Hood’s Cures My Health is Solid As a Duck's Foot in the Mud Cured of Gravel and Indigestion by Hood's Sarsapariila \\ Ho 2% Fredevick Earnfred Chicago, Hlinois, I have been wl's Sarsaparilla made a and Hood's I want to say tha new man by IH Pilla. 1 paid to rescriptions, which ga me i from gravel, me n vas in a wretched ne physician ily walking abou ) Save Funeral Expenses, yuld ny oe ' calth is as solid us a duck’s foot in Sarsaparilla the mud. 1 . * ¥ i as | " ! Hood s Pills Cures Consumption, Coughs, Croup, Sore {hroat. Sold by all Drugeists on a G Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies LN Other Chemicals EY re i the W. BAKER & C0.’S tCocoa arantese mical, costing i ous 3 is delich ENTE Sold by Grocers everywhere, W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass, #THE KIND . ®= THAT CURESH m Dyspepsia for 20 Years | TRIED EVERYTHING, wet 2 bottles wroughtg A CURE. NO FICTION, BUT TRUTH DANA Sammy "| 1 ha be 4 Fears w worything | 2XD great saferer fo BYSPFREPsSIA I hear of. Hare ain rovagl ee #, bet N | bought & bottle of DANA'S SARSAPARILLA MELPFED ME 80 Min 'y r Faia WAS CC IEh oF Se, nk ARENA N. Yours : Y JONN RIRKEY, tod Te whom i way sone Wa are well go painted wih Ms Richer, wd mow Bat he wot male an mleme Pee MARMYRITH N Drugging CURES or agent, and you would have plenty o ew, for business and waited ta # ns f iy yourself, had sie promotion and the increase in salary pending o the mortas | antiripated, | yous pe ted, life is the th ries, generally so far behind the anticipations, It | as did the | 0 marvelously pr | this | gratit | has been knooked ont REY. DR. TALMAGE. BROOKLYN DIVINE'S DAY SERMON, THE SUN. Bubject: “From Twenty to Seventy.,* Text: “The days of our years are three score and ten." =FPaalm xc, 10, The seventieth milestona of life is here planted asat the end of the journey. A few go beyond it; multitudes never reach it, The oldest person of modern times expired at 160 years, A Gieek of the name of Btrava. ride lived to 152 years. An Englishman of the name of Thomas Parr lived 153 vears. Before the time of Moses people lived 150 years, and if you vo far enough back they Hved 500 years, Well, that was necessary, because the story of the world must come down by tradition, and it needed long life safely to transmit the news of the past, If the generations had been short lived, the story would so often bave changed lips that it might have got all astray. But after Moses began to write it down and parchment told it from century to cen. tury it was not necessary that people live so long in order to authenticate the events of the past If in our time people lived only twentv-five vears, that would not affect his tory, since it is put in print and is no longer depends n tradition, Whatever yom ag 1 will to-day directly address you, and I shall speak to those who are in the twen. ties, the thirties, forties, the fifties, the sixties, and W086 who are in the seven ties and beyon First, then, 1 a¢ t thoss of ¥ are in the twenties. You are full of tation. You are ambitions-that is, if you amount to anvthing-—for some kind of suc- r reial or mechanical or profess ural or social or in the twenties bith "Hi | nt nt Ll wi who SX POC feel like 1 the you, 1 have tthe wor wr that the ha land. t - Lars not that =» t ad iL 4 . ’ La t bu ey ne ipation and the led, You friendships, You You fix your Almighty, for roy on all the i Wii De gn tt men he thirties YX a : find what a tough guizged and established or profession, Ten years u thought all that was neowsary for « was to put on your shutter the sign r dentist, or attorney or broker f busi. How many hours you sat and waited vain three per your wife an In commercial life you have not an « knowe={God, expactad “ated which yom and those 1. or the place you toy in the firm has not been va of the farm. with p ’ ure! 1 anticipate roted to support y wa, and to pay the interest e. has been far lems than ir the pr.am wera down, or sp tness made drafts on yald not have ex~ ny sal expenass for » resources that you eo deands of results ars har lost the In » me respects tha becauw is very rare indeed that a young man dos young man last Sunday night, ame to me and sald: I hava beon spared since | cams to couniry that I feel, at a matter of te, that I ought to dedioats myself Nineteuths of the postry of life if you sinoe you oams into the thirties, Moen in the different pro. fesslons and occupations saw that you ware rising and they must put an estoppel on you or you might somehow stand in the way, They think you must bs suppresssd From 30 to 4) it is an eapecially hard time for young doctors, young lawyers, young merchants, young "armas, young mechan jos, young inlnisters, The struggle of the thirties is for honest and helpful and re munerative recognition. But few old ple know how to treat young people without patronising them on the one han | or snub. bing them on the other, Oh, the thirties! Joseoh stood belors Pasrson at 8), David was J) years old when he bagan to reign, Tue height of Solomon's temple was 30 ow bits, Christontersd u when he « to Go” dias sold bumasit for What a word Your for | 4 | the hill | half way through t | hois inna position to | temptation to fold up your | quit. You will feel a tendency to reminisces, Fil active ministry putting first a figure “2” and the time whon you will cease expressing it by putting first a figure *9." Ay itis the greatest time of the struggle, I adjure you, in God's name and by God% grace, make it the greatest achievement, My prayer is for all those in the tremendous crises of tho thirties, The fact is that by the way you decide the pres- ent decade of yonr history you decide all the following decades, When I was in Russia I was disappointed in not seeing the battlefield of HBorodino. Why was thera fought such a battle at that small village? It was 70 miles from Mosonw, Why that desperate struggle, in which 125, + 000 Frenchmen grappled with 160,000 Rus slang, and 80,000 dead Frenchmen and 52 000 dead Russians were left on the fleld? It was because the fate of Moscow, the sacred city of Russian, was decided there-~decided 10 miles away. And let me tell you, peopls of the thirties, you are now at the Borolino, whence will resound its successes or its moral lisasters clear on into the sevedfties if you ive to the threesoore and ten of the text, Next I accost the forties, Yours is the dee sade of discovery. Ido not mean the dis. sovery of the outside, but the discovery of yourself. No man knows himself until he s 40 He overestimates undersatimates vmself, By that time he has learnsd what 1 can do or what he cannot do, y thought we had commercial geniu t SOG » millionaire b } ho | 2 comfortabl ing, He thought rhetorical power that the United States senate, if he can sucomsssfully argue a common belore a petit jury. He thought he had maelical would make hima Mott or a Willard Parker or a Bims; now sphere is that of a family p }) IAS had into mtent Case woull bring him now he is skill that Grosse or a he finds his scribing for the flict our race. Hoe and could not take clears up en tht real latitude and longitu chimbing, but now | and he takes ¢ ward, Heo bas m | had, Hes ki been r YOYage. tiedown bubbles ¥i gaturs of all o hat ¢ wok har rat Wau year! And if wus was such a giad tin rious ner th HEDen ne to the Af pet of jubiles that I That was the allusion made by the great h st, when | Blow ye the trumpet, blow i gindly solemn sound; Lt all tae nations koow, y earti's remotest bound, The year of jablies Is come Retarn yo ransomed sinners % hear y maologi yal, Yeo who have sold for naaght Your heritage above Khali have it back nado hile The gift of Jesus's The year of jubilee has come Heturn yo ransomed sinners ne ve, Mi next a ta the sixt ios Z of that decades is more startling than any other, In his chronoogiel jours ney the man rides rather smoothly over the figures “3” and “57 and “¢" and “5° figure “0” gives him a big jolt “it cannot be that I am 6), . amine the old family record. | guess they made a mistake They got my nams down wrong in the roll of births.” Bat, no. the older brothers or sisters remember the time of his advent, and there is some relative a year older, and another relative a year younger, and, sure ssough, the fact is estab lished beyond all disputation, Sixty! Now your great My beginning rm danger (a the facultion and i you donot look out you will begin al | most everything with the words, “When | was a boy," But you ought to make ths sixtion more memorable for God and the truth than the fifties, or the forties, or the thirties, You ought to do more during th next ten years than you did in any 30 years of your life beosuse of all the experience you have had, You have committed enough mistakes In life to make you wise above fru Juniors, Now, under the acoumaliated luht of your past experimenting, go to work for Giod as never bolore, i £ veil : : i =F % 3 heart and the sin of the world, but I guess ¥ou ave about done, } Thera may be ome wor: for vou vat on small or args scale Blsmarek, of Germany, v gar fe in the eighties, The prime minis- ter of England strong ar 84 Havdn come posinz bis oratorio, “The Creation,” at 70 years of age, [soorates doing somos of his best work at 74, Plato busy thinking for all UOC Hog conturies at 84, William Blake at 67 learning Italian, vo as to reat Dante in the original, Lord Cockburn at 87 writing bis best treatise Waoslov stirring great audienc ss at 85, William CC. Bryant, without soectacies revling in my “Thanatopsis” at 83 years of age ? Christian men and women in all doe partments serving God after bee ming septuagenarians and onarians and honagenarians prove that thers are possis bilities of work for the aged, but I think You who are passed the seventies are near being through How do you fesl nbout it? Y ou ought jubilant, becauss fe is a tremendous strug le and if you have Hmrough ress of , John house oclo got vi } » ugh) clably and usefully you ought “i KB io 1 y 2 ‘ " 18 people toward the closs of a LT Her aay seated on the rosks watching th 4] unset at Har Harb aps A or Look ot at La; saroor or Caps May or Look. JUnsain, I am glad to say that 1 $ " iat most old Christians eerfal Daniel Webster visited Jo n ttimes befors his deat a very infirn andiord, as near as I can make « t intend to make nny repairs, y the ] i fuse th m wis out of a hundred who take God in- r worldy affaire, “Behind the great, vi standeth God within the shadows Mi | ro are not 1 st ad Don 8 OWEH na New York prayer moete my partoer. 1 did at Him for twenty years and failed every two or three years. | been doing business with Him for twenty years and have not falied " Oh, take the supernatural into all your affairs! 1 had such an evidenos of the goodness of God in temporal things when | entered active life | mast testify, Called to preach at lovely Belleville, in New Jersey, | ettored upon my work. But there stood the empty par- sonage, and not a cent had [ with which to furnish it, After preaching three or four weeks the officers of my church asked me if 1 4id not want to take two or three weeks vacation. Isald “Yes” for I had pres about all I knew, but 1 feared they must be getting tired of ma. When | returnad to the village alte brief vacatl handel me the key of the parsonage and asked me if I did not want to go and look at it Not suspecting any thing had happened, [ put the key iuto the parsonage door and pened it, and thers was the hall completely Turnishel with carpet and pictures and hatrack, ani [ turned into the pariors, and they were furnished, the softest sofas | ever sat on, and into the study and found it furnished with _book-oases, and 1 wont to the bedrooms, and they were fur nished, and into the pantry, and that was furnished with every culluary article, and the sploshoxes were filled, and a flours barrel stool there ready to be opsnasd, and | went down into the dining room, and the table was set and beautifully furnishe), and into the kitehen, apd the stove was full of fue’, aud a matoh lay on the top of the stove, and all 1 had to do in starting house keeping was to strike the mateh, God ine sv'red the whole thing, and if 1 ever doubt ! 4s goodness, all up and down the world, eall ae an ingrate, I testify that [ have boon in many tight Jans and God slways got me out, and He will get you out of the Ught pisces, dut the most of this audience will never reach the eighties, or the seventies, or the sixtion, or the fifties, or the forties. He who lens into the forties has gone far beyond he average of human life. Amid the un. certainties take God through Jesus Christ t and eternal safely. The v a small fragment of the We will all of us soon be rand said: ‘God is ness with have ved a, they and win eos nat they have gained whose sols are lost, — i —— SABBATH SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL LESSON FOR MABCH 19, Admonitions” Golden 18 Lesson Text: "Timely Prov xxiil., 105.2% Text Eph, v., Commentary, Note: A Missionary Lesson has also been suggested for this date litle, “Gods Tant Men Make,” lenis “a B20 Liv. Mr, Stearns has prepared his co nmentary in the Lesson He Iper for this lesson ), “They that maks a graven all of and thelr things shall not profit,” Jehovah will yet be known in all the world, and in so [ar as we by word and deed make known that true God and be raissiovary spirit, chown > image are them vanity, delectable Jesus Is Jehoval the only only ive t Saviour, ople to be Hix witne nit sek into Those but i he maketh a ft, and prayeth unto { South Sea islanders hoart of Africa, who we are reading of peo of many “in Israel, i exalted above all He might be w they had falles ff God, ere Decale AN empty vine unt himself (Hos 3 doing with your en tertainments and lectures and fine music and works of bearts and bands, bowing down 10 these things and to peoples of ture and infl nent nstead of bowing to one, IS, *They bave not known por und stood, for tie bath shut their eyes that 1 cannot * The greatest thing is the knowledge of God: it is bet all SArilly wisdom Or robes or m them you yt mens 4 oe fx LM Jos i Ths to know 1 trus Christ, whom Thou hast sent 8. And Paul inted all things but for the excellency of the knowledge of Jesus Christ (Phil. HH, ® Because lsranl delibe erately ana williuily turned away from her God He therefore shut her eves and hard ened her heart, Compare Isa, vi, 8 10; Math, xiii. 13 19. “Ana pone considereth in his heart” No one seemed to have sense enongh to say, Here is wood of which | make a fire to warm me, and bake my bread, and roast my meat, and the rest 1 worehin as a god, falling down 10 the stock of a tree. Whea ono men turn away from the word of God, they are ready to believe any delusion plenty (LI Thess, ii, 10.12 20. “He feoedeth on ashes, a deceived heart bath turned him aside that he can not dee liver his soul” If we head not promptly and only the word of God, satan will con tnually deceive us and give us ashes for bread. Ses how the church is deceived to. day, fanoying that she is lerael, and that her mission is to conver: the world, and that she has plenty of time to do it in, See how the people follow those who destroy the Word, and Jeaven their food till it seems as if the whole was leavened already Let ue turn ak Sud hearts to Him who is "Nagectiig Il His enemies De made His food (Heb, x. 1%, and filled with His spirit live to make Him known, obeying to the utmost His command, “Go ye into all the world and the Gospel to every creature” then shall we realizs iiis “Lo, | am with you alway.” « Lawson Ax Ogden preacher attended a prize fight and then swore out war. rants for such of the other spectators as he eould recognize. He was guilty, in this laudable effort to elevate the pugilist, of one grave error. He swore out no warrant for his own ar rest. sss — ss Ric FATHER-IN-LAW “My tor will, 1 trust, prove a veal meet to you mpeSunious Son-1e- law—*1 hope so. I don't know how I'll ment without her help.” | inch of the head. | gtables, but the loss of Lis enrs | trim, | enthe uncferm or assorted, pat os In | | meng A Siylish Horse Witavul Ears. “Ope of the most stylish drivigg horses in this city has no ears,’ omar] Eugene Carter, of Omabs, toa friend st the Lindell, “1 won't disclose the name of the owner, but the horse is driven on the boulevard every floe day | CART OT 19 with- cise. He can easily trot in 2:52 out u skip, and hie disposition makes him one of the mogt valuable family Lorses In St. Louis. My brother raised 1! When s colt the animal bad | frozen so badly that whe process set in they sloughe | off within The colt was Host brother Dan's nim promising one in ny ace Daa broke him three years first troted ed A Una aie gue, ana he showed speed from Lhe H. Is less than six but the ah Sy [ . ONE ENJOYS Both the method and 1 ta wl Syrup of Figs is taken; it and ‘refreshing to the tast genily yet promptly on Liver and Bowels, el tem effectually, dispels colds, aches and fevers and cures hal Syrup of Figs is the nly remedy of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste and so npt In ceptable to the stor its action and truly effects, prepared only healthy and agreeable sul many excellent qualities to all and have mad i remedy k-~own. Syrup of Figs is for sa : and 81 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist wh may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one whe wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute, CALIFORNIA FIS SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCIK - LOWISYILLE, xy A XYNI1 MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS witn THOMSON'S SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. and they will find | ma eine hem easly and quirk vaotuirly smacth. Requiring » Setve No tools reguioed. Only 8 hammer needed 1 saving the ‘ be # The “ee strong, . pow In us iN a, any dealer for them, send 0a In Dk of JR, assorted slees. Man 00 by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO. WALTHAM, MASS, I ————— he leather tar barry for the Rivets Bh and durable, Milos Ask [DELICATE W\f OMEN BRADFIELD'S REGULATOR. E possesses Tonic ey exerts a wonderful influs Sn tho t Vig, Health and
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