T.RV T)T TLArOFi . V1J ? JLfjH. X.LJJJIaIAJ J.ai TIIK BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SO'. DAY SERMON'. Suliject; 'The 1J Sea.' litulnz of tlit Text; ' ITe mal'th a path to shine of la him." Job xli., 32. If for the npxt thousand years ministers of rHiirion should preach from this Bible, thero will yet be texts iinexpoiiniol and un-x-I) lain p. i no'l unappreciated. What lit r ie lias toon artid ooncnrmu? this chapter in Job from wliit-h my text is taken bears on the controversy as to what w.is really the levia than described as disturMn the M. What creature it w.'is I know not. Sornsy it was a whale. Some say it was a crocodile. My own op:nion is it was a sea monster now ex tinct. Nu ere-kiure now floiuinir in M'fditer ranean or Atlantic waters corresponds to Job's de-ription. Wli.at reost interests rr. is that as it moved on through the deep it left the waters flash ing and resplendent. In the words of the text. "J"" maketlt a path, to shine after hirn." What was that illumined path? It was phosphorescence. You find it in the wake of a ship in the nls;ht, especially after roueh w ath-r. I'ho.phores!ence is the liRlitnin of the sea. That this figure of tpee'h U correct In describing Its appear ance I am certirte 1 by an incident. After crossing the Atlantic the limit time and writing frtun T'.riaV Kwitzerlund . to an Amor. i'an raaazino an account or my voyuir-?. in which nottiini; more fascinated me than the I'liw-jmur'-sconce in mo suip wiir, a caned it the llirlitninir of the sea. Jloturninir to my hotel, I fonnd a took of John Ituskin, and the llrst soutence my eyes fell upon w is his nescrij.tion or piiosphoresceuce, in wuicn no wiped awav, an I a-dash wiui conirratul i eaMed it "the llKbtuimr of the sea." ' ;;ou,s. nnd eloar out to the horizon in nil ii- Down to the potoill-e I hastened to Ret re.-tions is the sp irkllnfr. n:ishinir, billowiuT the manuscript, and with (jreat labor and phosphorescence of a Christian life, some expense rot possession of the maii'i- maketh a path to shine after him." 7-ine arti.de and put quotation marks aroun I An 1 h'Te I correct one of the mean no tliat one sentence, although it w;is as ori- (ions which at so ne timo takes possession of inal with me as with John Iiuskin. I sup- nil of us, an 1 that is as to the brevity of Im pose that nine-tenths of you living so near ' man life. When I b'iry some Tery ass ul the seacoast have watched this marine ap- I man, cleric. tl or lay. in his thirtieth or for pearance called phosphorescence, and I hope ! tieth year. I say ''What a waste of ener that the other oue-tenth may some day be so ifjes ! It was hardly worth while for him to liappy as to witnss it. It is the waves of the rf,;t ready for Christian work, for he had so soa diamonded ; it Is the inflorescence of the joon to quit it." lint the fact is that I may biilows ; the waves of the ea crimsoned as insure any man or wo:nan who does any wns the deep after tha sea fight of Lepauto ; t-oo i on a laro or small scale for a life on tne waves of the sea on lire. ; earth aa louir as the world lasts. Sickness, There are times when from horizon to iro ley car icidents, death itself, can no horizon the entire ocean seems ineonflai;- mre" de-troy his life than they caa tear ration with this strange splendor as it changes every moment to turner or mors dazzling color on all sides of you. You s:t looking over the taffrail of the yacht or ocean steamer, watching and waitiug to B'-e what new thing the God of beauty will do with the Atlantic. It ls the o-ean in trans- ilgurnliou , it is the marine world casting its garments of glofy in the pathway of the Almihtv as He walks the deep ; it ls aa in verted firmament with all its stars gone down with it. No picture can present It, for photographer's camera cannot be sueccs.i fully trained to catch It. an 1 before It the hand oftlio painter drops it p m-il, Over awed and powerl"ss. This phosphorescence ls the appe.arince of myriads of t'tu cnimal king!o.u ruing, falling, T'layin flashing, iiv.ng, iiv;n r. These luminou-4 animalcules for narty 1"0 years have been the study of naturalists an 1 the fascination nil 1 soiea;niz.ation of nil w!io have I. rain enough to think. Now, (ioi, who puts in His Bd'le nothing trivial or u-" less, c.ai Is the attention of Job. ttio great-st Fcientlst of his day. to this pho-piiorescen :e, and as the leviathan of the deep sweeps pa-t points out the fa t that "he maketh a path to shine after him." I Is that true of us now. and will it. b true of us when we have gone? Will there be subsequent light or darkness? Will th. r' Caa any a trial of gloom or good cheer? wo live in the same house, and transact Las:- nes in the same store, and write on the same ' table, and chisel in the same s'u !io, and thrash in the same barn, and worship in the 1 same church, wo are in motion au 1 ar 1 in many respects moving on, and Wi are not where we were ten years ago, nor wher.i vd will be ten years Ivn ce. .Moving on ! Look at the family r 'ord. or the almanac, nr into the mirror, uu 1 see if any one of you is where you wit1. Ail in motion. Other feet may trip an i stumble anl hait. but tae feet oT not on tpo.niut for file last six:y c.m turies lias tripped or stu r.l'le I tr lrilie I. Moving oa ! fociety moving on 1 The world moving on ! Heaven moving on! The uut- verse moving on Tirne moving on ! Kt nlty moving on : Therefore it is aostird V think that we ourselves can stop, as we noi-t move witli all thn rest. Are we like tiie crea ture of the txu ma'tin g o'ir pith to s'-ir-s after use? It may be a peculiar uu -stioa. but inr text suggests it. What Ind ii-n will we 1-avc in this world after we have gomothr ii?'i it? "None " an swer hun Ire. Is of vojee ; "we are not one of the lmmorta's. Tifty years after we arc out of the worid it iil t'C as tiioagli we never in habited It." You are wrong in saying that. I pass down tProitgii t lis au hence .ui l up throughthese g.-i!lerie4, and I aai iuokin ; lor some one wtcim I cannot lln I. I am looking for one who will have no In fluence in this World lhj years from now. lint I have foun 1 the man who has the least influence, and I inquire into his history, and I find that by a y s or a no he decided some one's eternity, in time ,,r tern; tation he cave an affirmative or a lie rative to some tempta tion which another, leering of, was induce! to decide in the same wiy. Clear on the other side of the next million years may I the iirt you hear of the long reaching intlm'tieo of that yes or no, but hear of It you will. Will that lather maht a path to shine aher him? Will that mother make a p..t h to shine after her? You will be waikin g a! jug these s'reets or along th:d country roa I 1:00 years from now in the chancier of your descendant. They will be a'Teeted l y y.eir oonrage or your cow nr itee, yoar puriiy or yoiir depravity, your holiness cr your sin. You Will Ui.ake t'-ie parh to sVno a t-r you or blacken alter yon. Why should tc.ey point out to u on o i:c mountain t ;vo r.vue i:. on- of wli-'h pa-s -s down info t ie r.vers wliieh pour out intothe 1'acitlc Ocean, an 1 tic other rivulet llovv.ng down into the rivers whi 'h pas out into the Atlantic Ocean? Every man, evry W"3man, stands at a point where words uttered, or deed done, or prayers o:Terc !. deu.le oppo site do. Tiuies and opposite eternities. We sec a eiaii planting a tree, nnd treading s vl on eiih r s. Ie of it, and watering it in dry went.e r. and taking a great care in its cu. ture. an I lie never plucks h'.t frui's from its bough. Ihit l.'is cliildren will. We are nil planting troi-s that will yieid fruit hundreds of years a'ter we arc de.a 1 orchards of gol den fruit or grov(-s of deadly upas. I am to fascinate 1 with the phosphor escence in the track of a ship tiiat I have sometl'ii's watched for a long while and have s 'en nothing on the lace oi' the deep but blaekness. The mouth of watery chism that looked like gaping jaws of hell. Not a spark as big as a tlreily ; uot a white scroll of surf , ret a taper to illuminste the mighty pepuleheis of dead ships ; d irkn-'s- So;i;J feet deep, an 1 more thousands of feet long nn l wide. Tiiat is the kind of wake that a tied mnn leaves behind him as he plows through the ocean of this life toward the va-der ocean of the great future. Now, suppose a man se.atel in ft cornei grocerv or hu-dnes- otllee amor, g dorks g.ves himself to jolly skepticism. He laughs nt the hl!ef makes sport of tii mirieh, speaks of perdition in jokes nnd laughs at revivals as a frolic, and at the pasige oi a funeral proeossiun, whi h nlw.v.s sole:nro7.-n sensiMe people, sas, "j1js, let taxe n ilrink." There is in that group a young man who is making a great struggle against temptation and prays night an l menungaud reaus his liibie and u a-skiag Ge l for u.cp day Pt day. lint that girtTuv againt Chris Tianttv nia-'is id n f. his gr p n' sartrer things, nnd he gives up .,' I.v.-'i an 1 churet Bail moral an goes ffom baH to worse, til he falls under ifts--ftTthms, dis in a laza house mial is bnrlcd'ln. Tie pefter's ff"I I. Another yofitiJir.Tri whi bearl that jo'Ii ekepilcism ina-f np h'h mm 1 that "it make no diTerence what w oj nnv, f.ir we wd all come out at fust at the right p'a-e," an : began as a C''mviia to purloin. S en moni-y that came into his hauls for otn'r he applied (o jiis own , t'.ii'.k.'ng p -r haps he woald make it s'ralght some o'.h' j time, an I all would be w -ii even If lie dh: not make it straight. He en Is in the peni tentiary. That scorer who uttered the joke against Christianity n -ver realized what ba.: work he was doing, and hepassclont!irougi life an lout of it anl into a future th ;t I am not now going to depict. I do not propo-j with as -ar-hlight to show .'ho break- rs of th awful coast oa wl-.i -r. t!t at snip is wecke.i, for mv busine-n now is tc wat-h the sea after the' keel has plowed ir. No phosphorescence ih th wake of that sh.p. but behind it two sottis struggling in the wave two young men daetroy 1 by reckless skepticism, au umlluuiiaed o-eau beo'wth and on all sides of them. Blackness of dark ness. You know w''at a i-W'ousti- i ,-,-n Rev. John iiowtoa was thn rrWt of his iiie. dui oeiore tils conversion lie very ' wicked sailor, an.1 on board the s'.ifo Har wich instilled intldelity nnl vic3 into tho min-1 of a youn g man principles w'lii-'h d Mroye 1 hun. After.virl ti:etwoniet.nnl Newton tried to un lo his bad work, but in vaio. The youuj m ai boaaie wro au J i betw-m now an d the next 10J years say o( fore twenty-four hours go bv, moot soaie man us truthfully as the text says of Me ievi ncan or wo:n,-,n wth a big pack of care and trou- of the dp, "Ho maketh a path to shine tile, an 1 you mav say something to him or after him?" For we are moving on. While ,,. tl,,.t win endure until this world shall I woo MffWH ipraSe5, ..'yln? those who stood by Mm In tu last moment. Better look oat what bad rnQiMnee Ton start, for you may not be able to stop It. It does not require Tory Kraut foxoe to ruin others. Why was It that many years ego a Err eat flood nearly destroyed New Orleans? A crawllsb had burrowed into the banks of t he river until the (f round was saturated and the banks weakened until tha flood burst. But I find here a man who starts out In life with the determination that he will never see suffering but he will try to al leviate it, and never see disconraKement but he will try to cheer it. and ivsver.meet with anybody but he will try to do him UooiU Oettin? his strength from God. he starts from home with high purpose of doin all the aood he can possibly do in one day. Whether standing behind the eounter, or talking in the business office with a pen be hind his ear, or making a bargain with a fel low trader, or out in the Held discussmir with his next neighbor the wisest rotation of the crops, or in the shoemaker's shop pound In? sole leather, there is something in bis face, an l In his phraseotoy and in his man ner, that demoaislrat"s the jtraoa of God in his heart. He can talk on religion without iwkwardly dracins it in by the ears. He loves God and loves the sou is of all whom he meets and is interested in their present and sternal destiny. For fifty or sixty years he lives that life, ind then gets through with it and (roes into leaven a ransomed soul. But I am not going :o describe the port into which that ship has jiitered. I am not ?oinx to describe the Pilot who met him outside at the "lightship." I am not goin to say anything about the crowds f frien Is who met him on the cyrstailine ; jrharves np inch he goes on steps of For God in His words to Job ;hrsoprases. :al!ls mo to look at the path of foam in the ake of that ship, and I tell you it is all I t-gieam witn spion iors oi aminess aon' ; md rolilnjr with illumined t"ars that werj flown one of the rings of Saturn, lou can stmt one good worJ, one kind act, one iTfv-rful smile, on a mission that will last ui.til the world beeom-s a bonllro, and out . o: that blaze it will pass into the heavens, u-ver to halt as lonn as Gol lives, j There were in the seventeenth century men ' (in 1 women wnos names you never heard of w'uo are to-day influencing schools, co!- leges, ohuroues. Nations, lou can no more measure the gracious results of thoir lire lime thau you could measure the length and ic 'a ith and deptii of the phosphoresnce I ;t night following the ship of the White ir lice l.'iO) miles out at sea. How t ie i oiirag -an i conse -ration of others lnsp.ro ca to iollo-.v, as a general in the .Vr.orl rm amy, ocol amid the Hying buTcts, inspir-l tr.'.ntiling s 1 tier, wao said atlerw irl, "I was ne.ir;y scare 1 to deith, but I saw tan Did man's white mustache over his shou'e' t and went on." Aye, we are all following 4o:nebo ly, either in rigiit or wi'ou ; direc tions. A few days ago I stool l esi In the car !.".u led casket of a gopl minister, anl in n.y remarks had occasion to recall a snowy aigiit in a farmhouse when I was a boy an 1 su evangelist spending a night at my father's house, who said something so tender and beautiful and impresssive that it led me into the kingdom of God and deci b-1 my destiny for tills world an 1 the next, lou will, be- uav9 00n s0 far iQ3t (n tn9 pa3t that nothing r,ut t)l(, B;r,.tch of angella memory will bj at,ie to realize tliat It ever existed at ail. t aTT, not talking of remarkable men on 1 women, but of what ordinary folks can do. I am not speaking of the phosphorescent in the Ira- of a N'ewfoundlan 1 fishing smack. Go-1 makes thunderbolts out o' ; r-parks. an i out of the small words an 1 dee i j or a small iiie He can launch a power that I will flash un J burn and thunder througa the j eternities. How do yoa like tHis prolongation of your ' earthly life by deathless Influence? Many a ! bubo that died at six months of age by the anxiety created in the parent s heart to me -t ! that child in realms seraphic is living 3-et in the transforme I heart an l iiie 01 mo-i parents and will live on forever In the his tory of that family. If this be tbe opportu nity of ordinary souls, what is the oppor tunity of those wuo have especial intellectual or soekd or monetary equipment? Have yoa any arithmetic capable of esti mating the iulfu -n 'e of our good and gra cious friend wiio a few days ago went up to r,t George W. Chi Ids, of l'hiladelp'.iia ? From a newspaper that was printed for thirty years without one word o! defama tion or scurrility or e;.vn.lal, au I putting a chief emphasis on virtue and char.ty e.nd clean intelligence, he reaped a for..mc for himself and then distribute I a vast amount of it among the poor and struggling, putting his invalid and aged reporters ou pensions, until his name stands every waere for large hearteiness and fcympathy and help aud highest style of Christian gciitie uan. In an era wh! 'h had ia the chairs of its journalism a Hornce Greeley, aud a Heury J. Itavmond. and a James Gordon Bonn -tf . anl anErastus Brooks, and a Ocorge Wiiiia-n Curtis, anl an Irenaeus Prime, none ofthom will be longer remembered than O.ior- W. Ciiil-Is. Staying away from the unveiling ol the monument he had roared at large ex pense in our Greenwoo 1 in memory of Pro lessor I'roetor. the astronomer, bi.t I should say something in praise oi the man who hud paid for the monument. I'.y ail ii 'ii'.e'.i '.. eiged a representative o' Vie higlit Ar.i-ri-can journal!0':!. If you would ca'oulato his influence r..r goo i, vou nm-t e.juut how rr.nuv s'-o-.s oi iii n iv.-r'aper have bl eu pubiii.'iej ,11 I'e Just fju krt-r of a century, au-1 bow iiciny people have reed them, nnd tho eiTect not only upon thoe rca b-r-, but upou ail wiiom they ! -e c j, ti ':. w'lilc y-'-e, add to lil th ! l ie m- .r: ,,f t'ae oliureVs b.el'-e 1 ieiij.l lu't.o in-titiitlonsoT mercy . 1 ee,..l foOT! '. 11 '('el give Up before VOtJ , irt tiie ;i.e.-is. inn of tl'e phosphorescence n the Wi;;.o of that ship of the ('(sti.il lin. V uo eel. te;l the r'. -t Mortem influence of a s 1 veii'rn; i, a 'A" . n elri a G utenberg, a iuriiror-.n-'lt, a i iter, a Touss;litit, a Boli var, a Ci,-.rsoM, a Kooert liaikos, a Harlaa Page, who ha I lg5 SaK ith scholars, eighty four ot wi'om oe -ame Christians, aulsix of them ministers of the gospel. With gratitu lean 1 peniten nnl worship I meiitioa the gra:id st life that was evr live 1. Taat s'op of ii -ht wis lauuehe! fro-u tile heavens nearly 11?. ij year ago, angdic hosts chanting, na 1 frou tae e-lostial wi'iarvs Mio tip sprung irvo tv rougiost s '.a tiiat ever to--' t. 1 s i,;: o - w-t rri W up of the vr it 1 of nvii un I .lt t-ie, il-'roi.a and sanlie.lrinic p r-e 1 : i ie.s stirring th- deep w.th re I wr-ii'i. an I ali tiie hurri-Mnes of wre s iinitt it untti ori tae r fits of tr-V. .ua that life struck with a r-s it i of a :o:i . that uppalled the e.inh aud tha h-ivu;. But in the wake of that life what a p'lo-pho-r-se-mecof smi'-s on the cheeks of souls par loned, an 1 bv -s r-ornel, anl Nations redeemed. Tun luillenuiun itself is only one rtill of t'nt ira i.rite I w ivc of gla ln"-s an I beaed'. tica. la th sa'i'lm v-t or all senses it m :y i-e sii-t or H':n, "llema teth it tath to shin-' aiier Him." lint I cannot io k upon that lu n'no'itv that follows ships we'iout reali-in; ho. v ion! the I. or I is of in'". Tilt fir of t'tu ic-p is lift, myria is of cr '.".in- -s a I a-s vt u an 1 u p'ay nn I u-rornp in par.;s of m ir.no ivi u laid out nnl p trierro I e.11 1 ra-'atei aud i.!o-;so-iied by O oTi.por.mee. V.'aat istiieuso Jltoose cr'itnr-s c.iiiel by the nwur.il'.s'.e "erustaoono.s" .;t. "copep , i n.)j m ir-3 than one out o: i.uu ire is or r.iiiions 01 which tre ver seen by human ey ? Go l create I ah"m for tiie same rouson that He cr cites lowers in plajes whore no human foot evi r makes them tremble, nnd no bu-nnn nosiril ever inhales their redolence, and no huaiaa eye ever s-es their f'l-'.r n. In the liotuaical ur! 1 they prove that Gad loves flowers, as iu tie mariuo worl-l the pliosnhori prove that He loves life, nn I He !ov--s lib in p!ay,life in brilliancy of gladness, lite in exuler.in--. Anil so I am led to believe that lb loves ur life if we fulfill our mission as fullv ns the phosnhori fulfill tiieirs. The Son of tio I came "that we might have life and liaTJ it more ai un lantly." Bat I am glad to toil you I hat our God is not the God sometimes de scribe 1 as a harsh eritia at the head of the universe, or an in'lnito scold, or a God that loves funerals iett"r than weddings, or a Gol that prefers tears to laughter, an om nipotent N'ero. a ferocious Nana Sahi . but I ho loveliest Being in the universe, loving flowers and lite an 1 play, whether of phr.s phorl in the wake of the Majostic or of t la human race keeping a hollilny. But mark you that the phosphorescence has a glow that tbe night monopolizes, an 1 1 nsk you not ou'y what kind of Influence vou ftre going to leave in fhe world as you pass mrouga.1T. dui wuni iigni are you going 10 throw across tiie world's night of 6iu nnd sorrow? People who are sailing on smooth sea and at noon do not need muca sympathy. but what are yon fjou to do for people in the nisUt oLni9?rl1s?-'i4.1 you. drop oa tEifisESJow, Or will yoa kindle for thera phosphoreeeence? At this moment there are more people err ing than laughing-, more people on the round worid this moment hungry than well fed. more households bereft than homes un broken. What are you going to do about it? "Well," says yonder soul, "I would like t do something toward illumining the great ocean of human wretchedness, bat I cannot do much." Can yoa do as much as one of the phos phori in the middle of the Atlantis Ocean, creatures smaller than the point of s sharp pin? Oh, yes," you say. Then do that, dhinel Stand before the looking glass an l experiment to see if yon cannot get that scowl off your forehead, that peevish look out of yeur lips. Have at least one bright ribbon in your bonnet. Embroider at least one white cord somewnere in the midnight of your apparel. Do not any longer imper sonate a funeral. Shine ! Do say something cheerful about society and about the world. Put a tow drops of heaven into your dispo sition. Once in a while substitute a sweet orange for a sour lemon. Bemember that pessimism is blasphemy and that optimism Is Christianity. Throw some light on the night ocean. If you can not be Si lantern swinging in the rigging, be one of the tiny phosphor! back of the keeL Shine I "Let your light so shine before men that others seeing your good works may glorify your Father which is in heaven." Hake one person happy every day, an 1 do that for twenty years, and you will have made 7300 happy. You know a man who has lost all hla property by an unfortunate in vestment or by patting his name on the back of a friend's note. After roa have taken a brief nap, which every man and woman is entitled to on a Sua-lay afternoon, go and cheer up that man. Y'ou can. it God helps yon, say something that will do him good after both of yoa have been dead a thousand years. Saine! Yon know of a Tamily with a bad boy who has run away from home. Go be fore night and tell that father and mother the parable of the prodigal son, and that some of the Illustrious and useful men now In church and stale had a silly passage in their lives and ran away from home. Shine 1 Y'ou know of a family that has lost a child, and the silence of the nursery glooms the whole house from cellar to garret. Go be fore night and tell them how much that child lias happily escaped, since the most prosper ous life on earth is a struggle. Shine I You know of some invalid who la dying for lack of an appetite. She cannot got well because she cannot eat. Broil a chicken and take It to her before night and cheat her poor appetite into keen relish. Shine' You know of some one who likes you, and you like him. and he ought to be a Christian. Got .11 hi n wli it religion has done for you, and abk hun if yoa caa pray for him. Shine I Oh, for a disposition so charged with swoetness and light that we cannot help but shine 1 Bemember if yoa cannot be a leviathan lashlnig the ocean into fury you nan be one of the phosphor!, doing your part toward making a path of phosphorescence. Then I will tell yoa what impression you will leave as yoa pass through this life and fitter you are gone. I will tell you to your aee and not leave it for the minister who of ficiates at yonr obsequies. : The failure in all euiogium of the departed Is that they cannot hear it. All hear it ex cept the one most interested. This, in sub stance, is what I or some one else will say of jyou on such an ocension : "We gather for tofnees of respect to this departed one. It is llmpossible to tell how many tears he wipel away, how many burdens he lifted, or how many souls he was, under Go I, instrumen tal in saving.. His intiuencewill never cease. We are all better for having knowu him. I "That pillow of flowers ou the casket was presented by his Sabbath-school class, all of (whom he brought to Christ. That cross of 'flowers at the head was presented by the lorphan asylum which he befriended. Those three single flowers one was sent by a poor jwoman for whom he bought a ton of coal, and one was by a waif of the street who n he (rescued through tho midnight mission, anl the other was from a prison cell w ii ii he had often visited to encourage rep-M an -e in ia young man who had done wrou .'. I "Those three loose flowers mia ipilte as much as the garlands now br -athin g t oar Inroma through tbes saddened ho tic crow ! 1 with sympathizers. Blesse 1 are tho dead who die in the Lord. They rest from their labors, and their works do follow them.' '' Or If it should be the more solemn l.urlal at sen. let it be after the sun bus gon down, nnd the captain has read the iippr.ior ate liturgy, and the ship's boil has toiled, and you are let down froai the stern of the v -s-el into the ri'splender.t phophor-seenee at the wake of theship. TI.eu let so u- on" s iy. in the words of my text, "llo inaktHh a path to thine alter him." 'i'ulli in;, Swoilisii. "siuy, ti jcars of ago, hail not.Ted that the girls of foreign nationalities wiio served ia her mother's: kitchen ipnlce English in a way sotuewhat JiiTerent fr ta the English stio was iccust'jnied to hear from her father ind mother. One day her mother sent Susy down stairs with an order to the cook not to ;ireparc any soup for dinner. Pies jutiy tho little girl came bade "Well," aske.l her mother, "did ?ou (five Mary the ordcr'r" "Yes, mamma, I t old her in Swod sh." "Told her in Swedish: .Vhy.child. .vhafc did you say'" "1 said to her, 'You needn't make 10 soup, Mary.' " Flnglisli I'cilsion List. The total amount raid out for all finds of 1 ensions in England for I ho car cudine; March, lv'J.', was i.7, -15 SG The 1 ensions for the civil It amounted to A.Ol.ST; for the uiuy. 3,7H,d7.'i: for the navy, l,- i-,'I2. and for the survivors of 'oriner distinguished naval and mi!i .ary men, 2:,.-20. The whole num jer of recipients of all classes i .02,0 in. T:-s Russian thistle now occupies riiiit 30,000 square miles In the two Iiakotas, and ls reaily troublesome In about half of this territory. In this area about 640,000 acres aro de voted to wheat growing, and tho weed has caused a loss of fully five bushels per acre. If this were woitli tn!y fifty cents a bitshi-1, the loss on wheat alone would bo (1,600.0.-0. Tho lo-s la other crops injured b th? spines aud tbe fires caused n tho plants jumping fire breaks w u swell the loss to !2,000,000. It I however, a wcd that nred not b feared, except w hore farmers try t.u plow more land than thc-7 can cult -V8t8. The plant makes n.i p-ogrc . ,irfi'.dlng in sod land or l.,ud tl. ii thoroughly cnltiva'cl. The lartu and Jlan Cumparcd. If it were possible for man to e t Kruct a globe 800 feet ia diameter, f. .. lu place npon any part of its surface 1 t.torn ccc four thousand t'.itee bund hod eightieths of aa incli ia diameter l id oue-hundred uad tiveT.t'.eti of . larb ia keight, it would corrrctly dea the rtroj.ru tir.n ini.i bc.irs t i tbe n , upon wt.ic'a lie staa.'.j. Si. Xvut' 'Ihe rjncsMon that confronts tho fubt yoting tuiiu is whether ho will let np now or let down later. It ia by attempting to reach tbe top nt a single leap thai so mnch misery is caused in the world. All honest men aro working for other mt n; all lovo of industry, ail love of In tegrity, all Live of kindred, all love of neighbor, all love of country and all love of Immunity are f zpraased in labor for others. "Love adds no dollars to the till," grnnts th? mis,rly husband. Fewer dollars and more love worjd ad 1 im mensely to tue value of his life. If we listen to the dictates of our cot j scienc. nnd reason, it i almost imp jsib!o If r us to bo wrong. None but the ill bred ridicule the , peculiarities of (thtirs. j Love is to the moral nature what the sun is to the earth. Only what we have wrought into our , churneter during life can we take away with us. I To bo all the time feeling for feel, ing is a poor way to l.romoie relig ious life. Hood's Cures Charlie Warren Fosa East Limington, Me. After Scarlet Fever "In tbe fall of 1SS9 the members of our hoase aold were atflioted with ecitrlet fever. Cbarlie' .tire years old, whs lelt wlta ua AbMcu In One Kr Thlch aMTcctd hie liearlnc The abscess grew trTonse, It dl'hartrv-d freely and the matter wan juite offnalT. Vt e were obliged to use a (tyring twice a day. After more than a year physicians leckied Uiat it might take furs' to heal the ab icm, and it was likelv he would atwuy be deaf. We decided to give 1 food's SMrsaparilla. There as a f raat ciiauge for Hie better after lie had akan two boiUes of Hood's Sarsaparilla ria result has been more than we dared to hope "or. i? hns not only tfecUd a prtet:ted cure and sealed ie atuef4 b jt has reatored bla hear ing.' RxrALLH. Fos, Unt Liintugton, Me. Hood's Pills cure liver llli, constipntlon, jtllousntM, jaundice, sick headache. Indigestion. Xtu'es for American Solttlers, The "Articles of War" wnlcu the newspapers mention once In a while are the ru es coveriiinrf tiie armies of the United States. They are con tained in Sections 1342 and 13-43 of the AerUeJ Statutes of the United St.tc4 and were adopted In 1809 ub iietiuially as taken from the British articles of war In 1TT5. Section 1342 contains 125 different articles, which formed the original articles. The wlioli collection is ancient and accord ing to the Globe-Democrat might be revised with ijreat benefit; it is long and, as the articles must be read pub licly at least once every six month", the day on which they arc read is looked forward to with disgust by both otlicers aud men. The tfr-t el?ht articles deal with enlistments, mu iters, false returns; articles 9 an 1 10, with responsibility for stores: articles 11 to J4, with fur'.o'.jghs ar.d musters: 15 to 18, with damauin or losing stores: 19 V 30, with di-nc-spcet to president, to oificers, mutiti , challenging in duels; 31 to .15, w.tli absence; 30 to 51, hiring duty, drunk enness, cowardice, dlssertlon; 5S and D.'t, with misconduct at divine service antl the use of profane o.iths; 54 to .'J, with (rood order in commands, de struction of propertr, violence to per son bringing provisions, crimes dur ing rebellion; 60, frauds asaiost the Unified States; 61, punishment of conduct unbei oniltig an officer; II and 61, persons subject to articles of war; P& to 71, treatment of prisoners; 72 to 114, conduct of court-iaarilais; 115 to 121, courts Inquiry; 122 to IK, rank of oXcers; 123 to 1S7, effects of deceasod soldiers; 129, publication of articles; and section l'ci'i, punish ment of spies a higgledy-piggledy arrangement, which might be im proved without more than half an hour s troublo. Beware of ntatmen's far Catarrh That Contain Mercsrr, as mprcury wi.l surely destroy the spns of snifll arid roinpletely it .-ra-itfe l tie wholesyi-teni wiien enteriiift .t thr-nu-i-1 ha raucous stuf.u.ei. Sui-h articles sh tul'l uwvtiT b) used eice.'t on Siewrtitlions trom repulab'o ttiyh'iaii, ns ttio amiip? they w ill do is ten fold t'jtheKood ynu can po.-iih.y ile.-ive froni theuu Hall's Catarrh i lire nianufA -tured by F. J. C'heney A C ., Tolelo, ., Titalnino mercury, and Is taken iiiternally, actiuir d'rectly upon the blood nn l mucous Furfct o. the system. In tuyiiiK Hall's Cat irrh Cii't be sure toget thegHii-.itie. it is take-i internal ly, and Is made in Toledo, O'lto. I.y K. J. Cheney & Co. T-timoninli Tee. fWSold by Druiiihts. price ;c. per bottle. Queer was the citse of Martin Bnn you, wiio whs at home and sick abed in Mansfield, Ohio, when another fel low was run over and killed on a rail road near there and indentified as Bun yon by a whole lot of his friends anJ relatives. Grass and 0 Isver Se Tiial u-esi grjwsr ot Urass and (Jlorer Ses I la tuu warid is sixsr. Ls Crosse, Wis. Uv-r VJ u-iri j vdtict.es, w.th ljvvjt privoi Special low Crsight to New YorkPat. aad ths Et. it TOO WILL CUT THIS OUT A.f D S1SO IT W.ltt lie postage to tha Joha A. Saizer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wa, you will recjivs slartn packages rr. and itlnrtir mtrtm a-td Kla mammor h farm sed catalogue; fa lot good things for thetr- sir, to gardener a ed th oltissn. A - A machine for making tacks was uatented in 1806, but not put into practical use until near the middle of the century. Now the world consumes 50,000,000 tacks a day. SOMEBODY'S GOOD. To make our own troubles tne means nf helping the troubles of ot.iera is a I ma a...-nr-.l M na-i1 1 1 I 1 11 I nnbl effort for cood. A well illustra ted insUnce of this kindly sympathy is shown in a letter from Mr. Enoch L. Hauscom, School Agent, Marshfield, Me., an old Unioa Soldier. lie snys : "It mav do somebody some good to tate.Iauift man of 60 and when 40 had a had knee and rheumatism set in. I wus lame three years and very bad most of the time. I got St. Jacob's Oil and put it on three times and it made a cure. I am now in good health." A vmincF mnn of Isaniror. Me., was much surprised the other day to learn that he had a twin sister in Provi- dence. lie had never so much as heard of her. The cotton gin, which made exten-, How many collectors or coins know sive cultivation of cotton profitable, anything about the curious half-pence was invented in 1793. The United Issued centuries ajo by English au States product in 1S92 was 9,033,707 thorities, half-pence In the truest bales, or ,tMi.,uou pounas. Dobblni' tlectric Sd a oood aa It la laid to ine vrru wnw iu iquw ttueiuc ur ntth be, uuitryit yourwlt. it cant deceive you. Beaure to n-t no Imitation. Ibere are lou ofi them. Atk your groctir lor just one bar. , , Envelopes were first made in 1639, ' and sold for ten cents to twenty-five cents apiece. They are now from two to Cve for a cent. sold at For fonizha anil Throat Trouble ue Bkuu s's is ku.n chi a L Troches. They relieve all Throat irritations caused by Cold or uae of tne voice. Blacking for boots was invented 1S36, and now the manufacturers this country and Eugland sell $4,000,000 worth a year. Reecharo's Pills cure Indigestion and constl pution. Becchm'a no others. 25 eta. a box. The head nurse in a ward of an American training school for nurses, says: ' I am sure that any one who could provide the Americans with a substitute for animal food would be xmferring a national benefit. They ;at twice as much meat as we English do, and fb that, I believe, is largely due the nerrous derangements, and too often shortened life of the average America. TIIK MICROSCOPE. A careful microscopical lamination and chemical analysis of the urine, is a valuable aid in determining the nature of many chronic diseases, particularly those of tha nervous system, blood, liver, kidneys, and bladder. These aids make it possible to treat such dis eases successfully at a dis tance, without personal ex amination of tbe patient. Thus Bright' Disease of the Kidneys, Inflammation of the Bladder, Gravel, and other Diseases of the Uri nary Organs are success fully treated; Nervous De bility, Exhaustion, Dropsy, Liver Disease, and many other Chronic Maladies are cured without seeing the patient. Write for question blanks, treats, and other informa tion, describinc; case, and inclose 10 cents, in stamps, to pay posts cj. Adilress, World's Dispkssart Medical Association, No. 603 Main btraot, Buf falo, N. Y. rieretlety. Proliably many would rezard it as Impossible to account in any approi mately satisfactory way for their physical and mental status, says Dr. Wesley Mills in th .Popular ijcience Monthly, and would te very apt to refer the latter in no small decree to what Is commonly known as cdi. ca tion. But If we were to visit the estab lishment of some successful breeder of domestic annuals we would find no such hazy mental condition. Toe 'breeder does know why his stock Is such as it. is. You point to s ime ad miral spec men and compare it wiih another of plainly inferior merit and ask him V.e reason why. lie docs not attempt to explain the difference by the pastur?. but he tell-, you that the less valuable animal Is a common cross-bred withoutextended pedigree, .while the other ls derived from an cestors that ho can trar.e for genera tions, and the paienis of which are now on his farm, the purchase price being a large one. The breeder wou'd have b.cn greatly puzzled If such ancestors had produced oltsprini; entirely unworthy of themselves. The same appl.cn to the vegetable world. "Do men Kathcr grapes of thorns or I'n of thistles':"' hut apnare it'y we often expect th's rule to be rever e I in re gar I to human bcin rs. The fart is, man was so much regarded us a re t ture ap.nt by himself with laws of his own laws th.it were every now :ind tm-n at ita-t interfered with in sutiiPt itie n licai.lc way that tho public mind gut dciiiorali.e l; lor nolh na con be o disastrous as t j be lieve that the laws of natuieare sub ject to chatiue. We mav re itiire to modify our views as to what the laws of nature really are, but so far as the world has jet learned these laws are invariable. i m .st confess myself to have had at one time almi st unb unded faith in the changes that the environing it could work, and especially that art of it that we cill cducat'on. in the narrower sense, tut a close study of the subvert by observation and ex periment in breedlr.g some of oar do mestic animals for a term of rears has very strongly impressed upon my mind the strength of heredity. A Itouted Hawk. A white-feathered chicken in s 'arch of worms strayed from the yard of a Feeding Iliils farmer on a recent afternoon and was soon scratching merrily in the black loam of a swamp near by, says tho Spring Held (Mass.) lleptibilcan. A big hen hawk that was sailing lazily along far up in the sky tipp.-d an eye down ward and saw the little white chick. The hawk had had nodinneraud was very hungry. TV l 'i, hungry haw suddenly shot duwu iikca Hone, at.d before the chick could run or clue!; or even Hup her funny little witis she was in the hawk's cruel claws. The farmer was cutting cornstalks in a wagon near the barn and did not sec the hawk with flapping wh'.gsrisj into the air, clutching tight ttie lit tle white chick frightened and still. But perched upon some trees tin other side of the swamp were eight b'.ai'k crows. They had seen it alt. Tutting their heads together tlifss crows consulted hurriedly, and then with a loud, defiant chorus of "caw, caw, caw," they took wing. The bird tit prey had not risen tifty feet in tha air before the crows had completely urrounded him. They pocaed at him above, below. In front, and be hind. They would rise many feet above and shoot downward one after the other at the hawk with the swift ness and celerity of swallows. Tho hawk, burdened with the breathless cintK, cuuiu uut cuuuio tuts savage 1 onset and soon sunk among the trees. gin the crows, crying "caw, caw," more defiantly than be fore, beat upon him etlll. and at last the hawk dropped the chick and angrily dashed upward again. For minutes the bat tie raged over the tree tops. The iawk wa3 fior( e in h,3 dcfensef b j tne crQW, us)nir the 8ame tat.tlca as before gradually drove him hlghy: and higher still, until Anally dis comflted and thoroughly beaten t lid bird of prey Bailed oa to the bouth whither he was followed miles an J mue9 by two of the more pugnacious rrnwa The other now flew in thn apposite diiectlon and disappeared. Meanwhile what had become of tho little white- chick to whose rescuo ihese eight crows had so chivalrously jone? With feathers sadly rufTlod and her breast black with the sliti:- of the bog Into which she had droppc 1 from the rlaca of trm hawlr triA1n-eiI jhick was slowly and palftfullj j hoppinjj back through tho 6wau5j li the maternal roost. They Jast Cat the Fcnnlef la Two. sen;e or tne woras, since they were nothing mo:e than minted pennies I tHnnin i.. i,.i,i c- t . Lu" uJ opetnuens oi these coim have been discovered fre n,pnt,lv anionir the bur'ed trpacii-r ljueniiy among ine uur.eu ireasu es which from time to time have b.-ea unearthed in Great Britain. In Lancashire in 1840 wcro found a rare lot of coins among which were sev- ; eral pennies of the time of Alfred and fcdward divided in this way. Similarly divided pence of the time of Edward the Confessor hare been found, and in speaking of the dis covery, In 13:13, of a number of these :urious half-pence of the time of William the Con moror. and iinnnpi- ovcrtioned authority states that they were probably issued from the mints in that form, since the whole collec tion had evidently been In circula tion. Ia the British Museum in Lon lon are specimens of these divided :oins issued under various monarchs from Allrcd to Henry IIL, with the iatter ot whom the custom ceased. An eminent arhaeologlst accounts for the divided coins by saying that this ioubtlesss arose from the scarcity of mall Chang-, which was In part remedied under the reign of Edward L by the coinage of half-pence and Carthlngi CARRiES A CURIOUS CANC A Cincinnati Man's Walking Stick Orn meated by Some Grewsome Mementoes. The other afternoon an old man attracted a goid deal of attention on ine btreet, Cincinnati, by rea-on of the peculiar cane which he carried. Personally he was In no way dlrTerent from lots of other old men that one is apt to meet in a day's walk about the streets of a treat .city. He was undersied, fat and red as to his nose. His beard was gray and was long. It needed a shamDoa The man's drtfs was of ordinary quality, but it was all there. His breath was ta ntrd with Hie water. As he was p issing a store a clerk asked him where be got the cane It was an old siic and without knot or crook. Wound around and around it was a string ' ornaments of the strangest kind. 1 i ere w:w a hicktirv nut. there a beei h nut. there a walnut, and other nuts cotd lj be seen on the stick. Then there we: e . ,.u ,-.,i.iniitB enmf we:el pants buttons, others were coat and, vest buttons and there were dress or r.loak buttons. Pome were sm ul, while others were large as silver do.- lars. A lead pencil stump dangie i about the middle of the cane. A carpet tack hung from the point. A A piece of cor, a broken marble, a shoe peg, keys of various kinds ai:d other articles too numerous to men tion were strung about the cane. -On lieing asked by a Times-Star man how he happened to get so peculiar a stick, he became tommunicattv. Every trifle around this stick," said he, "is a momenta This piece of toy marble Lelonged to my boy when he was still alive. Here is a button from my first sweetheart's clojk. And here's another from my wife's r.lnaic. This shoe button dropped from a beggar's shoe." He indicated the various articles as he spoke. "Last fall I visited by boyhood home ( in West Virginia and thec nuts ( came from theie. I found this shoe nail at Mount Vernon a few years ago, near the tomb of Washington. This rin Is from the finger of a Japanese girl; that from the Hnger of a suicide. Here's a piece irom ine rrtlnnl .nl.inm ft O ltltni T tl 1 1 i 1 j C i .1 n . denial i,uiuui u v . u i . . which the students of a local mcdi- cal college ably discussed in their j time. 1 am simply a collector of curios. I like to have them near me. aud I find that the easiest way is to carry them around my cane." Kirh, red blood si" naturally results from tak 1ns Hood's Sr.Hpttri!l as personal cieunllm- results from free ue of sonp and water. This Br.iat purifier thoroughly exitels scrofula, salt rheum and all other impurities. Hood's Pills are easy, yet eTicient. A Suggestion. The American habit of calling Tom, Dick, and Harry "Judge," "Colonel," or '-Major" has fre ;uetitiy been critic! cl. tcul 11 is a hii:!i time for a reform in this dlrectiu.i. suggests Texas Siftings. How would It do to give men titles derived from their trade or profession? For in stance, the Tope of Rome is called 'Your llollns-ss." Here we have a starting point. A landlord might, be addressed as"VourSuavity,"or "Your Obse iUiousness." When you m-et a doctor yoa could say "Good-m irn ing, how does 'Your Healthful ness' feel to-dayV" The title could always bo varied to suit the rcculiarlt;es of the Individual. Some clcriymen who are given to banging the lilble might be addressed as "Your Extreme Vio lence," others as "You Urowi-inss " The same rule might apply to differ ent trades. It Is Tor the benefit of title-lovers we throw out this crude Idea. We do not propose to elaborate It at all. We simply furnish the or ner stone. Those who desire can build the editIC'3. i v . OOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvciYtciit rml tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many who live bet ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's beat products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced ia tho remedy, Svrnp of Flga, -Its excellence is due to Ito prcFcntlng in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing arid truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and feven and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the tn:dical profession, because it acts on the Kid nevi, Liver end rowels without weak, emng thsm and it is perfectly free from, every objectionable substance. SrrUD of Fi?s is for sale bv all rlmr. gtsts in 50c and fl bott?ee, but it is nian- ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whos name ia printed on every package, also the name, Srrup of Figs, and beintr wp!1 InfnrmpH rim will T,nt Accent amr substitute if offered. 1,-000,000 ACRES O POLAND .....DjineurrPA 4 Dclctk Bailboao CoarAirr In MtnoeEota. Eeod for Map an4 Oreo lara. They wUl be Mat to yoa Adtlrai HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land CommlMioper. 6u Panl, Hiua $I2to$35":.-p w v Hu-nlah n !?&ZZ?ZYlntat at .. ... - - nu travel li Kf 5- F K u uu 9 mm 1 iw .pi . .. ( ? ...ri.l . ' ' ib'a an fx, optr: unity 1 . ...4t.iiTiri nnl l oTuior.t. t r prolitabU. ein- i" us m-jv K . . . . 1 Ilk and Malneia., UkUiuon J, V. S C 0 D L U C K ntJ A'plmtlv Ji nun cttpv OC . ixtat. .jc. Etfaliaiu'a.n W.HtaW. S . f . tl PWItV "Iklim Ua.htnr . D. C. K . D. C. Krt' - tl. rJ.Wnte fur InTyntor'a Onitle JAPANESET00TK l?'- J malied tor 1. Lapp Dni.c;'..! !?. $0 . i Is W a. r- Conanmptloo. It haa tana l?J 1 1 1 Vlfr. L " i0' bM to tike. tJ I Sold arerrwhera. Z fcj ST. JAOUU - - Lameness, Swellings, Back-ache, Soreness. ROTHES. SUBDUES. CXJRES. 8h. Knew Too Mach. .. whxt i!o vou mc.in nutting -.7 c,dry n thU water? ervanr-H on'l hurt 'en. muni; 1 erS they've b.en in soak menny a toimcl Jude'e. a juvenu Theory, Mother "Wliv are yon not as poiite ,i mtisid' rute and ucnilcuiaii y , ;. , i 'rummy Didd.-' Small on 1 l' on he w is brought Uue streot where the ot her boys wa, bigger than htm. ! eWa- Iti Hj Clio". brother." said the exortcr. 'My "why do vou not lay up Ireasmes ic Heaven?" Well, to tell you the truth." said the s uner "1 do., lii-.ow enou-h about the i lace to feel absolutely c -tire." Truth. ic j I'n-AKfrira" Mouniont. Tn.mirin- i:oy What do the news- titiDers mean when they say a thing . j nn. a nif .-irtin Father They mean that, it is something v n.ch p: event foreigners from runiiin' this country to suit themselves. 1 uck. A :t;'iiiedy. Jackson I Wlieve I have at lust discovered a cure for the ills which jtfllict our municipal xilitlcs. Mc I nmniick 1 was unaware that you were anxious to be a pol.tical healer. Raymond's .Montniy, I Mrs. Kussidl Oil, Kdward, you should m v p- I:n, not pam. Mr. Ruv sell -Will, that being the case, will y in please pass me the halm? Truth. o 1 rouhle. Carruthcrs 1 hear you ateengaced .0 one of the Ilaihbuine twins. How 1 you dist nguish her from her sis ter? Walte Oh, prior to the wed ding I haven't regarded it as ma terial, and when tiie time comes I prosurno she w ill know the difference. Truth. 8he Hail a Sporllni Brotfier. Algy (for the twentieth time) Weil, dearest, I must leave you now. Voice (t.'irough the velvet dark) 5eo that you do I've bac'cod you to win and these false starts increase thort horse chances. I 'uck. Very Starllinc- "Is there an;, thing si artiing in the iiapcr. dear?" said Mrs. r-nag's to aer I. upland. ' Y'ep." "What is t?" "No one killi d at foot ball." I'lltsburgh Chronicle Telcgraih. ,lhe Rt-usun. Nurse Girl I lo.it track of ther :hild, mum; and Mistress joodjheavens! Why didn't vou s. cak to a policeman? "urso t;irl I "was ipeaking to wan all the to: me, mum. -Truth. A Krlrht lo.tlan. Stranger And are there still ; medicine nieu In your tribe? Dakota Indian Sure thing: There's money in druga since the original package ji-cision. jrucK. A Misconstruitioo. m. 1 ii iw Cholly Aw what did your faw Ihw leave the room so" suddenly faw? Kthel I'm afraid he's bound for that horrid club. Cholly Oh. for heaven's sake hide me. Ethel! I'm no match for him. je know, even without a club. Judge. I'eter'g Mistake. The schoolmistress was showing 33 her pupils to some visiting friends. She had been over the same ground a lay or two before, and thought bhe :ou!d trust them to do her credit "Who knows what useful article Is furnished to us by the elephant?" she -kei. "Ivory," was the prompt reply of mine uovs ait once. "Very good. And what do we cet I "Whalebone." cii-'iht. nrr,l And what from the "eallng-wax," answered Tei ,:and, whose Inventiveness was U er betr er iua his memory. Fairies la AU Conitrles. I 1 gia a list of the names by . T " ' u wscii known ia . tno Tarlou countries fi I A.Tol Ira r.. 1 - . ' i . . '' "!" "renins, ouplies. e!l- . mnirta ii j . r. I . """ "-ucu, uwans, trolls, horas. nisaes, aoDolds, duendes, brownies, knecln, stramkarls, fates, wights, un diDee, miios, salamanders, goblins, hob gobhns, poukes, banshees, kelpies, pix ies, pens, dijinus, genii aad gnomes St. Louit JttpubUc Cndoabtedly ERcerat.A "Doctor told mamma the other nTfXn1 IVldldn't 'vp wear. afB i ?.a "2 b0nnet, rd n;" cu to th- ,A?a 80 you're Koinji back "V,fn JnJ a conirortable Ayles? Sn'fc ,u?htheir mlnds t0 il neuralifii 'utsuchan awful thins. JudKe. Do You Knuw Tha! There Wise ny Fixing Thing- 1 1 u fe't-L mm mm OA-j.-trJIUfcii rTfl ,u v s -i t; ill v . V .T 1 - 11 i. k mm ,nM ).-! 1 JLJ.'-yc 1 otiRES PROMPTl-Y MERCURIAL?- fAbonttenyearsacoI i Mr. J C. Jonp. ci Fulton, ArUaii-a Bays of i "About ten years ro i con- .A Mvere case of blood poi- eon Leading physicians prescribed r,( n. titer medicine, wblch 1 took witfcmit any 1 1 li .' I also tried mercurial and putaih iwm di. with unsuccessful results, but which brou.-i on an attack of mercurial rheumatism tl.a: After suffering four years I gave up all rerwdies and Nvu. usinir S. 8. S. After takinc scnral botth s i was entirely cured and able to resume w . rk. 14 trie frreaiesi. lueuici.-ie inr i '(,.,,1 poisoning to-day ou tie n:arl.ti." Treatise on Blood and fkin Di-'-as trie, 6wiT Sfti .1110 Co., Atlwiut, (,. ti ADWA - - purely vetaWe, mtltlan-l n'.Utf. Dltlou. complete ''"""'"'..V ',':' lartlr. Uv. Bowels. Kidneys, Blui.Ur. -Ni rvu. LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE, INDIGESTION, DlZZr FEEI INQS. FEMALE COMPLAINTS BILIOUSNESS, DYSPEPSIA. rKRFFCT HKiKSTIOV wl'l tie m -ini -takinc Had way's I'ills. Ky tie !r A M I -1 .1 1 proiiertles tli-y stimulate tlio liv.-r In tie, . the blleand its diseharm ttiruuun tue t i . i .. These pills In ilitvHtirtruiu twoto r-'ir Hi! , retoilate the aclrm of the liver ari l tr.-e tl, from Uiese disorders. One or two of lta..... tit ken daily hv those suhjei-t to l.lllout p..... . pkllty of the liver, will keen tue yt. iu r. , . secure healthy lii-'etioii. l'rlce, aic ier boa. Mdd by all .lru.',-Mi KADWAV . CO.. VKW llHH. "Almost as Palatable as Milk' This is a fact with tr Srntt's EmuN'on U'j,' Liver Ol!. The tlilK:. :: between the oil, in its t.:.:; state, is very apparent, i. Scoti's you detect no fish-od 1 -i As it is a help to tii-i tion there is r.o after e except gocd effect. Kec p i mind that Scott's Enu.! is the best promoter of iij and strength known i ?cienr " COLCHESTER " mimn urn a ul iiiiii-r. Th .i;-ir . r 8!e pxt'nl!s th W.-.p it -, of thm m dowo t-i t'- i:. pro-erting th rtinnU ii gin, iV.-. ii: r in.it. rdic hoii : WALTER BAKER & GQS C0G9A and GHGCGLATE Highest Awards (Ke.ialsaad Oij.'.oain) World's Cclurnbian Exposition. f :-'A On the f'ilowUij artitl.v f dliaCRKAKriST CCfOl. vi.p;;',M I'KJ. 111.1 5. 1 (IHx-flUTF. k; DhViiiLii ciif coLiit, ?kftC'Jt(li BllILR, f jrm evea coni,io5iUou." SOLD AY CROCETtS EVERYWHERE WATER BAKER & CO., OORCKESTER. MASS. WORLDi AVAT r,. ind on DlDlomA for lif.-un Hirnli and ( hripamc. in inw vaaiCim it'.- uen sold direct to tiiti . -sn3 at once mr our coi-ir "' f-alIO(iu ' V ) of overv k;:.': hlailjiA k. - oi isnmooiuis. !ti.-v nr-- fr- ALUANCE CARRIAGE CO., CINCINNATI. C equals custom work, costinii 4 l yj, iK-st Yahir inr the nvr - sum. in m wona. AN;ime and p; i stamped on the bottom. K- ti 'dtTAuV.'alTr-ha ltrcrip:i,.nf.f c.::r com; O-UC -a.'V ..... . ' ' TV ticnicri or snJ I t j- derby mail potaee fre. Yr, can rct thebt. bargaina of dealers who pVtsh our shot. FOR FIFTY YEARS! MRS. WIMSLOW'S r CirNrvT'TTTXTr otrnTtn' baa tv-n r.ri1 br !KI!l!nn f Mntlipra ,' ;;ir tijeir -hi.!rl-n ti,ii,. i.-n,.. f.,i 0-.r J iHytar. It -c-thMthaor.!lt f.iftna ti. E;'P. ': l ain. cnr Mld collaau luc K.t it'i-.irtt furiilarrK.t. ' Tw?-v-livt Centra Hottie. ; 0. !?afre'a VWA Rrmpdr. rnlnrr' ra. UA a Ar.r iv ittt.i ...... u it. ..i. tattoo an 1 hal l'.eili ctl n fiiilrt t . :' n centu, pKial n. t- or a np. r r un ! i.'" I teauurr I'tirmiral W, rli. Vru i.li ii. Married Ladies n'"0cfi)'R'T-isr.at...r.i. ILLJJU. -t. J..U. is Science ia K2;nss:. and Usa . (Cir i&x&jz - vX' '-7-V,.. ; -a -'- .V ' . PI