive. 1 then read of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral and began its use, I commenced to improve at once. I am now back to my old weight and in the best of health,” —Cuas. E. HarTMAN, Gibbstown, N. Y., March 3, 1899. You can now get Ayers | Cherry Pectoral ia a 25 cent size, just tight for an ordinary cold. The go cent size is bet- ter for bronchitis, croup, wh ing-cough, asthma, the grip. The dollar size 1s best to keep on hand, and 1s most economical for long-standing cases. LIBBY’S EXTRACT { of BEEF Made without regard to econ. omy, We use the best beef, get all the essence from it, an concentrate it to the uttermost. In an ounce of our extract there is all the nutrition of many pounds of beef. To get more nutriment to the ounce is im- possible, Few extracts have as much, Cur booklet, “How to Make Good Th eel trace. . many your sddroes for it. LIBBY, MeNEILL £2 LIBBY Chicago ’ REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE EMINENT DIVINE'S BUNDAXY DISCOURSE, Subject: Lack of Patience~Faith, Hope and Charity Bloom in Many Hearts Where the Grace of Patience Is Wanting-'ity Rather Than Condemn the Erving. {Copyright 180u. | WasHiseToN, D. C.—This discourse of Dr. Talmage is h full length portrait of a virtue whieh all admire, and the lessons taught are very helpful; text, Hebrews x, 36, "Ye have need of patience.” ‘es, we are in awful need of it. Bome of us have a little of it, and some of us have none at all. There is less of this grace in the world than of almost any other. Faith, hope and charity are all abloom in hundreds of souls where you find one specimen of patience. Paul, the author of the text, on a conspicuous occa- | sion lost his patience with a coworker, | and from the way he urges this virtue upon the Hebrews, upon the Corinthians, upon the Thessalonians, upon the Ro- mans, upon the Colossians, upon the | young theological student, Timothy, I | conclude he was speaking out of his own need of more of this excellence. And I only wonder that Paul had any nerves left. Imprisonment, flagellation, Mediterranean cyclone, arrest for treason and conspir- acy, the wear and tear of preaching to | angry mobs those at the door of a thea tre and those on the rocks of Mars hill, left him emaciated snd invalid and with a broken voice and sore eyes and nerves a jangle. He gives us a snap shot of him- self when he describes his appearance and his sermonic delivery by saying, “In bodily presence weak and in speech contempti- own eves and have given them to me.” least of. visage most admire beauty; those of us with discordant voice most extol musical cadence; those of us with stammering | speech most wonder at eloquence; those of us who get tience. So Paul, with with the agitations of a lifetime, writes of the “God of patience’ and of “ministers of God in mue patience,” patience,” and speaks of those ’ ened with all might to all patience,” and | the startling charge, “Ye have need of ! patience.” | getting ready to write opposite your name | anything applaudatory. All your sublime equilibrium of temperament 1s the result of worldly success. But suppose mightily change with you, as they » times do change. You begin to go d hill, and it is amazing how m here i to help you down when you i g that direction. A great investm fails The Colorado silver min yield You get land poor; ¥ mille, that ed marvels of wea are eclipsed mills with newly invented machinery; 3 ‘ get under t feet of bears of | street. For the first time in your life ) need to borrow money, and ing to lend. Under t} ment you get a distressful feel base of your brain. Insomnia | dyspepsia lay hold of you goes down with your fortune; your ci of acquaintances narrows, and where one | you were oppressed by the fact that you had not time enough to return one-half of the social calls made upon you now the card basket in your hallway is empty, and your chief callers are your creditors and the family physician, who comes to learn the effect the last prescription you understand bow people can become wessimistic and cynical and despairful. fou have reached that stage yourself Now you need something that you not. you can have if you will accept it me Vie he of Yo "5 messenger of God. Her attire is unpre countenance that implies rescue and deli» erance. She comes up the steps that ance | were populous with the affluent and into {the hallway where the tapestry is getwing faded and frayed, the place now all empty | of worldly admirers. I will tell you her | name if you would like to know it. Paul baptized her and gave her the right name. { She is not brilliant, but strong. There i» {a deep quiethood in her manner and a ; firmness in her tread, and in her hand is a | scroll revealing her mission. She comes { from heaven. She was born in the throne i room of the King. This is Patience. “Ye | have need of patience.” First, patience with the faults of others i No one keeps the Ten Commandments | equally well. One's temperament decides | which commandments he shall come near | est to keeping. If we break some of the {| commandments ourselves, why be so hard i on those who break others of the ten? If | you and 1 run against one verse of the | twentieth chapter of Exodus, why should | we so severely excoriale those who run | against another verse of the same chap { ter? Until we are peffect ourselves we | ought to be lenient with our neighbor's | imperfectjons. Yet it is often the case { that the man most vulnerable is the most | hypercritical. Perhaps be is profane and i yet has no tolerance for theft, when pro- fanity is worse than theft, for, while the { latter is robbery of a man, the former is | robbery of God. Perhaps he is given to defamation and detraction and yet feels | himself better than some ose who is | guilty of manslaughter, not realizing that @ sasassination of characier is the worst : of assassination. The laver for wash- i ing in the ancient tabernacle waa at ita side burnished like a looking glass, so that those that approached that laver might see their need of washing, and if by the gospel Jooking glass we discovered onr own need of moral cleansing we would be more economic of denunciation, most of those who go wrong are the victims of cur: cumstances, and if you and I had been rocked in the same iniquitous eradle, and been all our lives surrounded by the same balefal influences we would probably have done just as badly, perhaps worse. We also have of patience with slow resulta of Christian work. We want to sec our attempts to do good immediately successful, world is improving, bul improving at so deliberate a mats; why not more rapidity and momentum’? wheels turn so swiftly; why not the gos | chariot take electric speed? I do not . the geologist replied, “Yes, and you migi| say millions of years, for no one knows but the Lord, and He won't tell.” If it took so long to make this world af the start, be not surprised if it takes a long while to make it over again now that it bas been ruined. The Architect has promised to recon- struct it, and the plans are all made, and at just the right time it will be so com- plete that it will be fit for heaven to move in, if, according to the belief of sume of my friends, this world is to be made the eternal abode of the righteous. The wall of that temple is going up, and my only anxiety is to have the one brick that I am trying to make for that wall turn out to be the right shape and smooth on all sides, so that the Master Mason will not reject it, or have mueh work with the trowel to get it into place. I nm respon. sible for only that one brick, though you may be responsible for a panel of the door or a carved piilar or a glittering dome. 80 we are God's workmen, and all we have to do is to manage our own hammer or ax or trowel until the night comes in which no men can work, and when the work is all completed we will have a right to say rejoicingly: “Thank God, 1 was privileged to help in the rearing of that temple! I had a part in the work of the world's redemption.” Again, we have need of patience under wrong inflicted, and who escapes it in some form? It comes to all people in pro- fessional life in the shape of being misun- derstood. Because of this, how many pro Re fly to newspapers for an explanation. ‘ou see their card signed by their own name declaring they did not ssy this or did not do that not realizing that every man comes to be taken for what he is worth, and you can- not, by any newspaper puff, be taken for more than you are worth nor by any news- paper depreciation be put down. There 18 a spirit of fairness abroad in the world, and if you are a public man you are class fied among the friends or foes of society. If vou are a friend of society, you will find plenty of adherents, and if you are the foe of society you cannot escape reprehen- Paul, you were right when you said, not more to the Hebrews than to ug, “Ye have need of patienee.” [I sdopted a rule years ago which has been of great service to me, and it may be of some service to you: Cheerfully consent to be misunder- stood. God knows whether we are right or wrong, whether we are trying {o serve When you can cheerfully consent to be misunderstood, many of the annoyances and vexstions of life will quit your heart, and you will come into calroer seas than vou have ever sailed The most misunderstood being that ever trod the earth was the glorious Christ s cradle and Ther called misun- ' be of much Him with never charged importance inebriety and The sanhedrin derstood Him, and when was tL to +¢ vote whether He was guilty or not of treason He got but one vote, while all the voted “Aye, ave” ° lerstond His cross, and conel ile had divine power He won OWN rescue hey understood grave, : i Hiz body een resurrect) 1 effect His His bad Bista be misunder- ped and sub answered 8 néter. Far better to have OReIdera § Lite must summer 1 stood on Sparrow jiles from Moscow it was Lhe Napo looked ei ut to cap r had been in long marches its and fearful exhaustions, came to Eparrow hill the n and voices, "Moscow, Moscow!’ I do nat wonder at the transport. A ridge of hills sweeps round the city. A river semieir- clea it with brilliance. It is a spectacle three or four most beautiful scenes in all the earth. Napoleon's army marched on which surrendered without ane shot of irregistible. There is the room 1m which Napoleon slept, and his pillow, which must have been very unessy, for, ob, how short his stay! Fires kindled in all parts of the city simultaneously drove out thet army into the snowstorms under which 05.000 men perished. How soon did triumphal march torn into horrible demo- Htion! hill, a glorious hill of Christian anticipa- These hosts of God have had a long agein and again mingled wth the victor great city, the capital of the universe, the residence of the King and the home of those who are to reign with Him for ever and ever. Look at the towers and hear them ring with eternal jubilee where many of our loved ones are. hold the streets of burnished gold and hear the ramble of the chariots of these who are more than conquerors. So far from being driven back, all the twelve gates are wide open for our entrance. We are marching on and marching on, and our every step brings us nearer to the eity. At what how we shall enter we have ne powsr to foretell, but once enlisted amid the blood washed hopt our entrance is cer tain. It may be in the bright noonday or the dark midnight. I! may be when the air is Jaden with springtime fragrances or chilled with falling snows. But enter we rust and enter we will through the grace offered ne as the chief of sinners. Higher hills than an have spoken of will guard that city. ore radiant waters saw in the Rosman valley will pour thro that great me is. No : gratiaa shall drive us forth, for the only es kindled in that city will be the fires of a splendor that ever hoist and there will be a ng. parting. There will be an eternal farewell, ut no sadness in the utterance. The and there we will part with one of th friends we ever had, No place for her in heaven, for she needs no heaven While love and joy and other enter heaven, she will stay out. Pa , beau- tiful Patience, flering Patience, will THE KEYSTONE STATE. Latest News Happenings (leaned From Various Parts. STUDENT MAY DIE FROM HAZING. EP a Head--Jacob Schroll Hanged Himself, Arndt K. wns discherged ag a voluntary rupt in the United States Court, with liabilities and assets $20 It was $20. staacd was 22 duced him to go on their bond in gigantic real estate operation. This involved the erection of 800 houses in Philadelphia and nearby cities, ter awhile matters changed so the barden of the mortgages, $3,000,000, fell on his shoulders. holders of the mortgages began ceedings against him. He was in early pro- afterward became a drug clerk. Oscar L. in Bristol. About young Booz was gresgman Wanger Military Academy, home A Year appointed by to the West and the Con that time was of such an suit. After the hazing Congr physical condition that he had to re- sign his cadetship. It is alleged thrown in on his red hot throat, pepper was eyes, grease poured feet, in. operations generally indulged James Dougherty was killed Gordonville while carelessly a shotgun. Dougherty was party of nomads, cousisting men, three women and a number children, who have been living in gip gy fashion during ti pack of dogs ha. rabbits when his gun in a wagor the barrel, the 1 ing his chest The & contents of the one of f th 0 oO ring within They had that would had been was seized with his wife's arms pra the other often they as they death, ved doct who commit Jacob Sechroll, wnship by hanging himself with a halter st: lived od was cut down as soon in The sp himself iz only about where his neighbor, committed gulcide #eVOra ago, also by hanging. ne « months the Among the charters lasued at The Sandy Lake Water Works, Sandy Mercer county; capital, $10. 000 $25.000. The Company, capital, Steel New New 000. The B. 8. Janney, Jr. & Co., Inc, Philadelphia; capital, $190,000. Governor Stone reapited George Ward, the Washington county murder- er, from December 4 to January 8, The date for the execution of of the same county, was fixed for January 9, and at the reques! of the county officials Ward was respited until the latter date that both might be hanged on the same day. Stephen Mercer, a prominent and wealthy farmer of Collier township, committed suicide by shooting himself in the head with an old muzzle-load- ing rifle. No reason is assigned for the suicide. The family once before caught him with the rifle while he was making preparation to kill himself, At Greatbend, Susquehanna coundy, 100 carloads of tan bark, the property of the American Hide and Leather Company, was destroyed by fire, to- gether with the building containing it. The fire is believed to have been of incendiary origin. Frank M. Wellbacher, proprietor of a silk mill in Allentown, made an as- signment for the benefit of his credi- tors to Isaac H. Hall, of Paterson, * * The jury in the case of John Keenan, charged with manslaughter, decided at Bellefonte, after half an hour's deliberation, that the killing of Annie Hobbins by him last September, on an island in Moshannon Creek, was purely accidental. Keenan was at once discharged, lewis P. Worthington, former cashier of the Doylestown National coaseloss treadmill of work. ders One day —it spoms as thoug for all fem re and the interest you have taken in and sation back to work KE. Pink- grateful to you for your kindoess truly believe that your medicines re $0 8 woman than all the My troubles began with inflam. fromp_the kidpeys, then {®ing of the womb, I underwent local some time; then, after nearly yr = aaa I went back, but in less than a week On break- I decided to let doctors Before , ‘ash did Banative medicine kind advice and attention, I remain. Thanking you for your Yours gratefully, which will test motial is "0000 the eight-hour day { mand Falest, surest sil throat | Dr.BullPs:i ian Cough Syrup? Refuse substituies. Get Di without Potash. Supply enough Pot ¥ ash and your profits will be large; without Potash your crop will be a" “scrubby. Our books, telling about composition of fertilisers test adapted for all crops, sre free to all farmers, GERMAN KALI WORKS, 03 Nassau Se, New York To W.C.T. U. Workers with o fal devotion img yur modest raing Ee A eels ut, VRE i =, SL $11,600.00 1 THE DELINEA » : Tiel « 18th St, New York. Owing people! to tine QUE the genuineaers of the testisnonis] letters we are oonsmantly poblsbing, we hive Cur Bank, of Lyon, Mam, $000, whe will show that the above Likshed before obtaining the any person FREE! i { lees run acrom ref. matters and things understand and Fh mar wot may in a rich mine of valuable intereating manner, and is value to (howe who BLISHING te his rertiBomte w Mig th 81. 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Gree, Ju days’ tresatinsnt of the set medicine «a ewrth, mad pat vou on tae Trask how To make Sens vy yt ai your howe, Address sil ocders to Pas HM. MH, Wills Medicine Company 33 dlteas perth wi, Hagerstown, Md, Branch cen 129 todinun Ave. Washington, I) o. Y NEW DISCOVERY: guiok reiie! End sures wore shuns. of testimonials and 10 days’ treatm Free. Dr BW. GAELS § SONS Box RB Assis, Sa CATS mE Use CERTAIN" CURE. Lali mick | Thompson's Eye Water to refer to TO ADVERTISE IN THIS PAPER. congtantly, our handy for 18. has bees 8
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers