Pretty Underwear. Tbe variety of pretty silk and woolen un derwear to be bad at suoh reasonable prices, is very tempting to dainty women, yet many refrai» from purchasing suoh on account of their liability to injure In laun drylng. If the work is properly done this trouble may be avoided. When ready to begin fill a tub half full of warm water, in which dissolve a fourth of a bar of Ivorv Soap, and wash the articles through it with the hands, rinse in warm water, and squeeze, but do not wring. Hang on the line aud press while still damp. ELIZA B. PABKER. A Twelve-Inch Wire-Wound Gun. Our American cousins are not, oui Plymouth correspondent says, appar ently to enjoy a monopoly in the manufacture of man-killing weapons. Although it has been known for many mouths that the British Admiralty have introduced for the navy a new type of 12-inch breech-loading gun, few are aware of the enormous advan tages the new weapon can claim ovei existing ordnance of the same calibre. The new gun, which is to be known as the "Mark 8," is constructed of steel on the wire-wound principle, so that the liability to fracture is reduced to a minimum. Cordite charges only will be used, and a lenthy series of experiments have shown that a charge of 167} pounds of cordite is sufficient to fire a projectile 850 pounds in weight a distance of ten thousand yards, whereas the existing 12-inch guns need a charge of 250 pounds of powder to fire a projectile weighing 714 pounds the same distance. The new gun has also a greater de structive capacity, it having been found that its projectile will penetrate 21.1 inches of wrought iron at a dis tance of seventeeu hundred yards, while the penetrating power of the 12' inch gun at the same distance is 19. : 3' inches. At shorter distances the dif ferences in the destructive capacity is much more pronounced, the muzzle perforation of the new gun being 38.5 inches of iron, as against 20.7 inches in the case of the older type of weapon. The first vessels to be armed with these guns will be the battle-ships Canopus at Portsmouth, Goliath at Chatham aud Ocean at Devouport.— London Standard. Cost, of a Petty Suit. The folly of going to law is shown by a recent transaction in the Justice Court at Greenville. The constable levied upon 800 pounds of seed cot ton, which when sold the next day un der the attachment brought the sum of 811.34. When all costs were paid there was left $3.70. which, by the terms of the original instrument, went to the attorney, leaving the attaching party without a cent from the collec tion.—Dallas (Texas) News. 'l'ell Wcciio for 10 Cents. Thnt big family paper. The Illustrated Weekly Sentinel, of Deliver, Col. (founded 1890) ten weeks on trial for 10c.: clubs of <!, s'Jc.; 12 for SI- Special offer solely to introduce it. Latest mining news, illustrations of scenery, true stories of love and adventure. Address as above; mention this paper: stamps taken. France has a law forbidding the slaughter of birds smaller than larks. Nevertheless, piles of such birds are offered for sale in the markets of many French cities. A movement is now under way for enforcing the law and saving the song-birds and the fields, which, it is said, they keep free from injurious insects. l ISVOUR HAIR TURNING GRAY? What doea your mirror say? Does it tell you of some little streaks of gray? Are you pleased? Do your friends of the same age show this loss of pewer also? Just remember that gray hair never becomes darker without help, while di.rk hair » rapidly becomes grr.y when once the chance begins. ilip i i will bring back to your hair the color of youth. It never fails. It is just as sure as , that heat melts snow, or that water quenches Are. It cleanses the scalp also and prevents the formation of dandruff. It feeds and nour ishes the bulbs of the hair making them produce a luxu riant growth. It stops the hair from falling out and gives a fine soft finish to the hair as well. |l W« I)nve a book on me Hair and 8j Sculp which you may obtain free ■ *lf you* dn uot rhtain nil the benefits ri rou expttctsri fi*em the UR« of tha ft Vigor, write the Doctor about It. ■ ffl Addr*M« OK. J.C.B jjj-—~jT stoepep FREE » HTrE" Permanently Cured HE Id Mm ißtMltv Prevented by H R H DR. KLINE'S CHEAT Hi ■ ■ w herve restorer PMKIT« our, for all Nfoui Utowin. MpOfr, WM Vfiuvu and SI. rifkf* Vmnee. KoFlUvrKcrrnaMMa H Arir«di,'i!». Traatiaa and At trial bottle [M free to PllptUtiiu. tltt, i ft7Uißupr«Mfb»rf»a calf H luititme ifUt'dleiiie°*u ArcbSt-.l'UlaaalpliU.ra, DR TALMAGES SERMON.' SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. SubJ«Mt! "Tbe Housewife's Perplexities" -Ltuoni Drawn From the Episode of Martba and Mary—Daily Trials Pre pare One For Fatnre Blearing*. TEXT: "Lord, dost Thou not care tlmt ray sister hath left me to serve alone? Bid her therefore that she help me."—Luke x., 40. Yonder Is a beautiful village homestead. The man of tbe house is dead and his widow has charge of the premises. It is Widow Martha, of Bethany. Yes, I wiil show you also the pet of the household. It is Mary, the younger sister, with a book under her arm, and in her face no sign of care or anxiety about anything. Company has come. Christ's appearing at the outside of the door makes some excitement Inside the door. The sisters set baok the disar ranged furniture, arrange their hair, and in a flash prepnre to open the door. They do not keep Christ waiting outside until they bavo newly appareled themselves or elaborately arranged thoir tresses, nnd then with affeoted surprise come out and, pretending not to have heard the two or three previous knocklngs, say, "Why, is that you?" No, they were ladies, und nl wavs presentable, nil hough perhaps they had not on their best. None of us always have on our best. Otherwise very soon our best would not be worth having on. They throw open the door and greet Christ. Thevsay: "Good morning, Master! Come in and be seated!" Christ brought a oom pany of friends with Him, and the influx of so many city visitors, you do not won der, threw the country home into some perturbation. I suppose the walk from the city had been a keen appetlzor. The kitchen department that day was a very important department, and I think ns soon ns Martha had greeted her guests she went to that room. Mary had no anxiety about the dinner. She had full confidence that her sister Marthn could get up the best dinner In Bethany, and she practically said: "Now, let us have a division of labor. Martha, you cook and I'll sit down and learn." The same difference you now sometimes see between sisters. There is Martha, in dustrious, painstaking, a good manager, over inventive of somo new pastry, discov ering something in household affairs. Here is Mary, fond of conversation, iiter ary, so full of questions of othics she has no time to discuss questions of household welfare. It is noon. Mary is in the par lor. Martha is in the kitchon. It would have been better for them to have divided the toil, and then they could have divided tbe opportunity of listening to Christ. But Mary monopolizes Christ, while Martha swelters before the lire. It was very im portant that they have a good dinner that day, for Christ was hungry, aud Ho did not often have luxurious entertainment. Alas, me, if all the responsibility of that enter tainment had rested with Marvl What a repast they would have had! But some thing went wrong in the kitchen. Either the fire would not burn or the bread would not bake or something was turned black that ought to have been only turned brown, or Martha soalded herself, and, forgetting ail the proprieties of the occa sion, with besweated brow she rushed out of the kitchen into the parlor, jjerhaps with tongs in one hand and pitcher in the otnor, and she cried out: "Lord, dost Thou not care that my sister Ims left me to serve alone? Bid her therefore that she help me." Christ scolded not a word. If it wero scolding, I would rather have Him scold me tlinn anybody else bless me. There was nothing acerb in the Saviour's reply. He knew that Martha had been working herself almost to denthto get Him something to eat, but Ho appreciated her kindness, and He practically said: "My dear woman, do not worry. Let the din ner go. Sit down here on this couch be side your younger sister, Mary. Let us talk about something else. Martha, Mar tba, thou art careful and troubled about many things, but ouo thing is needful." As Martha throws open the door I look in to-day, and I seo a great many household anxieties, perplexities, fatigues and trials, and about them I am going to speak if the Lord of Mury and Martba und Lazarus will help me by His grace. As I look into that door, iu the llrst place, I see the trial of nonappreciation. That was what made Martba so vexed at Mary. Mary, the younger sister, had no proper estimate of the elder sister's fa tigue. Just as now men having annoy ances of store and factory and shop, or at tbe Stock Exchange, come home at night nnd hear of some household annoyance, und they say, "Oh, that's nothing! You ought to be in a factory a day and nave ten or fifteen or twenty or 100 subordinates. Then you would know something about annoyance and trouble." Ob, man, let me tell you that a wife and a mother bas to conduct at the same time a university, a clothing establishment, a restaurant, a laundry, a library, and bas to be health officer, polico and president of the whole realm! She has to do a thousand things, and to do them well, in order to make things go smootbly. and that Is what puts the awful tax on a woman's nerves nnd a woman's brain. I know there are exceptions to the rule. Sometimes you wiil find a woman who can sit in the arm chair of the library all day without any anxiety, or tarry on the belated pillow, and all tbe cares of tbe household are thrown upon servants who have large wages ana great experience; but that Is the exception. I speak of the great masses of housekeepers, to whom llfo is a strug gle, and who at thirty years of age look as though they were forty. The fallen at Cha lons and Austerlitz and Gettysburg nnd Waterloo are a small nnmber iu comparison with those who have gone down under the Armageddon of the kitchen. Go out to thu country and look over the epitaphs on the tombstones. They are nil beautiful and Xioetlc, but if the tombstones could tell the truth thousands of them would say, "Hore lies a womun who was killed by too much mending and sewing and baking and scour ing nnd scrubing," and the weapon with which she was killed was u broom or n sewing machine or a ladle. The housewife rises in the morning half rested. At an irrevocable hour she must have the morning repast ready. What if the fire will not burn, what If the clock stop, what if the marketing has not been sent in? No matter that; it must be ready at the irrevocable hour. Tnen the chil dren must be got ready for school. But what if the garments be torn? What if they do not know their lessons? What if tbe hat or sash is lost? They must bo ready. Then you have theduty of the day, or perhaps several days, to plan out. But what if the butcher sends meat unmasti cable? What if the grooer furnishes your articles of food adulterated? What if the piece of silver be lost, or a favorite chalice be broken, or the roof leak, or the plumb ing fail, or any one of a thousand things occur? No mutter. Everything must be ready. A young woman of brilliant education and prosperous surroundings was called down stairs to help in the absence of the servant, nnd there was a ring at tbe bell, and she went to the door and an admirer entered. He said: "I thought I beard music in tbe house. Was it on the piano or the harp?" She said: "Neither; it was a frying pun accompaniment to a gridiron! In other words, I was called down stairs to help. I suppose sometime I shall have to learn, and I have begun now." When will the world learn that every kind of work that is right is honorable? As Martha opens the door I look in and I also gee the trial of severe economy. Nine hundred and ninety-nine households out of a thousand are subjected to it either under the greater or less stress of circum stances. It Is especially so when a man smokes expensive olgars and dines at •ostiy restaurants. He yiil be very apt to enjoin severe economy at bome. That 1* what kills thousands of women—the Attempt to make $S do the work of $7. It Is amazing how some men dolo out money to the household. If you have not got the money, say so. If you have, be cheerful In the expenditure. Your wife will be reasonable. "How long does the honey moon last?" said a young woman about to enter the married state to her mother. The mother answered: "The honeymoon lasts until you ask your husband for money." "How much do you want?" "A dollar." "A dollnrl Cnn't you get along with fifty cents? You are always wanting a dollar." This thirty yea's' war against high prices, this everlasting attempt to bring the outgo within the income, has exhausted multi tudes o 1 housekeeper?. Let me say to such, It is a part of the divine discipline. If it wore best for you, all you would hjvve to do would be just to open the front win dows and the ravens would fly in with food, and after you had baked fifty times from the barrel In the pantry, like the barrel of Zarephath, the barrel would bo' full, and the children's shoes would last as lcng as the shoes of the Israelites in the wilderness— forty years. Oh, my friends, all these trials and fatigues of home life are to preparo you for heaven, for they will make that the brighter in the contrast! A dying sold'er was asked by a friend, "Have you anv message to send to your father?" "Yes," said he; "tell him I have gone home." "Well," said the frlond, "have you anv message to send to your wife?" "Yes; tell her I have gone 1,0 me." "You have other friends. Would you like to send a message to them?" "Yes; give them the same mes sage. They will understand It. Tell them I have gone home." And that heavenly home will compensate, will fully atone, for all the hardships and the trials and the annoyances and the vexatious of the earthly home. In that laud they never hnnger, and consequently there will be no nuisance of catering for appetite. In that land of the white robes they have no mend ing to do, and the air of that liilly country makes them all well. No rent to pay there. Every man owns his own houso, and « mansion at that. It will not be so great a ohange to step into the chariot of the skies If on earth you rode. It will not be so great a change if on earth you had all luxuries and satisfactions. It will not be so great a change for you to sit down on the banks of the river of life if on earth you had a country seat. But oh, the joy of the weary feet when they step into the celestial equippage, and, oh, for the joy of those to whom home was a martyrdom'on earth when they go into that home whore they will never hive to do anything they do not want to do! What a change from tho time she put down the rolling pin to tho tlmo she took up tho scepter! If Chatsworth Tarlcond the Van derbllt mansion were fitted into the celes tial city, the.v would be looked at as unin habitable rookeries, and Lazarus himself would bo ashamed to be seen going in and out of them, so great are the palaces nwaiting Ood's dear children, and so much grander the heavenly architecture than the earthly. It Is often not only the toil of the housekeeping, but it is the «ickne?s and the sorrow that go along. It is a sim ple fact that one-half of the women of the land are invalids. The mountain lass who has never had an ache or a pain may con sider household work ot no verv groat weariness, and at the eventide may skip out to the fields and drive the cat tle home, and until 10 o'clock at night may fill the cnMn with laughing raoket; but. oh, to do tho hard work of the house hold with a shattered constitution—after six weeks' whooping cough has raged in the household, making the nights as sleep less as the days—then it is not so easy! And then this work of the house has often to be undertaken when the norvos are shattered with some bereavement that has Dut desolation in every room of tho houso and sent the crib into the garret because Its occupant has been hushed into a slum ber that needs no mother's lullaby. Oh, it was a great deal easier for her'to brood the whole flock than to brood a part of them now that the rest have gone! You may tell her that her departed children are in the bosom of a loving God, but, mother like, she will brood both flocks, putting one wine of caro over the flock in the putting tho other wing o[ care over the flock in tho grave. Nothing but the old fashioned religion of Jesus Christ can take a woman happily through home trials. All these modern religions amount to noth ing. They do not help. Solomon wrote out of his own miserable experience—he had a wretched home; no man can be happy with two wives, much less with 700,and out of his wretched exper ience he wrote—"Better is a dinner of herbs where love is than a stalled ox and hatred therewith." Oh, tho responsibilities of housekeepersl Kings by their indiges tion have lost empires and generals through Indigestion have lost battles. One of tho great statisticians says that out of 1000 unmarried men thirty were criminals, and out of 1000 married men only eighteen were criminals,showing the power of home. And, oh, the responsibility resting upon housekeepersl By the food they provide, by the couch they spread, by the books they Introduce, by the influence they bring around the home, they are helping to de cide the physical, the Intellectual, the moral, the eternal welfare of the humun raoe. Oh, the responsibility! That woman sits in the house of God to day perhaps entirely unappreciated. She is the banker of her home, tho president, the cashier, the teller, the discount clerk, and ever and nnon there is a panic. God knows the anxieties and the cares, and he knows that this is not a useless sermcn, but that there are multitudes of hearts waiting for the distillation of the divine mercy and solace In their hour of trials and their home duties and their own fa tigues. The world hears nothing about them. They never speak about them. You could not with the agencies of an inquisi tion bring the truth out of them. They keep it still. They say nothing. They en dure and will until God and the judgment right their wrongs. It is tho self sacrificing people that are happy, for God pays so largely, so glori ously, so magnificently, in the deep and eternal satisfactions of the soul. Self sa crifice! We all admire it in others. How little we exercUe of It! How much would we endure? How much would we risk for others? A very rough schoolmaster had a poor lad that had offended the laws of the school, and he ordered him to come up, "Now," lie said, "you take oiT your cout instantly and receive this whip." The boy declined, and more vehemently the teacher said, "I tell you, now, take off your cont. Tuke it off instantly." The boy again de clined. It was not because he was afraid of tho lash; he was used to that in his cruel home. But it was for shame. He bad uo un dergarments, and when at last he removed his coat there went up a sob of emotion all through tho school as they saw wby ho did not wish to remove hi 9 coat, and as they saw the shoulder blades almost cutting through the skin. As the schoolmaster lifted his whip to strike a roseate, hoalthy boy leaped up and said: "Stop school master; whip me. He Is only a poor chap: he can't stand it. Whip me." "Oh," said the teacher, "it's going to be a very severe scourging! But If you want to take thft position of a substitute, you can do it." The boy said: "I dou't care; whip me. I'll take it; he's only a poor chap. Don't you see the bones nlmost come through the flesh? Whip me." And when the blows came down on the boy's shoulders, this healthy, robust lad mado no outcry; he endured It all uncomplaining ly. We all soy "Bravol" for that lad. Bravo! That is the spirit of Christ! Splen did! How much scourging, how much chastisement, how much anguish will you and I take for others? Oh, that we might have something of that boy's spirit! Aye, that we might huvesomething of the spirit of Jesus Christ; for in all our occupations and trades and businesses, and all our life—home life, foreign life—we are to re member that the sacrifice for others will soon be over. A TEMPERANCE COLUMN. THE DRINK EVIL MADE MANIFEST IN MANY WAYS. Pledged to the Fight—What Wai Been. and Beard In a Fashionable Saloon In New York City—Characteristic Senti ments of the Proprietor. A pledge we sign with joy, Up, every girl and boy, To flght the drinkl Let eaeh one find his place, And then from Ood seek grace To set through life the face Against the drink. Would we our country save? We must be true and brave And steadfast stand; * Have faith in God and pray. Work, vote and haste the day That from the demon's sway Shall free our land? "Here to I>o Business." As I was walking down a certain street in New York City, writes Harry Grcen smlth, my attention was called to a large sign overhanging the sidewalk, which read—"Here to Do Business." I passed on; but later in the evening I returned the same way, and the same sign still shown forth its message, "Hero to Bo Business." This timo tho changeable col ored electric lights,which gleamed through the letters, made the sign all thu more noticeable. My curiosity was aroused: I turnod to to Investigate. A large plate glass window, with its colored electric shades, sent forth its glow across the street. I pushed aside the mahogany screen doors and entered. I found mysolf in a New York fashionable saloon. As I walked down the aisle I walked over silver and gold dollars inlaid in the floor. As I neared the further end, I found small rooms curtained off, and furnished in mahogany; chairs, tables and lounges, all of the very be?t workmanship. For wains coting they have beveled plate glass mir rors. On the walls were, what some might term beautiful oil paintings; to me they were filthy, lewd, disgusting, I went further and still these rooms con tinued, lit up only by meagre wax candles — the beautiful light of heaven being com pletely shut out. I heard tho song of the harlot and in disgust I turned from the scene to pass out. But as I did so, I could but stop and notice tho long bar, made ot solid mahogony, Inlaid with silver and gold coins,'and choice pearls. Behind the bar was a long plato glass I mirror. I noticed a Haw in one end of it, and Inquired of the bartender the cause. I was informed that some young men, hav ing imbibed too freely, began quarreling. One drew a revolver, to shoot the bar tender, and, missing him, had hit the glass. I The owner of the saloon, standing near by, heard my question, and In a rage further answered: "Yes! I would to God it had i hit the man rather than have broken that ' glass." Upon further Inquiry, I heard that the interior of that saloon had cost a little over 4100,000. With a pityiug eye, and a ! sorrowful heart, I turned from thosceno to pass out; and to encouuter again that over hanging sign—"Here to Do Business." As 1 passed down the street, that sign went ever before me; those words still rang in my ears—"Here to Do Business." Yes; what kind of business? A business that will debauch .nanhood, that will ruin womanhood, that will ensnare the young man, that will rob virtue from the young ! woman, und leave them all outcasts from I society, to walk our streets in despair, He in the gutters in drunkenness; damned for I this lire, and without hope for the life which is to come! i I went on my knees and asked my God. "How long, O Lord, how long shall sin and Satan rule this benighted land of ours?" Lincoln's Promise to nig Mother. While drinking whisky was the fashion all about him, Abraham Lincoln never for got his dead mother's request to close his lips against intoxicants. Once, when he i was a member of Congress, a friend criti- I clsed him for his seeming rudeness in de- I cilning to test the rare wines provided by ! their host, urging as reason for the re i proof, "There is certainly no danger of a ' man of your years and habits becoming addicted to its use." "I mean no disrespect, John," answered Mr. Lincoln, "but I promised ray precious mother only a few days before she died that I would never use anything intoxicat ing as a beverage, and I consider that promise as binding to-day as it was the day I gave it." "There is a great difference between a child surrounded by a rough class of drinkers, and a man in a home of refine ment," Insisted the friend. "But a promise is a promise forever, John, and when mado to a mother it is doubly binding," replied Mr. Lincoln. The Secret Drinker. The secret drinker Is no doubt injured in the same way as others, and his foolish ef forts to conceal this act Intensifies the in jury, which after a time breaks out In some unexpected form, ending fatally. The sud den, unexpected death of persons'previous ly supposed to be well, has in many ea?es revealed the fact of secret spirit drinking of many years' duration, with destruction of vitality and general decadence. Life in surance companies are often aware of this faot, and appeal for help, but it is exceed ingly difficult to convict or prove secret drinking in a man with a large insurance, and more difficult after death to bring out this fact. The law In these eases will sel dom allow presumptive evidence; it must be direct and positive of the use of spirits. Unmistakable insanity is present in some cases, seen in the unusual cunning wise calculation to procure spirits and con-* ceal its effects. The llrlnk Curm. at Manila. Chaplain Hunter, Af the Tenth Pennsyl vania Itegiment, writos to the Pittsburg Commercial Gazette from Manila. Novem ber 12th: "Many of our men are acquiring the habit of drink. Saloons are on ever side We as a regiment have not been cursed with a canteen. But those regiments where a canteen exists find the men drink outside just the same as if no canteen exist ed. The disorderly houses are doing theit hellish work with Government sanction. There are thousands here who had far bet ter have fallen in battle than entered Man ila. They will be a curse to themselves and their families. Yet these evils flourish under Government protection." Notei of the Crunarie. Take for the foundation-stone of youi character sobriety. The freshman class of Cornell University has decided to prohibit the use of liquor at its annual banquet. "Papa and mamma were nearly all the time drunk," were the opening words of a statement made by a child in a New York murder case, recently. Liquor stain and blood-stain are often closely related. Some years ago the Calcutta Medical Record said: "Society's use of alcohol is the secret of half the jaundiced, haggard, dried up, prematurely-aged Europeans we And In India." May the good work ot temperance go on j With ever-increasing interest! It means to i every one more abundant blessings, hap- I pier homes, better health, a fuller pocket- ' book, and a keener sense of the enjoyments | Of life. Some time ago $60,000 was left by a gen- | •rous benefactor to the Good Templar Or- i ghanage Home in the State of California; I nt legal proceedings arose out of the mat- j ter. The Court has recently pronounced I In favor ot the will, and awarded this sum, i f60,000, to the home. Ivory Soap, because of its purity, is especially valu able for bathing the skin of infants and very young children. Particular care should be taken [to wash the chil dren's clothing in Ivory Soap. The garments will be whiter, cleaner and sweeter. The lather of "Ivory" is clean. There is no oil or grease in it. IVORY SOAP IS 99%,, PER CENT. PURE. Copyrlff.t, 1890, by TYi» Prater k Gambia Co., Clnelaaatf When Hamlet Exclaimed: "Aye, There's the Rub!" Could He Have Referred to Tlie Cont of Ariiiiex. All the countries of Europe are speuiling on their armies anil navies at the rate of nearly SSO a second, or tlie almost incredible sum of $4,000,- 000 a day. Hon. W. J. Connell, Ex-Congressman from Nebraska, and at present Omaha's City Attorney, writes: "To Whom This Comes, Greeting: I take pleasure In rec ommending the virtues of the remedies prepared by the Dr. B. J. Kay Medical Company. Having Known of some remark able cures of Omaha people affected by the use of Dr. Kay's Renovator and Dr. Kay's Lung Balm, I believe that these great reme dies are worthy ot the conlldence of the public." Thousands of the most prominent people in America know that the above are facts, and no remedies have affected so large a per ceut. of cures. Send for our large Illustrated book. It has great value, but will be sent free and we will give free advice and samples on application. Dr. B. J. Kay Medical Company, Saratoga S, rings, N. Y., and Omaha, Neb. The people oi the United States use about 250,000 lead pencils each day. Florida mill < libit. Via Pennsylvania. Southern Ry„ F., C. & P. and F. E. t'. The only route operating through Pullman sleeping car service New York to Ormond, Knokledge, Palm Beach and Miami. Connections fur Havana, Key West and Nassau. Boute of the "New York and Florida Limited." Finest train in tho world, operated solid between New York and St. Augustine, exclusively of dining, library and observation, compartment and drawing room sleeping cars. l'wo other tnst trains, 4.20 p. m.and 12.05 a. m. Full information from J. L. Adams, (i. E. A., F.. C. & I'. K. K„ iioit B'way, New York, or A. S. Thweatt. E. P. A., Southern Ry„ 271 B'way, New York. The soap of the Queen's household costs nearly £2500 a year. DAMP PENETRATE,LOOK OUT FOR AN ATTACK OF SCIATICA. BUT DEEP AS THE BCIATIO NERVE IS ST. JACOBS OIL WILL PENETRATE AND QUIET ITS RACKING PAIN. Zt cures Colds,Coughs,Sore Throat,Croup.lnfluen • za, WhoojAnf Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once. Tou will see the exoellent effect after taking the first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere* Largr tattles 50 c*nt.s and SI.OO. A COODCARDEN is a pleasure and a profit. Gregory's seed hook di rects a right beginning. Gregory's Seed insure tho most successful ending. Get the l>ook now it's free. James J. H. Gregory & Son, Marblehead, Maß3. WANTED - axe of had healih that. K-I-l'-A-N-S will not benefit. Send 6 cts. to Ripans Chemical Co., New Y<>rk, for losamples and loou testimonial >. HDADCV NEW DISCOVERY ; j V quiokreliaf and cure* worst case*. Book of testimonial*and lO dn v»* treatmnnt Frea. Dr. H. H. •KEEN'S SOUS. Box D. Atlanta. Oa. HappyH imnS3y& > 17 m JOHNSON'S MALARIA, CHILLS & FEVER, Grippe a Liver Disease* IKNOWN Wdkbogmts. 35C. "COLDS" Railway's llendy Relief Cures ami pre vents Colds, Coughs, Sore Tli rout, Influenza, Bronchitis, Pneumonia, Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago, Inflammations, ltheumu tism. Neuralgia, Headache, Toothache, Asthma, Difficult Breathing. Radway's Ready Relief Is a Sure Cure for Every Pain, Sprain, Bruises, Pains in the Back, Chest or Limbs. It was the First anil is the Only Pain Remedy that instantly stops the most excruciating pains, alluys Inflammation and cures congestions, whether of tho lungs, stomach, bowels or other glands or organs, by one application. FOR INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL USE. A half to a teaspoonful in hill! a tumbler of water will in a Jew minutes cure Crumps Spasms, Sour Htnimu-li, Heartburn, Nervousness. Sleepless ness, Sick Heatlai'lie, Dtarrliiea, Dysentery, Colic, Flatulency .imlall internal pains. There is* not a remedial agent In the world that will cure fever ami ague ami all other malarious, bilious and other fevers, aided by I{AIIWAY\s I'IM.S, so quickly as HAIUVAVS KKAUY IU.I.IKI'. Sold by liruuglHts. UAinVAV & C 0.,,).» IJlin Street, New York 1 FOR 14 CENTS | X We wish to pain this yi'ar2oo,o<H) ! T new customers, and hence oner 3 1 p kg-13 Day Radish, 10c • dfiStfifin&L 1 Pkg. Karly Ripe Cabbage, dc 0 «1 " Earliest Red Beet, A)c # $ Wml»bF 1 /"i V * " California Fig Tomato, 20c 2 9wa\\\vlßmL 1 " Karly Dinner Onion, luc J 6W\IW.'» 3 " Brilliant Flower Seeds, Worth * lOU ' for g ? Above 10 pkgs. worth SI.W), we will J V I'. Ut iwl mail you free, together with our • Kl ® r,,afc Seed 0 28v SS S" bta^ 0 h ° lllVlt , e trade ana X 9MI H| aeedsymiwillneverget alongwith* 5 ™ BB ~t . ; outthem. Onion Need GBc.»nd w 9 «1» n lb. Potatoes nt Sl.iiO V na Bbl. Catalog alone sc. No. i( § Q JOHN A. SAL/KIl SEKU t O. ( LA ( KUSSB. WIS. Q MILLIONS CAN BE MADE IN WALL ST. By buying Stocks on a margin, if you onlv knew how it could be done. Our Treatise on the Market, "HOW TO TItADE WITH SAFETY," which tells you how it is done, will be mailed to you free upon application. A man with limited means, with a few hundred dollars, can < wn as inanv S'ocks in proportion as the man who is worth thousands, and the man who takes advantage of the favorable conditionsof 18W in the Stock Market can make himself rich. We can show the man ot limited means how he can make as much money in proportion to his eap ital as the man who is worth millions. GHAS. B.TOWNS & GO. BANKERS, Stock & Bond Brokers. 32 Broadway, New York. or Know Thyself Manual. A 91-pase pamphlet by a Humanitarian and emi nent medical author. This is a unique Vade Mecum of Medical Science for.MEN ONLY, whether married, unmarried, or about to marry ; young, middle aged or old. Price 50 cents by mall, sealed ; sent free for 60 davs. Ad dress The Peabody Medical Institute, No. 4 ftulflncli St., Boston, Mass. Chief Consulting Phvsk-ian, Graduate of Harvard Medical College, class 1564. ate Surgeon sth Mass. Reg. Vols., (he most cml- Il'm'e'r fc'. ! '"who ALWAYS CURES Where Others Fall. Consultation in person or by letter, from 9to 6. Sundays 10 to 1. The fame the Peabody Medical Institute has at tained has subjected it to a test which only a merit orious Institution could undergo.—Boston Journal, The Peabody Medical Institute has many imita tors, but no equals.—Boston Herald. FMSTMCIAfIU JOEIN W.MOKRIN, \JV& Washington. D.C. "Successfully Prosecutos Claims. LatePrtnefpal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. 3yrslu civil war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty since niirilM ATICM Cl'KEl)—Sample bottle, t days' KrItUIYIA I I dill treatment. poatpaid. lO cents. ■ ' Alexander Kemkdit Co., :;■»! Green wit h at., S. Y. MTATTTTYKT THIS PAPint WHEN UEPLY IVLXIJN lIUIN INO TOADVTO. NVNIT-g. C 3 ID time. Sold Or drufwiita. f"l
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers