Railways have the very sensible rule that passengers are not allowed to stand in the cars if any one objects, The fol- lowing instance recently cceurred showing how even one's rights may be strongly insisted upon: “Will you kindly allow me to stand?” asked a gentleman as he got into a rail- way carriage, which earringe already contained the specified number. “Certainly not, sir!” exclaimed a pas- senger occupying a seat near the door. “*The way these trains are overcrowded is shameful.” “As you appear to be the only person who objects to my presence,” replied the gentleman, ‘I shall remain where I am." “*Then I shall call the guard and have you removed, sir.” Suiting the action to the word, the aggrieved passenger rose, and putting his head out of the window, vociferously demanded the guard. The new comer saw his opportunity, and quietly slipped into the seat. “One over the nomber,” said the new comer to the guard, coolly. «You must come out, sir, the train's going on,” and without waiting for further explanation the guard pulled out the aggrieved passenger, who was left wildly gesticulating on the platform, British Weekly. ——————————— of Americans in known The winter Florence, Italy, for many years, ( olony was the smallest Mrs. Willtam Lohr yspepsia arveeml ¢ lost all appetite ! y dragged along wit ot Eat Vegotables Tor 1fie Cou dN or meat and a butte ¢ A Used 4 uv the t : mast | distress my | a girl; a tea and en stomach. nentiv. uo : persuade lady for Iy , ited cost a dollar to tr | Dragged Along 1A t.when 1 began to take HH i t a week | felt ¢ we we gained 22 pounds, as ' eX ’ . Hood's Sarsaparilla and a ul to let k v what it ) for: Mi Wi Hood's Pill's are wat aft "ills, assist digestior i i sist dig re headache Shouid Mave ¥t in The Nouse, Dropped on Sugar, Children Love PNRON'E A 3 Lavine as o Lia Ee y Ia bottles bBosrox, Mass, “August, Flower’ “What is August Flower for?" As easily answered as asked. [It {s for Dyspepsia. It is a special rem edy for the Stomach and Liver.— Nothing more than this. We believe August Flower cures Dyspepsia We know it will, for knowing it. honored place Liax Loun, 101 Van ™ paid. 82. 1 9 country, and sells everywhere. The reason is simple. It does one thing, anddoesitright. Itcuresdyspepsias 900000 O0OGBOS or from excess of work of mind or body or exposure in malarial Regine, © 0000000000 Ely's Cream Baim ~ Apply Balm into each nostetl, ELY PROM, - Warren Se, N. ¥. oTuit's Tiny Pillse ‘s Pills the most genia : The dyspeptic, the debifitated, wheth. Ww restorative ever offered the invalid, | Price 50 Cents, | Mustrated Publications, with PAEb LEE * ‘ " , fii LAND NYNUIN PATENTS baci A We have reasons | To-day it has an | in every town and | country store, possesses one of the | largest manufacturing plants in the | TEV, DF. TALVAGE THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S BUN. DAY SERMON, Subject: “The Greatest Name of All’ TexT!: name,” Philippians ii., 9, Paul is bere making rapturous and en thusiastic description of the name of Christ, There are merely worldly names that some. Buch wus the name of Henry Clay to a Kentuck- times thrill you through and through ian, the name of William W irt to a Virgin fan, the name of Daniel Euoglander, By common proverb we have come to be- lieve that *‘there is nothing ina name;” and 80 parents sometimes at the baptismal altar | Rives titles to their children reckless of the fact that that title, that name, will be a life time hindrance cr a lifetime help, You have no right to give your child a name lacking either in euphony or moral mean ing. itis a sin to call a Tiglath-pileser—or by anything that 1s disa greeable, Because you have bad an exas perating name yourself is no reason why you should inflict it upon your progeny. And yet how often it is that we see a name full of jargon rattling down from generation to generation simply because a long while ago some one happened to be afflicted with it. Institutions and great enterprises some times without i nomenciature, decided by a n long course of the misfortune « child Jeholakim or ent deliberation take (hity destinies have been While may bv a istinn behavior get over ving been baptized with the name of a des a cheat, how much better it would have been if we could hass all started life any such ipcum brance! When Pau!, in my sages of Scripture, | of admiration for the na to Inquire what are that appellation, “ EVEery nas ou In regard we C without text and in other pas urst forth in aspiration of Christ. I want mracterist t ihe aame which the kingdom of name, the name of Jesus stands f love, for patience, for sel sacrifice, for magnanimity, for everything that is good and glorious and tender and sympathetic and kind! It is aromatic wit] all odors, It ls accordant with all harmonies Bometimes when | look at that name of Jesus Christ it seems as if the letters were made of tears, and then they seam to be gleaming or Sometimes that name seems to be twisted out of the straw which He lay, and then it seems to be bulit out of the thrones on which His people are to reign. Sometimes 1 sound that word Jesus and 1 hear in it b of Gethsemane and the groan of Calvary, and then I speak His name and it is all a ripple with gladness and a ring with hose Glorious name! Take all the glories of bookbindery an put them around the page on Ww hich that name is printed, On Christmas morning wreathe it on the wall, Let it drip from harp's string and let it thun ler out in organ’s diapason, Mound it often, sound it well, un- til every star shall seem to shine It, and every flower shall seom to breathe it, and mount ain and sea, and day and Agit and earth and heaven acclaim in full chant, “Blessed be His glorious name forever.” “The name which Is above every name Have you ever heard in a Methodist church, during a time of revival, a score of souls come to the altar and cry out for mercy under the power of just two lines of glorious old John Wesley! Jesus, the name hugh over all, In heaven, or sarth, of ky, To the Nopunting soul, to the exhausted in ny on the so ina. 3 | valid, to the Bund school girl, to the snow white octogenarian it is beautiful, The aged man comes in from a long walk, and he tremulously opens the door of his home, and he hangs his kat on the old nail, and he puts bis cane in the usual place, and he Hes on his | couch, and he says to his children and his randohildren, "My dears, I am going away rom you ” And they say, hy, whore are you golog, grandfather? “Oh” he mys, “1 am going to Jesus.” and so the old man faints away into heaven, And the little child comes in from play and she flings herself in your lap, and she says, ‘Mamma, I'm so sick, I'm so very sick” and you put her to bed, and the fever fs worse and worse, and some midnight, while you sre shaking up the pillow and giv. ing the raedicine, she looks up in your face and mys, “Mamma, Pm golag away from Re You sy, “Why, where are you go , my darling” And she says, ‘1 am go- to Jesus,” And the red cheek that you to be the mark of the fever turns out to be only the carnation bloom of heaven. Qu, was it not beautilul when & litsie ® “The name which (8s above every Webster to a New child hear] that her playmate wis dying and she went to the house, and she clambere upon the bed fof her dying playmate. “Where are you golng to? and the dying girl said, “I'm going to Jesus Then sai | the little girl that was well ns she bent over | to give the parting kiss to her dying ‘play- | mate, “Well then if you are going to Jesus, give my love to Him." Itis a beautiful uname, whether on the lips of childhood or on the lips of the old man, When my father was dying the village minister said to him. quoting over his pillow this passage, “This is a faithful saying and worthy of all ac ceptation-—-that Christ Jesus cams into the world to save sinners "and thers ho stopped. Then my father finished the quotation by saving, ‘of whom I mun chief.” But | remark again, in regard | name of Christ, that it is a mighty name. tothschild name mighty in the com mercial world, Silliman is a name mighty in the sclentifle world, Irving is a name mighty in the lterary world, Washington is a name mighty in the political world, Wellington is a name mighty in the military world, but Is a to this | sions all full, Heaven full, The sun will sot afire with its splendor the domes of the temple, and burnish the golden streets into a blaze, and be reflected back from the polit pearl of the twelve gates, and it will be | noon in heaven on the hills, Noon in the noon, And then you will gradu ally accustoming your vision to the sight, Noon on the river, Noon valleys, look up, shading your eyes at tho first lest they be | extinguished with the insufferable splendor, until after awhile you can look upon the full irradiation, and you will ery out, “My Lord my lord, Thou art the Bun that Never Bets,” But at this point I am staggered with the thought that there may in this house for whom this name has no charm though iv is 50 easy, th gh it is so beawti- Do EODN | ful, though it is so potent, though it is so en- | during. wherein all the earth is a name so potent to | lift and thrill and arouse and rally and bless as the name Jesus Why, the sound of that one name unhorsed Saul and threw Newton on bis face on ship's deck, and that one name to-day, while | speal bundred mil Hon souls under ot spell, That name in England to Victoria In means more than mighty name! I have man bound the devil and eaptive o sound of that name shackles and march out for a man overs of mis every kind of trouble had of that name the » clouds parted, and the holds a mnipotent JAY mMosns Geraiany that Eu) ror name t William. and foot BOUT A hand | evil babi ash qo ver free and the eternal gladness Wn Aman of God, full pigment ay, id of that MI and s amd believ have fant and gr and y ump Oh, itis a mighty name, : i Pr Mark's and its i in the s of i al arson ven and pat t nansions and pala agration all beaven went down wne out to look upon the but even then thay w ame of Christ in the thunder were and in the crash of te goo It inter woven into the and the t the temples and t burn; = he te the awlu and the charred uid hear the of falling ple walls, and flying banners of hesven ud pn FT have Jesus left forever, name : made up yor by what name you will ano Chri you see Him in heaven? bat i tical question, For you soo Him, child of God, just as certainly wi wit there and I stand here up your mind to call meet Him in heaven? Anointed One” or “Messiah™ or will you take some one of the symbolic terms which you read in your Bible on earth-terms by which Christ was designated Some day perhaps you will be wandering among the gardens of God on high, the place abloom with eternal springtime, infinite Jux ury of lily and rose and amarath, and per haps you will look up into the face of Christ and say. “My Lord, Thou art the Rose of Sharon and the Lily of the Valley." Some time there will be a new soul coms into heaven to take its place in the firmament and shine as the stars forever and ever, and the luster of a useful life will shine forth tremulous and beautiful, and you will look up into the face of Christ and say, “My | Lord, Thou art a brighter star, the Morning Htar, tho Btar of Jacob, the Star of the Re deomer.” Howe day you will be walking among the fountains that toss in the sunlight, falling in erash of rl and amethyst inte golden and rretaliine urn, and wandering up the | round banked river to the place where the | water first tinkles in silver on the rock, aud | from ehalices of Jove yon will be drinking | to honor and everiasting joy, and you will wople « a ’ ruins; 1 flatne, redeemed of say, “Ls ot them be His glorious nam » OVOry have ¥ g¢ burn Blessesa “The name which is abov My friends wt Nowt will As y Christ when you Will you eal look up into the face of Christ and say, “My | loss than 1:40; Lord, my Lord, Thou art the Fountain of | v TAving ater.” Home day you will be wandering among the lambs and sheep of heaven feeding by the rock, rejoicing in the | pare of Him who brought you out of the | wildarness world into the sheeplold, and Jou will look " Joie His face and say, “My | Lord, my Thou art the of the Everlasting Hille” But thers is another name by which you ean onll Him, WP he be the | name [ have not men Imagios | that heaven ix all full, Every throne has | itu king. Every harp has its ‘harper. All | the wealth of universe has come Into heaven, There is noth in, dal: man. would moras than ! day | On, | tl again Wo say | told you the By what name have you made | ¢ first | Him | i to Oh, come to-day and see whether there is anything in Christ! | challeng to test with me this morning whether (God is | good, and whether Christ is precious, and whether the Holy Gho Come, my Come, and we will knee mercy. You lont and I will kueel on the of mercy, and we will not get up from our knees until are pardoned and we all honor to the name and I pronouncing it— above every name,” Lis ¢ mnipotent, brother, challenge you, at the altar of ide of the altar ne our ire abls to ascribe you prono the name which 1 inet in i His worth if nations knew, Bare the whol arith 1 would love him wo, I pray God that He may move asssmbiage now, that ig thro Jt 3 this walk Holy audi Oh upon we may see Him aisles, that the over thi for heaven. periam pened, what ) vl His wing tory. Nov your tin { ny ends! meeting on l are « ning never aali to the - ——————_ Longfellow's First Poem. r up, he though r what it was, what it was for, y with it been allowed Henry undertaking what would be dot A half hour frat had In a hall and ted the The : in a Poti | accomp shed neatly, teacher | i when h en afl: w hat to have be MM 10 tears nw bor had done in so short a time, ymposition had been written form, and was as follows: Mr. Finney had a turnip, And it grew, and It grew And it grew bohind the barn, And the turnip did no harm grow, And it grew, and it Till it could grow no taller Then Mr, Finney took it up And put it in the csliar, Thera it lay, there it lay Till it began wo rot When his daughter And put it in the pot Then she bolled it, and boiled it, As long as she was able Then his daughter Lizzie took it And put it on the table, Mr. Finney and his wife Both sat down to sup. And they ate, and thes ate, Until they ate the turnip up - i ———— Horse Running Forty Miles an Hour} Few horses have made a mile dash in Salvator, fn 1890, I be. lieve, made it in 1:354, which is some. thing truly wonderful. Let us analyze these figures: To begin with, it is nearl forty miles an hour—a speed drs by few railway trains, ro are 5280 foot in a mile, so that for every one of the ninety-five seconds he was in making that mile he had to get over ffty.fve and three-tenths feet of ground. Just think of the wonderful he was moving at—a balf a hundred feet for each beat of a man’s pulse!—St. Lous Susie wasted It High | DTATE OF UNIO, you | | Co. doing ther side of the aftar An Accommodating Justice. A Texas journal tells the following story of a justice of the peace who held court on the border line between Texas and Arkansas: A man was brought be- fore him on charges of murder and horse- stealing, the Justice: “Do you want to be tried by the Arkansas law or the Texas law? If by the former, I'll set you free for stealing the horse, but hang Said you for killing the man, If by the Texas law, I'll ac juit you for m thi man, but hang you for stealing the horse.” York Post, urdering w NCW — CITY OF Lucas County Frank J. Cheney makes o penior partner of the busing County and Blate af will CAM HE firm of pay Lhe f oatarrl { Hall Calarrh sore eves use Dr. sas sons Eye-water, Druggists se » “or gentlemen , N \ ~ \ LC 1 a1 e Wo For GENTLEMEN. 85.00 naiier: $4.00 83.50 "7, $2.50 $2.25 32.00 *':. ECS TAKE NO IT IS A DUTY you owet Hand -Sewed Welt Bros. Extra Value Call Shoe Working. man's Shoe * ti 15 93.7 1 acknowl "SUBST Heads off dicease — Dr. Pierce's Golden Med- ical Discovery. In a way, that yon can understand, too, urif ying the blood. When weak, languid, blotches uj ! the to take It, mo mat hat the It's easier wo prevent than ure, all diseases tions £ 1 aused by a tor- pid liver or impure 1, Dyspep- Bilionsness, rof , Skin, or y Diseases ven imption Ip Lung carlier i Bia, { Or trying In: ! risk, except vour Catarrh? atarrh--Remove the Cause. a th » “EP TE face, Call senile r MIBRES, For BOYS & YOUTHS. $2 & ®1.75 CHOOL SHO Eg" iTU ) wearaf v vd 3! 5 CAUTION. °, consumer against high prices an who acknowledge the superiority ing to substitute other makes for ulent, and subject to prosocution faise pretences. WW. L. DOUCIA® 1! not tor sale in your eo» wanted, tree. Ad EN where | have Kennedy's MedicalDiscovery Takes hold in this Bowels, Liver, Kidnevs, Inside Skin, Outside Skin, Drtving everything before It (hal Saght wn he vet You know whether you need it or not, Bold by every Aruggie, and ifactared Sy DONALD KENNEDY, ROXBURY, MASS, Wom LR MONEY ..°.. MUSHROOMS an § » (gals Posting ne ngent 8 silver mar 8 ] any other crop. Any * utiay t More money in (hem fon one celebrats FE mailed Importers Phila SF Oardiper's Beads ro New Untalogue for thos now ready. Free Sena or RK Ll ns J =o 1 A briain ehergetic man 50 0 0 woman wanted ta Inks the fe sgeney lor anariicis bg rt y+ od In pyevy 3h A town of pountry 700 in = days and a steady income ereard. A “"Donanis the right peteon taal le gi n in fa. vile of erie 3. W. JONES, Munnar. Snringfield, Ohlo nod indisprasns ewe ry ee. Le AT si Pac's Remedy for Ostareh I the Post, Wasiest to Use, and ( - SoM by droggists of sent by mail, We KT. Haselties Warren, Pa bottom of each shoe, the 82 W.L. DOUGLAS name and the price is stamped which protects the d inferior shoes, Beware of dealers of W. L. Douglas’ Shoes by attempt: Such substitutions are fraud for obtaining money unde! m. by law, nd width Thousands of Women from personal knowledge anf tabie cul for all forms of female complaints, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetabie Compound Is unequalled. Mrs. Many A. Atieg Lynn, Mase, saver “1 sufleved fron womb trouble, misplacement, ulceratiof stify experience, that as a simple re of Pole aa Tho TH heli ry,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers