ts ———- C—O AST AO WANN Dyeing is as simple as washing when you use Puram Faveiess Dyess, druggists, In a new work on antelopes there are descriptions of 133 distinct species, about 120 of which are African. Four and one-half million people use London's swimming baths yearly, Beet For the Bowels. No matter what ails vou, headache to a cancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right. Cascarzrs help nature, cure You without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost vou just 10 cents to start getting your health back, Cas- carers Candy Ostbartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has 8. . stamped on it. Beware of imitations, Although there are 214000 acres of orchards 1a England, yet that country buys 100,000 tons of apples abroad in a year. Strate or Omio, City or ToLspo, Luvoas Covxry. Fraxx J. Onsxey makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cuzxer & Co. doing business inthe City ofToledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of oXg HUNDRED DOLLARS for eso and every case of carammu that cannot be cured by the use of Harvr's Catanax CURE. Frasx J. Cuexey, Sworn to before mo and subscribed in my { ~Ae , presence, this 6th day of December, ] SEAL ¢ A. D., 1836, A. W, GrLeasox. S—— Notary Public, Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free, F.J. Caexexr & Co., Toledo, O Sold by Druggists, 75¢. Hall's Family Pills are the best, I i LA Ten days’ intimate acquaintance with poverty will satisfy any man for the rest of his natural life. See advt. of SMrraprar’s Busixess COLLEGE There are 40,000 ill and bedridden pau- pers in English workhouses. His Opinion. Bridget O'Ho the lahan (1 paper 1 i anda S4¥s a pa $le.} 5.1 COHdal Oe i O’'Hoolahan ony man smashed who pace-maker an’ oight! y gob, 1 Cad ‘** My hair came out by the hand- ful, and the gray hairs began to reepin. I tried Ayer’s Hair Vigor, and it Stopped the hair from com- ing out and restored the color.”’— Mrs. M.D. Gray, No. Salem, Mass. There’s a pleasure in offering such a prepara- tion as Ayer’s Hair Vigor. It gives to all who use it such satisfaction. The hair becomes thicker, longer, softer, and more glossy. And you feel so secure in using such an old and reliable prepara- tion. All droggists. If your druggist cannot supply you, send vs one dollar and we will express you a bottle, Be sure and give the name of*your nearest express office, Address, J.C.AYER CO, Lowell, Mass. $1.69 3 bettie. Your Tongue If it’s coated, your stomach is bad, your liver is out of order. Ayer’s Pills will clean your tongue, cure your dys- psia, make your liver right. asy to take, casy to operate. 25¢. Al druggists. Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown of rich black T BUCKINGHAM DYE er 22 £m Mags hn MP Vi DOUEEAS UNION NAPE, For More Than a Quarter of a Century The reputation of VW. 1... Douglas £3.00 and 283.50 shoea for style, comfort and wear has excelled all other makes sold at these prices. This excellent reputation has been won by merit alone. W. lL. Douglas shoes have to give better satisfaction than other $3.00 and $3.50 shoes because hia reputation for the best £3.00 and $3.50 must be maintained. The standard has always been placed 20 high that the wearer receives more value for his mone in the W,. L. Douglas £3.00 and $3. shoes than he can get elsewhere, W. L. Douglas sells more 83.00 and $3.50 shoes than any other two manufacturers. W. L. Douglas 84.00 @iit Edge Line cannot bs egualird at ang price 1: state syle desdred | wire andwitih osunily wi plain or oe | M4 rer am of Hight soles. hy A BL emraniend, Try a pain, WOMAN'S SPHERE. Rev. Dr. Talmage Says She Should Rule as a Queen in the Home, Its Value as a Field of Usefulness « The Mother's Influcace. {Copyright 1801.) Wasmineron, D. C.—In this discourse Dr. Talmage extols home as a field of use fulness and especially encourages wives and mothers; text, Gone i, 27, “Male and female created He them.” In other words, God, who can make no mistake, made man and woman for a spe cific work and to move in particular spheres, man to be regnant in his realm, woman to be dominant in hers. The boundary line between Italy and Switzer land, between England and Scotland, i» not more Ot marked than this distinetion between the empire masculine and the empire feminine. So entirely dis- similar are the fields to which God called them that you no more compare them than vou can oxygen and hydrogen, water and grass, trees and stars. Al this talk about the superiority of one sex to the other sex is an everlasting waste of ink and speech. ‘A jeweler may have a scale so delicate that he can weigh the dust of Hamonds, but where are the scales so deh- cate that you can weigh in them affection against afiection, sentiment against sent: ment, thought against thought, soul against soul, a man's word against a wom- an's word? You come out with the stereotyped re- mark that man is superior to woman in intellect, and then 1 open on my-desk the swarthy, iron typed, thunder-bolted writ- ings of Harriet Martineau and Elizabeth Browning and George Eliot. You come on with your stereotyped remark about wom- ans superiority to man in the item of af- fection, but 1 ask you where was there more capacity to love than in John, the disciple, and Robert MecCheyne, the Scotchman, and John Summerfield, the Methodist, and Henry Martyn, the mis sionary? The heart of those men was so large that after you had rolled into it the hemispheres there was room still left to marshal the hosts of heaven and set up the throne intellectual. 1 deny to woman the throne affectional No human phrase. ology will ever define the spheres, while there is an intuition by which we know when a man is in hi= realm and when a woman is in her real, and when either of them 1s out of it. No bungling legisia- tion ought to attempt to make a definition or to say, “This is the line and that is the line.” My theory is that if woman wants to vote she ought to vote, and that if a man wants to embroider and keep house he ought to be allowed to embroider and keep house. There are masculine women and there are e¢fleminate men My theory that you have no right to interfere with any, one’s doing anything that i= righteous Albany and Washington might as decree by legislatioh how high a brown thrasher should fly or how deep a trout should plunge as to try to seek the height or the depth of woman's duty The question of capa ity will settle finally the whole question, the whole subject When a woman is prepaced to preach she will preach, and neither conference nor presbytery can hinder her. When a » an is prepared to move in highest commer cial spheres, she will have great influence on the exchange, and no boards of trade can hinder her. | want wonu etand that heart and brain can any barrier that politicians may and that nothing can keep her back or keep her down but the | ity. I know there are w sirable nature who wander up and ¢ the country, having no homes of ti own or forsaking their own homos, talk ing about their rights, and we know very well that they themselves fit to vote nor fit (0 keep hoose. Their nus sion seems to be to humiliate the two sexes at the thought of what any one of us might become No one would want (o under laws that such wom uld enact or to have cast upon the children that such But I will show rights thal woman can ' well ut ou n to under overflow sel up. quesion Of Ca png men of most unde wn are neiher live en w society would raise best already the women you that the own has in her possession, tl position in t at this time 1s no one « § Com ation; ream « that twinw aown ODETees > hall voted OLA, san always nd te. Our great-grandfathers thought were by their voles putting Wash Presidential chair No the principles sh il by habits she incul him President was a Christ) mother's hand 4 the ballot when Lord Bacon wrote Newton philoso phized, and Alired the Great governed, and Jonathan Edwards thundered of ent to come. How fhany men there in high political station who to stdnd the 2 ich their moral principle was put had it not been for a wife's voice that aged them to do right and a wife's prayer that sounded jouder than the cia mor of partisanship! Why, my friends We men oxercise assem ' nimays they 1 into the . by him the made and wen insuificeent eneony the right of suffrage as it seems to be a feeble thing. You, a Christian man, come up to the ballot box, and you drop your vote. Right after vou comea a libertine or a sot. the offscouring of sireet, and he drops his vote, and his vote counteracts yours. But if in the quiet of life a daughter by hes Christian demeanor, a wife by her indus try, a mother by her farthfulness, casts a Vote in the right direction then nothing vam resist it, the influence of that vote will throb through the eternities My chief unxiety, then, is not that woman have other rights accorded her. but that she by the grace of God rise up to the appreciation of the glorious rights she already possesses. I shall only have time to speak of one grand and all absorb ing right that every woman has, and that i= to make home nappy. That realm no one has ever disputed with her. Men may come home at noon or at night, and thoy tarry a comparatively little while, but she the nome and fiex it. It is within her power to make it the most attractive place on earth, It’ is the only calm harbor in this world. You know as well as 1 do that this outside world and the business world is a long reene of jostle and contention. The man who has a doller struggles to keep it; the man who has it nel struggles to get it. Prices up. Prices down. Losses, Cains. fisrepresentations. Gougings. Under selling. Buyers depreciating; salesmen ex. pggerating. Tenants seek: leas rent; landlords (pmanding more, "Cold fidgety Strigaies ig office, Men who are in trying to keep in; men out trying to get in. Hips. tumbles. Detarationa Pani: Catastrophes. O woman, thank God you have a home and that you may be queen in it! Better be there than wear a queen's cor onet. Betier be there than carry the urse of a princess. Your abode may be umble, but you can by your faith in God and your Sheet fulnas of demeauot gild it with epiendors such as an uphols A hand never yet kindled. Wo naw There are abodes in the city—humble, two stories, four plain unpapeted rooms, undesirable neighborhood--and vet there is a man here today who would die on the threshold rather than surrender it. Why? It is home. Whenever he thinks of it he Sees angels of God hovering around it. Che ladders of heaven are let down to this house. Over the child's rough erib there are the chantings of angels, as those that sounded over Bethlehem. It is home. These children may come up alter awhile, and they may win high position, and they may have an afiluent residence, but they will not until their dying day forget that humble roof under which their forher rested and their mother sang and their sisters played. Oh, if you woyld gather up all tender memories, all the lights and shades of the heart, all banquetings and reunions, all filial, fraternal, paternal and conjugal af- fections, ‘and you had only jist four let- ters to spell out that height and depth and length and breadth and magnitude and eternity of meaning, you would, with streaming eves and trembling voice and agitated hand, write it out in those four living capitals, H-O-M-E! What right does woman want that is grander than to be queen in such a realm? Why, the eagles of heaven cannot fly across that dominion. Horses, Ranting and with lathered flanks, are not swift enough to run to the outpost of that realm, They say that the sun never sets on the British empire, but I have.to tell you that on this realm of woman's influence eter- nity never marks any bound. sabella fled from the Spanish thragne, pursued by the nation’s anathema, but she who is queen in a home will never lose her throne, and death itself will only be the annexation of heavenly principalities. When you want to get your grandest idea of a queen, you do not think of Cath- erine of Russia or of Anne of England or want to get your grandest idea of a queen vou think of the plain waman who sat op- posite your father at the table or walked with him arm in arm down life's pathway, sometimes to the thanksgiving banquet, sometimes to the grave, Put always to- gether, soothing your petty griefs, cor recting vour childish waywardness, joining in youu infantile sports, hesening to your “evening prayers, toiling for you with needle or at the spinning wheel and on nights wrapping you up warm. And then at last on that day when she lay in the back room dying and you saw her take those thin hands with which she toiled for vou so long apd put them together in a dying prayer that commend. ed you to God whom she had taught you to trust-—oli, she was the queen! The cha riots of God came down to fetch her, and as she went in all heaven rose up. You cannot think of her now without a rush of tenderness that stirs the deep founda. tions of your soul, end vou feel as much a child again as when you cried on her lap, and if vou could bring her back again to fpeak just once more your name as ten- derly as she used to speak it vou would be willing to throw yourself on the ground and kiss the sod that énvers he: “Mother, mother!” Ah, queen, she was the queen! Pe cod CTYIng, she was the many thou- miles a would have travel Gown belare h got to the box? om this work of sr God and ns all ths r aldermen and m \ sheriffs and constables # and presidents! To make one man have described y¥ thousand would want of se who go in the round of god- end dissipation, dis Xow. can you il me how eand : and mayor such how those grand we CTE | ma jet you fashion their bodies and going as far to ward disgraceful apparel as they dare go as not to be arrested of the police, behavior a sorrow to the good and a ature the vicious and an insult to who made them women and not nd tramping on down through a d dissipated life to temporal » § OF and eternal destruction MAD lightning of your £) = with the i dead at your feet all these al fashion to dissipation and to immortal soul cannot be fed upon God calle you up to em on Will you have it? od your heart, give to God give to God all your all your refinement, m for this world and the trike ' vida these bright eyes will be and these voices will be hushed last time you will look i Father's band, mother's hand, gi 3 snd, child's upon thus hand, will be be night, ang tHe i from the Je be a Ah in 2 Our and « will ray You wl were we sow | will {ne od by not Wave when sou desert 3 When you are sick of His hand and the storm wi t he wave His hand, and i k into midnooy Lis hand and the cl come down fr yi heaven with robes lustrous, blood washed and heaven glinted, in which you will array yourself for the mar riage supper of the Lamb. And then with Mir who struck the timbrel by the nd with Deborah, who led the wet into the fight, and with Han. wi gave her Samuel! to Lard, th Mare. who rocked Jesus to » op there were angels singing the : nd with Florence Nightingale, who bound up the battle wounds of the Oni mes will f the chalice of God Grink to the soul» elernal rescue, One twilight alter 1 had been playing with the children for some time I lav down on the lounge to rest. and. half sleep and hall awake, I seemed to dream thie dream: It seemed to me that | was m a far distant land—not Persia, although more Oriental lusuriance crowned the cities; nor the tropics, although more than tropical froitfulness filled the gar. dens; nor Italy, although niore than Ital ian softoess filled the air dered around, looking*for tharne and net. ties, but 1 found none of them grew there. And 1 walked forth and I saw the sun rise, and I said, “When will it set again ¥’ And the sun mnk not. And I saw all the people in holiday apparel, and I said “When will they put on workingman's garb again and delve in the mine and sweller at. the forge?” garments nor the robes did thew put off. And wandered in the suburbs and | said, “Where do they bury the dead of this great city? And I looked along by the hills where it would be most beaut ful for the dead to sleep, and I saw castles and towers and battlements, but not a mausoleum nor monument nor white slab could I see. And I went into the great chapel of the town and I said: 1 dro i Grog ’ EINE OF in treasure the in You yin on rity Shey mt?” swered, “We have no or in thi 3 And | wandered out. seeking oe find the place where were the the destitute, and | ound mansions of am- and ivory an . t i Des And vor ui go! ut no tear did 1 I was bewildered, shadow of a : ang) am I and w And a voice an. eat under the t tree, and I said, “What oe comes all this?” And the leaves, skipping up the flo and across the ps kling Joni An, bright and sparkling group, and when saw their step I knew it, and when 1 heard their voices I thought 1 knew them, but their apparel was so different from any thing I had Svar een 1 bowed, a Stranger 6 strangers, at after awhile, they clapped hande and shouted, 3 ol come, welcome!” the mystery was solved. eternity had come and that ( gathered us up into a higher oy said, “Are all here? And intumerable S{isations 4 re. And while tears Indness were raining down our cheeks and t of the Lebanon ced he brung hands and the towers of the wore chiming their welcome we be to the voices of great city laugh and sing and ‘ Hugh ig an leap and shout, “Home, COMMERCIAL REVIEW. General Trade Conditions. York SN cial) Hr .Y 4 . NEW Aasirect of trade alike in ton circles Weather and Northwest con specially generous in the Pacific Northwest ported The . i ana iron and steel change, but despite sumption growing stocks of pig tron are were a month ago on a comparati trifitng decrease ction Boot and i b woked good orders and hides are firm Wheat, lnding fi cek in the United St bushels as ag: and 1.113.641 Wheat 44.072.332, lowered con ’ ‘ the sirike i Out aller that the; prod shoe 111¢ HI ne w ast week, last year exports date AREIeRalt 109.044.0006 last Corn cxp against 900.7 last year “16K Busi number 168 in this 18K VCAr ARPTCRALC aga 1G5 13 fae v wil Penn Eadiern s1#413 ) 19 : Westen mia, 18'ca16; Southern Mens | § «i oid O08 28a 30¢ spring chickens targa. Ducks, Rage, Spring ducks Live Stack. East Liberiy-~Caitle steady: exta 2.50a8.75; prime $s5.4003.00. Hogs prime heavier, $6.1006.15; assorted me pigs as to weight and quality $5.70 Bri; Sheep slow; best wethers $3.00a 400: culls and common $i1.%0a2%0; yearlings $100a4.20; veal calves $6.%50a4 7.00. Chicago—Cattle—Texans firin, active: buichers’ stock steady to slow; canners stronger; good to prime steers, $4.43 ya0:; poor to medium $4008.25: ws $2.8084.55; bulle 82 38a4.2%8; calves casier. $3c00ougrs: Texas steers $1400 t.20; Hoge—mixed and butchers $5.25 SarVs: good to choice heavy $s502'4a Hats: rovgh heavy $5.soasfo: lig $2 5000.00: bulk of sales $58oabos Sheep——Good to choice wether: $3.50a 10: fair to choice mixed $3ici130: Westerns sheep S340ag.10: vearling Satcad to: native Inaba $Sicoasao Wegtern lambs 84.0605. 40, | i } A bit of paper money has been dis covered in China 104 years oid. Its face value iz R187. redeemable in silver FITS permanently cured, No fits or nervous. ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer, $2 trial bottle and treatise free Dr.R.H. Kring, 144., £8] Arch 8¢,, Phils, Pa The Mexican volcano Popocatapet] was utilized as a source of sulphur more than 400 years ago Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrap for ehildren teething, soften this gums, reduces inflamms- tion, alleys pain, cares wind colic. 25+ a boils The shipping trade slong the Central American consts is to a large extent in German hands Tamsure Piso’s Care for Consumption save | my life three years ago. Mus, Tuoxas Rosn- pixs, Maple Bt, Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17, 199, (irecks were dependence the much The Phoenicians and the first to p.ace naval warfare on KNOW THE VALUE OF | \ IT WILL 11 TI KEEP I IN THE ll « WETTES WEATHER | AN { “J SHOWING FULL TINE OF GARM A. J.TOWEK CO. BOSTON. best Las Test 77 YEARS wr Nurs STARK BROS, Lovisians, Mo. Hontaviile. Als KEW DISCOVERY; gives quick relist! and cores worst Book of testimonials sud JO days’ treatmest bree. Dr. HB. BH GREEN SEONS, Bax 3, Atlantis, Gs pr , ony » CARTRIDGES from .22 always give entire satisfaction, THEY SHOOT WHERE 2] VL TIRH SS —— - A cont No vacations, Bookkeeping, Ehorihand, ! ce. “Leading business college south of the Potomac Phila. Stenographers Address GM. smithdeal President, Richmond ASIHiMA-HAY FEVER ENE DR.TAFTS_, SIND FOR STH FREE TRIAL BOTTLE Aoveess DR.TAFT. 79 £130" ST. NY. CITY Ladies Ix gentiemen Vea and Women a8 local Mauagers and all expenses, We want inieliigent Men Traveling Representatives of salsry $900 to $1500 a yest 3 according to experience and abiliiy We also want locs] representatives; salacy $9 10 Ji15 # week and commission, depending upon the time devoted. Send stamp for full particulars and Rate position prefered. Address, Dept. B THI COMPANY, Philadelphia, Pa. WILLS PILLS —BIGREST OFFET EV:I1 MADE Foroniv 10 Cents we will seis aay J. si Gress | * { 12 ie is 34 sarth, an i ve the t Bow to wakes Mone ey Nigh ir yi Ridross & i Fas KK. 1, 5s Medicina Company, 23 Eliza beth st... Hagerstown, Md, Brasch Ofer 120indiana Ave., Washington, i. «. The Kauce that made West Point famous” McILHENHRY'S TABASCO. Use CERTAIN: CURE. 3 HB PrEnALEL tia. ELLE il LR yr; gsm orn it. BK lure! TO ADVERTISE ThiIS PAPER. iN fw # C de and loaded in a by skilied experts. ¢ ALWAYS R THE FY PATEL " " 3 . A BING LE SET Is of THE SET jiu: ana bumiin or hate, when ell tise tal. SoM throneh Rana, aid Te hosse Yrope, isoston, U §. A " y 4 Portis
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers