DR. TALMAGE'S SERMON. SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. 6 object: "The Kvil or Selfishness"—Help Others to Dear Their Burden*—lt is > Christian's l)uty to Knconrae* » ml Aid His Comrades in Life's Battle. TEXT: "Bear ye one another's burdens and so fulfill the law of Christ."—Galatlans vl., 2. Every man for himself! If there be room for only one more passenger in the lifeboat Ret in yourself. If there be a burden to lift, you supervise while others shoulder it. You be the digit while others are the ciphers on the right hand side—nothing in themselves, but augmenting you. In oppo sition to that theory of selfishness Paul ad vances in my text the gospel theory, "Bear ye one another's burdens and so fulfill the law of Christ." Everybody has burdens. Sometimes they come down upon the shoulders, some times they come down upon the head, sometimes they come down upon the heart. Looking over nny assembly, tliey all seem well and bright and easy, but eaoh one has a burden to lift, and some of them have more than they can lift. I'aul proposes to split up these burdens into fragments. You take part of mine, and I must take part of yours, and each one will take part of the others, and so we will fulfill the law of Christ. .Mrs. Appleton, of Boston, the daughter ofDnuiel Webster, was dying after long illness. The great lawyer after pleading «m important case in the courtroom on his way home stopped at the house of Ills daughter and went into her sickroom. She said to him. "Father, why are you out to day In this cold weather without an over coat?" The grentjlawyer went Into the next room and was in a flood of tears, saying, "Hying herself, yet thinking only of me." Oh, how much more beautiful is care for others than this everlasting taking care of ourselves! Iligli up In the wall of the tem ple of Baalbec there are three stones, eacli weighing 1100 tons. They were lifted up by a style ot machinery that Is now among the "lost urts. But In my text is the gospel machinery, by which the vaster and the heavier tonnage of the world's burden is to be lifted from the crushed heart of the hu man race. What you and I most need to learn Is the spirit of helpfulness. Encourage the merchant. If he have a superior style of goods, tell him so. If ho have with "his clerks adorned the show •windows and the shelves, comrllment his taste. If he have a good business locality, if he have had great success, if he have brilliant prospects for the future, reoognixe all this. Be not afraid that he will become •Hrrogant and puffed up by your approval. Before night some shopgoing person will come in and tell him that his prices are ex orbitant and that his goods are of an In ferior quality and that his show window gave promise" of far better things than he found inside. Before the night of the day in which you fay encouraging words to that merchant there will be some crank, male or female, who will come Into the store and depreciate everything and haul down enough goods from the shelves to lit out a family for a whole wiuter without buying a cent's worth. If the merchant be a grocer, there will lie some one before night who will come into his establishment and taste of this and taste of that and taste of everything else, in that way steal ing all the profits of anything that ho may purchase—buying three apples while he is eating one orange! Before the night of the day when you approve that merchant ho will have a bad <!ebt which he will have to erase, a bad debt made by some ono who has moved away from the neighborhood without giv ing any hint of the place ,of destination. Before the night ot tlie day when you have uttered encouraging words to the mer chant there will be some woman who will ■return to his store and say she had lost her purse; she left it there in the store, she brought It there, she did not take it away, she knows it is there, leaving you to make any delicate and complimentary inference that you wish to make. Before night that merchant will hear that some style of goods of which he has a largo supply is going out of fashion, and there will be some one who will come into the store and pay a bill under protest, saying lie has paid it before ; but the receipt has been lost. Now, encourage that merchant, not fearing that ho will become arrogant or pufTad up. for there will bo before night enough unpleasant words said to keep him from becoming apoplectic with plethora or praise. Encourage newspaper men. If you knew how many annoyances they have, if you understood that their most elaborate article is sometimes flung out because there is such great pressure on the col "imns, and that an accurate report of a opeeeh is expected, although the utterance be so indistinct the discourse Is one long stenographic guess, and that the midnight which finds you asleep demands that they be awake, ana that they are sometimes ground between the wheels of our great brain manufactories; sickened at the often upproach of men who want complimentary newspaper notices or who want newspaper retraction; one day sent to report a burial, the next day to report a pugilistic encoun ter; shifted from place to jdace by sudden revolution which Is liable to take place any day In our great journalistic establish ments; precarious life becoming more and more precarious—if you understood it you you would be more sympathetic. Be affa ble when you have not an ax to be sharp ened on their grindstone. Discuss In your mind what the nineteenth century would be without the newspaper and give en couraging words to all who are engaged in this interest, from the chief of editorial department down to the boy that throws the morning or evening newspaper into your basement window. Encourage mechanics. They will plumb the pipes, or they will calcimine the ceil ings, on they will put down the carpets, or they will grain the doors, or they will fashion the wardrobe. Be not among those who never say anything to a mechanic ex cept to find fault. If he has done a job well, tell him it is splendidly done. The book Is well bound, the door Is well grained, the chandelier is well swung, the work is grandly accomplished. Be not among those employers who never say anything to their employes except to swear at them. Do not be afraid you will make that mechanic so puffed up and arrogant he will never again want to be seen with working apron or In shirt sleeves, for before the night comes of that day when you praise him there will be a lawsuit brought against him because ho did not finish his work as soon as he promised it, forgetful of tho fact that his wife has been sick and two of his chil dren have died of scarlet fever and he has had a felon on a linger of tho light hand. Denounced perhaps because the paint is very faint in color, not recognizing the fact that tha mechanic himself has been cheated out of the right Ingredients, and that he did not find out the trouble in time, or scolded at because he seems to have lamed a horse by unskillful shoeing, when the horse has for months had spßvin or ringbone or springhalt. You feel that you have the right to find fault with a me chanic when he does ill. Do you ever praise a mechanic when he does well? Encourage tho farmers. They come in to vourstores, >ou meet thom In the city markets, you often associate with them in the summer months. Office seekers go through the land ind they stand on politi cal platforms, and they tell the farmers the story about the independent life of a farmer, giving flattery where they ought to give sympathy. Independent of what? I was brought up on a farm, I ■worked on a farm, I know all about it. I hardly saw a city until I was grown, and 1 tell you that there are no class of people in this country who have it harder and who more need your sympathy than Uru>«B. Independent ot what? 01 tbt eurculio that sting* the peach trees, ol the rust In the wheat, of the long rain with the rye down? Independent ot the grogs hopper, of the loaust. of the army worm, of the potato bug? Independent of the drought that burns up the harvest? Inde pendent of the cow with the hollow horn, or the sheep with the foot rot, or the pet horse with a nail in his hoof? Independent of the cold that freezes out the winter grain? Independent of the snow bank out of which he must shovel himself? Indepen dent of the cold weather when he stands thrashing his numbed lingers around his body to keep them from being frosted? In dependent of the frozen ears,and the frozen feet? Independent of what? Fancy farmers who have made their fortunes in che city and go out in the country to build houses with all the modern improvements und make farming a luxury may not need any solace, but the yeomanry who got their living out of the soil and who that way hHve to clothe their families and educate their children and pay their taxes and meet the Interest on mortgaged farms—such men flud a terrlflo struggle. I demand that office seekers and politicians fold up their gaseous and imbecile speeches about the independent life of a farmer and substitute some word ot comfort drawn from the fuct that they are free from city conventionalities and city epidemics and city temptations. Encouruge the doctors. You praise the dootor when ho brings you up from au awful crisis of disease, but do vou praise the doctor when, through skillful treat ment of the incipieut stages of disease, he keeps you from sinking down to t'«o awful crisis? There is a great deal of cheap and heartless wit about doctors, but I notice that the people who get off the wit are the llrst to send for a doctor when there Is any thing the matter. There are those who undertake to say in our dny that doctors ure really useless. One man has written a book entitled, '-Every Man His Own Doc tor." Thut author ought to write one more book entitled, " Every Man His Own Un dertaker." "Oh," says some one, "phy sicians in constant presence of pain get hard hearted !" Do they ? The most cele brated surgeon of the last generation stood in a clinical department of one of the New York medical colleges, the students gath ered In the amphitheater to see a very painful operation on a little child. The old surgeon said: "Gentlemen, excuse me if 1 I retire. Theso surgeons can do this as | well as I can, and as I get older it gives me more and more distress to see pain." Encourage the lawyers. They are often 1 cheated out of their fees, nnd so often have | to breathe the villainous air of courtrooms, | nnd they so often have to bear ponderous , responsibility, and they have to maintain against the sharks in their profession the : dignity of that calling which was honored 1 by the fact that the only man allowed to j stand on Mount Sinai beside the Lord was I Moses, the lawyer, and that the Bible j speaks of Christ as the advocate. Encour- j age lawyers In their profession of trans cendent importance—a profession honored by having on the bench n Chief Justice Story and at the bar a Rufus Choate: Encourage the teachers in our public schools—occupation arduous and poorly compensated. In all the cities when there comes a lit of economy on the part of offi cials the llrst thing to do is always to cut down teachers' salaries. To take forty or fifty boys whose parents suppose them precocious and keep the parents from llndlng out their mistake; to take an empty head and 1111 It; to meet the expectation of parents who think their children at llfteen years of age ought to be mathematicians and metaphysicians nnd rhetoricians; to work successfully that great stuffing ma chine, the modern school system, is a very arduous work. Encourage them by the usefulness and tile everlastingness aud tho magnitude o! thoir occupation, and when yourchlldren do well compliment the in structor, praise the teacher, thank the ed ucator. Encourage all invalids by telling them how many you have knowu witli the same aliments who got well, and not by telling them of their sunken eye or asking them whetlwir the color of their cheek is really hectic or mentioning cases in which that style of disease ended fatally or telling them bow badly they look. Cheerful words are more soothing than chloral, more stimulating thau cognac, more tonle than bitters. Many an invalid has re covered through the Influence ot cheerful surroundings. Encourage all starting in life by yourself becoming reminiscent. Established mer chants, by telling these young merchants when you got your first customer,and how you sat behind the counter eating your luncheon with one eye on the door. Es tablished lawyers, encourage young law yers by telling of tho time when you broke down in your first speech. Estoblished ministers of the gospel, encourage young ministers by merciful examination of theo logical candidates, not walking around with a profundity and overwhelmlngness of manner as though you were one of the eternal decrees. Doctor established, by telling young doctors how you yourself once mistook the measles for scarlatina.' Aud if you have nothing to say that Is en couraging, 0 man, put your teeth tightly together and cover them with the curtain of your Hp, compress your lips aud put vour hand over your mouth uud keep still. Encourage the troubled by thoughts ol releuse and reassoclatlon. Encourngotho aged by thoughts of eternal juvenescence. Encourage the herdsman amid the troughs of sin togo back to the banquet at the father's homesteud. Give us tones in the mujor key Instead of the minor. Give us "Coronation" instead of "Naomi." You have seen cars so arranged that one enr going down the hill rolled another car up the hill. They nearly balanced each other. And every man that'llnds life up hill ought to be helped by those who have passed the heights and are descending to the vale. Oh, let us bear one another's burdens! A gentleman in England died leaving his fortune by will to two sons. The son that staid at home destroyed the father's will and pretended that the brother who was absent was dead and burled. The absent brother after awhile returned and claimed his part of the property. Judges und jurors were to bo bribed to say that the re turned brother and son was no son at all, but only an Impostor. The trial came on. Sir Matthew Hale, the pride of tho English courtroom aud for twenty years the pride of jurisprudence, heard that that injustice was about to be practiced. He put oft his official robe. He put on the garb of a miller. Ho went to the village where that trial was to take place. He entered the courtroom. He somehow got empan eled as one of the jurors. The bribes came around, and tho man gave ten pieces of gold to tho other jurors, but as this was only a poor miller tho briber gave to him only live pieces of gold. A verdiot was brought in rejecting tho rights of this re turned brother. He was to have no share In tho inhorltanse. "Hold, my lord!" said the miller. "Hold; wo are not all agreed on this verdict. Theso other men have received ten pieces of gold In bribery, and I have received only Ave." "Who iro you? Where do you come from?" said the judge on the bench. The response was:"l am from Westminster Hall; ray name Is Matthew Hale, lord chief justice of the king's bench. Off of that (dace thou villain!" And so the injustice was balked, and so the young man got his Inheritance. It was all for another that Sir Matthew Hale took off his robe and put jn the garb of a miller. And so Christ took }IT His robe of royalty and put on the attire )f our humanity, and in that disguise He won our eternal portion. Now are we the ions of Godl Joint heirs! We went oft 'rom home sure enough, but we got back n time to receive our eternal inheritance, knd If Christ bore our burden, surely we :an afford to bear each other's burdens. The success of the recent experiments with automobile Are englues has induced the Paris Municipal Council to consldet the question of Introducing automatic and automobile machines for watering and ■weeping the streets. A TEMPERANCE COLUMN. THE DRINK EVIL MADE MANIFEST IN MANY WAYS. Tl>» Two Paths—Mont of the DUeaiei Treated in tlie Hospital* Arise Froin Alcoholic Drink*—Children of Toper* Are Often Deformed and Idiotic. There were once two little boys, Long, long ago! Leaving home and all its joys. Long, lons ago! They had heard the people say, "While the sun shines make your hay:" Bo to work thev trudged away. Long, long ugo! They worked on for many a year, Long, long ago! Full of courage, full of cheer, Long, long ago! Rut one merry New Year's day, At a party bright und gay. Both were tempted, sad to say, Long, long ago! One resisted, doing well. Long, long ago! While the other drank and fell, Long, long ago! Ho who drank the poison wine, Heeding not tlie voice divine. Died a drunkard (fearful sign). Long, long ago! He who shunned the tempting wluo. Long, long ago! Listening to the voice divine. Long, long ago! Full of honor lives to-duy, Teaching men the better way That he chose when young and gay. —Mrs. M. A. Kidder. The n.ittsTii of Alcohol. At tlie last meeting of the Paris Hospitals Medical Society, M. Legondre, alarmed by the ever-increasing amount of drunken ness, askeil if it would not be possible to withstand this by means of meetings, In sistence on the dangers of alcohol, and by what lie considered an even better method, tliat Is, getting U|i for the instruction of patients lantern shows with exhibitions of anatomic preparations to show the dangers of alcohol. M. Legen.lri has had printed for the use of all his patients*little leaflet, the text of which runs as follows: "Most of the diseases treated in the hos pitals ariso from alcoholic drinks—that Is to say, tliev are either caused or aggravated by the abuse of alcohol. All alcoholic drinks are dangerous, and the most harm ful are those which contain aromatlcs in addition to alcohol—as, for instunce, absinthe and the so-called aperients, called ainers. "Alcoholic drinks are more dangerous when taken on an empty stomach or be tweeu meals. A man necessarily becomes an alcoholic—i. e., slowly poisoned by alco hol—even if he never gets drunk, when every day ho drinks alcohol in the form of liqueur or too much wine, more than one litre per diem. "Alcohol is a poison the habitual use of which destroys more or less quickly, but none the less certainly, all the organs most ne.-essary to life—the stomach, the liver, the kidneys, the blood vessels, the heart unit the brain. Alcohol excites man, but does not strengthen him. It is no substi tute for food, but taken away the taste for it. Those who often drink alcohol or too much wine ("more than one litre a day) are much more liable to illness, and when ill are much worse, for the disease Is ofteu complicated with fatal delirium. "Alcohol is a frequent cause of consump tion by its power of weakening the lungs. Every year we see patients who attend the hospitals for alcoholism eoino back some months later suffering from consumption. Fathers and inotiiers who drink often have children who are deformed or idiots or who die trout llts." The llest Cure. Lev. Dr. T. DeWitt Talmage said in a re cent sermon: .V celebrated doctor of France has re cently discovered something which all drinkers ought to know. He has found out that alcohol iu every shape, whether of wine or brandy or beer, contains para sitic life, called bacillus potumanie. lly a powerful microscope these living things are discovered, and when vou take strong drink you take them into the stomach, and then into your blood, and getting into the crimson coals of life they go into every tissue of your body, and your entire or ganism is taken possession of l>y these noxious infinitesimals. When iu delirium tremens a man sees every form of reptili an life, it is only these parasites of the brain in exaggerated size. It is not a hal lucination that the victim Is suffering from. He only sees in the room what is actually crawling and rioting In his own brain, Every time you take strong drink you swal'ow these maggots, and every time the imbiber of alcohol in any shape feels vertigo or rheumatism or nausea, it |s ouly the jubilee of these maggots. Ef forts are being made for the discovery of some germicide that can kill the parasites of alcoholism, but the only thing that will ever extirpate them is abstinence, to which I would before God swear all young, men and old." Treatment of Inebriate* in Rertnanjr. The sixth paragraph of the new code, which will come into operation in Germany iu 11100, enacts compulsory treatment of liabituul drunkards. Involving their being placed under a curator, who will be em powered to put the individual anywhere for treatment until discharged from curu torship by the court. The exact descrip tion is: "He who. In consequence of ine briety, cannot provide for his affairs, or brings himself or his family into the dan ger of need or endangers the safety of others." This measure was flr.-t advocated iu 18G3 at a meeting at Hanover. A Drunkard'* Will. A 'lying drunkard In Oswego, New York, lelt the following as his "last will and testa ment:" "I leave to society u ruined char acter, a wretched example and a memory that will soon rot. X leave to my parents as much sorrow as they can, in their feeblo state, bear. I leave to my brothers and sisters as much shame and mortification as I can bring on them. I leave to my wife a broken heart and a life of shame. I leave to each of my children poverty, Ignorance, a low character and a remembrance that their father filled a drunkard's grave." The Saloon-Keeper'* Profit. If a bushel of corn is worth fifty cents, when made into whisky it makes four gal lons which, sold over the bar, brings $24. The Government gets st.4oof this, the rail roads forty cents, the distiller 54, and the saloon-keeper all that remains but the fifty cents the farmer got when he sold thecorn. This is not the only transaction In which the price received by the farmer and that paid by the consumer Is a long way apart, but there is no other transaction that can result iu less good to the country, and no worse use that corn can be put to. Paragraph* About tlie CriKadr. The bright fights of the saloon are stolen from human eyes. Consecration and concentration are much needed In the anti-liquor fight. At the beginning of 1899 there were 1000 fewer licensed saloons iu Chicago than in January, 1898. A St. Louts Grand Jury reports that seventy-live per cent, of all crimes are committed by Intoxicated persons. One of the Parisian religious papers, when pleading for temperance, gives no stronger warning than simply that alcohol is had for children "under th« age of 1 «iT." Fall-Grown Caribou. Fall-grown caribou not only flitter widely in weight, varying from 200 to 100 pounds, but also in general ap pearance. The prevailing color of the animal when he has donned his winter coat is a dark fawn inclining; to gray and fading to almost pnre white an the neok and under parts of the body. Before the snow falls an edu cated eye is required to distinguish his form on the sombre gray of the barrens. Occasionally what are known as "red bulls" are seen, ani mals of a dull yellowish color and very large in size, distinguished by spindling horns. Some caribou, especially young cows, are almost as graceful as the deer, while others re semble an overgrown goat. They possess a variety of facial expression bordering on the grotesque, some ex hibiting a muzzle arched like that of a Percheron horse, others a square, massive nose like that of the domestic cow, and others resembling the come ly countenance of the Virginia deer. A Very Good Bid. It was at an auction room. The place was crowded, and the collection of furniture, art and bric-a-brac being unusually choice, the bidding had been very spirited. During an inter val of tko sale, a man with a pale and agitated countenance pushed his wav to the auctioneer's side and engaged him in a whispered conversation. Presently he stood aside, and the auctioneer rapped attention with his little hammer. "Ladies and gentlemen," he said, in a loud voice, "I have to inform you that a gentleman present has lost his pocketbook containing SISOO. He of fers $250 for its return." Instantly a small man in the back ground sprang upon a chair, and cried excitedly, "I'll give you $500." A Sudden 'l'urii* By a sudden turn wo may givo a twist an.t bring on lumbago. By a prompt use of St. Jacobs Oil the twist lets go and the muscle becomes stralßht and strong. l)rled apricots are sent from California to London. STATE OP OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, I LUCAS COUNTY. t FRANK J. CHENEY makes onth that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. .1. CHENEY & Co., doing buslnessintheCity of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said Arm will pair the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOI.LA.RS for each and every case of CATARRH that cannot 1)6 cured by the use of HAI.I.'S CATARRH CURE. FRANK J.CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my I - I presence, this 6th day of December, -t SEAL> A. D. 18W. A. W. G LEA SON, I —. — i Nutaru Ptiblic. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. .1. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Snld by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family i'illsare the best. On the average in Russia there is only une village school for 12,000 persons. Beauty la Blood deep, 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, liegin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. AH drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c. 25c, 50c. Infant schools began at Now Lanark. Scotland, in 1815; In England not till 1818. To Florida. Itcaortii. The Plaut System reaches the finest re- , sorts in Florida, Cuba, Jamaica and Porto i Blco. Tickets by both rail and water from the East. Tri-weekly steamship service be- j tween Port Tampa, Key West and Havana, i Beautifully illustrated literature, maps, ! rates, etc., upon application to J. J. Farns- i worth. Eastern Pass. Agent, Plant System, 261 Broadway, New York. The export of apples from Canada last year was 436,236 barrels. Try tlraiifOl Try Grain-O! j Ask your grocer to-day to show you a package of GBAIN-O, tho new food drink that takes the place of coffee. Chlldron | may drink it without Injury as well as the adult. All who try it like it. GRAIN-0 has that rich seal brown of Mocha or j Java, but is made from pure grains; the ! most delicate stomach receives it without distress. % the price of coffee. 15c. and j 25c. per package. Sold by all grocers. The apple orop of Oregon amounted to over 1,000,000 bushels last year. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 60c or 11. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedr Co. Chicago or New Yoilt Half of the 125,000 Scandinavians in the United States live in Chicago. To Core Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25a ' II C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. A gold mine under the town of Ballarat; Australia, Is considered the richest in the world. Fits permanently on red. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer, t'2 trial bottle and treatise free J)N. R. H. KLINE. Ltd.. 931 Arch St.,Phlla.,Pa The bones or tombs of over 200 giants have been found in various parts of Eu rope. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, ~sc.a bottle Dogs in Hamburg, Germany, are taxed according to their size. Piso's Cure is a wonderful Cough medicine. —Mrs. W. PICKERT, Vau Siclen and Blake I Aves., Brooklyn, N. Y„ Oct. 38, 1804. A Congregational church in Kansas City, | Mo., maintains an evening college. Dr. Seth Arnold's Cough Killer is the best medicine in use for La Grippe.—A. H. Mc- CAULEY, BaUle Crtck, Mich., Sept. 38. 1808. The first telegraph line In California was completed on the 22d of February, 1853. No-To-Bac (or Fifty Cencs. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weaK men strong, blood pure. 50c, (1. All druggists. In Spain the theatres do Dot issue pro grammes. Coughs Lead to Consumption, Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. Goto your druggist to-day and gee a sample bottle free. Sold In 25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays are dan gerous. Germany already supplies seventy pet cent, of the world's consumption of dye stuffs from coal tar. | THE CREAMERY. g K¥ if> <3" Butter must be sweet and clean. That is the first & requisite. It can not be perfectly sweet unless the place g in which it is made and all the utensils used in its manu- gj facture are perfectly clean. €> 3! The old rule was: "Do not use soap to clean the <j| churn"—this referred to sticky rosin soaps. £> "Of Ivory Soap can be used freely; it is the best for £> creameries or dairies, because it rinses easily and leaves neither odor nor taste. $ *3" <£> g The vegetable oils of which Ivory Soap is made, and its purity, <£> fit it for many special uses for which other soaps are unsafe and g <q unsatisfactory. !p, Ctpyrlfht, 1813, by Tht Pr*ct*r k Citable C«., ClaoiutU. Quite a profitable business is done in some large English towns by lend ing turtles to restaurants. They are permitted to remain in the windows lor a few days, and are then taken to lifterent parts of the city as advertise nents for other eating houses. New York to I'alui Ileacli nail lliami Without I'huuge. The Southern Railway announces, effective January 30th. a new Pullman Sleeping Car Line will he Inaugurated between New York and Miami, via Pennsylvania H. R., Southern Railway, Florida Central & Peninsular R. R. mil Florida East Coast R'v. This will be the ilrst through sleeping car line ever operated between New York and the extreme Southeast Coast of Florida. This service will give to the. East Coast improved facilities for reach ing the different resorts in that section; also * perfect through sleeping car service for the travel going to Key West, Nassau and Ha vana, this route now being about six hours :lie quickest route New York to Havana, and carrying the United States Fast Mail. For full particulars call on or address, J. 1,. Adams, <■. E. A..F. C. & P. 11. R., 353 Broad way, or Alex. S. Thweatt, E. P. A., Southern It'y, 271 llroadway. By a unanimous voto the Minnesota Senate has declared In favor of the election of United States Senators by the people. I.mic'm Family Medicine* Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick head ache. I'rlce 25 and 50c. There are 1000 electric lamps in the Whito House. LIVER ILLS: DB. RAIIWA* & Co., Now York : Dear Sirs—l have been sick for nearly two years, and have been doctoring with some of the mo9t expert doctors of the United States. I have been bathing in and drinking hot water at tho Hot Springs, Ark., but it seemed everything failed to do nie good. After I 9aw your advertisement I thought I would try your pills, and have neurly used two boxes; been taking two at bedtime and one after breakfast, and they have done me more good than unything else I have used. My trouble has been with the liver. My skin and eyes were all yellow; I had sleepy, drowsy feelings; felt like a drunken man; pain right above the navel, like as if it was bile on top of the stomach. My bowels were very costive. My mouth and tongue sore most of the time. Appetite fair, but food would not digest, but settle heavy on my stomach, and some few mouthfuls of food come up again. I could only eat light food that digests easily. Please send "Book of Ad vice." Respectfully, BEN ZAUGG, Hot Springs, Ark. DADWAY'S II PSLLS /rice 25c. a Bo*. Sold by Druggists or Sent bv Mail Send to DR. RAD WAY & CO., 56 Elm Street. Kew York, for Book of Advice. HLICIIMATICM CURED—Sample bottle, 4 days' KncUlflA IIOM treatment, postpaid, IO cents. ■ 'ALEXANDER REMEDY CO. , 'J4t>Greenwich St., N.Y. FIETMCIOM J OHN W.IUOKRIS, Knanuii WMbingtoD,». c. 112 Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Principal Fx&mtner U.S.Peuslon Bureau. Jyrs in I'ivll war, I.s adjudicating claims, atty siuce THE GLORY OF MAN! Strength, Vitality, Manhood. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE; OR. SELF-PRESERVATION. J | A Great Medical Treatise on Happy / 7W£ , S& , /fA//*rwMarriages. the cause and cure of Ex- nL 1 hausted Vitality, Nervous aud Physical / fir->msi IPC M Debility, Atrophy (wasting), and Vari § U' Jpw't. m cocele, also on ALL DISEASES AND / ,-MKf M WEAKNESSES OF MAN Jrom tc/ia/- W erer cause arising. True Principles of Treatment. 370 pp. . 12mo, with KNOW THYSELF, graves. HEAL THYSELF. It Contains 125 Invaluable Prescription!! fop acute and chronic diseases. Embossed, full Kilt, PRICE ONLY Si BY MAIL (sealed). (Sew edition, with latest observations of the autlior.) Read this GREAT WORK now and KNOW THYSELF, for knowlrdge la power. Address The Peabody Medical Institute, No. 4 Bulfinch St., Boston, Mass. (Established in 1800.t Chief Consulting Physician and Author, Graduate of Harvard Medical College, Class 1804. Surgeon Fifth Massachusetts Regiment Vol. The Bost Eminent Specialist In America, who Cores Where Others Fall. Consultation in person or by letter, 9to 6 ; Sundays 10 to 1. Confidential. The National Medical Association awarded the Gold Medal for this Grand Psize Treatise, which Is truly A BOOK FOR EVERY MAN, Young. Middle-aged, or Old. Married or Single. The Diagnostician, or Know Thyself Manual, a 94-page pamphlet with testimonials and endorse ments of the press. Price, 60 cents, but mailed FRKE for 6<> davs. Sendnow. It is a perfect VADE MECUM and of great value for WE A K and FAILING MKNhv a Humanitarian and Celebrated Medical Author, distinguished throughout this country and Europe. Address as above. The press everywhere highly endorse the Peabody Medical Institute. Read the following. The Peabody Medical Institute has been established in Boston 37 years, and the fame which it has attained has subjected it to a test which only a meritorious institution could undergo. -Boston Journal. " The Peabody Medical Institute has many imitators, but no equals. "-Boston Utrald. In a Worid Where "Cleanliness is Next to Godliness" No Praise is Too Great for SAPOLIO MILLIONS CAN BE MADE IN WALL ST. By buying Stocks on a margin, if you only knew how it could be done. Our Treatise on the Market, "HOW TOTKADK WITH SAFETSf," which tells you how it is done, will be mailed to you free upon application. A man wi.b limited means, with a few hundred dollars, can < wn as ma y S-ocks in proportion as the man who is worth thousands, and the man who takes advantage of the favorable conditions of 1899 in the Stock Market can make himself rich. We can show the man of limited means how be can make as much money in proportion to his cap ital as the man who is worth millions, CHAS. B.TOWNS & GO. BANKERS, Stock & Bond Brokers, | 32 Broadway, New York. § FOR 14 CEBITS | We i 1 Pkg. fcarly Rip- Cabbage, 10c X 1 " Earliest lied Beet, 100 £ 1 " Long Li ino 1 " California i' ig Tomato, Hoc X 1 " Early Dinner Onion, luc X 3 " Brilliaut Flower Seeds, l'o 9SSmMm Worth $ 1.00,J0p I4 conn, iTl.iO • SPy®! w Above 10 pkgs. worth SI.OO, we will 9 yji;M ffij mail you five, together with our • & 12'/ Su great Plant und Seed Catalogue A A S"J rw upon receipt of this notice Alie m Z jfi \Ve invite your trade and fiH fiH w li'outthom. Onion Need f5Sc. and J a lb. Potutncs at 9 a lib I. Catalog alone oc. No. af 0 JOHN A. SALZKR SI'KU CO.. I.A t'ROSSI. WIS. Q Happyl Jrem'edTflf .B. JOHNSON'S MALARIA, CHILLS 0c FEVERS Grippe & Liver Diseases'. 1 KNOWN ALL DRUGGISTS. 35C. Sood Postal for Premium List to the T>r. Seth Arnold Medical Corporation, Woonsocket, K. I. CATALOGL'ES OF THOUSANDS OY PIjAVS! FLATS! SENT FREE SENT fc'BEE Larg-Pdi AMorlmml la tb« WrrH» All klntll of Books lor Home Amusements, Including 100 Ne* lMays Juat Issued. Charades, Reciters, CLlldren s Plays, Negro Plays, Dialogues, Mrs. Parley's wax Works, tairy l'lays, Paner Scenery, Plays tor Male Characters oulv, Tableaux Vlvaut., M jkc Up llaterlalu, Amat.ura Guld« liMbe 3tace, liutile Ui Selecting I'laya, "How tj Make Ip. SA.WUEI, FRENCH, a» Went 22«l >tr»-i-i, - New York City. no A D DISCOVERT; (IW fX %# V O B quick relief «»d curat wont ca.t>. Book of testimouiala and I O il*v»' treatment Free. Dr. H. *. BEEEH't lOM. Bo* D. Atlaata. ca. \\J ANTED- ase of bail health that R-I-F-A-N -9 '» will not benefit. Henil B cta.tn Ripans Cheinfi'a) Co., New York, for loyaiuples and louu testimouiala. 11/TCMTTnAT THIS PAPER WII EN REI'LY. IVLtIIN 11UIN INQTOADVI's. NYNt'—6- ImJ Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Lse g|
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers