psc AAR pr claim as to the efficacy of Peruna. Take, for instance, the United States Dispensatory as a tonic. as a SUBSTITUTE FOR QUININE Our Peruna Tablet is Peruna With Fluid Removed. TT a———— ? BIS, OR past fifty Useful in chronic cystitis, chronic dys- entery and diarrhea, and some chronic diseases of the liver and kidneys. These opinions as to the ingredients of Peruna are held by all writers on the subject, including Bartholow and Scudder. (catarrh of the mucous surfaces of the increasirg the tonicity of the mucous OF HYDRASTIS, BARTHOLOW SAYS it is applicable to stomatitis mouth), follicular pharyngitis (catarrh ~ THE PULPIT. A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. ROBERT COLLYER. Subject: Toward the Sunset, Brooklyn, N. Y.— The venerable but still vigorous Dr. Robert Colyer preached In the First Unitarian Church Sunday morning to a large congregation. His subject was “Looking Toward Sunset,” and for his text he took the two passages of Scripture: I. Timothy 4:8: “The promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come,” and II. Cor- inthians 15:53: *“This mortal must put on immortality.” Dr. Collyer sald: I think it Is no wonder, as the years come and go, and we fare on toward the sunset of the life that now is, the heart in us should feel a touch of dismay now and then when we try to imagine ourselves out of the body, but the same man or wom- an, away from the world we live in, yet still in a home which will be homelike and welcome, and of a day when the seasons will be no more what they have been or the sun and stars, the streets on which we walk { or the homes in which we dwell. A { time when we can clasp hands no more with friends; sit no more at the table and join in the cheery talk, go to our work in the morning and when the day's stint is done go home, take some book we love best to read and then go to sleep through the silent, shadowy hours to wake again in the morning and find that God has made all things new. And I think this touch of dismay may well be of all things natural and therefore right, because we are in this body and find that in the measure of our life is our loyalty to the things we can touch and see. To the feeble aged this loy- ality to the world he lives in is no more than an instinet to hold on, but in those who are still hale and strong membranes of the throat. It also re- gad chronic bronchial aflections. TTT wid Va vaso motor nerves. general In the r tairs of Virgin collinsonia canadensis is considered a highly as a remedy in chronic diseases These citaticns ought t ky oan “wel < This is our claim, and we ars abl Dissappointed In Washington. | “1 went to hear ‘Il Trovatore' last, aight.” i “Fine opera.” i “Oh, shucks! Man, the hapd gangs have been playing them times | for years I recognized all.” — Washington Herald. Or-* em . i . 8 } If you suffer from Boll : Riese or have Cin Mew Discovery snd Tresiment R snd 84 page book, Fr lopey Fr froe by il. 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Serd for 40-page FREE catalogue, fisting over 1000 articles given FREE for PREMIUMS. Address pacific Coast Borax Co, New York. >You can get a Splendid Pro- mium for 100 Coupon values or less, represented by Borax Carton Tops and Soap Wrappars. oa . ia, Kentucky, Tennessee and Carolina, | panacea for many disorders, including of the lungs, heart disease and asthma. t to show to any candid mind chat Pe- a to substantiate this claim by ample The oldest known English picture is one of Chaucer, painted on a panel in 1380. What Caa«rs Headache, From October to Mar, Colds are the most frequent cavse of Hesdeche, Laxative Promo Quinine removes cnuse. EW, A report from Hanyang states that the late Vieeroy's model prison at Yuchang is now lighted by electri city. The instaliation was made by a Cantonese who had studied in the Paris of Medicine | for the dis covery of an absolute cure for tuber So far no one has won iL The Academy Year Something New Under the Sun, A lady in Ilinois sent us 1c a year ago and sold $37.76 worth therefrom, or made 314 per cont. That's new, Just send this notice with 12¢ and re ceive the most original seed and plant catalog published and 1 pkg. “Quick Sek 1 pkg. Earliest Ripe Cabbage 10 1 pkg. Earliest Emerald Cucumber..., 1 pkg. La Crosse Market Lettuce..... pkg. Early Dinner Onion. .. Strawberry Muskmelon Thirteen Day Radish., kernels glonously fower seed........... Sisesesensun ans AS A6 A3 pxg. 15 Above is sufficient seed to grow 35 bu. liant flowers and a'l is mailed to you . POSTrAID Fou Ie, or if you send 18, we will add a ckage of Berl'ner Earliest Cauliflower. John A. A CL the orod of tobacco smoke in a room. a STII EYESIGHT WAS IN DANGER Irom Terrible Eczema-—Baby's Head a Mass of Itching Rash and Sores Disease Cured by Cuticara. * (ur little girl was two months old when she got a rasa on her face and within five days her face and head were all one sore. We used different remedies but it got worse instead of better and we thought she would turn blind and that her ears would fall off, She suffered terribly, and would scratch until the blood came. This went on until she was five months old, then 1 had her under our family doctor's care, but she continued to grow worse. He said it was eczema. When she wits seven months old 1 started to use the Cuticura Remedies ent girl. You could not see a sign of a gore and she was as fair as a new-born baby. She has not had a sign of the eczema since. Mrs. H. F. Budke, LeSueur, Minn, Apr. 16 and May 2, 1007." Colombo has four tides daily, and Malta has none at all. a Quinine” 3 » ¥ E wr oon ok one av. B it is a loyalty for which they can give They love the fra- grance of the opening spring that fills them with the old delight, and the summer with her fruits and flowers, and the golden treasures of the au- ter. All this is so dear and human that it comes a little hard to think of And so it If the option were giv- en to many of us while the tides of life run deep and full to exchange this life for the splendors of the ce- lestial city, to give up the fight for the necessaries of life, for the white robes, the harps and crowns, most of us would hesitate to say, we love this best, after all, and do not want to give it up, no matter what may be waiting In the blessed life to come. The gravitation of our being binds us our planet, and we cannot cry, what it is here and now. Nor do I think that God's gift of life should be thought of as if it were in quarantine and this world a Some such conclusion, 1 The men who have talked in The men most and best were of an abounding human life, and while they were on the way to Augustine or play or sing So of the men who claim to a place They loved their own land like good Sir Walter SBeott, waters and to go afishing like who once told a friend that he could not think of writing another word in his once 7 them because they are part of my. self and I am only as shards and | shreds of the whole fair circle. My | soul demands, if, being mine here, they are not mine hereafter And in looking into my own life TI can see | where I have missed my way and | want to try again, I am only a learn. | er. I want still to learn and turn my | lesson to some noble use. Bo what | can this incompleteness mean which | haunts but the intimation of com- pleteness? This claim as it seems to | me is founded in fair reason, and we hold the right to see the account! come out fair and trueon this ground, | if on no other. i May 1 not say once more that the years as they come and go should | bring the heart to understand that this we call death should not be thought of-—and especially by those who like myself have had a long lease | of life—as a bane but a blessing, and not to die while so surely would this | world be the loser by our staying; | that those who love us most dearly would pray that we might be set free from the burden of the over many vears. For it would make no mat- ter to the creatures of the lower ere- ation we have glanced at, {f their life could run on forever in the old kindly grooves, because they must measure their life by their instincts, and the present moment is the perfect sphere. They want no better, as they fear no worse, and take no thought for the morrow. The squirrel has his nuts and the bee his honey, and so through all the spheres of their life. But here lies the distinction be. tween our life and theirs: Where they have instincts we have memories, where they have habits we have out- looks and inlooks, anticipations and reflections, and our manhood on the {ine to which we have risen holds in its heart our cross and our crown. The glamor of youth is mine no more; yet, I may remember with ten- der regret and I may in some dim fashion be aware why the eternal love should give me the blessed boon of death, when I have drank my fill at the fountain of life down here and ft is time to cross the bar I must take this truth home to my heart: that by the time I have had enough of life the world 1 live in now may have had enough of me. So I must not only get out of the world, but out of the way, so that the new man may have room for the work he must do. To most of us the time comes when we begin to trace the truth of the new time oy the lines of longitude and forget the lines of lati- tude: we do not believe in the new man from the Lord, but want the old | man and manhood that will be true to our line of measurement. Again, when we grow old the knowledge of the evil In the world begins to lie iike lead on us, while the knowledge | of the good can hardly hold its own. | One man in ten may take me in and {I lose more grace by that one man than 1 gain by the nine who did not; I think more of the bitter than the swest, brood over the cruelty and for- get the mercy While I must say, with the great apostle, “It doth not yet appear what we shall be.” 1 would hold on well to the faith that I shall be myself when I pass from the shadows of the seen and temporal into the light of the | unseen and eternal. I shall pass out of one room in the “many mansions’ into another, and what treasure in | the heaven was mine here will be | mine there, while that which is to come will not seem so much another life as the ripeness and perfecting of | this life that now is. We may say we know nothing about the mystery of the life beyond, but this is not true if we belleve in Him who “brought life and immortality to light.” We know enough to keep the heart from trouble, and this is what we need to know, for it was the heart's love which brought us here, that nursed us forth, bore with us, believed in us and hoped for us, and never falled—and that death | cannot slay. No one thing in this universe can be of deeper true factor and say, with a very no- ble man I knew who has gone out of ! the bed to God's house: “I prefer hell { to annihilation.” The angels are well { enough. but he would not be an an- { gel. Angels have had no mothers to | eroon over them, by whai we can make out, or fathers to romp with | them. They never fell in ove when the time came, wondering over their | rare fortune, or made homes where the children clung about their knees, | or fought strong batties for the truth and the right, or wept over graves, | Angels, then, must be poor where ¢uch a man is rich, or rich in some | way he cannot as vet understand. He ‘ has solved the problem so far of his ! own personal identity and would not { have it resolved into the grandest | presence that ever trod the earth. These years, with their clustering | memories, are his own vears. They stand out clear and reveal to the man his own life. A poor thing, he may { say, but mine own: full of mistakes, but mine own. 1 want to Keep track of myself. Bend me where you will, but let me be sura that [ am still the man who is now living this hu- ! man life, as those are who have lived | human lives with me. “The kind, { the true, the brave, the sweet who walk with us no more.” they will be { there in the life to cotae, not une | clothed but clothed upon and then I shall rest in hope for: It is the dear belief That on some solemn shore, Beyond the reach of grief, ‘e find our own once nore; nd sphars of time, Bat seme SAE ates trol, me. Dells > immortal soul. This faith 1 fain would keep, This hope would not forego: Eternal be the sleep, 1 not to waken so, There must be another life to round this out and clothe it with perfec- Hoa, The ye Does Dine Jlussome or one fruit; w let thelr young go forth and hing: flocks Eh kin, bu I long to be-—released from ing in my life down here; and not a ten. so far away in time and space. What care | Though falls the sky turn: No fires of doom Can ever comsume What never was made, burn. sor meant to The Man of Prayer. ingness of a soul which lives in com- munion with God; asking and receiv- ing, seeking and finding, knocking and having the door opened, wrote Thomas Adam, over a century ago. For what is happiness but this? saying that a man wishes for the very thing he sought and is sure to have it? And such is the man of the fountain of all happiness for his portion, and can not be disappointed of his desire. He is happy in the very act of prayer, knowing it to be the right frame of his mind, the proof of his renewed state and his capacity for receiving blessing from God. Preparing Prayer. All personal work must be perme- ated with love. A perfunctory invi- tation or a word spoken without sym- pathy and love will not prove effec tive. The spirit in which wear proach an unsaved person ma use jess all our labors. Preparation by prayer is necessary before we under take personal work. If you are in communion with God, it is much eas- fer to get into touch and communion with your fellow men. ; In Thine Inner Chamber, Having entered into thine amber, shut thy door again Shamber, shut thy 2 : loves and pr NEWS OF PE ' PROSPERITY LOOMS UP, Norristown (Special), --Work has begun on an enlargement of the plant of the Dlamond State Fiber Company, Bridgeport, and the doub- ling of the capacity of March's pork- packing at the same time, give a hopeful prospect for bus iness Industry in the center of the Schuylkill Valley, Both establish- ments give employment to large forces of men In addition to the bullding opera- tions already awarded at the State Hospital for the Insane, requiring a million and a half of bricks, Steward John L. West is asking bids for still another brick structure that will cost about $30,000. These contracts are to be let this week Similar reports cover conditious in the iron and steel industries of this valley, which are picking up slowly. The sam general conditions with more alacrity in other parts of this ceunty, especially along the North Penn Rallroad At Landedals 150 men of the Coxe Stove Company are employed at full time, with likelihood of the other 150 employee being called any day. The Central Radiator Company and Krup's foun- dries have full complements at werk All Industries at Amber and North Wales show signs of going full with everything in readiness to full tit establishment exists SUSPECTED POISON. Pottsville (Special). — Startling charges of poisoning made in Register H. H zer in the contested will case of Mrs Elizabeth were court here before Selt- Holland, of Mahanoy the disposition of a large estate being atl stake on the issue Dr. G. W. Reese, executor of estate, testified that during Mrs land's illness sl symptoms of frequently she was said, that second test Co the Hol displayed and ning vomited ie Poise it was the oi ned, Dr to mas: [ree = nrove tha ance ana i MINE BOARD ACCUSED. his 2a we WIRY I54 : Special) i remove A Cx 30 ner’'s jury asked strict ju Salsburg to from office the members Board Hurley, Pine, certificates act as min it was shown Ignatz Moosic, Euglish, had been in this only eight months and was not quali- fled to be tificate without an examination incompetency, the jury charged, sulted in death of one of his borers Moosic has been held on the charge of manslaughter of the Miners’ Third District, Griffiths and } x 11 wes 11 they {llegally of the E. P because to rs issued men at the hearing that His the l HORSE IN STALL 15 YEARS, Altoona ial) drayman a been imprisoned for fifteen his because the ani- mal ran off and threw the occupants of a buggy into the road. The owner $0 angry with the horse that he registered a vow never to take the animal out again {Spe Pius Inlow, bought horse that owner's stable became ularly. Lack of excrelse horse so weak he could hardly walk He was also handicapped by his hoofs, which had gotten to be a foot long. Before the animal could be cut away CAN'T ELECT DEAD MAN. The Schuyl- Pottsville (Special) man can not be elected to office, and candidate receiving the next highest The Coart refused to make an ap- puintment of clerk of East Norwe- glan Township, stating that although John Cooney received the highest number of votes at the last election, he was dead before the election was held and the next highest man was legally elected. FEDERATION OF LABOR GAINS. federation of Labor received the re- port of 'C, F. Quinn, secretary and treasurer, showing a balance on hand of $381.37. and expenditures of $1,015.91 last year, There are 280 local unions and thirty-five central bodies affiliated with the Federation, a gain of eighteen locals since the last meeting. Resolutions were introduced and referred to a committee, opposing Jocal option, favoring employers’ lia- bility bill, wanting wood pulp placed on the free list, demanding greater safety in public buildings. AAA Merchant Takes Life. Lewisburg (8pecial).—At an early hour W. Brady Marsh, a leading citi- zen and owner of a big shoe store in town, apparently committed sui- cide by jumping into the river from the new bridge at the foot of Market treet. * ! Band Will Travel In An Auto. Birdsboro (Special).«—The Forty- sixth Regiment Band, of this place, to con i ——— A AOA Sr ——_————— » "BELLED BUZZARD" CAUGHT. Oxford (Bpecial) Great ment was caused in East Notting- ham by the capture of the bellied buzzard which for years has taken the place of the legendary stork in that township. Samuel Winchester was the captor and people from all the surrounding neighborhood flocked to his place to see it all day long. This bird has been known for vears in East Nottingham, because of its enormous size and because of a sleighbell which someone had wired to its leg a long time ago Gradu- ally it came to be noticed that every time this buzzard was seen hovering over a farm house, the family was enlarged by a new arrival and of late years this sign has been regarded as infallible, the mothers no longer telling their children of the stork bringing the little o but it is al- ways the belled bi which car- ries these preci Hence, interest whic un its cap- Mr. Winchester he intends letting the bird free lest race suicide sweep over the community excite g nes the | ture *f A REMARKABLE TRIO, Bor- in hich go to make in the taking full neighbor- » reputed Toy the the ridge carpenters Her Oxford (Special) Hopewell ough, with three octogenarians the twenty houses w this | State share hood, up smalliest borough all of them activities and in takes Osler theories climbed, without roof of her home and fron pole superintended who were making repairs thers r, David Robi: 3, Was ing an apple tree » at was jumping from ithe agility of a Meanwhile, the 5 YOArs oia of no stock Mrs fartha asgistance, to brothe prun hand and limb with David F and school his last of young Was { ope teacher, { birthday, gathere abou him on umber and wrestling ifty vears Afi Enes Mil | bands from any She was married Iman a year ago ‘ried Amos Henry man, who ha for bigamy Her Moore g LOW other husbands and after another, 1 them, and asserting she has dong | Wrong. Jacob i One {of » ghe tired her ar- nothing ¥ is indignant A STUDENT DROWNED. ivan R N.J. a University, Coffin, at in city. Easton Asbur Lehigh the { Special) of y Pask student was drowned River this y with two Lafayette Col- students Coffin was canoeing, and while shooting the Weygat Rap- ids stood up in the craft in order to gave 1 from getting wet | The canoe upset and the three went Coffin sani while the ) 1 h shore. The of John L N. J., and engineering. Delaware near 1 1 408 compansi 1 th oe is clothes { overboard { others managed { dead student was a | Coffin, of Asbury Park, was uvding electrical | He was 22 years old THIS AND THAT The mail. telephone and telegraph are more generously used in the | United States than in any other coun i try. Judge Coffee, of California, has | decided that a bequest of $1,900 {made to = pet dog is invalid on the j ground that it is impossible for a tdog to inherit money French fishermen have recently been surprised and pleased by the appearance of fishes heretofore un- known in their waters, including the sheepshead and the biuefish. Kelley and Peare, of La Grande, Ore., have produced on their farm a potato weighing 6% pounds, a foot jong, and larger around than the arm of an ordinary blacksmith. in Peru the number of rubber-pro- ducing trees is steadily growing less Systematic - planting and cultivation would be of inestimable benefit to the country and the individual As an evidence of China's progress it is stated that the number of news papers published in that country has been increased greatly in the last decade. They now number 200. Twin sisters named Moore, of Chi cago, are so much alike that Dr Charles A. Street, a dentist, in love with one of them, was forced to iden tify his sweetheart by her teeth. British returns show that § der cent. of the workmen of union mem- bership in the United Kingdom were unemployed in December, as com- pared with 4.9 per cent. in the same month in 18086. One of the many methods proposed to rid London of its fog nuisance was the erection of towers in different parts of the city through which i was designed to pump the foggy at mosphere and clarify it. It costs nearly as much to pay the salaries of thé municipal servants of New York City as it does to support the entire army of the United States, The salaries amount close to $70, 000,000 annually. Lions are plentiful In Portugese East Africa, and that region is a paradise for hunters of big game n some sections the authorities offer a reward for each lion's head brought in, and they permit the hunter to i Ger %1 {1 we i i i