"REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN- DAY SERMON. Subject: “A Great Woman.” ——— Texr: “And it fell on a day that Elisha passed to Shunem, where was a greal wo- man. "IT Kings iv.. 8 The hotel of our time had no counterpart fn any entertainment of olden time, he vast majority of travelers must then be en- | tertained at private abode, Hers comes Rilsha a ssrvant of the Laoasd on a divine mission, and he must find shelter, A bal eony overlooking the vatley Esdraeclon is of- fered him ie a private house, and It is es pecially furnished for his occupancy-—a chair togit on, a table from which to eat, a candle stick by whieh to read and a bed on which to slumber-the whole establishment belonging to a great and good woman. Har husband, it seems, was a godly man, but he was entirely overshadowed by his | wife's excellencles, just as now you some times find in a household the wife the centro of dignity and influence and power, not by any arrogance or presumption, but by superior intellect and forve of moral nature wielding domestic affairs and at the sane time supervising all financial and business affairs, the wife's hand on the shuttle, on the banking house, on the worldly business, You see hundreds of men who are successful only because there is a reason at home why they are succesaful, If aman marry a good, makes his fortune, I! he marry a fool, the Lord help him! The wife may be the silent partner in the firm, thers may masculine volees down on exchange, there oftentime comes from the a potential and elevating influence, This woman of my text was the superior of her husband, He, ss lar ag 1 can under stand, was what wa often; 568 in our day-—a man of large fortune and only a modicum of brain, intensely quiet, sitting a long while in the same place without moving hand or foc ~if you say ‘‘ves,” responding ‘yes’ ou say ‘‘no,” responding ‘‘no inane, eyes alf shut, mouth wide open, maintaining position in society only § as go patrimony. But his wile, my text says Was a great woman, Her name bas not come down to us, belonged to that eo ot people who neod no distinguish theo n would tit f duchess or princess « what w escutoheon or gleamin «be to this woman of my text, wi intelliges and her behavior, of admiration of ali ages Long Hant women of the ‘ been forgotten, and the the court of Spain bave bee the brilliant w nn whe have been forgotten, » put on his spectacies, and bold the other side the light read to hi dren the story of this great wor nem who wae so and Christian to the good prophet she was a great woman, in the first y, she was great in her hospitalitios, ivilized and barbaricas nations honor this virtue, Jupiter bad the surname of the hospitable, and he was sald especially to avenge the wrongs of strang- ors Homer exalted it in his verse The Arabs are punctilious upon this subject, and among some of their tribes it is not anti the ninth day of tarrying that the occupant bas a right to ask his guest, “Who and whenee art thou?" If this virtue isso bos ored even arn barbarians, how ought it t be honored among those of us w believe fn the Bible, which ox a to use he pitality one toward anotl it gradg ing? Of course I do not mean under this to give any idea that | approve of that grant class who go around from place place ranging their whole lifetin peips under the auspices of some svoient or philanthropic society, quartering themselves on Uhiristian families, with a great pile of teauks in the hall and carpetbag portentons of tarrying. There is many & country parson. age that looks out week by week upon the ominous arrival of wagoa with creaking wheel and lank horse and dilapidated driver, come under the anspices of some charitable fnstitution to spend a few weeks and the neighborhood. let no su tramps take advantage « 8 be honsst soul, he be only but One 0 his bec he h She lisction rue diadem forgotten nighty thre kind Vw cover a to CARDVASe h religious sutiful vir. Rot so much the y diet and the regality of your abode wil} fm press the friend or the stranger that steps across your throahold as the warmth of your greeting, the informality of your reception, the reiteration by grasp and by look and by a thousand sttentions, insignificant attentions of your earnestness of weleome, There will be high appreciation of 3 weleoms although you have nothing 1 the brase: eandlestick and the plain cha offer Elisha when he comes to Shunem, Most beautiful is thiz grace of hospitality when shown in God, 1 am thankful that I am iroh where strangers are ale home, and not a State in the Union in which 1 have not heard the affability the ushers of our charch complime v But I have entered churches were thers was no hospitality, A stranger would stand in the for awhile and then make pligrims the wi and excited and embarrassed, he gtarted back again, and coming tosome hall. filled pew with apo air entered it, while the occupants glared on him with a look which seemed to say, “Well, if I must, 1 must.” Away with ‘such accursed in- decency from the houss of God! Let every ehureh that would maintain iarge Christian influence in community eultore Sabbath by batd this beautiful grace of Christian hos pitality. A good man traveling in the far west, in the wilderness, was overtaken by night and storm, and he put in at a cabin. He saw fire. arms along the beams of the sabia; and he feit alarmed. He did not know but that he bad fallen into a den of thieves, He sat there greatly perturbed. After awhile the man of the house came home with a gun on his shoulder and set it down ins corner, The stranger was still moce alarmed, After awhile the man of the house whispered wil’: his wife, and the stranger thought his de. struction was being plannod, Then the man of the house eames forward and said to the stranger: “Stranger, wears a rough and rude people out here, and we work hard for s living. We nmke our living the house of thnre HE ’ Ol vestibule aour Gr viet fe by hunting, and when we come to the night | fall we are tired, and we are spt to go to bed early, and before retiring we are always in the habit of reading a chapter from the word of God and making a prayer, Hike such things, if you will just step outoide the door until we get through L'il be greatly i obliged to you,” Of course the stranger tar- ried in the oom, and the old hunter took bold of the horns of the altar and brought down {he blessing of God upon his house. bold and upon the stranger within their gates. Buds but glorious Christian hospi it : n, this woman in my text was great in her kindness toward God's messenger, Elisha may have heen a stranger in that housheld, but as she found out he had come on a divine mission he was cordially welcome, Wa have a great many books fn our day about the hardships of ministers and the trials of Christian ministers, I wish somebody wold write a book about the joys of the Uhristin minister—about the sympathies sll around him, about tha kKindnesses, about the considerations of him, Dises sorrow come to our home and ie there a shadow on the eradle, thers are nundrade of hands to help, and many who weary not through the long night watobing, and bun. dreds of up tuast Bod would dutning, Birkin. on { or & Xe If you don't | This woman of the text was only a type of thonsande of men and women who come down from the mansion and from the cot to do kindness to the Lord's servants, I sup- pose the men of Shunem had to pay the bills, but it wasthe large hearted Christian sympa thios of the women of Shanem that looked after the Lord's messenger, Again, this woman inthe text was great in her behavior under trouble, Her only son had died on her lap. Avery bright light went out in that housshold, The sacred writer puts it very toerssly when he says, ‘Ho sat on her knees until noon, and { then he died,” Yetthe writer goes on to say | that she exclaimed, “It is well!” Great in | prosperity, this woman was great in trouble, | Where are the feet that have not been blis- | tered on the hot sands of this great Sabarn? | Where are the shouiders ibat ave nol hent under the burden of grief? | the ship sailing over glassy sen that has not | after awhile been caught in a cyclone? Where | is the garden of earthly comfort but trouble { hath hitehed up its flery and panting team { and gone through it with burning plowshare { of disaster? Under the pelting of ages of suffering the great heart of the world has burst with woe Navigators tell us about the rivers, and the { Amazon and the Danube and the Mississippi have been explored, but who ean tell the depth or length of the great river of sorrow made up of tears and blood rolling through | all lands and all ages, bearing the wreck of | families and of comn ~foaming, writhing, bolling with the agon jes of 6000 years? Etna and Cotopaxi and Vesuvius have been deseribed, but ever sketehed the voleano of suffering reach. ing up from its deptha the lava and the scoria and pouring them down the sides to whelm the nations? Oh, if 1 could gather all the heartstrings, the broken heartstrings, into a harp I would play on it a dirge such was never sounded, Mythologists tejl us of Gorgon and taur and Titan, and geologists tell us tinct species of gr Gordon or megatherium, and not belonging to the realm of fable, and not an extinet species, Is a monster with fron jaw and fron hoofs walking across the nati his. tory and poetry and sculpture, nl- tempt to sketoh it and d hay {0 sweni great dr hank God, thers are tho enn as this won if the text conquered and say: I " hough my § ort y be gone, tho my home bet be sacrifoad, it is we no wie EE ns Cen of ex- mon than ters, but enter of ne, and their in, | in esoribe ’ wpe of bloo 5 WIO health | There in Christ is ready to the ship rm on t rise In the hinder part of it. There is no tions of God's eter and though the w rthern sky § northern sky say Way are thrond : : phire, and the spiendor of Come up this way arkness bat 1 n soem to We may. like the » On periloas dept Though satan en The Promise Assres sips, by tempest be | we, Bat i 38 the Lord wi T heard an echo of my text in a wv hour, when my father lay dying, ar sountry minister said to him, “Mr. Ta ' 3 y you feel now as you are about 19 pass the Jordan of death?’ He replied—and it was the last thing be ever sald--"1 Teel well I feel very wall ; all is well,” Kiting bis hand in a benedictic a spococbless bene which I pray God may go down the geperations, It is weil! Of co was well, Again, this woman « n her application to 4d cture is a he ¥ ORES } nm, Hetion, ga a: urss it of my text was mestio duties ire, whet tiisha, or whether ahie je giv . 0 her oy, or or the torat ion Chan disoie Qreat Every whi ia whether she is ay of her propert a home pietur ples of this Bhunemite Woman who, me out to attend to outside duty of homo the duty of wife, of daughter. No faithiu efnction can ever atone gence, There bas been many defatigable toll has reared a large children, equipping them for the dx with good manners and | gence and Christian principle, out, who has do r th many another woma whe sounded through all lands wontuties I remember thera o whaok ) Jue. ro in her is " are not Ww charities, neglect the of mother, fea in for publie ben domestic negli a mother who by : tiv of Nf lite start ne more % ah wit hy He La when K¢ were 8 by presenting him very fully with bouqg of flowers on wione, but what was all that comparad with the work of the plain 0 wgarian mother who gave to truth and eivilh ation and the eause universal Hberty » Kossuth You, woman of my text wid great in her simplicity When the prophet wanted to reward her for her b by asking n the King, what did she say “I dwell an as to say satisfiad with All T want fs my nd my friends around me I dwell 2 my own Oh, what & reba oo s in all agen! y want {0 get great Fraen. pete paBine on this snitality some wy axa to th rife How many there are wi architeot and rarnjshed with all wrt, all painting, wary, who bave not enon @ to dist wish between gothi id not a from Palmer's ire homes ' Le shal nae 8 Nive penetl Bierstadt's "Yosemite men who buy large libearies by the square oot, | buying these libration when they have hardly enough education to pick out the day of the almanacs! Oh, how many there are striving to have things as well as their neighbors, or better than their neighbors, and in the strug. gle vast fortunes are exhausted and business firms thrown into bankraptey, and men of reputed honesty rush into astounding for géries, Of course | say nothing against refinement or culture. Splendor of abode, sumptuous mess of diet, Iavishness In art, neatness in ap- parel-thers is nothing against them in the Bible or out of the Bible, God does not want us to prefer mud hovel to English eot - tage, or untanned sheepskin to French broadeioth, or husks to pineapple, or the clumsiness of a boor to the manners of a gentleman, God, who strung the beach with tinted shell and the grass 57 the field with the dews of the night and bath exquisitely iinged morniig cloud and robin red breast, wants us to keep our eye open to sll beaati- ful sights, and our sar open to all beautiful eadences and our heart open to all elevating septimect. But what | want to impress upon ou is that =e ought not to inventory the fuxuries of ile a8 among the indispensables, and you ought not to depreciate this woman of the text, who, when offered kingly prefer. ment, responded, “I dwell among my own | people,” Yea, this woman of the text was great in her piety, faith in God, and she was not oA. | to talk about it before ldolaters, Ab, woman will never appreciate what she owes to Christianity until she knows and sees the jon of her sex under pagsuiam and | Mahommedasism, Her very birth considered | a misfortune, Sold like cattle in the sham. | bles, Slave of all work, and at last her body | fuel for the funeral pyre of her husband, Above the shriek of the fire worshi in India and above the rambling of the jagger. pants I hear the million voiced groan of | wronged, insulted, broken h , down. | trodden woman. Hee tears have fallen in the | Nile and Tigris and the La Plata and on the | steppes of Tartary, She has been dishon- ored in Turkish garden and Persian and Spanish Alhambra, Her little ones have boon sacrificed in the Ganges, There is not # groan, or a dangeon, or an island, or a mountain, or a river, of & sea but could tell of the out nea u her, fron Where i» | O8 | junities and of empires | who has‘ | When I come to speak of womanly influs ence, my mind always wanders off to one model-—~the aged one who, 27 years ago, we put away for the resurrection, About 87 yoars #go, and just before thelr marriage day, my father and mother stood up in the eld meeting house at Somerville. N. J,, and { took upon them the vows of the Christian. { Through a long lite of viclssitude she lived | harmlessly and usefully and eame to her end { fn peace, No child of want ever came to het door snd was turned empty away, No one {in sorrow came to her but was comforted, | No one asked her the way to be suved but she | When the angel | lof life eame to a neighbor's dwelling, she | | was there to rejoice at the starting of an- | | pointed him to the cross, | other immortal spirit, When the angei cl death eame to a neighbor's dwelling, she was thoes tn rota the danastad for the burial We had often heard her, say, “OO Lord, 1 ask not for woalt™ or honor, but I do ask that they all may bathe subjects of Thy comforting grace bg i Her 11 children brought into the kingdom of | and that | God, she had but one more wish, wns that she might see her long absent nis stonary son, and when the ship from China anchored in New York harbor and the long absent one passed over the threshold of his paternal home sha sald, "Now, Lord, lettost I'hou Thy servant depart in peace? for mine { eyes have seen the salvation.” The prayer WAS S00Nn Aneweras g ’ It was an autumnal day when we gathered { from afar and found only the house from whish the soul bad fled forever. She looked very natural, the hands very much as when they were employed in kindness for her children. Whatever else we forget, wo never forget the look of mother's hands, As we stood there by the casket we could not help “Don’t she look beautifal?’ It was cloudless day when, with heavy hearts, carried her out to the last resting place, The withered loaves crumbled under hoof and wheel as we passed, and the sun on the Raritan River until #t looked like fire ; but more calm and teantiful and radiant was the setting sun of that aged pil- grim’s life, No more toll, no more tears, no more sickness, no more death, Dear Beautiful mother! Dut say. " we shone ' mother Swost is the slumber beneath the sod, While the pure spirit rests with God I need not go back and show you Zenobla r Semiramis or ahem or even the wou of the text as wonders of womanly excellence or greatness when I in this momer picture galler; y e one face that you rem . and ArOuUsSe all your holy rom inisong ow in new consecration t b tion of that tender, beautiful, (+) y God | mother I Ee Medicine In the Middle Ages, In neteenth Century an entertaining some curious A person whose right eye was inflamed or bleared was recommended to “take the right eve of a Frog it in a piece of russ cloth, it about the neck [he skin of » prescribed for gout. LH] ravens heel was men will be interested Difident young in this: “If you would have a man be- a | Ky # ap and hang come bold or impudent, let him carry about him the skiu or eves of a lion or cock, and he will be fearless of his nay, he will be very terrible unto them.” The tendency to reti- cence, which is so of municipal councils, ete. , might be cured by this treatment: “I! you would have him talkative, give and seek out those 1 ducks, for Enemies mmon a fault parliaments, him tongues, of water frogs tures notor 0 ey making du If a man had a “sounding or a pip ing in his cars,” he waa recommended to put oil of hempseed, warm, into em, ‘and after that let him leapeo on his upon that side where the discase hen let him ht syde, if issue ont and such creas "He their continual y 34 » OF One eK ms; 1 bowe donne hs eare of haply any moysture would he re medy for nose bleeding was “heat ogre them thre them into bys nose | of egges whareout young hatched, it w Powde red F Were recomm shales to pounder, and = cloth, ed 144] igh a linnen and blow if © shinles werd y chickens are the better.” mized with ended for jaundice. hache might be relieved by an ap- the fat of ‘little greene i of the ‘‘graye worms breathing under wood or stones, hav- ing many fete Frogs and toads were remedios, especially when treated in some grotesquely barbarous n Popular medical scicnee today and will probably disappear alio- gether: but the Middle Ages it seems to have had a very rational basis, -Toronto Globe, ere so much earth worms favorite AnDET, Against declining, tejudice prejudi 18 EE —— Saved by a Blotter, A commercial traveler writes {o tha St. Louis Globe-Democrat: “The blotter in a hotel writing room once saved me from very consideruble loss, As a general rule the blotter in a writ. ing room is so dirty and covered up with ink marks that the whole presenta the appearance of an Egyptian hieroglyphics. But on this oconsion, as lnek wonld have it, the blotter was absolutely new and clean and could be examined very closely. The last man who had been using it was also the first, and as he used rather a liberal | supply of ink and wrote rapidly he re- | produced simost the entire letter upon tho blotter before folding it up. I knew him to be the reprosentative of a large Eastern house in asimilar though not rival eapacity to our own, and | I found without intending to do so, myself glancing at the reproduction | I was | of his letter on the blotter. struck at once with the name of the house from which I had the previous | | day taken an exceptionally large | order, and reading on I found that ie had notified his firm that, acting under | advice from a very reliable source, he {had decided not to earry out his in | structions and sell this firm a bill of | goods, 1 went out at once and made 'a few inquiries which convinced me | that not only was the house in ques | tion in difenltios, but that it was alse contemplating a feaudulent transfer to defeat ita creditors, 1 prowptly wired the honse I represented to ignore | my letter hy hi containing this | order, giving the reasons briefly, and : : soon of one of the fecuding held & lean hotel Rieter in » when leading | family prayers in the absence of my father, | my children | | firmly i SABBATH SCHOOL. ————— se INTERNATIONAL LFSSGN FOR SEPTEMBER 3, — Y.esson Text: “Paul at Athens,” Acts xxvil,, 30-44 Golden Text: Psalm xivi., 3 mentary. Come 80. “And as theshipmen were about 40 flee | out of the ship, when they had let down the | boat fnto the sea, under color as though they | would have east anchors out ofthe foreship,” | A jovi grieved to begin ibis lesson wilh ibe treachery of theso sallors, when such rich food for the soul is iu verses 22 to strangely omitted by the lesson committes, 5, 21, “Paul sald to the centurion and to the | soldiers, Except these abide in the ship ye cannot bs saved.” Paul was only 24); them, Nop was given those with him in the ark, and Rad those with her in the house, Only those can be saved who are in Christ, and abiding is the evidence that we are truly In Him (John » 27 98. 1 John 8 12, “Then the soldiers cut off the ropes of the boast and let her fall off.” throwing away their only hope, but 2 was really their only safety. In orderto be saved by Christ we must let go our owa righteous. Ness, HUF Own Works and even our own ways and thou " wll that we have (Isa, Ixiv 6 5: Ilsa. lv., 7, and Luke xiv 33 35. “And whi 149 in fact, Titus 544. , } o the day was Paul besought them all to take mest had endured fourteen days of nous werther that they had nity and perhaps little desire 10 In verse 20 we road thst all soeing land bad been given up. But there Is ght in the darkness, He who trols the winds and the sea (Mark iv, bad for His servant's sake sent s message prace i. “This 3 hall not an dir fall from the you This Is & oot Testament iliustration of perfect 1 Sam. xiv,, 45; 11 | ¥ Math. x., 80 Luke xix 18 Even concerning Daniel's who east into the seven times heated furnace it written thet there was not & hair of beads singed (Dan. in : “And when he coming on They ueh tem pest - little opportu- tasta food hope of ever now on 39) ' is for your health, for thers head of any of Old and New seiety mas Ham, I Kings i, wera is thelr 5 and wh in his that he trusted in God an ftealings with God He gry Hverance when to faith, ¥. “Than they also took some ported them to be i choer hi HECWIsS { YErpes sxiil., 11: Math, ix If we stead with joy and peace (Hem, xv moh as it i Lpossible for only unto ourselves ( Hon of pecessity influence « also 1] iowa re 1 wi st iy believe (3 “And we were hundred, tl Think of 270 grave by on have saved H edornal ros » Mm a wWalery & men would overid @ Kodo Ww many th flery US » been saved ty men as fn, Neadbam and others? What pom in the world Does ft tend the health and safety of others, ar are you 6 troubier and a dishonor Prince of Peace i, And when they had eaten enough they { the ship and cost out the wheat lato the son” The angel bad tid Paul, and he had paesed it on that the shi aid hye {verse 24 There was therefore no object in The the row is } from such Rpurge the wae be eR lighten {A of their wealth Jesu th J fo wake r this Knew nd dayll would somehow A, yiid wo storm was still ¢ they ware thers we i thelr Hyves than pen ra | within (he 19 VME. FUE al “And when they chors they made 1 came the greatest danger apps might they not all be dashed to § fox the word of God was on thelr behalf One who trusts in that word can say, “Therefore will not we fear though the #arih be remo 1 and theugh ther be carvied int v0 midst of the xivi, 2 41 AORN TIT LEIP F TRE LIT SRI) Be ar part remained immovable, while the rest was soon broken by the waves and the vessel that bad held sogether through sli the tm post on the sea and kept them from going to the bottom was now a hopeless wreck, It eame to pass as Patil had been told—the ship should be lost (verse 21) 42 “And the soldiers’ counsel was to kill {he prisoners, lest any of them sb mild swim out and escape It was because of one of these prisoners that all were alive They were glad enough to listen to his words of encouragement in the storm, but now they would ruthlessly take his His if permitted, Ah, Paul, thou hadst much fellowship with thy Master, for those whom He came (0 bless actually took His life, When shall we learn the lesson that the servant is not greater than his master and bes will content to be as He (John xv., 19, 20)7 ! 4. “Put the centurion, willing to save Paul, kept them from their purpose” The | records of the centurions whom the Lord need to accomplish His furposes or who | were Jad to know Him as thelr Lord i= most | instructive, The name of this one is given | in verse 1. Compare chapter x. 22, and see | also Math, wifi, 5, 6, 10; xxvii, 54, 44 “And so it came to pass that they es- eaped all safe to land.” What God and angels testify we may surely believe, for “The Lord of Hosts hath sworn, saying, surely as I have thought so shall it come to | pass, and as I have purposed so shall it | Band (Isa. xiv.. 3). May the fulfiliment | of the words of this angel lead us to believe the words of some other angels who sald, “This same Jesus shall so come in like manner.” And also the words of Gabriel, that “ths Lord God shall give unto Him the throne of His father David, and He shall over the house of Jacob forever of His kingdom, thers shall be no end" {Acts 1, 11: Luke §., 32, 83). ~Lason Helper, ek sat anex Buffalo Bill's Indians get through thelr work in Chicago In the afternoon, they like nothing better than to repair % a merry-go-round pear their camp and revolve to the music of & bad handorgan. The passerby stops to see the show, for the buks and squaws are in thelr full panopiy of feathers and paint. Most people would get enough fun by rid- Ing horseback three or four hours every day without wanting to ride on wooden horses afterward; but, then, you see, real horses have no band had taken ward the sho pledged intains sen’ (Ps. YAnd falling into ers two Sr a. piace w 8 | promised | the lives of those with him in the ship (verse | if they should start off in the boast by | themselves, bs could not be responsible for | | declare It looked lke | i and | These unmbers { © Where Pearls Are Found, Tearls are found in the shells of many kinas of mollusks. They occur in the common edible oyster, but sre not of value, Very large white ones are occasionally obtained from the gient clam, which is the biggest known bivalve, but they are not worth much. They are always symmetrical and of rome beanty, having a faint but pleas when looked at The shells of the ginnt clam sre sionally used for baptismal fonts churches, The animal is found, buried up to the Lpe, downward, in - # i | Corsi recin ont an as ing sheen sidewnve, O00 n hinge Lf... LT ATA Arama wT by stepping between the open vaives, which immediately npou the foot, holding them until they drowned, clos d It is said that peasris of a yellowish | sined from the | of | the m | away, considering them unlucky. They Hight color are sometimes obit pearly nautilus the Booloo Archipelago throw $ut natives the that, if a should wearing a ring withsuch a be killed, found in the Many the have wi man Dent I, Pearl- AK #8 8 IT while he wonld certainly CATLIN THs Is are of parts of #irenins ne mollusks of world, FRE gr valuable H that attempts havi establish |B orl gems in untry, bree made to commercial The chi mother-ol-pearl nd West and the trad Macassar Pacifie contribute produ Varictios $s coentaor valuable I'hree whi mon ly ~~the it \ For Insomnia NE kin Detter than ans for this {oa eiICIng Detroit Free Press, AANA MAID A AAA Rn ne a a on ag ng a ap nr ned > United Btates, ent | HT ED J Yio > Aen Mr a a 1d KNOWLEDGE Prings comfort and improvement and tends to swersonal enjoyment when rightly oy The many, who Jive bet~ ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principies embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly ative ; effectually cleansing the system, | sadaches and fevers curing constipation. faction to millions and | of the medical s on the Kid- hout weak ricetly free from 4 disp Hing and permanent It has given met with pproy on, because it Liver and ening them the a Bowels wit it is pw every object i | Syrup of Figs is for pets in Hl ANOLE, + by all drug. i® mans Syrup is printed on every sme, Syrup of Figs, , you will not offered. Squirrels Destroying Birds’ Eggs. The number of song birds t always thar them South AOA AAS hh od A A »e pa greatest of helps. a as lh: troubl Dy BE aw at hs we. 3 For Summer Cookery §¢ Royal Baking Powder will be found the With least ¢ it makes bread, biscuit of finest flavor, light, sweet, &> k> > labor and » > o > and cake appetizing and assuredly digestible and wholesome. "You Wil: Realize that ** They Live Wel: Who L i» I» RR TR RT RE RR TERETE RR TERRE Es ; 3 . - a ive Cleanly,” if You Use _S with Paster, Enamels and Paints which stain the bands, injure the iron 4nd barn red, The Rising Ban Stove Polish te Brilliant, Odor. fess, Duratide, and the crmsumer paye for no Un Or glass package with every pon ih GOITRECURED THE KIND THAT CURES SEND tor VREE Circular J, XN. Kein, Belleville XJ APOLIO MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS CLINCH RIVETS. No tools required. Only a hnmer needed to drive snd clinch then easily and quick ry, leaving the clinek staointely saocth, Requiring ne hoe to be made In ihe lenther por burr for the Rivets. Ther are tough snd durable. Millon: pow in use lengths, uniforys or assorted, put up In bones, Ask your dealer for them, o wd a in vinsmps & box of JN, assorted sizes. Mani hy JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO., WELTHAM, MASS. XYXU-23 TIEW WORLD'S FAIR FREE Send two cents in post wf R Bowes, General Northern Agent, ILLINOIS CENTRAL RA HOAD, 198 Clark Street, Chicagns, 1, for a free of a large, colored bird ‘seve view of the World's Fair and vicinity, It is mounted on rollers handing up, and will be fousd of VALUK oR SGLYENIR, AND FOR REFERENCE FRAZER AXLE WTB TAC FAMICY MEOTCTNE] CATA R
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers