A 3 Rayer i P Oueen of Sheba gave King So [hronicles, ix., 9. ? ¥iibe portico and a great tower, adorned with Bsorder, five hundred were captured by David his father, in battle. « pawing of four thousand fine horses in the | /" who had charge of the i the 1 King Solomon was an early riser, tradition % says, and used to take a ride out at daybreak: ¢ and when in bis white apparel, behind the ! swiftest horses of all the realm, and followed “11 suppose it was something worth getting up 7 ‘at five o'clock in the morning to look at. ¢ Solomon was not like some of the kings of the present day-—erowned yy eclipsed by his intellectual power, i" seemed to know evervthing, {¢ great naturalist the world OR. TALMAGE. XN DIVINE'S SUN- DA } SERMON. DE Subject: “Humdrum Abolished,” —i “OF Spices great abundance; neither was there any such Spice ag the omon,"=11 a’, What is that building out yonder glitter i x in the sun? Have you not heard! It is ighe house of the forest of Lebanon. King ASolomon has just taken to it his bride, the Princess of Egypt. You see the pillars of (dns thovwzand shields of gold, hung on the ‘mtsr!= of the tower--five hundred of these + hicids of gold manufactured at Solomon's Seo how they blaze in i the noonday sun! 4 Bolomon goes up the ivory stairs of his ; throne between twalve lions in statuary, and sits down on the back of the golden bull, the head of the bronze beast turned toward the ople. The family and attendants of the ing are so many that the caterers of the place have to provide every day one hundred sheep and thirteen oxen, besides the birds | and the venison. I hear the stamping and royal stables, There were important officials work of gathering straw and the barley for these horses, , by mounted archers in purple, as the caval- i cade dashed through the streets of Jerusalem imbecility, All the splendor of his palace and retinue way Why, be He was the flrst | ever saw, Pea. cocks from India strutted the basaltic walk, | I' and apes chatted in the trees and deer stalked | (Cand tradition says these birds were so ¥ tamed that Solomon might walk clear across * Wvestigation y Shal-be Wide ide ES J until the horse was nigh exhausted, Aj RFhundred boys in girls : the parks, and there were aquariums with | foreign fish and aviaries with foreign birds, well | the city under the shadow of their wings as qd they hovered and flitted about him. More than this, he had a great reputation for the conundrums and riddles that he made | and guessed. He and King Hiram, his | neighbor, used to sit by the hour sod ask iddles, each one paying in money if he could not answer or guess the riddle The Solo monic pavy visited all the world, and the satlors, of course, talked about the wealth of their king, and about the giddles and engimas | and the i until! Queen Balkis, away «™ outh, oF of it, and sent messengers with a few es that she would like to have Solomon se, and a few puzzles which she would Hike Jave him find out. She sent amoag other Bis to King Solomon a diamond with a so stoall that a uld not pene e it, asking him to thread that diamond. Solomon took a worm and put it at the | ing in the diamond, and the worm pled through, leaving the thread in the ond, The queen also sent a goblet to Solomon asking him to fill it with waser that did not wr from the sky, and that did not rush out rom the earth and immediately Solomon put a slave on the back of a swift horse and galloped him around and around the park and i nn the perspiration of the horse the goblet was lied She also King Solomon five Irese, and five hun dred girls in boyy wondering if would be cute enough to d out the dec 'p jon. Immediately Solomon, when he saw bem wash their faces, knew from the way hey applied the water that it was all a cheat Queen Balkis was pleased with the cuteness of Solomon that she said, “I'll just go and see him for myself Yonder it omes—the eavalcado-— horses and drowmeda les, chariots and charioteers, jingling has ess and clattering hoofs, and blazing shiclds, and flying ensigns, and clapping cymbals, I'he place is saturated with the wriume, She brings cinnamon and saffron nd calamus and frankincense and all man ner of sweet spices, As the retinue SWeans through the gate the armed guard inbale the roma. “Halt!” ery the charioteers, as the wheels grinds the gravel in front of the pi Jared portico of the king Queen Balkis lights in an atmosphere bewitched with per fume, As the dromedaries are driven up to the king's store-houses, and the bundles of camphor are unloaded, and the sacks of cin namon, and the boxes of spices are opened, the purveyors of the palace discover what my text announces, “Of spices, great abun dance; neither was there any such spices as the Queen of Sheba gave to Ling Solomon Well, my friends, you know that all the ologians agree in making, Solomon a type of Christ, and making the } Queen of Sheba a type of every truth seeker, and 1 shall take the responsibility of sslying that all the Spikenard and cassia andj frankincense which the Queen of Sheba bre $ght to King Salo mon are mightily suggestive of the sweet spices of our holy religion. Christianity is not a collection of shagp technicalities and angular facts and chrofologieal tables and ary statistics. Our refigion Is compared to frankincense and tof cassia, but never to nightshade. It is a bpindleof myrrh. Itisa #h of holy light. [fit isa sparkle of cool ountaine. It is an Ppening of opaline gates It is a collection of gpices. Would God that Wa were as wise in Raking spices to our Di ine King as Queen Balkis was wise in tak. | hg the spices to the earthly Solomon! What | ny of us mostfneed is to have the bum. rum driven « of our life and the hum- um out of ourf religion. The American and | glish churetf will die of humdrum unless | news pneedla ¢ sont dres b Ed wn San Francisco a few weeks | sayin; he was getting up for | symposium from many clergy- ing other things, “Woy | £0 to church’ and wanted and I gave it in one sentences, not go to church because they | he microney the humdrum.” The fact IEMISTRY w Ugh course i; ling that humdrum of religion. We mons and exhortations and | temple service of heaven, he says: | our head | hood. | that ! wretch, ! Lord sent me alone now: Martha gets through fretting and Joli Mary at the feet of Jesus, All day long Deborah is happy because she can help Lapidoth; Hannah, because she can make a coat for young Samuel: Miriam, because she can watch her infant brother; Rachel, because she can help her father water the stock; the widow of Rarepta, be- cause the cruse of oil is being replenished. 0 woman! having in your pantry a nest of boxes containing all’ kinds of condiments, | why have you not tried in your heart and | life the wsplcery of our holy religion? | “Martha! Startha thou art careful and troubled about many things; but ote thing is needful, and Mary hath chosen that good art which shall not be taken away from er,” I must confess thata great deal of the re- ligion of this day is utterly insipid. There is nothing piquant or elevating about it Men and women go arvund humming psalms in a minor key, and culturing melancholy, and their worship has in it more sighs than rapture. We do not doubt their piety. Oh, no, But they are sitting at a feast whore the cook has forgotten to season the food Everything is flat in their experience and in their conversation. Emancipated from sin | and death and hell, and on their way to a magnificent heaven, they act as thous they | were trudging on toward an everlasting Botany Bay. Religion does not seem to agree with them. [It seems to catch in the windpipe and become a tight strangulation instead of an exhilaration All the infidel books that have been writ ten, from Voltaire down to Herbert Spon cer, have not done so much damage to our Sutiniaaity es lugubrious Christians. Who wanis a religion woven out of the shadows of the night? Why go growling on your way to celestial enthronement! Come out of that cave and sit down in the warm light of the Sun of Righteousness. Away with your odes to melancholy and Hervey's *‘Medita- tions Among the Tombs.” Then let our songs abound, Aud every tear be dry: We're marching through Emmanuel’s ground To falrer world's on high, I have to say. also, that we need to put more spice and enlivenment in our religious teaching, whether it be in the prayer met log, or in the Babbath school, or ia the church. We ministers need more fresh air and sunshine in our langs and our heart and Do you wonder that the world is #0 far from being converted when you find $0 little vivacity in the pulpit and in the pew? We want, like the Lord, to plant in our sermons and exhortations more lilies of the field. We want fewer rhetorical elabora tions and fewer sesquipedalian words; and when we talk about shadows, wa do not want to say adumbration; and when we quesrness, we do not want f i astitelr In mean talk al t : to * . i Lack, idiosyneracies; of we do not want to talk about lum the iain vernacular preach that g wed Prog to make all men bh ictorious and free words, we want Let sO in different lepartinents of work to which t lord calls us. Let us be plain earnest. Let us be common sensionl we talk to the people ina can understand they i come and receive tf Would to God that Queen drive her laden drow all our sermons and prayer-u tations, More than that we want more life and spice in our Christian work, The poor do not want so much to be groaned over as sung With the bread and medicines and the garments you give thom, let there be an a companiment of smiles and brisk encourage. ment. Do not stand and talk to them about the wretchedness of thei: and the hunger of their and ® hardness of their lot. Ah! they know it better than you can tell them. Show them the the thing, if there any Tell them good times will come that tor the children of God mortal rescue. Wake them ug stolidity by an inspiring laugh you send in help, like the Ques also send in the api There are two ways of One is to come into their house with sevated in disgust, as much as to don't see how you live bere in this ne It actually makes me sick, bundle: take it, you pour, miserabil: and make the most of it Another way is to go into the abode of the poor ina manner wh soos to say: “The blessed He was poor himself, It is not more for tae good I am going to try todo you than it is for the good you can do me Coming in that spirit the gift will be as aro- matic as the spikenard on the feet of Christ and all the hovels in that alley will be fra grant with the spice We need more spice and enlivenment in our church music, Churches «it discussing whether they shall have choirs, or precen- tors, or organs, or bas viols, or cornets i say, take that which will bring out the most inspiring music. If we had half as much pen! and spirit in our churches as we have in the songs of our Sabbath schools it would not be long before the whole earth would quake with the coming God. Why, in most churct tenths of the people do not sing, or they sing so feshly that the people at their elbows do not know they are sing ing. P ith and mumble the prajes of God; but ti y ia not more than one out of a hundred makes “a joyful noise unto the R Som VOOR hie go, but in J hh a. other and less more inoamon be } gristle, his all fat Lak spice to. abode +4 og, th brigh Tell there at of t and whi t ¥ 6 Of Soeta bright t of be 1 uD Oo -. meeting the ich oN nine MODle 1 P m wine of Our Salvation times, when the congregation forgets iteelf, and is all absorbed in the goodness of wel or the glories of heaven, | get an intimation of what church music will be a hundred years from now, when the coming generation shall | wake up to its duty I promises high spiritual blessing to any one who will sing in church, and who will sing so heartily that the Riople all around cannot help but sing. ‘ake up! all the churches from Bangor to San Fraocisco and across Christendom. It is not a matter of preference, it is a matter of religious duty Oh, for fifty times more volume of sound German chorals in German cathedrals sur. | pass us, and yet Germany has received wothing at the hands of Ged compared with America; and ought the acclaim in Berlin be louder than that in Brooklyn? Soft, long drawn out music is a te for the draw. | ing room and apy te for the concert ple have so much humdrum in | but Bt. John gives an idea of the sonorous do not want | and resonant congregational singing appro | to the heard priate for churches when, in Menanig more of what Queen Bal. | a great voice, as the voice of a great multi i T: A nelent the Shop and t Ton t the duties and cares of this 4 from time to time WernaL Art an ie. MEN Cor REE { wo Years 4 Instrument; OF AND Lit rench, Gey Ne or more ; “ ® been barterin, ng, pounding, forty years, fife dgery has their What is necessary TIC AND t man's lite, and to sweeten everyday Ifo, instead of a stupid monotone, would a glori- inspiration, Rénduliming between calm satisfaction and high rapture, an h 1 5 iF ife been, | their feelings benumbed, | are | inane and intolerable. Here | and ne. | only your hearts, but the mighty upliftin ammering | of your voloes, and 1 bel years, | Christ's grace, sing fifty » Bolomon—namely, more | tude, and as the voice of many waters, and as the voice of mighty thunderings. halle lujah for the Lord God omnipotent reign. eth.” Join with me in a crusade, giving me not owe y My. wos yusand souls into the kingdom of Christ. An argument they can laugh at, a sermon they can talk down, but a vast audience folning in one anthem is irresistible. Would that Queen Balkis would and to put sparkle (nto | drive all her spice leaden dopiedaries into our church music. “Neither was there any | such spice as the Queen of Sheba gave King Folomon."” spices together, “Oh" have not looked at it as such, was a pulsmnce; it for appalled at its sald, if 1 have any rel Just as little of it as §=s 2 = 3 4 | through | nots, and some years ago in Trenton. { would not be a discovery. | is internally lined with a dense and wool- | strange internal appendages I | unknown to any other ing like Macaulay whon he wrote: “If 1 had another month of such days as I have been spending, I would be irapatient to got down into my little narrow pv in the ground like a weary factory child.” And there have been times in your life when you wished you could get out of this life. You have said "Oh, how sweet to my lips would be the dust of the valley,” and wish you could pull over you in your last slumber the coverlet of groen grass and daisies. You have said: "Oh, how beautifully quiet it must be in the tomb, I wish I was there.” 1 soo all around | about me widowhood and orphanage and | ehildlossness; sadness, disa pointment, h per. plexity. If I could ask all those to rise in this audience who have felt no sorrow been buffeted by no disappointment if 1 could ask all such to rise. how many would rise? Not one y A widowed mother with her little child went West, hoping to get better wages there, and she was taken sick and died, The over. sear of the poor got her body and put it in a hoax, and put it in a wagon, and started down the street toward the cemetery at full trot, The little child—the only child-ran after it the streets bareheaded, crying, “Bring me back my mother! bring me fon. my mother ™ And it was said that as the people looked on and saw her crying after that which lay in the box in the wagon-—all she loved on earth—it is said the whole vil- Inge was in tears. And that is what a great many of you are doing-—-chasing the dead, Dear Lord, is there no appeasement for all this sorrow that I see about me? Yes, the thought of resurrection and reunion far be. yond this scene of struggle and tears, “They shall bunger no more, neither thirst any more, neither shall the sun light on them, nor any heat; for the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall lead them to living fountains of water, and God shall wipe away all ears from their ayem.” Across the couches of your siok and across the graves of your dead I fling this shower of sweet spices. Queen Balkis, driving up to the pillared portico of the house of cedar, rd no such pangency of perfume as ex- bales to-day from the Lord's garden. It is peace. It is sweetness, It is comfort. Itis infinite satisfaction, this Gospel I commend to you. Someone could not understand why an old German Christian scholar used to be always so calm and happy and hopeful when be had #0 many trials and ailments. A man house, He Wid, “I mean to watch this old scholar and Christian” and he saw the old Christian man g Vis room and sit down on the chair beside the stand and open the Bible and read. He read on and on, chapter alter chapter, hour after hour, until his face was all ag with the tid. fr heaven, ) clock struck twelve he we and shut his Bible and said i pod i we are on the 1.1 Good sickuesses and himself! in the secreted y LO begin to ings m hen the 1 read of in some respects the build on earth’ Twenty usand men were twenty years in building it. It cost about sixteen lions of dollars. { marble, inla'd with carne int rquois from Thibet, and jasper {rom the njaub, and amethyst mn Persia, and all manner of precious A traveler says that it seems to him Like the shining of an enchanted oastie of burnished silver, The are two bun fred and forty-five foot high, and from the top of these springs a dome thirty more feet lome taining the most won has ever known, «=o that ever and anon travelers standing below with flutes and drums and harps are testing that ids from strike up, and then £134 wa as it were, the we of ange's all around a» building here is around it a garden marind and mnyan and palm and all the floral glories of the ransacked earth nly a tomb of a dead empress, npared with the grandeurs Med for your living and Uh, home of the blessed Archos of wi Lory ys of praise And a dome in which are echoing and reechoing the halislg- of the ages And around about that is a garden-«the garden of God and all the springiog fountains are the bot. tied tears of the church in the wilderness, and all the crimson of flowers is the deep hue that was caught up from the carnage of earthly martyrdoms, and the fragrance fs the prayer of all the saints and the aroma puts into utter forgetfulness the cassia, and the spikenard, and the frankincense, and the world renowned sploss which the Queen Balkis, of Abyssinia, flung at the feet of King Solomon pear what we the Taj Mahal in In most ma jest 1 4} ’ Hey SEOs, th Wai high, that wind echo the wo acho, and The son Devo w 3 wes goid myn radon When shall these even thy heaven built walle i pearly gates behold bulwarks val 4d streets of shining N . om slrom 2 with = q sirom gg. 4? on our part, and of that Christ who I wonder if any of us I fear fear! rise up in judg obvuracy rejection hrough through the makes heaven possible will miss that spectacle? The queen of the south will ment against this generation and condemn it, because she came from the uttermost parts of the earth to hear the wisdom of Sol- mon, and behold, a greater than Salomon is here! May God graut that through ur win practical experience you may find that religion's ways are ways of pleasanines, and tit all her paths are paths of peace-—that It is perfume now and perfume forever. And there was an abundance of spice; “neither was there any such spice as the Queen of Nheba gave to King Solomon.” A Unique Rotifer. At a recent meeting of the Natural History Society Dr. Thomas 8, Stevens entertained and instructed the members — | by an illustrated paper on a rotifer, a microscopic animal that is among the rarest in the group. It was first discov. ered by a Russian microscopist, next found twice in Philadelphia, once in 1ili- It has now been re-discovered Lere. ‘Ihe creature is unique in several par. ticulars that would be of but little inter. est to the general reader, but which fill with inexpressible joy the heart of the devoted microscopist, who is happy when be is prying ioto the little brain or the larger stomach of the animal, The little creature is blessed above the human beast in having two stomachs, which it ean fill with other animals, and apparently enjoy itself by digesting them | in spite of their wriggling. But in con- | nection with one of the animal's stom- | ache a discovery has been made in Tren. | ton that has never before been made in any part of the worldotherwise it | This pouch ly coating of vibrating baie. These | tobe | Trenton | rotifer, and are, therefore, of great jnter- est in a scientific way. Another plensing poiat, both to the snimal and to the , In that the rotifer has no means of seeking its food nor of crea currents in the water that shall bring food to | stomach, Tt'ean only rest on 8 and | stroyed, SCIP FIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Electric welding is spreading. Gas can be changed into liquid form, Pails and tubs saturated with glycerine will not shrink. Galveston, Texas, has twenty miles of glectrical railway, The street cars of Springfield, Il., are | supplied with electric heaters, Copper tubes now manufactured by | { means of electrical deposition, Bince 1880 over 700 applications for patents for electrical accumulators have { been made in England alone, A good water-proof cement can be | made, it is said, from equal parts of red | and white lead worked into stiff paste | with boiling linseed oil. The creosoted wood floors of a build- { ing recently burned in New York wen the only portion of the structure not de They were onl Jnarred. To obviate the waste of steam in steam hammers an improvement has been intro- duced in fitting the hammers with two pistons of different diameters, compound- | ing them in fact Mica, which stands unique among minerals as ap insulating substance, 1s destined to become one of Connecticut's leading products. Three new have recently discoverd State. A new embroidery machine for use in in making linen handkerchiefs can tury out finer work than any work done by hand. The north of Ireland must adopt the Sew methods if it wishes to retain Ma present leadership. mines been in that A late innovation is an electric rail way express service established in a Western of which, for a small packages ix town, by means the the subu wind gathered 1 hiarge, ward for it the depot and tie rhs are n del thi vered al routs The production of electrically teel chains will soon bacome or my § country strength, onsiderable les At the coming ti Y H ¥ hal sition a large bal he power sending it will be electric tained from a large dynam ground, A teleph ne passengers with tl ose « Russia's Koll-Supye pot-au. fe bage is stewpan, (usually ' ounce 03 walter for about ment It is sKimmed, the and when and pepper, and tureen, —-New Yori S'JACOBS QJ], ——————— SPRAINS. BRUISES. Ohilo & Miss Rafl way —— Office President and | 74 Dolphin Ftreet, Genera! Manager, Baltimare, Ma. Cineinast!, Ohlo Jan’y 18, 1800 “My foot mddenly *1 was bruised tad) turned and gave me | ly In hip and side by 8 yay Re Fig © 1 | a fall and suffered so Spplica thon of Bt | verely. St Jacobs Off Jacobs Of] resulted at | completely cured once In arelial rom | me" Wa C Hanous Member of Siate WW Prapony, i Prost & Geni Man'gr. | Legtsiature THE CHARLES A YOOFLER CO. Baftimors. BA oN NET For Internal and External Use, Stops Pan, © i Inflamsenation in heady ar Mh Mee nage 1 oud As hee, dda, Ostareh, Chel era Mortme [Sarrhers Rieamnts , Seuraigia, Lame bar, SUE Joints and Strades Fal particulars free, Price & ote pot paid LA JONNEON & OO, Poston, Mass. ‘August Jou pm | Flower” “I have been afflict Blliousness, ‘ed with biliousness “and constipation “for fifteen years; ‘first one and then ‘another prepara- ‘* tion was suggested ‘* tome and tried but “to no purpose. At last a friend * recommended August Flower. I Constipation, Stomach Pains. "took it according to directions and | “its effects were wonderful, reliev- “ing me of those disagreeable ** stomach pains which I had been “troubled with so long. Words “cannot describe the admiration “in which I hold your August ' Flower-~it has given: me a new “lease of life, which before was a * burden. Such a medicine is a ben ** efaction to humanity, and its good “qualities and ," onder Lio Josse Barker, “itsshon e “made knownto Printer, “everyone suffer- Humboldt, Kansas, @ “ing with dyspep- ‘sia or biliousness G. G. GREEN, Sole Man'fr, Woodbury, NJ. NY NUN | peti " | with 830.000.0000 ova, | reasonable allowances for the destruction | size of our globe! Astonishing Fecundity of Codfish. ft 1s said that between 60,000,000,000 and 100,000,000,000 codfishes are taken from the sea around the shores of New. foundland every vear jut even that quantity seems small when we sider that a single cod yields something like 3,500,000 egus each year, and that over 8,000,000 eggs have been found in the roe of a single cod, A herring of six or seven ounces in weight is provided After making all con the it has been in of eggs and of calculated that youny, three vears a single. { pair of herrings would produce 154,000, 000, Buffon once said that if a pair of herrings were left to breed and multiply ang ) undisturbed for a period twenty years, they would yield a fish-bulk equal to the St, Louis Republic, i — - When an article has boen sold for spite of competition and chs “p i must have superior quality. Dobl Boap has been constantly made and sold sluce 1866, Ask gour grocer for df, Best of all u's in fee at KAx#tAs Cry Is promised hundred, ss a result of competition How's Thin ¢ We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure F.J.Cnnxey & Co., Props., Toledo, O We, the undersigned, have known F., J. Cheney for the last 156 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transac. tions, and financially able to carry out auy ob. ligations made by thelr firm, Wear \ Warning, Kixxaw Diruggists, Tole {all's Cainrrh Cure ing directly he } faces of Lhe Price Ti do. O i# taken internally, act ood and mucous sur Manvix, Wh OLeNae won ipon system. Testimonials sent focal od wi per Hottie DY ail ArUER be correct Ir would Manitoba sccent the last ayll you pronout FITS stopped free by Neve Hesronen Marvelous [roe If afflic won's Eye-watler.Drugg pr . bw 2 ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when Byrup of Figsis taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts fondly yet promptly on the Kidneys, iver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head. aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Byrup of Figs is che only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste i ph ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most beaithy and agreeable substances, ite many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popula remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 500 and $1 bottles by all leading drug. giste. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute, CALIFORNIA FI6 SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, SOWSYILLE xy FEW TORR, A 2. ~ -VASELINE- FORA ONEDOLLAR BILL sent us uy mall We will deliver, Tres of all chargm, 10 aay parsss ia the United states, sii of ae Too wing artsios, OM» Tully pmokes Use tw oounoe hottie of Pare Vasslina Une twoossos bottle of Vaseline Pomale Uris Jar of § aseline Codd Ores, is 4 Vaseline Cam phor joa « i ™ of Vaseline soap, anscents | « TH Une Cate of Vaseline Soap, exquisitely sosn ted 2) Vise tw oounoe Dotiee of While Vasellon, “ ots »- “ oh ! On For postage stamps any single artisle af The prioe (om wo @aoocunt be persuaded to assent from yourd Vaseline or preparation there fv wm ler baie win GWT mame, Deod wer foe will car tainiyreoeive an imilalion whieh hae Kili or wo value MORTGAGE HOLDERS REE. Address, with Scamp, Commercia opeka $1.00 per month and «xpannes to anti Nurwery Stock Hustlers wasted sew, OD Guus, Syracuse, 5.7 “Ttmay [Fmaun be Fru PUBLIC, endorses § outlast two cakes of cheap theapest in the end. Any reasonable price, & Tv ax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, | ) | Bg rE RuInE ] 84-09 Handesewed Welt, A fli { #3-30 Goodyrar | A 83-00 i woh r pas i 89-30 Dongola shor for Ladies $9.00 Shoe for Ladies, an oti {Alla | tor illastrated cntunlogue, a py Iris a solid cake of For many years SAPOLIO has stood as the finest and best article of this kind in the world. It knows no equal, and, although it costs a trifie more its durability makes it Copyright, 1800. Fashion’s favorite fad, centers in that famous, fascina- ting game-——lawn tennis, But there are women who cannot engage in any pastime. They are delicate, feeble and easily exhausted. They are sufferers from weaknesses and disorders peculiar to females, which are accompanied by sallow complexions, expressionless eyes and haggard looks. For overworked, “worn - out,” “run-down,” debiliteted teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, “shop-girls,” housekeepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women gen- | erally, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre- | scription is the greatest earthly boon, being ne dualed as an appe- tizing cordial and restorative tonic. | It's the only medicine for women, | sold by druggists, under a positive | guarantee from the makers, of sat- | isfaction in every case, or money re- funded, This guarantee has been faithfully carried out for years W. L. DOUCLAS 83 SHOE cen? Shen Munpdenew ed, an clog outnsnends eelf call Shoe aw a, Wylie dress Shoe which ow Wy he and Curabiiiny Welt » the eguaiied 1 Wandard drome ar pies n's Shoes is especially odapted farsaers, otc Shoe 81 a popu $9.50 Policeman for ralirosd pen H made In Oongress, Button and Lace for Ladies » the oul) bandesewed hoe \ new de ery popalar 1.75 for Misses for syle, slammed Wilh name on old svt a y factory, enclosing advertised AK Brockton, Mass, WANTED Shoe dealer in every city and town net eccapied lotake exclusive agency. ents adveriiond in loon! paper. mend phar re aad baenovonty ry Prom ie t retain their exoolionoe Ail pods warranted and aS Yo price or REQUIRES ADDITION QF ANY EQUAL PART OF OIL MAKING COST Pr Gall 25 =. «7348 PAPERS Where we have se Agent will arrange with any active Merchant ~L, & M, p { ie | / Ton SCALES | $60 | \ Beam Box Tare Beam ALL wm * A\ « — for 1¢ Fy NSIO JOHN W MORRIS, P Washingtop, P, €, Nae Eyes Opime. 3 vre in et war 1 sdjodiosting claims, aft) sisos MA \X) HAY FEVER STAY send hy returs mall a valuable Mecret Hel . Mra, W, Harvey Greene, Detroit, Mick, be true what some men say. whala men say.” bh C scouring soap: makes, It is therefore the grocer will supply it at a Pris, KEY 0 a cure 1s io
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers