TH RR a ——————— ——— June 17, 2056, “Yes,” said the eminent merchant, as he swallowed a tabloid beefsieak, “cur ancestors were an improvident st.” “They certainly were,” assented the other, gulping down a pill containing two fried eggs and a cup of coffee “Why,” Ruggins’ ‘Customs of the Ancients says that during the period of 1902-5 a busy merchant frequently spent ten min utes in eating one meal” B. E. 8. SENT FREE! Cares Blood and Skin Diseases, Cancers, Bone "ains, Itehing Humors, Ete, Blood Pim- Send no mouey, si: Jotanie Balm at our expense. B.1I ples, soabby, scaly, itching Eozema, Ulcers, Eating Sores, Scrofula, Blood Poison, Bone and ¥ 3. B. cures Pains, Swellings, Rheumatism, Cancer, all Blood and Skin Troubles, Especially ad- vised for cases that patent medicines and Hot chronie the doctors, Springs fail to Druggists, #1 per large bottle, sent free by writ- cure or help, To prove it cures. B. B. B. ing Broop Bary Co,, 12 Mitchell 8t., Atlanta and free medloal letter Ga. Describe trouble advice sent in sent at once, prepaid. you will speak a g: when cured, sealed All we ask fs that for B. B. B. wd word Some people who seem to think the world owes them a living are too lazy to collect: the debt. In the Blue Grass Region. “1 take off my hat to a 50c. box of Tetter- ine, doctors in seven States failed to eure.” W. Cantrell, Louisville, Ky, 50c. a box by mail from J.T, Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga., if your dru; gist don't keep it. The child that cries for the moon may grow up and want the earth. “l had a bad cough for six weeks and could find no relief until I tried Ayer’s Cherry Pecto. ral. Only one-fourth of the bottle cured me.” L. Hawn, Newington, Ont. Neglected colds always lead to something serious. They run into chronic bronchitis, pneumonia, asthma, or consumption. Don’t wait, but take Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral just as soon as your cough begins. A few doses will cure you then. Three sizes: 23¢., 58. $1. AN druggists, & take it, growing insure when enough 1s in the fertilizer, Neither quanlily nor Possiuic Potash. for our free books THE ORIGINAL OILED CLOTHING BLACK OR YELLOW WILL KEEP YOU DRY NOTHING ELSE WILL TAKE NO SUBSTITUTES CATALOGUES FREE SHOWING FULL LINE OF GARMENTS AND HATS Largest growers of Clover, Timothy and Grasses, Our northern grown Clover, for vigor, frost and drouth resisting properties, has justly become famous. SUPERIOR CLOVER, bu. $5.90; 100 ibs. $3.20 La Crosse Prime Clover, bu, $5.60; 100 ibs. $3.20 Samples Clover, Timothy and Grasses and great talog mailed you for bc postage. JOHN A. SALZ SEED Co, LA Crosse, Wis. a Lead the World. Are You Sick? Send your name and P. 0. address to The R. B. Wills Medicine Co., Hagerstown, Md, Gold Medal at Buffalo Exposition, McILHENNY’S TABASCO i SUMPTI "WHEN SUN OF LIFE SETS Dr, Talmage Says the Christian Finds Fulfillment in the Time of Old Age. The Light of the Evening Tide— Last Hours amined Wasnizarox, D. C.—In this subject Dr. Talmage puts a glow of gladness und triumph upon passages of life that are uswn- ally thouche to be somewhat gloomy; text Zachariah xiv, 7, “At evening time it shal be light.” While “night” in all languages is the symbol for gloom and suffering, it is often really cheerful, bright and impressive. 1 speak not of such nights as come with no star pouring light from above or silvered wave light from be murky, portentious, ut tossing hurtling un magnificence of heaven turn out on night seems as though the song y parade, and it f i i {lad ad we » shouting for joy tle, and the trapper on vast prairie, and the belated traveler by the roadside and the soldier from teat, rthiy hosts gazing upon heaven.y and shaphe rd. 3 3 ing the flocks Cas rds gua angel bauds above sm set the silver bells a rod in the highest a wd will toward men What a solemn and glorion in the wilderness! Night mountains! ) in the grant nigh wpieal groves! night night on Roman cam; ringing, to ro id on carth gO go 3 among the Fra F igen ocean! severities! agna! Awl Glorious ni Thank God tht mid sea after a tempest! the coast ngnthouses on cannot tind our way in My text may well suggest that. as tl i ho ; ie denice NANY « 1%, but youlh--we y what ti 14] il] know i gs were not al ways on your brow; that snow was not a! ways on your head; that brawny muscle did not always bunch your arm: you have not always worn spectacles. Grave and dignified as you now are. you once went coasting down the hillside threw off your hat for the race or sent the ball fly ing sky high. But youth will not always last. It stays only long enough to give us exuberant spirits and broad shoulders for burden carrying and an arm with which te battle our way through difficulties. Life's path, if you follow it long enough, will come under frowning crag and cross trem. bling causeway. Blessed old age, if you let it come naturally! You cannot hide it. You may tr to cover the wrinkles, but you cannot cover the wrinkles. If the time has come for vou to be old, be not ashamed to be old. The grandest things in all the universe are o'd--old mountains, old riv- ers, old seas, old stars and an old eternity. Then do not be ashamed to be old unless you are older than the mountains and old. er than the stars. How men and women will lie! They say gay they are forty, but they are sixty. They say they are twenty, but they are thirty. They say they are sixty, but they are eighty. Glorious old age if found in the way of righteousness! How beautiful the old age of Jacob, leaning on the top of his stuff; of John incy Adams, falling with the harness on; of Washington Irving, sitting, pen in hand, amid the scenes himself had nade classical; of John Angell James, to the last Jroclaiming the goupel to fhe masses of irmingham: of Theodore Frelinghuysen, down to feebleness and emaciaton devol. ing his illustrious faculties to the kingdom of Cod. At eventide it was light! or Bee that you do honor to the aged. A philosopher stood at the corner of the street day after day, saying to the passers by: “You will be an old man: you will be an old man. You will be an old woman; you will be an old woman.” thought that he was crazy, that he was they have not many more steps to take. Steady those tottering limbs, they will soon be at rest. Plow not up that face with any more wrinkles; trouble and eare have marked it {nll enough. Thrust no into that old heart; it will soon cesse to beat. “The eye that mocketh its father and refuseth to obey ite mother the ravena of the valley shall pick it out, and the young eagles shall eat it.” You have watched the calmness and the glory of the evening hour. The the heavens are as though the sun in departing had forgot to shut the gate after it. All the heaven above and heaven beneath leaf rustling or a bee humming or a grass ence in the meadow, among beautiful shail be the evening of the The heats of earthly conflict glory of heaven fille all joy and peace 1 ight! world cool: the text shall i Christian winter's day Now, my Finally, my the end of the how short a work you « a short winter's day he and set 4. The birth fly only a lit m and burial are ends, life 3 ses at 8 an do apart, ether, the era uches a grave. I went int h 10 f one of my pa- ay. The 2) WKS Gic and with th 1 { up and down Dray came and the household bad perished. We h black bool ading over the lies to ashe ust to dust, Christmas that t wit grave, "As But 1 hurl away this darkness. nave you weep I cannot unto (rod. who shall ne ie, heaven x i never up to The gate. Lhey say, did a great heaven Len et £3 : “ Ye have ne i many noble things on earth. We endowed colleges and took care of the poor - The voice from within “I never knew nother group come up to the gate aven and knock. The gatekeeper “The password They answer, “We were wanderers from God and deserve to die, but we heard the voice of Jesug-—us' “Aye, aye,” says the gatekeeper, “that is the password! Lift up your hoade, ye everlasting ates, and let these people come in. They go in and surround the throne, jubilant forever! Ah, do you wonder that the last hours of the Christian on earth are illuminated by thoughts of the coming glory? Light in the evening. The medicines may be bitter. The pain may be sharp. The parting may be heartrending. Yet light in the even- ing. As all the stars of the night sink their anchors of pearl in lake and river and sea 80 the waves of Jordan shall be il luminated with the down flashing of the glory to come. The dying soul up at the constellations. “The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall 1 fear?” “The Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall lead them to living fountains of water, and God shall wipe away all tears from thelr eyes.” . Close the eyes of the departed one: earth would seem tame to its enchanted vision. Fold the bands; life's work is ended. Veil the face; it has been trans figured, Mr. Toplady in his dying hour said, “Light.” Coming nearer the expirin moment he exclaimed with illuminate countenance, ri dpi In the last instant of his breathing he lifted up his hands and wried: “Light! Light!" Thank for light is the evening! (Copyright, 196% & Xiopsch. | ras wo > 4 wed ' Rss wordg Ye i gave, ! An Urgent Desire, “Papa, do you know this is my eigh- teenth birthday?” “Yes, my dear.” “Papa, 1 want you to do me a great girl buried her face in the paternal bosom. “And what is wants?" “Papa, you have gas company, haven't you? “Well, yes, my ! “Then get them to 1 away right influence from f our 3 1 { that the 1 { i father little nd sn't a augnter Wash sion ol ferry Sixth a dime vas Not "“Yeented South Af: ¢ of Ointments Vor Catarrh Contain Mercury, That Beavt For the Bowels. Ko matter vhai alls you. head as eancey, vou will ver got wall bowels a : f, Cascannrs cure yon ithout a gripe of PCASY natural nm cents to star: gelt health back. Cas. Carns Candy Cathart! he gentine, puty in ‘metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it, Beware of imitations, Paan, , Cost you just 10 venient Some people only seem to put their best oot forward when they are looking for trouble, Many Behool Children Are Slekly. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children, used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children's Home, New York, break up Colds in 26 hours, cure Foverishness, Headache, Stomach Troubles, Tecthing Disorders and Destro Worms, At all druggists’, 250, Sample mailed Free, Address Allen 8, Olmsted, Le Roy, N.X. Venice has a German school, which, howe rer, has more Italian than German childran. FITSpermanently cured, No fits or nervous. news after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NervoRestorer, #2trial bottle and trealise frea Dr. BR. H. Krixz, Ltd, 831Aren 0, Thila., Pa, There are about 900,000 more women Iam sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago. Mus, Tomas Ron. BINS, Maple 8t., Norwich, N. Y., Fob, 17, 1900, Tea consumed in England is subject to 1 duty of twelve cents a pound, Rn A AAS NINE, i Mrs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children Jsthing, soften the gums, reduees inflamma. tion, ¥# pain, cures wind colic, 250 a bottle, Does the detective have to get a pointer order to dog criminal's footsteps? « in , Young “Dear of womb three years have intense pai severe cramps For three mont while health and h tainly have one g Vegetable Cong IY permission to Yours sincercly, Miss Marion C When womes e troubled menstruation, . womb, that bearing.-d ating (01 weak $s $43} Hatuie they should remember there ia « Pinkham’s Vegetable Refuse to buy any other nu Mrs. Pinkham invite CINE, 1 ri Fad Grass, “i Popular * getabl : Compound. wed me ly ilar and would often seine $5303 daches and Pinkham’s Memory mnmcinory, 7 y Pe “i 1 Lydia E. usca OT GENT i . Lydia E. a trou ice, Address, Lynn, Mass. Pe EXOT R * "ws LZER SEED i Nr 5 ANY, La Crosse, Wis. iow le Got His Birthmard ¥ I TE a cures the most quficnit cases of Rheumatiom after every other form of treatment has {2 ved St. Jacobs Oil never fails. IT CONQUERS PAIN . Price, 25¢. and 50¢, 150 Kinds for 16¢c. It iam fact that Salers vegetable and flower are found in more gardens and on more ferns than any of we ol Opera a © own © Over 0 the hole DISCOVERY; mes el and cures wort Sdn Yu trentmont B Atanta, Os _ { Fp . il SHOES ¥ “¥ UNION MADE 7 v rease of pales vm Lalide LEDS wee $45, 908 Pairs, 1890 a £2 plan 1000 1 Tan Patra. 901 >=1,566,720 Pairs, |r RSI Sutiness Wore Than Doubicd Four Yewrs. i rime make vith S50 4 are foand to aur 3 Wton, £1 deathers, ivciwding Potent i, Coroba Colt, and National Kanoeros. Fou Osler Eysiste and Atenas Pack Books (eed, W. L. Douglas $4.00 Gils Bdge Line™ ARDot be equalled at any price, ste Ersvergtons i. Fi 3 » MODERATE RATES. a any of tha fevieh Ph Avene | ated vi fo «» Broom which it is one walk to ‘ - for the axe REPROOF. shopping (ve Bockiste, wore SRI, per C5 AVIS IT PAYS ‘32 oars
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers