HR cL ——————————" Wh tl SO REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN DAY SERMON. Subject: “Worth Living.” Text: “Wherefore doth a Hving man com- plain ?'—Lamentations iii, 89, If wo leave to the evolutionists to guess where we came from, and to the theologians to prophesy where wo are going to, we still have loft for consideration the important fact that we are here, There may be some doubt about where the river rises, and some doubt about where the river empties, but there can be no doubt about the fact that we are salllngon ft. Sol am not sur- risad that everybody asks the question, ‘Is {fe worth living?" Solomon in his unhappy moments says ft is not, “Vanity,” "‘vexation of spirit," “no good," are his estimate, The fact fs that Bolomon was at one time a polygamist, and that soured his disposition, aman happy; more than one makes him wretched, But Solomon was converted from polygamy to monogamy, and the last words i ever wrote, as far as we oan read them, wera the words “mountains of spiees.” But Jeremiah says in my text life is worth living In a book supposed to be deleful and Jugubrious and sepulechral and “Lamentations” he plainly intimates that the blessing of merely living is so great and grand a blessing that though a man have {led on him all misfortunes and disasters © has no right to complain, The author of my text cries out in startiing intonation to all lands and to all centuries, “Wherefore doth a living man complain?” A diversity of opinion In our time as well as in olden time, Here is a young man of light hair and blue eves an! sound digestion and generous salary and happily afflanced and in the way to become the partner in a com- mercial firm of which he is an Important olerk. Ask him whether life is worth living, He will laugh in your face and say, “Yes, yes, yes!” Here is a man who has come to the forties, life, Every step has been a stumble and a bruise, The people he trusted have turned out deserters, and the money he has honestly made he has cheated out of, His are oat tune, He has poor p and all the food he does eat does t assimilate, F hill of AVE him 1 the Matterhorn, and there are yet to go down, and descent is always more dangerou Ask him wh worth livit and he will bean of rty miles elimt life 1 been to 8 than and appalling io this y? You oscillating in ) tion 10 exuberance be very suarial in his depend very much up w lows, Ifthe ¥ no I . Af sk im, he will say, “Yes." an yw from the northeast, and you ask him, he will “No How are we, then, to get the question righteously answered? wail all nations t gether in a great avention on eastern or waostern hemisphere and let all those who ars in the affirmative say “Aye,” and all those who are in the negative say “No.” While there would be hundreds of thou- sands who would answer in the os ™ mative, there would be me millions who would answer in the negative, and because of the greater number who have sorrow and mis. fortune and trouble the ‘noes’ would have ft. The answer [ shall give will be different from either, and yet it will commend itself to all who hear me this day as the right an- swer, If you ask me, *‘Is life worth Hving? I answer, it all depends upon the kind of life you live, In the first place, I remark that a life of mere money wetting is always a fallare, be. matter will fix Sa his fon } say IDOSH Wa re want, The poorest in this country are the viehest, and the next to them those who are half as rich. There is not a scis. sors grinder on the streets of New York or Jrooklyn who is so anxious to make money en who have up fortunes in storah your n govern. i house S00ses, in jump when they when there | thetariff. T strings, t read the reports fr morning with a concernment that threatens paralysis or apoplexy, or, more probably they have a telegraph or a telephones in their hcuse, so they eateh every breath of change in the money market. The disease of aceu- mulation has eaten into them-—-satea into their heart, into thelr lungs, into their spleen, into their liver, into their bones, Chemists have sometimes analyzed the hu. man body, and they say it is so v nesia, so much lir tassium, If some Christian chemist would analyze one of these financial behemoths, he would lad he is made up of and silver and zine and lead and coal an fron, 1 t alife worth living. The are too 1 in . ag rditions ju it. bail ure ga nas, * in the vibration. Wall street in ym the mag- yf © po opper and gold 1 nies § » and live ATE $ naucement there, but happi. nanned and postillioned she will not ride to send princely escort arm. They make their arches ; she will not They set a golden throne en piate ; she turns away ros They her from ut holsterad balcony : she will not listen, Mark you, this isthe iaiiure ofthose who have had Arge accumuiation., And then you must take into consideration that the vast majority of those who make the dominant idea of life money getting fall far short of affluence, It Is estimated that only about two eut «! a hundred business men have anything worthy the nama of success, A man who spends his life with one domi. nant idea of financial accumulation spends a life not worth living. 80 the idea of worldly approval, If that be dominant in a man's life, he is miserable, The two most unfortuaste men in this coun try for the six months of next presidential campaign will be the two mea nominated for the presidency. The resecvoirs of abuse and diatribe and malediotion will gradually fill up, gallon above gallon, hogshead above hogshead, and about autumn these two reser. voirs will be brimming full, and a hose will be attached to each one, and it will play away on these nominees, and they will have she nphal ride under then before a 2 the banquet eall to to stand It and take the abuse, and the false | hood, and the earieature, and the anathema, and the estorwauling, and the flith, and they | will ba rolied in it and rolled over and over In it until they are choked and submerged and srangalated, and at every sign of re. turning consciousness they will be barked at by all the hounds of political parties from Ocean to ocean, And yet there are a hundred men to-day struggling for that privilege thousands of men who are helping them lo the struggle, Now, that is not a life worth Jiving, You ean get slandered and abused cheaper than that! Take it on a smaller seale, Do not be so ambitious to have a whole reservoir rolled over on you. But what you see in the matter of high politi enl Pr etarhant you see In every cots munity in the struggle for what is called social position, Tens of thousands of peopls trying to get into that realm, and they are under terrifle tension, What is social position? It is a difficult thing to define, but we all know what it Is, Good morals and intelligence are not necessary, but wealth or the show of wealth Is absolutely indispensable, There are men to-day as nologious for their liber. One wife makes | entitled | He is at tha tiptop of the hill of | and there ars | tiniam as the night is famous for its dark. ness who move in what ix called high social position, There are hundrads of out and out rakes in American society whoss names ure mentionad among the distinguished guests at the great levees, They have annexed all other worlds of diabolism to conquer, Good morals are not necessary in many of the ox- altad elreles of society, Neoither is intelligence nosessary, You find in that realm men who would not know an | adverb from an adjective if thay met it a { hundred times a day and who could not | writen letter of acceptance or regrets without | theald of a secretary. They buy their libraries { by the square yard, only anxious to have the binding Russian, Their {gnorance is posi- tively sublime, making English grammar al- most disreputable, and yet the finest pariors | open before them. Good morals and in- | tolligonce are not neosssary, but wealth or a show of wealth is positively indispensable, It does not make any difference how you | got your wealth If you only get it. The Lest | way for you to get Into social position is for | you to buy a large amount on eredit, then put your property in your wife's name, have a fow preferred eroditors and then make an nssignment, Then disappear from the com- munity until the breeze is over and then | come hack and start in the same business, Do you not see how beautifully that will put out all the people who are in AR atition with you and trying to make an honest liy- { Ing? How quickly it will get you Into high social position! What is the use of forty or fifty years of hard work when you can by two or three bright strokes make a great fortune? Ah, my friends, when you really lose your money how quick they will let yon drop, and the higher you get the harder you will drop, Theres are thousands to-day in that realm who are anxious to keep in it. There are thousands in that realm who are nervous tor fear they will tall out of it, and there are changes going on every year and every month and every hour which involves heart. | breaks that are paver reported, High social life is constantly in a flutter about the dell cate question as to whom they shall let in and whom they shall pash tle is going on-——pler mirror against pler mir. ror, chandelier against chandelier, wine cel. lar against wine cellar, wardrobe against wardrobe, equipage against equipage. Un- rertainty and insecurity dominant In that realm, wretchedness enthroned, torture at a premium and a life not worth living. A life of sin, a life of pride, a life of indul- gence.a life of worldiness, a life devoted to the world, the flesh and il is a fallure, a lead fallure, an infinite failure. I care not how many presents yon sent to that eradie, many garlands yu send to that grave, you need t t underthe name nthe tombstone 118 < on, “Better » had never rn." jut Ishall show you a life that is worth A young man sayst¢ “Iam here, 1 nsible for n noostry, Others ponsible for 1 me that, Bat her of the nineteenth cen- I am here, and the dev or ho for that man if h been bo living Am not ress that I am t temperament ; God gave I am, in the afternoon tury, at twenty years ol age I must take an account of stock, Here | have a body which is a divinely constructed engine, I must put it to the very best uses and I must allow nothing to rarest of machinery. tneldad "my r my Two feet, and they mean locomotion, wo eyes, and they mean capacity to pilek out own way. Two ears, and they are telephones of communios- tion with all the outside world, and they mean capacity to catch sweetest music and the voices of friendship-—the very best musie, A tongue, with almost infinity of artienia- tion. Yes, hands with which to waloome or resist or lift or smite or wave or bless—hands to help myself and help others, “Here is a world which, after 6000 years of battling with tempest and accident, is still grander than any architect, human or an- gelie, could have drafted. I have two lamps to ght me-—a golden lamp and a lamp—a golden lamp set on the sapphire mantel of the day, a silver lamp set on the jot mantel of the night. Yea, 1 have thai at | twenty years of age which defles all in. 53 -~ " " . . 4 | choose or reject, to rejolos or to suffer, to love or to hate, Plato says it is immortal, Seneca says it is immortal. Confucius say it is immortal. An old book among the fam iy reil a book with leathern cover al worn out and pages almost obliterated by « perusal, joins the other books in sayin am immortal. I have eighty years Histime, sixty ) ylive. In live an hour, but then I must lay plans intelligently and for a long lite, years added to the twanty I have already lived—t will bring me to eighty, 1 remember that thess eighty years are only a wreface t thousand jaintillions of years which will Now I opportunities and my re 5 ra wot FoaArs yes § mat brief y the five hundred millions be my chief residence and existence, understand sponsibilities, “If thers is any being in the universe all wise and all benefloent who can help A man in such a juncture, I want him. The old book found among the [amily relics tells me there is a tiod, and that for the sake of His Son, one Jesus, He will give help to a man To Him I appeal. God help me! Here | have yot sixty years to de for mysell and to do for others. I must develop this body by all industries, by all gymaoastios, by all san- shine, by all fresh air, by all good habits, And this soul I mast have swept and garn- ished and illumined and glorified by all that I ean do for it and all that I ean get God to lo for it, It shall be a Lugemburg of flan It shall bo an orchestra of grand It shall be a palace for God and yess to reign in. I wonder how many kind words I ean utter in the next sixty soars, [will try. Iwonder how many good deeds I can do in the next sixty years I will try. God help me ™ That soung man enters life. He Js buffeted ; he is tried ; he is perplaxed. A grave opens on this side, and a grave opens mn that side. He falls, but he rises azain Ho gots into a hard battle, but he gets the vietory, The main course of his Hie is In the right directi He blessos everybody he comes in contact with, God forgives his mistakes and makes everiasting record of his he endeavors, and at the close of it God sags to him, "Well done, good and talthful servant ; enter into the joys of thy Lord,” My brother, my sister, I do not care whether that man dies at thirty, forty, fifty, sixty, seventy or eighty ong ol age. You mn chisel right under his name on the tombstone these words “His wis worth living.” Amid the hills of New Hampshire in olden times there sits a mother, here are six children in the household «four boys and two girls, Small farm. Very rough; hard work to coax a living out of it. Mighty tug ¢ m ietares, Armonies NM h h righteous m Ie My life to make the two ends of the year mest, The | boys go to school In winter snd work the farm in summer, Mother Is the chief pre- siding spirit, With her hands she knits all the stockings for the little feet, and she is | the mantua maker for the boys, and she js | the milliner for the girls. There Is only one musieal instrument in the house-the spin. ning wheel, The food is very plain, but it | Is always wall provided, The winters are very cold, but are kept out by the blankets she quilted, On Sunday, when she appesrs | In the village church, her children around | her, the minister looks down and Is remind. { od of the Bible description of a good house- | wife “Her ohlidren arise up and eall her i Dlause sed, Her husband also, and he pralseth ' her.” Home years go by, and the two eldest boys | want a collegiate education, and the house | hold seonomies are severer, and the ealoula. | tions are closer, and until those two boys get | thelr education there is an hard battle for | bread, One of these boys enters the univer. | sity, stands in a pulpit widely influentiai and preaches righteousness, judgment and | | temperance, and thousands during his min- istry are blessed, The other Ind who got the collegiate education goes into the law, and thence into legislative halle, and after a while be commands listening sonates as he makes a plea for the downtrodden and the outeast, Ono of the younger boys becomes a merchant, starting at the foot of the lat. der, but climbing on up until his success and bis philant are recognized all over the and, The other son sta, s at home becauss the known human vices and are longine for | out, and the bat. | damage this | silver | ha prafers farming life, an then hn (iinks he will be able to takn care of father and | mother when they get old, Of the two daughters, when the war broke out ona went through the hospital of Pittse | burg Landing and Fortress Monroe, cheers ing up the dying and homesick, i the Inst message to kindred far away, so that | every time Christ thought of her He sald, as { of old, “The same is My sister and mother." The other daughter has a bright home of her own, and in the afternoon of the forenoon when she has been devoted to her housshold | she goes forth to hunt up the sick and to | encourage the discouraged, leaving smiles | | and benediction all along the way, But one day there start five telegrama from | the village for these five absent ones, saying, | But be. ! fore they ean be ready to start they receive | “Come ; mother Is dangerously §11." another telegram, saying, ‘Come ; mother is | dead.” | farmhouse to do the last offices of respect. | But as that farming son, and the clergyman, | | merchant, and the | | two daughters stand by the casket of the | | dead mother, taking the last look or lifting | | and the senator, and the once more the want to ask | their little children to see { face of dear old grandma, I that group around the casket one question, | | “Do you really think her life was worth liv. { Ing?" A lle for God, a lilp for others, a | Ife of unselfishness, a useful life, a Chris. | tian life, is always worth living. I would not find It hard to persuade yon | that the poor lad, Peter Cooper, making glue | for a living and then amassing a great fore | tune until he could build a philanthrophy | | which has had its echo in 10,000 philanthro- | | ples all over the country—I would rot find it hard to persuade you that his life was worth living, Neither would I find it hard to persuade you that the life of Busannah | Wesley was worth living. She sent out one son to organize Methodism and the other son io ring his anthems all through the ages, I | would not find it hard to persuade yon that | the life of Frances Loors was worth ns she established in England a school for the scientific nursing of the sick, and then | when the war broke out between France and { Germany went to the front, and with her own hands scraped the mud off the bodies of the soldiers dying in the tronghes with her weak arm, standing one night in the hospital, pushing back na Ger man soldier to his couot 11 frenzied with his wounds, t loor and sald : § mutter." Major-Ge let pass this angel of me Neither would I have 'Y that Grace the I AS, A he rushed toward “Lot ma go! Let me go tor hari work to per. Darling lived of the life un life out Duchess of and that r her lighthouse, sinh! The heroine rondering that the eriand e to her Innds asked wr of TY I know all thess fon't think my I friends, whet yo ve A spielous worth {ta » ie mn ving rour soul according 1 the but according with whieh you really possessed erowns of heavan will not be given to people with ten talents, for most of them were tempted only to serve thomselves, The vast majority { heaven will be greatness o to the employe ' The majority of industries talents you of the crowns of given to people who had one talent, but gave it all to And remse here {8 latrodustory vestibule to a palace, oor of the Madeleine beciuse thers are grander glories within Yoar life if rightly lived i= the first bar of an eternal oratorio, and who despises the first note symphonies? And the | ail the more worth oO another, It is the 10 despises the living t into a life that shall never and, anithe inst i 4 - oo i — Ee |RSS. A Sky Scraper for Physicians, The physicians of New York City are to erect elevon-story office building devoged entirely to the ' a palatial profession earved the name, *‘‘The Medical Building.” The been designated with special reference to the needs of tenants who are to be exclusively members of the medical profession or engaged in New York tice, and no office will uny tenant whose standing in the pro- fession is not entirely satisfactory, If will probably be located near the Academy of Medicine, on Forty-third | and Bixth ave | street, between Fifth nues, It will have practical facility for the accommoda- tion of tenants, such as an agency for | trained nurses, mail chutes, pneumatio | tubes, steam heat, electrio light, elee- | tric motor power, ete, Wheeled chairs will make it practicable for an invalid to be conveyed from a carriage to the clevator and thenee to an office in any part of the The ground floor will by stores, which, it is be building. be oo upied believed, will very desirable for apothecaries, mnstrus | ment makers and opticians, There will be abont 100 snites in the building. The material will be white granite. The entrance will be one story high and will be about fifty feet deep, the main strae- | ture rising eleven stories on three vides of this foyer. The entrance will be very artistically dome in carved granite, with massive wrought iron gates, There will be considerable | earving about the first five stories, and everything about the exterior of the building will be of light colors, —~Chi- cago Herald. 5 A Remarkable Net, | ‘“Isawa new fish net-—new to me, ! at least—in the Kennebec River re- { cently,” said J. 8. Stackpole, of An- | gusta, Me., at Hurst's, “The poor fish have no chance at all with it. Tt was an ordinary net, provided with a rubber tube all around the top. The | tube is connected with a compressed air-pump, operated from a boat on | the shore. The net is sunk and the fish are attracted over the middle of it, either by an incandescent lamp or {by bait, if the fisherman does not | want to carry too much paraphernalia, | When enough fish have gathered the | fisherman works his air-pump and 1n- | lates the rubber tube, It risos slowly | and so gently as not to alarm the fish, { In this way when entirely inflated the | whole top of the net is raised to the { surface of the water, completely sur- | rounding the entrapped fish, They shoot downward in flight, and never seek to go over an obstacle, and so all are easily taken. The net is reset sitaply by allowing the air to escape from the rubber tube, when the net sinks again, —Bt. Louis Globe-Demo- crat, and taking | The old neighbors ¢ather in the old | Hving, | the { sber that our life | y! Haydn's i live now is | use it opens | letter of the word “time” is the first letter | n ““ BJ er —————g i Over the portals is to be : building has | occupations . directly associated with medical prac- | be rented to! : every convenience and | to be nsed | NOTES) ——————————————————— Green denim is a new fabric, Amelie Rives Chanler, the Virginia | author, is planning a trip to the Holy Land. Mrs, Astor, the rich American wo- man, Who now lives iu England, has a | 860,000 dinner set, A sister of Thomas Carlyle is living in Toronto, Canada, the widow of a train dispatcher named Manning. *‘Health, recreation and lovely in- spiration” are the chief benefits of riding a bicycle, according to Miss Francis Willard. The will of Elizabeth Anthony Brayton Hitchcock bequeaths £1500 to the Union Theological Seminary, Schenectady, N. Y. The Baroness Burdett-Coutts sesses one of the finest collection of turquoises in the world, the smallest being valued at from $1000 to 81200, Mrs. Rebecca T. Robinson, of West Newton, Mass, is to defray the ex- penses of the erection of a new scien- tific building at Tufts Mas sachusetts, pos- College, A granddaughter of John C. Cal houn has just made a success in France, playing in French with a French com pany the role of Hermione in Racine’ “Andromaque.” Mrs. Catharine Salisbury, a sister of the Mormon prophet, Joseph Smith, who was killed by a mob at Carthage, Ill, June 27, 1844, is still Fountain Green, IIL Living near A school for women stud medicine has been founded i A ukase has been issued women to act as cians in the railro The Woodford which riven University, Ithao ed this year to a time in the hist ausistan ts vd districts It appears ths ladies employed in Department of the Englis! only about a dozen, or 1i leave during the year to get ma Miss Melle S. Titus, the to apply for admission to New York City daring the years, passed a successful examination before the Supreme Court of that city, Miss Annie Thomson Nettleton has resigned her position in Vassar Col- lege to become presiding officer of Guilford cottage at the Woman's Col- lege of the Western Uni- versity. Miss Helen Gonld living very quietly at Irvington on Hadson. Late in the season she will spend a week or two at Roxbury, N. Y., where she is first woman 1 | the Dar n last twenty Reserve is balding » church, as & memorial for her parents, The Civil Washington the examination to fill the assistant in the departm table pathology in the Agriculture Service Commission has admitted women The most fash ing diam double-cut most expensive, ting was In thirty-eight facets, nds now brilliant t The old ' singie-cut givie of brilliants One of the cleverest conductors of a periodical in the world is Lady Clemeotina Hay, daughter of the Marquise of Tweedale, who publishes and edits a magazine called City Spar- rows. She is fifteon years of age. Marie Antoinette fichas of chiffon, dotted and plain maslin, net or lace, either black or white, are one of the fashionable of summer dress, and the very chick are tnotted in the back with falling ends, Mabel Perey Haskell, and accomplished young woman of Boston, made a charming impression in her recent lectures before the Col- lege Club, of that city. She described her trip last summer to Iceland from Edinburgh, via the Faroe Islands, and gave many interesting details of the scenery and vegetation, as well as the social Ie of the far-off Northern isle, SH ————— Dr. Kitmer's Swaur-R all Kidney and Bladder Pamphlet and Consulimtion A Te Laboratory Binghamton, N. X. ROCORBOT ION Ones a beautiful cures trom Mrxruis (Tenn. ) has a prosperous Italian { solony. A Dose in Time Saves Nine of Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar for Coughs A Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute A Reanutitnl Souvenir Spoon Will be sent with every Ywitle of Or, Horeie's Certain Croup Cure, Ordered by mall, post. paid, 80 cts. Address, Hoxsle, Ru flalo, xX. XX. Hall's Catarrh Care Is a Constitutional Cure, Price 750, Earl's Clover Root, the great blood purifier gives freshness and clearness to the complex wn and cures constipation, 25 ete, 50 ote, $1. That Tired Feeling Is due to an impoverished condition of blood. It should be overcome without de- lay, And the best way to acoomplish this re- 00d’s sarsa- A parila ize the blood, give strength and appatite and refreshing sleep, Do sure to Hood's Sarsaparilia, and iy Hood's, -" NYNU~ 31 goum sult 18 to take Hood's Sarsaparilla, which will purify and vitale Cures and produce sweet a aM Hood's Pille cure nausea and Hiliousness, Ye Highest of all in leavening strength, — Latest 1, 8, Gov, Food Report, Royal Baking Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE Economy requires that for baking powder the Royal shall be used. in every receipt calling It will go further and make the food lighter, sweeter, of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL 8T., NEW YORK, The First Strike on Record, Livy, in his famous book, *“The An- nals,” ix., 80, relates in the following suggestive words the story of a singu- lar strike which occurred at Rome in the year 300 B, C,, and was probably the first strike ever known: That year occurred an event littl | A Pletorial History on Canvas, The “Bayenx Bayeux from the place whe preserved, 18 a pictorial history CANYAR, more minute in so; history, Tapestry,” call than written Yasion y | AATS snd ef nqgu« % worthy of being related, and which I |; would pass in silence had it not ap- | peared as involving religion, The lute players, dissatisfied because the latest censors had forbidden them to take part in the banquet in Jupiter's Temple, according to the tom, withdrew, every one of them, to Tibur, $0 that nobody Wis Ie ft nt R HI to play during the sacrifices. This in- cident shocked the religious sentiment of the Senate, and the Sens 5 sent messengers to inhabitants of Tibur to make every ort in order that the players should } estored to the Romans, pro unnaer Ls increase the 1zel nvited vy to his ho ve of that pre players indi and wine, of wh I fession are usually fond, was gi them in such quantities that they fell into a deep sleep. They were ther transported thrown into wagons an to Rome. They only becams what had happened on the when dawn surprised them the carts, which forum. A large crowd had assemble d, and they were induced to that they would remain at R me The right of attending the banquets was restored to these flute players. —New York Tribune, BWArY day after, iaying been left had in promise YT | KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly a The many, who live 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 Bealth of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs Its excellence is due to its presenting : yf : in the form most acceptable and pleas- ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers od permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- nevs, Liver and Bowels without weak. ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance, Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug. gists in HOC and $1 bottles, but it is man- ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered, | thisgradeo! nt i bootie liam the Conqus ror, al rt, and that it WHS Pre (at) 1841 S851 ancient cus- | } ”, a iuscq DOCTOR'S BILLS SAVED. Mineral Point, Dr. Piznce, rawas | G Juffaio, N. } Ivar Sir m glad t use of Medi~ has d00- for YeRre, been hare ven bors, as iL is & medicine worth recommending, J. Suirn, BQ. JOSEPH SMITH. PIERGE ==. CURE OR MONEY RETURNED. Guar. aniees a The “Discovery” purifies, vitalises and enriches the blood, thereby invigorating the system and building up wholesome flesh when reduced by wasting diseases, W.L. DoucLAs SHOE ~ 355s. #5. CORDOVAN, FRENCHA ENAVELLED GALT. 53. 53 50 Fine CALFS. Kanga } $.3.59P0LICE, 3 Soves. $2532. WORKINGwey $2.%1.75 BovsSounn 5 You can save money by wearing the W. L. Douglas $3.00 Shoe. Because, we are the largest manufacturers ou crantes thelr price om the m, which prot you against high prices and the middieman’s por ual custom work in style, easy Sttin aring qualities, We have them pold erywhers at wer prio for the value given than any Take no rubs stitute. If your dealer cannot supply we oan. '" 3) TRADER HARK COLLARS and CUFFS. ws value by stamp ther make mils i most ow « Beversible, Look well, wk of Tem oslinre Fe collar and pair and stele § and Reversible Collar Ceo. oF Rilhr st, Bor 57 Fraskiin st, New York FAT : 4 al C0 lars and « Fil weil, Wear well. ihoat — - FOLKS ' wed 15 The, y th: any one pan make remedy st hom Inder, Supply, Ark... says F 1 Ne 3 % (weaded i BX $04, St. La MATE 20, ule, Mo - JOHN W. MORRIS, NSION Washington, B,C, LSuccesstully Prosecytes Claims. Fyrsin leet war 1D adjudicating cisime. sty slaom - What to do with Milk Pails! Clean them with Pearline. You can't get them so thoroughly sweet and pure in any other way. Besides, it's easier for you— quicker, more economical. “The box and barrel churn are not hard to keep clean. A little hot water and a little Pearline will clean any churn or do away with any bad odor." = The Dairy World, Chicago. Perhaps you think that some of the imita- tions of Pearline, that you'd be afraid to use in washing clothes, would do just as well in work like this. hurt tinware, certainly. clean it, either, half as well lay with the fire.” If your in honest-—send it back. They wouldn't y. But they wouldn't as Pearline— besides, “don't grocer sends you an imitation, “w JAMES PYLE, New York ‘“ Well Done Outlives Death,” Even Your Memory Will Shine if You Use SAPOL.IO
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers