DR. TALMAGES SERMON. SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. Subject: "Divine Direction" Advice Aimed to Cheer Those Who Keel They Have So Especial Mission in tho World •—Follow God's Guidance. TF.XT: "To this end was I born." —John sviii., 37. After rilate had suicided, tradition says that his body was thrown into the Tiber, and such storms ensued on and about that river that his body was taken out and thrown into the Rhone, and similar dis turbances swept that river and its banks. Then the body was taken out and moved to Lausanne, and putin a deeper pool, which immediately became tho centre of similar atmospheric and aqueous disturbances. Though these are fanciful and false traditions, they show the execration with which the world looked upon Pilate. It was before this man when he wns in full life and power that Christ was arraigned as in a court of oyer and terminer. Pilate said to his prisoner, "Art thou a king, then?" and Jesus answered, "To this end I was born." Sure enough, although all earth nnd hell arose to keep Him down. He is to-day empalnced. enthroned nnd coroneted King of earth and King or heaven That is what He came for, and that is what He accomplished. By the time a child reaches ten years of age the parents begin to discover that child's destiny, but by the time he or she reaches fifteen years of age the question is on the child's lips: "What shall I do? What am I going to be? What was I made for?" It is a sensible and righteous ques tion, and the youth ought to keep asking It until it is so fuliy answered thnt the young man, or young woman, can say with as much truth as its author, though on a less expansive scale, "To this end was I born." There is too much divine skill shown in the physical, mentnl and moral aonstitu tion of the ordinary human being to sup pose that he wns constructed without any divine purpose. If you take me out of some vast plain and show ms a pillared temple surmounted by a dome like St. Peter's, and having a floor of precious stones and arches that must have taken the brain of the greatest draftsman to design nnd walls scrolled and niched and paneled and wainscoted and painted, aud I should ask you what this building was put up for, aud you answered, "For nothing at all," how could I believe you? And it is impos sible for me to believe that any ordinary human being who has in his muscular, nervous and cerebral organization more wonders than Christopher Wren lifted in St. Paul's, or Phidias ever chiseled on the Acropolis and built in such a way that it shall last long after St. Paul's Cathedral is as much a ruin as the Parthenon—that such a being was constructed for no other purpose and to execute no mission and without any divine intention toward some end. The object of this 6ermon is to help you find out what you are made for and help you find your sphere and assist you into that condition where you can say with certainty and emphasis and enthusiasm and triumph, "To this end was 1 born." First, I discharge you from all responsi bility for most of your environments. You are not responsible for your parentage or grandparentage. You are not responsible for any of the cranks that may have lived in your ancestral line and who, 100 years betore vou were born, may have lived a style of life that more or less affects you to-day. You are not responsible for the fact that your temperament is sanguine or melancholic or bilious or lymphatic or nervous. Neither are you respons.ble for the place of your nativity, whether among the granite hills of New England or the cotton plantations of Louisiana or on the banks of the Clyde or the Dneiper or the Shannon or the Seine. Neither are you responsible for the religion taught in your father's house, or the irrellgion. Do not bother yourself about what you can not help or about circumstances that you did not decree. Take things as they aro and decide the question so that you shall be able safely to say, "To this cud was I born." How will you decide it? By direct application to the only Being in the universe who is com petent to tell you—the Lord Almighty. Bo you know the reason why He is the only one who can tell? Because Ho can see everything between your cradle and your grave, though the grave be eighty years off, and besides that He is the only Being who can see what has been happening in the last 500 years In your ancestral line, and for thousnnds of years clear back to Adam, and there is not one person in ull that ances tral Hue of 0000 years but has somehow af fected your character, and even old Adam himself will sometimes turn up in your dis position. The onlv Being who can take all things that pertain to you into consid eration is God, and Ho is the one you can USK. Life is so short we have no time to experiment with occupations and profes sions. The reason we have so many dead failures is that parents decided for chil dren what they shall do, or children them selves, wrought on by some whim or fancy, decide for themselves, without any iru plontion ot divine guidance. So wo have now in pulpits men making sermons who ought to be in blacksmith shops making plowshares, and we have in the law those who Instead of ruining the cases of their clients ought to be pounding shoe lasts, nnd doctors who are the worst hindrances to their patients' convalescence, and ar tists trying to paint landscapes who ought to be whitewashing board fences, while there are others making bricks who ought to be remodeling constitutions or shoviug planes who ought to be transforming litera tures. Ask God übout what worldly busi ness you shall undertake until you are so positive you can in earnestness smite your hand on your plow handle, or your car penter's bench, or your Blackstone's "Com mentaries," or your medical dictionary, or your Br. Dick's "Didactic Theology," say ing, "For this ond was I born." There are children who early develop natural affini ties for certain styles of work. When the father of the astronomer Forbes was going to London he asked his children what presont he should bring each one of the*n. The boy who was to be an astronomer cried out, "Bring me a telescope!" And there are children whom you find all by themselves drawing on their slates, or oiipaper, ships, or houses, or birds, und you know they are to be draftsmen or archi tects of some kind. And you find others ciphering out difficult probloms with rare interest and success, and you know they nre to be mathematicians. And others making wheels and strange contrivances, and you know they nre going to be mach inists. And others are found experiment ing with hoe and plow and sickle, and you know they will be farmers. And others nre always swapping jackknives or balls or bats, and making soinethlug by the bar gain. aud they are going to be merchants. When Abbe de Bance had so advanced in studying Greek thnt li« could translate Anacreon at twelve years of ago, there was no doubt left that he was intended for a scholnr. But iu almost every lad there comes a time when ho does not know what he was made for, and bis parents do not know, and it is a crisis that God only can decide. Then there are those born for some especial work, and their fitness does not develop until quite late. Whon Philip Doddridge, whose sermons ami books have harvested uncounted soul for glory, begun to study for the min lstry, Dr. Calumy, • one of the wlse.'- and best men, advised him to turn hi thoughts to some other work. Isaac Bar row, the eminent olergyman and Christian scientist—his books standard now, though he has been dead over 200 years—was the dlsheartenment ot his futher, who used to say that if it pleused Godtotuke any of his children away he hoped it might be his son Isaac. So some of those who have beeq characterized for stupidity In boyhood oi girlhood have turned out the mightiest benefactors or benefactresses of the human race. These things being so am I not right in saying that in many cases Ood only knows what Is the most appropriate thing lor you to do, and He is the one to ask? And let nil parents und all schools and all universities and all colleges recognize this, and a large number of those who spent their best years in stumbling about busi nesses and occupations, now trying this nnd now trying that, and fnilirj? in all, would be able togo ahead with a definite, de cided and tremendous purpose, saying, "Tc this end was I born." But my subject now mounts into the momentous. Lot mo say that you are made for usefulness nnd heaven. I judge this from tho way you are built. You go into a shop where there is only one wheel turning and that by a work man's foot on a treadle, aud you say to yourself, "Here is something good being done, yet on a small scale," but if you go into a factory covering many acres and you find thousands of bands pulling on thou sands of wheels and shuttles flying and the whole scene bewildering with activi ties, driven by water or steam or electric power, you conclude that the factory was put up to do great work and on a vast scale. Now, I look at you, and if I should find that you bad only one faculty of body, only one muscle, only one nerve, if you could see but not hear or could hear und not see, if you had tho use of only one foot or one hand, and, as to your higher nature, if you had only one mental faculty and you had memory but no judgment or judgment but no will, and if you had u soul with only one capacity, I would say not much is expected of you. But stand up, Oman, and let mo look you squarely in the face! Eyes capable of seeing everything. Ears capable of hearing everything. Haqds capable of grasping everything. Minds with more wheels than uny fac tory ever turned, more power than any Corliss engine ever moved. A soul that will outlive all the universe except heaven, and would outlive all heaven if tho life of tho other immortals were a moment short of the eternal. Now, what has tho world a right to expect of you? What has God a right to demand of you? God is the great est of economists In the universe, aud He makes nothing uselessly, and for what pur pose did He build your body, mind and soul as they are built? There arc only two be ings in the universe who can imswer thnt question. The angels do not know. The schools do not know. Your kindred cannot certainly know. God knows, aud you ought to know. A factory running at an expense of $500,000 a year and turning out goods worth seventy cents a year would not be such an incongruity as you. Oman, with such semi-infinite equipment doing noth ing, or next to nothing, In the way of use fulness! "What shall I do?" you ask. My brethren, my sisters, do not ask me. Ask God. There's some path of Christian use fulness open. It may be a rough path or it may be a smooth path, a long path or a short path. It may bo on a mount of eon spicuity or in a valley unobserved, but it is a path on which you can start with such faith and such satisfaction and such cer tainty that you can cry out in the face of earth and hull and heaven, "To this end I was born. You have examined the family Bible aud explored the family records, and you may have seen daguerreotypes of some of the kindred of previous generations, you have had photographs taken of what you were iu boyhood or girlhood, and what you were ten years later, and it is very interesting to any one to be able to lco!: back upon pic tures of what he was ten or twenty or thirty years ago. But have you ever had a picture taken of what you may be nnd what you will be if you seek after God aud feel the spirit's regenerating power? Where shall I plant the camera to take the pic ture? X plant it on this platform. I direct it toward you. Sit still or stand still while I take the picture. It shall be au instan taneous picture. There! I have it. It is done. You can see the picture in its im perfect state and get some idea of what it will be when thoroughly developed. There is your resurrected body, so brilliant that the noonday sun is a patch of midnight compared with it. There is your soul, so pure that all the forces of diabolism could not spot it with an imperfection. There is your being, so miguty and so swift that flight from heaven to Mercury or Jlars or Jupiter and back again to heaven would not weary you, nnd a world on each shoulder would not crush you. Au eye that shull never sued a tear. Au energy that shall never feel a fatigue. A brow thnt shall never throb with pain. You aro young again, though you died of decrepi tude. You are well again, though you coughed orshivered yourself into the toinb. Your everyday associates are the apostles und prophets aud martyrs, and the most exalted souls, masculine nnd feminine, ot all the centuries. The archangel to you no einbarra-smeut. Ood Himself your present and everlasting joy. That is an instan taneous picture of what you may; be and what I am sure some of you will be. If you realize thnt it is au imperfect pic ture my apology is what the apostle John said, "It doth not yet appear what we shall be." "To this end was I bo'n." If I did not think so I would be over whelmed with melancholy. The world does very well for a little while, eighty or 100 or 150 years, and I think that human longevity may yet bo improved up to that prolongation, for now there is so little room between our cradle and t our grave we cannot accomplish much; but who would waut to dwell in this world for all eternity? Some think this earth will finally be turned into a heaven. Perhaps It may, but it would have to undergo radical repairs and thorough eliminations and evolutions and revolu tions und transformations infinite to make it desirable for eternal residence. All the east winds would have to become west winds, nnd all the winters changed to springtides, and all the volcauoes extin guished, and the oceans chained to their beds, and theepidemics forbidden entrance, and the world so fixed up thnt I think it would take more to repair this old world than to mnke an entirely new one. In the seventeenth century all Europe was threatened with a wave of Asiatic bar barism and Vienna was especially be sieged. The king and his court had fled and nothing could save the city from be ing overwhelmed unless the king of Po- Inud, John Sobloski, to whom they had sent for help, should with his army come down for the relief, and from every roof and tower the inhabitants of Vienna watched and waited and hoped until on the morning of September 11 the rising sun threw an unusual and unparalleled brilliancy. It was the reflection of the sun on the swords and shields and helmets of John Sobieski aud his army coming down over the hills to the rescue, nnd that day not onlv Vienna, but Europe, was saved. And see you not, O ye souls be sieged with slu and sorrow, that light breaks In, the swords and the shields and the helmets of divine rescue bathed in the rising sun of heavenly deliverance? Let everything else go rather than let heaven go. What a strange thing bo to feel oneself born to an earthly crown, but you have been born for a throne on which you inuy reign after the last monarch of all the earth shall have gone to dust. I Invite you to start now for your own coronation, to come in and take the title deeds to your everlasting inheritance. Through an im passioned prayer, take heaven and all of 1 its raptures. What a poor farthing is all that this vorld can offer you compared with pardon icre and life Immortal beyond the star* liniess this side of them there be a place urge enough and beautiful enough and enough for al! the ransomed! Wher ever It be. In what world, whether near by or far away, In this or some other con | stoliation, hail, home of light, and love and ilessednessl Through the atoning mercy it Christ, may we all get there! A TEMPERANCE COLUMN J THE DRINK EVIL MADE MANIFEST; IN MANY WAYS. The Politician'! Plea to tlie Voter—The Value of Pare Diet and Natural Cura tive Agencies In the Treatment of the Disease of Drunkenness. To the brewers, bar-keeepers, and brothels we give The protection of law that permits them to live; And we say to them softly, "stay by us! | and hold On your way, to our Rain, while we gar ner your gold!" t And we say to the pulpits—which meekly obey— "Let the party alone and the party will pay;' Pour the gospel of love sweetly over the pows, But the Decalog do not too widely dif fuse!" We are proud of the revenue records that tell Of the toll-gates maintained on the high way to hell; We delight in the leeches that suck the warm life Of the heart of the home, of the mother and wife: For the manhood betrayed andtho woman hood slain We hold up the red hands of a murderer's gain; And we boast of our millions, to bribe you to sin With your ballots ugain, that again wo may win! Fruit vs. Alcohol. A writer in an European temperance Journal calls attention to the value of fruit as an antidote to the craving for liquor. He says: In Germany, a nation greatly in advance of other countries in matters relating to hygiene, alcoholic dis ease has been successfully coped with bv the adoption of pure diet and natural curative agencies. I have said that the use of fresh fruit is an antidote for the drink crave, and this is true. I have met working men who have told me that fruit has often taken away the crave for drink; I met a clergyman recently, who assured me that a diet consisting largely of fruit had taken entirely away an hereditary craving that had troubled him for vears. It may be asked, how can fruit and pure diet do all this? The explanation is simple. Fruit may be called nature's medicine. Every apple, every orange, every plum and every grape is a bottle of medicine. An orange is three parts water —distilled in nature's laboratory—but this water is rich in peculiar fruit acids medicinally balanced, which arc specially cooling to the thirst of the drunkard, and soothing to the dis eased state of his stomach. An apple or an orange eaten when the desire for "a glass" arises would generally take it away, aud every victory would make less stroiig each recurring temptation. The function of fresh fruit and succulent vegetables is—not so much to provide solid nourishment as to supply the needful acids and salines for the purification of the blood. Once get the blood pure, every time its pure nutrient stream bathes the several tissues of the body, it will bring away some impurity, aud leave behind an atom of healthy tissue, until in time the drunkard shall stand up purilled-*iu his right mind. The Drink Question In Belgium. For some time past tho drink question j has been exciting among thoughtful per ! sons in Belgium serious reflections, and the figures collected by M. Jules Le Jeune, | ex-Minister of Justice, certainly justify ! them. The population of Belgium is stiil : less than seven millions, although it will soon pass that total, but it can boast of 198,000 wino and beer shops, or one for every thirty-five persons, women and chil dren included. The total drink bill of tho country is valued per annum at £20,000,- 100. One-third of that sum is represented by gin in its several marketable forms i alone. The compiler of these figures, the accuracy of which cannot bo impeached, has no difficulty in showing that this ex penditure does not represent all the loss to | the country. To it have to bo added the 1 loss of time, the deterioration in the quali ty of the work, and llie absolute incapacity for work that follow in the train of exces sive drinking. But M. Le Jeuno seeks to rivet public attention on tho subject by producing other statistics to show tlint in 1 seventy-four per cent, of the cases of con victions In criminal courts the cause of the crime is drink; that seventy-nine per cent. : of the paupers living in "tho state wero drunkards: that eighty per cent, of the ; suicides have a similar origin; and. Anally, | that forty-five per cent, of tho lunatics were victims to what jg called the alcohol habit. If the drink question reveals a seri ous flaw in the prosperity of Belgium, it must also be allowed thut many of her pub lic men are fully alive to the peril and seeking to combat It.—London Timer., Ruined by Hum. The list of persons who have killed them selves because they have been ruined by rum Is a long one, and the list of those who have killed themselves by ruin Is much | longer. Every day persons who have spent all their money in buying rum hang themselves, or make way with themselves by other methods; every day such persons are taken to Insane asylums, almshouses and prisons; every day they are discharged i from situations; every day they receive i wounds without cause; every day their wives ; and children, in some cases their husbands and children, are made wretched by the ! spectacle of their drunkenness. Never j theless, the people of the United States ! look with favor upon the saloon, because they are shortsighted enough to think that it keeps down taxes.—The New York Christian Advocate. Drunkards Weaken a Kecimint, Drunkards are like mill-stones attached to a regiment; Its greatest weakness and drawback to Its success and good name. When this excess abounds in a regiment there is a want of order and discipline, and a regiment without both of these can scarcely bo called an Integral part of the army. It is then the duty of a good soldier to live soberly, so that he may keep his oath, and act with justice to his comrades and for the honor of his regiment. It should be the pride of each Individual to do his duty with exactness, punctuality and fidel ity; a sober man only can do so. Degrading to the Intellectual Life. Suppose a student on his walk to school should be assaulted by a ruffian that seized his books, tore them to rags, smashed his Instruments and flung his manuscrips In tho gutter, would you not be entitled to denounce him as a ruffian who had no regard for Intelleot or culture? But If Instead of attacking the tools of a scholar, his assailant Should attack his brain, stupefy the organ of thought and feeling, aud paralyse every intellectual power, would not the injury be infinitely greater? Drink is such a degrading enemy to the intellectual life. Temperance Paragraph*. Don't drink intoxicating liquor to "pick you up." You will find that, Instead, it will throw you down. The new Oerman civic code disfran chises all citizens who can't provide tor their familes because of the drink habit. Washington City has a temperance bar room for bicycle women. It is on Penn sylvania avenue, three blocks from the Capitol, and is fitted exactly as a bar, ex cept that the drinks served are non alcoholic. Seventeen kinds of mixed tem perance beverages are to be had by the thirsty bicycle maid after she has had a long snln. 1 SCIENTIFIC SCRAPS. It baa been estimated that a single plant of the Russian tbistle six feet in diameter produces 2,000,000 Bee-:ls. Etherion is the name given by Cbarles F. Brush, an electriciau, to an element which he thinks he has discovered in the atmosphere. An inch of rnin falling upon an area of one square mile is equivalent to nearly 17,500,000 gallons, weighing 145,250,000 pounds, or 64,844 tons. The beautiful colors seen in the soap bubble arise from the fact that the bubble, being very thin, reflects light from both the outer and inner surfaces of the film. While lightning may be seen and its illumination of clouds and mist may be recognized when it is even two hundred miles distant, thunder is rarely audible more than ten miles. The thunder from very distant storms, therefore, seldom reaches the ear. It lias been shown that, acre for acre, water is capable of supplying a much greater quantity of nitrogenous food for man than land can supply. The cnltivatiou of water areas is called agriculture, aud its products, in con tradistinction to those of agriculture, are tish, crabs, oysters, clams aud other edible marine animals. A THRILL FOR AMERICANS. Two Stripe* and Three Stars With the Crest of the Washington*. In the little church of Wickhain ford, near Evesham, in the most rural, unchanged part of England, is a shrine to which no American can re pair without a thrill to the centre of his being, says a writer in the In ternational. There, ou the north side of the altar, is a tombstone on which are carved the Washington arms—two stripes and three stars—an eagle springing out of an antique coronet. The Laitin inscription on the tomb is to Penelope Washington. The tran slation is as follows: "Sacred to the memory of Penelope, daughter of that most distinguished and renowned soldier, Col. Henry Washington. He was descended from Mir William Washington, knight, of the county of Northampton, who was high in favor of those most illustrious princes and best of kings, Charles the First and Second, on account of his gallant and successful military achievements both in England and in Ireland. He married Elizabeth, of the ancient and noble stock of the Pack ingtons of Westwood, a family of untarnished loyalty and patriotism. Sprung from such famous ancestry, Penelope was a diligent and devout worshipper of (iod; of her mother (her only surviving parent) she was the great consolation; to the sick and needy she was an exceptionally ready and generous benefactress. Humble and chaste aud wedded to Christ alone, from this transitory life she de parted to her spouse. "February 27, Anno Domini 1097." In a little church not very generally known, the "Little Trinity," in the Minories, London, are to be seen the same "Stars and Stripes" of the old Washington family. They appear on one or more of the Dartmouth monu ments, with which family the Wash ington* were connected by marriage. Indian I act'maker*. Lacemakitig by the Chippewa In dian women is attracting attention be cause of the recent outbreak at Leech Lake, Minn., and the killing of Major Wilkinson and a number of soldiers of General Bacon's command. In 1891 Miss Sibyl Carter of New York city conceived the idea of pro viding employment for the women of the Chippewa tribes of Indians which would make them self-supporting. There was no market for the beadwork which they made, and she hit upon the plan of teaching them lacemakiug. In conjunction with the Episcopal mission, she established this depart ment and sent Miss Paniiue Colby to instruct the Indian women. Almost from tho beginning the ex periment was a success, and during the following year a large quantity of the lace thus manufactured was sold to wealthy women of New York, the principal patrons being Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt, Mrs. Astor, Mrs. C. P. Huntington and others, who purchase about all of the lace made. Mrs. J. Pierpont Morgan and Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt are now having made for them some very fine lace bedspreads for which they pay S2OO each. Miss Pauline Colby has been re markably successful with her pupils, and after an experience of eight years among these women she believes they are more deft with their fingers and more painstaking with their work than white women, although she says they are not as quick to learn as their white sisters. The Indian women are paid for their work at the rate of ten cents an hour. They are paid as soon as their work is completed.—New York Sun. Tests for a Good Husband. "Lady," said a Scotch servant to her mistress, "I maun tell ye I am to leave your service and be marritt." "Is not this very sudden, Mary?" inquired the lady; "who is the person you expect to marry?" "It is John Scott, mistress." "But you have known him but a short time; how can you trust a stranger?" persisted the woman, re luctant to part with a good servaut, "Yes, 'tis true; but he's ken han sel' mony years, and he says he's all right, and I believe he is, for I asked him, 'Did he know the Ten Command ments?' aud he gave them ivery one. I asked him could he say tho shortei catechism, and he had it ivery word; then I told him to grip his hands quick and hard, and then lady, I saw he was a strong man, aud I'm goin* to gie him my hand."—San Francisco Argonaut. It Can Be Made to no. j "The raelnncholy days have come;" has i rheumatism come with them? It can be . made togo right offby the use cf St. Jacobs Oil, which oures and loaves no trace be hind. Australasia possesses one-fifth of the world's stock of sheep. Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Iflercury. as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smellandcompletely derange thewholesystem when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's' 'atarrh Cure be sure to get the genuine. It is taken internally, and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. by Druggists; price, 75c. per bottle. Hall's Family Pills are the best. The first expedition to the - south pole took place In 1567. Betmty la Blood JJeep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. About twenty new books are published daily In Great Britain. Coughs Lead to Consumption* Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. Goto your druggist to-dav and get a sample bottle free. Sold in 25 and 53 cent bottles. Go at once; delays aro dan gerous. No particular form of religion receives official recognition In Japan. Carry Tlii-m 111 Your Pocket. Hoxsle's Disks will check any cough or cold in an hour. For singers and speakers they aro Invaluable. 25 cts. Five hundred trading vessels leave the Thames daily for all parts of tho world. Fits permanently cured. No fitsor nervous ness after lirst day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $:! trial bottle and treatise free DR. It. 11. KLINE, Ltd., (131 Arch St..Phlla.,Pa. The number of people at present who speak English is said to be 110,000,000. While You Sleep. Do not have too much air blowing '.hrough your room at night, or neuralgia nay creep upon you while you sleep. But !f it comes, use St. Jaeob3 Oil; it warms, ?oothes and cures promptly. A Large "Family. A single young man beard the banns I called in church one day. Perhaps he had not always been very attentive to the service, or perhaps marriages were more frequent than usual that season, for -the ordinary announcement seemed to make an impressson on him. At dinner that day he observed thought fully, as if communing with himself: "They must be a large family!" "Who?" asked the company, for the speaker was a silent man, and one whose remarks were few and far be tween. "Why, those Spinsters!" he an swered, gravely. "There was another j of them called in church to-day." He thought it was a proper name. But he was right. The Spinsters are a large family.—Tit-Bits. Kngllsh Victories. In all their wars the English have won the splendid average of eighty two per cent, of the battles. This is the world's record. Educate Tour Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever ; 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fall, drticcists refund money- Holland is tho only country In Europe that admits coffee free of duty. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c.»1. All druggists. The President of France receives $240,- )00 a year. THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Pigs is manufactured by the CALIFORNIA FIG SVRUP Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the CALI FORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. •AN FKANOUOO, OaL LOUISVILLE. Kr- Xlff YORK. H. T. " Don't Put Off Till ties of To-Day." SAPOLIO (Renter C«asnpUH Do not think for a single moment that consumption will ever strike you a sudden blew. It does not come that way. It creeps its way along. First, you think it is a little mid; nothing but a little hack ing cough; then a little loss in weight: then a harder cough; then the fever and the night sweats. The suddenness comes when you have a hemorrhage. Better stop the disease while it is yet creeping. You can do it with Ayer's Cherry Pectoral You first notice that you cough less. The pressure on the chest is lifted. That feeling of suffocation is removed. A cure is hastened byplacingone of Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Plaster over the Chest. A Book Froom | It is on the Diseases of the I Throat and Lungs. I Wrtlo um B If you have any complaint wbattver m M and desire the bent medical advice you M Djfi can possibly receive, write the doctor HI freely. Yeu will receive a prompt reply R DR. J. C. AT Eli, Lowell, Mast. M BAD BLOOD '•('ASCAIf ETi do nil claimed for them and are a truly wonderful medicine. I have often wished for a medicine pleasant to take and at last have found it In Cascarets. Since taklna them, my blood has been purified and my complexion has im proved wonderfully and 1 feel much better in every way." Mas. SALLIE E. BELL.AU?. Luttrell, Tenn. B CATHARTIC TRADE MARK a>gflt&T?»gf> Pleasant. Palatable. Potent, Taste Good. Da Good Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... SlerllnK Comedy Cni»pan», Clilcatrn. Montrral. Now York. 319 iin.Tft.RAf* Bold Mdjroaranteed by ulldrue- HU I joists lo Cli it n Tobacco Habit. I Are i You Going I ij To California? 7l The California Limited, San'a JC * Fd Route, glvos the best anil I* ! spoeillest service. Through c J* diniug ear, and observutioa K JJ ear with spacious parlor, V ft especially for use of ladies and Vj J children. 2%. days Chicago L to Los Angeles. F J Address E. F. BURNETT, It a. E. P. Agt. A., T. kS. F, By., Vim im Broadway, New York, N. Y. £ ■ . . TRY ... JOHNSON'S HAPPY PILLS. j The History of JOHNSON'S SAPPY PZIiIiS, for M«laria, Chills and Fever, and Liver Com ; plaints. is unparalleled in the annals of a medicine THEY CURE. NO MERCURY. THE HAPPY MEDICINE CO.. j West New Brighton, 5.1., Borough of Richmond, ¥ T- nOn D Q VNEW DISCOVERY; *if wJ ■ ■ qniokraliaf and cams worst case*. Send 'or book of tSMtimomala and 10 (lava' treatment Free. Dr-H M QKEEW 8 SOUS. Atlanta. Os; 1 so™eyw,«"o h \ Thompson's Eye Water W' ANTtE— Ca»i> of bail health that U-I'P-A-K-ti will mi. ii. nedt. Send » eta. to ltipan* Chemical .N Yoi k, to.- 11l sanmlei ami lim.i testimonial* IV/TPATTTHM T1!IS PAPER VVIIEN KKItLY IVIJjiN iIUIN INU TO ADVTS. NYNU-47. nuCIIMATIQM Opmt-Ou bottle- i>o»itive KntUlflA I loni relief 1u24 hour*. Postimirt. #l.o(i "Auhmim Rkmeiiy Co , 24« Greenwich St.. N. Y. ■i Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Lao PJ Em in time. Bold by druggists. |?i To-morrow the Du- Buv a Cake of