Myr, Clarence 0, Bigelow Prescription Druggist, 102 6th Ave., N. Y. City, says The People’s Confidence Has been won by HOOD’S REY. DR. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S DAY SERMON, TALMAGE. SUN. —————— Subject: “Lessons From the Story ot Daniel.” Texr: “Daniel was first," Daniel vi, 2. Where in romance can you find anything equal to what Daniel was in reality?! A young man, far away from home, intro duced into the most magnificent and most dissolute palace of all the earth, The king, wishing to make this young man a prodigy in personal appearance, orders his attend- ants to see that he has plenty of meat and wine, and Daniel refuses these delicacies and insists on a vegetable diet, refusing 3 thing but pulss and water, waving back all the rich viands with a determined “No: | thank you.” Hoe surpasses all the princes in brilliancy. As this sun rises higher and higher in the firmanent, puts ail the stars, and if there is anything the stars hate it is the sun, Daniel becomes so every it out much of a favorite promoted to be prime minister or secretary of state—the Frelinghuysen the Bi marck of the ancients. But no man attained s0 high position without exciting the envy of others The meanest and or of Sarsaparilla In a Manner Never Eq *lam, or pressing my views, pro or cos te of Hood's Sarsaparilla bel: einles C1 " 1 general priv any proprietary article, of a brother apothecary, will ired a place in the public confidence nes any Ww tary handled d ng than twenty years in the « tr Must Possess True M 1 y ie AS A Ie ial agent t« t s in BAY, Sarsaparilla has sec or attained by we Pra daily at ben ises are sonal HicerLow A oes PL coreick headach _JOHNSON’S Anodyne Liniment. Ue ANY OTHE 19 A SICK LIVER isthe cause of most of the depressiag, pain. ful and unpleasant sensation. =... suffer ings with which we areafllicted; and thess sufferviogs will continue so long asthe Liv. er is allowed to remnin in this sick or slug. glish condition, Teo stimulate the Liver and other diges. tive organs to an normal condition and healthy activity, there Is no better medi. cine than ADWAY'S PILLS The most perfect has ever 1 n TABLE, positivel deleterious » properties that Mereur ut the d , ale and reliable ( nded — F athartle RELY that y con Jhatance with they rin out taste, there Is be WAYS PILLS; n thelr rding tothe @ Anger have become the atly soated and with lowing RAD. 1 and gentle or thorough Is perations, sox se, they ar Stomach us Diseases, Low Indigestion, Dys nflammation of the Bow ela, Piles, and al oxrangements of the Interna Viecwrs 5 oents 8 box sold by druggists. DR RADWAY & ( Warren Street, N. Y. Clty. WAMF : ’ Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cure. Rheumatism, Lambago, pain in foints or back, brick dust in urine, frequent calls, irritation, Inflammation, gravel, ulceration or eatarrh of bladder, Disordered Liver, Impaired digestion, gout, billlous. headaches, SWANMP-ROOT cures kidney difficulties, La Grippe, urinary trouble, bright’s disease, Impure Blood, Borofuia, malaria, gen’l weakness or debility, Gunrantes [oe contents of Oma Bottle, Hf nod bens efited, Drugyiets will refund to you the price paid, At Druggists, 50¢, Size, £1.00 Size, “lavalide’ Ouide to Health (ree -Conealtation free Di. Kiruzn & Co., Bisonawron, N. ¥, Liver the LS The old saying that * con- sumption can be cured if taken intime” was poor com- fort. It seemed to invite a trial, but to anticipate failuge. The other one, not so old, “consumption can be cured,” is considered by many false. Both are true and not true; the first is prudent— one cannot begin too early. The means is careful liv ing. Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil is sometimes an important part of that. tussend you a book on CAREFUL LIVING—free, CL 139 South - Avenue, ovr druggm 'e Rinulad 8.4 olla} evasion svarywhore do, $n n wrathiest passion the soul Is jealousy. You see it among all professions and occ pations. | am sorry to say you it much among clergymen as among other classes of It is a passion bitter as hall and it is immediately recognized, and yet, though it blackens the man who indulges in it, men will kindle this fire only themselv There were demagozues in Babyl highly appreciative of their own doubted the § man as Daniel know more aa men which consumes vs wm, who, capacity, lioy of elevatit ia young They **Why, we mn he does, ‘eo could manage irs better than he can thanag: Dan in such a Old Babylon was afraid of bey began to plot his trious . he we apt to be struck su joa of { putting ruin, talle with th These an unaiter witli any one any n z, suall trusty he demag purpose, 10t stop Daniel, iecroe, 1 thirt ask exces D x uos for tl und the solid quakes with the The de moved and Dax into was all aglea: it ory wll to roll and snag CAYErns, proach the defenseless man, Was sharp with hur paw, inet have been Daniel fawn about him, They their long mane, They lock jaw That night in ca and undistur , with his head piliowed the warm peck of the tamed Hons, But King Darius was not so happy. He loved Daniel and he bated the stratagem by which his fav had ndemned He p floor all nig Hs cannot sleep, At the least sound he starts and his creeps with horror, A bad conscience will make the bravest man a coward, He watches eagerly for the dawn, which seetns 80 long in tars IGE, «ne hii Nd . . starts out to ut the fate of Danie wmisce gate « nd jars heavily behind vim while yet is asl He « to the den. He looks through the crevices but sees nothing. Hedare not speak, Ex pecting the worst, his heart stops Gathering strength, be puts his m the rifts in rock and cries, “Ob, | is thy God whom thou servest continually able to deliver from the lions? answer comes rolling up out of the darkness “Oh, king, live forever. My God bath sent His angel and hath shut the lions’ mouths, that they have not hurt me The young man is Le ut and the demagogues who made the plot are thrown in. But they hardly struck the bottom of the den when their flesh is rent, and their bones cracked and their blood spurted through the rifts while the flerce monsters shook the rocks with their terrible roar, announcing to all ages the truth that while God defends His people, the way of the wicked shall perish Now, you see from this subject that in the eyes of many the greatest offense you can commit is success, Of what crime had this young man been guilty that he should o under the bitter hatred of the demagogum Why. he bad gone to be prime minister of Jabylon. That they could not forgive. Be { in this sketch a touch of human natwre overt inches you, and you 1 tween taxgatherer and | have hard work to there will be multitudes w, he ht to sucosed. H or ro. which s that seem They Ap Their appetite Une stroke of their th and he we i Ww rlrange a welcome monsters They cover his feet with are struck with the anes sleep the den ne « ileioss, receive the s from at m on orite heen s BilL flesh on Ones ’ uth to Dat +h thee AN ught y i od your children, say: "Poor fell sorry 1 am for him But after awhile you begin to emerge from the darkness. That was a capital Invest. ment. You purchased at just the right time Fortune becams good natured and smiled You builded your own house, You got to be one of the first men on the street Now as you pass a number of those late sym. athizers stand on the corner of the street They scow! at you from under the rim of their bats. You have more money now than they have, and you ought to Le scowled at from under the rim of their hats Before you get fully past you hear a word or two, “Stuck up,” saysone. “Didn't get it honestly,” says another, Will burst soon,” says a third, Every stone in your new house was laid on their heart, Your horse’ | hoofs went over their nerves. Your carriage tire cut their neck, What bave you done, outrageous culprit’ You ought to be cast to the lions. You have dared to achieve suc cess, Depend upon it that if in any one re- spect you rise far above your fellows-—if you are more truthful, more wise, more eloquent, more influential —the shadow of your success will chill somebody, The road of honor and | virtue is within reach of the enemies’ guns, | Jealousy says, “Stay down or I will knock vou down.” In midair a snowflake said to a snowbird, “1 don't like you “Why don't vou like me? said the snowbird, * ‘Because,’ replied the snowflake, “you are going upiand I am coming down.” ol Success is often a synonym for scorn. The first thing a man waats is religion, The | second is grit, If you do not want to face wild beasts you must never get to be prime | minister, If you are now, As A young man, rising in any one respect, [ bless ( od for your advancement, but I wish to say before I quit this thought, look out for the Hons, Young merchants, young lawyers, young phys clans, young ministers have much sympathy, and kind advice is given them at first, but as you become your own masters and begin to succeed in your different occupations and professions, how is it then, young mer chants, young lawyers young physicians, young minfsters? How is it then ug Again behold in our subject an exhibition i “ Li Before | tories, dams are of true decision of character. Daniel wers condemnation and death, if he | continued faithful to his religion, Yet, as before, three times a day he prayed his face toward Jerusalem, nothing more fatal for the religious or wordly advancement than a spirit of inde cision, How often youth is almost gone before the individual has determined upon bis profession . are those who for thirty or forty have accomplished nothing any where use they bave not felt themselves set Just tied, They have thought of the law A medicine, of merchandise, of nechanism, with King Darius that our young hero is | aver | with | is | wise | self -rostraint have been dammed back and | rush into | machinery of important interests, | They have some iden of going west, Per haps they will go east, Ferhaps thoy won't, They may go north or south. rhaps they will invest their money in raflroalds or in | real estate, Perhaps they won't. They are | like a vessel starting from New York har- bor, which should ona day decide on going | 10 Liverpool, and the next on New Orleans, and the next on Marseilles. How many men have for a long while been out on the great sen of life and they do not know to what port they aro destined? Jt jg wcking of ship, but no hea Iway. The man who begins to build a house in | the Corinthian sty le and when half way up concludes to make it Dorie, and then com- | pletes it in Ionic, will have an unseemly pile | and be cursed of every school of architect ure. These men that try everything get to | be nothing. God wrote in your brain and engraved on your bones what vou ought to be. Then be that, nothing more or nothing loss, In that direction is your success, Every other road is ruin, Having adjusted your [ compass, go ahead, Bet your teeth together, {| Small difficulties do not notice, Great dif- ficulties, by God's grace strike them down. Unward! Let cowards skulk Act you like sons of God, [ff you want to sail to the land of gold you must aouble the To usefulness and character there is no overiand rout Over the great fly. Most of the way it | either head wind or tempest, haracter, lke the goldfineh of Tong is magnificent when sta Cape, strong lenps you raust is in wing firm, but loses all its splendor here no hh thing as [allure ust in God ling toned into heave MOK Man re | in fight | + who t tie by 1 ny ves on a religious no find it sail ompanions laugh and say with + tone, “He has to I 2 [0 on excursions, wphiesy that his r always smoot wd enough t It you have know not what and chuckle, an ‘There g [} pean Hie 3 BAY saint n requires fo rails wi fd started a Ww Onn cabin i uw servants the nation's noe swent the stare and ihe orator its up as Samson carried off stammerad and biasha i on th The ¥ under pencil skies blosso gleam, understands his subj ause he has be t to the one and ROTI OT who ON oh a o stage untry sch bouse ung paint whos ot shalt is obd want and the i Pan wy must first sketon 3 wit = Fraukiin, becoming the re nowoned philosopher, must be a journeyman printer Columbus must weave carpets be fore be can weave hemispheres, David must he CUAroonal 4 y fo p 3mm} . take cared ast Be a herdsman bafors must be th ’ 1 Daniel ries | a gL oN Mon mes humbie be th prime min If a young man sas of what he must cop Ader no « starts in life with large immodiately have Ltie ex pect wil cag - May, with a sn x5 an ocean frigate ized by the first that you osn carr) when pant unber wagon mountain a century WK, though you may plant it, you cannot make it live Ho he who begins life on such a grand scale and with such exorbitant notions, will never i i some young man who went t means, | haviag a right | ng ail shi; much 4 ' iimneed] Sprig will thrive vers oat and huge | you bring from the FBO0Re t spirit, but hroug f-denia’, plantad a tres street and the the t erhiich has ita shad granite palaces ( far out bored in the bay Men say success in life is all a matter of £ . lustry and nowy apd self denial put together always ma i luck. There are young mon who falled twice and are getting « haved the third before they are as old as their father when he first | wz An busioess for himsell They started with the idea that their w { capital. For awhils it did, bu when creditors sent their dons and banks wotests they found that mere shrewd was greatly below par You cann ost the comn In A yaw A young eaglet, far up in mountain evrie. says to ita winged mother, “I will fiy y nger from tree to tree as you tell me, but like you, mother, I will swing from this Chimborazo peak to yonder Chimboisse peak.” Like an arrow it shot into the heav- ens. but when over the awful chasm ita hes i was dizzy and its wing weak, and it began to whirl downward and with wild scream until it struck on the rocks A traveler passing through the gorge saw the mangled remains of the eaglet, “How came you tw bave this fall?” said the traveler, “Ab, me,” sald the eaglet, “it was because 1 | would not fiy from tres to tree until I was old enough, but headstrong 1 started from | 1] ln over one rect the avenues and in merchant wvoesssls an flung n yver they wd luck, but ir «0 yon af time 8 Well 25 t the " no Ww | Ch mborazo peak to Chimborazo peak.” ] If young men would seiz» the advantage of inteliigence, it will be by great economy of time and the refusing of many for.ns of gratification, Show me a man who, refusing many of the frivolities of gowiping youths, oan see more to attract his attention in the | pages of a treatise or a history than in the flash of bright eyes, or the airy step of those who find more skill in their heols than their heads, and I will show you a man who will | vot master languages and sway a very seopter over his fellows, Many an education which is now cousiderat complete is made up of a smattering of newspapers and the last page of a fashion magazine The parior and the drawing room cannot educate ue. They may give us oulward adornments of man—but getting valuable | knowledge is like sweltering at a forge, bel- lows in one band and hammer in the other | «like digging in mines with crowbars, pry- ing under the ledge and tne constant bang of | blasted rocks, Especially is it troe that no growth in grace is possible unless, like Daniel, we are willing to take up the cross, however heavy it may be and rough with nails, Moss chose affliction with the people of God rather than the pleasures of sin, and | if we would be anything lke him we must be willing sometimes to choose the bard | bread of ssif denial rather than the imperial ciusters from royal vineyards, To strengtn and depth enough in rivers tor turning mill wheels and manufac fit across them, and then through the mill race the quick foods leap on the water wheel to turn it with tremend- ous power. Ho natures thal would other- ve been powerless aod insufficient by i until with consecrated power they the world, turning its Jondatous nres strained men may have much goad in them, But it fs so seatterad that you ses no positive . Electricity in the air does not but gatheral in the cloud with its arm it cleaves the mountain, deapened, strike, an everlasting | | solicit ude, | disgrace on a father's name or prove re | lent beasts of burden, However attractive may be the sinful offers of the world, though rich and luxurious as the provision of the king's table, we must be willing to refuse them If nothing be left us but plain pulse, Oh, how wa want the faith and courage of a | Danijel and a Paul, but how we dread the hot atmosphere of trial, in which their | graces ripened, The richest fruits of re. { izglon grow in the sultry troplios of trial, If | you want pearls, you must dive for them, if you want gold, you must dig for i1. The | richest parts of California and Australia are under ground. Depend upon it, if no prun « ing, no fruit; no climbing, no elevation: no battle, no victory; no cross, no crown, Had there been no Nebuchadnezzar, thers would have been no Danfel. Fven so it has been in { all ages, The flames that have flashed up from the stake have been so many luming. tions of Christian ttiumph, y When God would make a great light of | truth and holiness in the world, he often takes groat and with them strikes fire, The devil's hate is God's glory, Had it not been for the persecutions of Bm peror Valerian, the world would not have known ol the courage of a Cyprian, and {f the tyranny of Dieclotian had never been known, the triumphant grace would not have been soon which made Maximilian, when entoncad to death, excisim “:od be praised.” Had not the bandits of Piedmont pursued the Waldenses through the valley of the Alps, and the infuriste decree put to massacre the Albigenses of France, the world 1 have had fewer illustrations of Chris. Be Jos before Pharaoh. | bet persecutions WOU Be Danie re Again let the story of beauty of that youthful mains unblemished and n home HaA Babylon, plunged friends in Jerus 1 Daniel teach us the character which re- upright when away iar ane me, he knew m and that ry young man who iracter when absent his father's sheep Keo a Theres is no i ter i the day at and MALS OOD. arture keep the young man from any poignant sorrow, but parents the destruction Among strang who Ware oon wrth youths, cannot help feel his step is full of momentous im- left home all his nate iardiar who soon thos ng ™ under the v aff Py Outbursts of foliy inor clessnoss and ln- { looseness of speech although there RYere, yot have convinced him that it was salutary and righteous. Bat bel w the sosne changes The father, through intercesding of metropolitan friends has secured the soa .a tage in some night his departure, come tH tak their farewell of the Young adveaturer, That morning he takes a Inst walk around the old place, and goiug past some loved spot a oy tear may start, but no one sees it. The trunk i» on the carriage, and aller a warm ww away they spesd over the hills, Het armnid and among ome panions not overscrupulous to thelr words or deeds, temptations troop around the stranger. The morning comes, but no fami ily altar, and the Sabbath but no real quiet, | perhaps at the sanctuary the faces are | strange and no cares wr he s to church or whether he does not go Ong winter evenings arrive and how ghall he ' Un bis way home from his ace of business he saw flaming placards ancing rare performances and that this iy the last night door of his cheerios boarding. ne greets him, and the evening TE ares whether he eats or does not eat. The room in the third story that evening seems doleful and repel- A book snatched up from the stand for no sister is there to n In despair he rushes if only he think pointin circle of repel it. On propriety wore Kindly Mraint the before exritetneonts ant what y be spent i Ann hou meal is insipid, for no one ting pr ves to be dull ok over with 1%. reckless ax to where san see something to make him That night may be the turnin Ones within the (ata he goes » mg his and the son! has no power 1 fark sea he i= laun i. where the gleam of Joy is only the flash of the pit and the roar of laughter is only the ereaXing of gates of the lost Iu many a country that he the ve churchyard i= now the grave of some youthful spirit that went yy lithe end bounding, but came home liseased and crushed and blasted to disgrace the sepulcher of his fathers. Yet this exo » made. As from far distant hills rivers find their way through tannels to great cities, so from far distant points of the try it is peoessary that a stream of un. corrupted population shall pour into our great thoroughfares to keep them pure and manage the traffic of ths world, Multitudes of such are constantly making their depar- ture from home, To-morrow morning all of the thorough. fares leading toward the great cities of omg land, on steamboat and rail oar, there will be young adventurers for the first gpeedin, away from their homes in order to try their fortune in town, The Lord streteh forth His arm for the deliverance of these Daniels away down in Babylon. Wherever your lot may be sast in far inland town or In somo great seaport, maintain in your absence the same principles of morals and religion which may have been instilled by parental an dus must tx And while you may feel in Jour heart and I1fe the ad vantages of early religious culture, forgot not those to whom you are chiefly in dobted, and pray that as age oomes upon thom and the night of death begins to fall in their pathway, the hope of heaven may boa through the darkness, lustrous and steady as the evening star, The Lord for bid that by our conduct we should ever bring greant to the love of a mother. The poet did not exaggerate when he exclaimed: How sharper than a serpent’s tooth, It is, To have a thankless child, Casts Unique Glass Tubes. The lost art of casting glass tubes after the method used by the ancient Egyptians has been, it is claimed, dis. covered by R. G. Guptill, He has a factory at Pendleton, Ind,, and has made his first cast with success. The glass tubes are suitable for gas, water and sewer mains, and are joined by a gia coment, also Invented by Mr, Guptill, All the operations at the new factory are conducted with great secrecy. Chicago Herald. sent — The estimated number of sheep in Australia in 1892, according to an Aus- tralian exchange, is 60,000,000, against bars red Passions har nossed aud yoked make excel. § $1,000,000 in 1884. | Are { | | which | | plar “Red Sea.” have puzzled why the The name was orig nally applied to it beesus portions of it Why the persons wondering Many brains should be 80 called, ri covered with patches from a few yards to some miles juare, © sed of microscopic vegetable animaleula ay When 1 the e the waters a blood red, vl by then intensely Organisms } * Bea is blue, the shoal f ae i pred water showing some sl andes o Nationa! Ha ee — Ball ne Sehedule, A very neat pocket National League Ball been issued by the proprie Anodyne Liniment as or Beries The schedule is arr: 1 of the New Eaglani Lo» pubiishod last year by the they own the « a glance where eas | season is to | schedule is ter nbie of any nes thie put their “Red” Bea “Red” | | COPYRIGHT 19 Doesn't “look” as she ought -~the weak, nervous and ailing wo- man. As long suffers from the aches, angements peculiar to can’t ex- pect 10, But there's With Dr. P scription, she’s And it’s a as wel | ii vy “nt | vigorate as ghe If to blame. Pre- woman. hat ean be seen em i8 ine RHEUMAT 3 DENN] N ' \ ISM. LAMEBACK. by doxct T . AW ~ PERMANENT!” THE PECULIAR EFFECTS OF ST. JACOBS OIL Are Its Prompt and Permanent Cures. { 3 { { +4 NH 2 ( 4 4 _ Fork { " ng. Ad e Bal Bes ding Pedals Strictly HIGH GRADE in LOVELL DIAMOND CYCLES @ 0 B | adies and Cents. 8x styios Frame, Stee Drop gongs. Sf Suspension Seddie Evers | Send 6 cents in stamps for our 100- page ill Bieseie Catalogoe FRIE JOHNP. LOVELL ARMS CO. Mfrs to sell our cholee Nursery Sox W write ry Ni RIX 5 LE ok ERT i MAY BROTHERS, 5c: Dependable 1ailoring Correct Styles, Moderate Prices, Hu ¥ i { | fgite to measure § W Trou . - 2X “Pleased to receive your order For either extreme, Oraa happy go betw ds Over 3.000 styles to rhon Send for » ples, Custom Clothing Only. ~~ mw ee L MUSHROORS ur of Bonen saragh Yo a Eade apyimeny ANTED rs Many Fine Specialties te ofler " : ‘ A {logue of Guns, Rifles, Revolvers, Sporting © ry gshineton St. 8 2% % % % GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878 W. BAKER & COS & Balls Gen 3, pure and No Chemicals a vith i by Gr W.BAKER re everye here & CO., Dorchester 00, M1 88, QECENeY the hands Yeu, I Sure the ir . Rising Sun Stove J rable and the ¢ The OF glam package with ever i fire I A I» vot er od Cent PATENT it. Sg. phen, Sdohn HH, Wondhury, ‘ 1del New ’ Lan [A ‘ \ ", MAREE BUGS: W Tas ED J a " D butciiee “ ] * 8 power. wi &i * Med - hk a host. up a8 tara. aj : Pre o gery lis id vg er 1 our a wre prevent i sleep in Pence, Sl Shs oF ay The FRED'K BITUHER & SONS, Si. Albans, Vi. W. 7. Fliingerald Washington, D.C 0pn pe bean Tree, JUBEN Wo Abe nen, NSIO Washington, DO Successful’ Prose inims. 1ate A die U tes O Bran Syveiuanst war ol adiudiont lng claims, SLY staon A ———— FE WOR oes a en JREMYOR Convampiives and people who have weak Jang of Anth ma. should use Piso’ Cure for Consumption, It bas enred t It has not inure od one, 1818 pot had 10 (eke, 11 nthe beer cough eyrup. " Sold evore wher, B8e.
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