I-.. Dealer For All n' Foot-Fese. . r to shake Into your shoesi rests ;Ct I'lirin t'oriin, liiinlons, Mwollon . lot. i nllous, ActalnK, KwentiiiR Kwt ' Krowtii Nnll. Allen's Kool-Knse w or tight shoes ens y. Atall druir . Kl !" uot, Vft cts. HnmplH miilltjl rA'lis Alleii H. Ulmatrd. lHoy, N. . I'll ! .lure of Wales still finds It accessary t calm. t'lSMilr la Blood Deep. I blood means a elenn skin. No i ." rjtl)out It. Caacarets, Candy Catbar '," tn your blood and keep it clean, by 'tun tlte lany liver and driving all lm """'i from the body. llcin to day to ."" 'fcimplea, boils, blotches, blacklirads, i'I sickly bilious complexion by takine I,: it l.enntv for ten rents. All ilruff- tli,. (tufn-Jtion guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 00c. 1'"' a Tenia's new laboratory nn Pike's , " a Iodic, wooden structure, with a bis: ;"'T , MK Itawnrd. !). -''"'laoVrsnf tills nuper will be pleased to "' 'isi there Is nt limnt ono dreaded dls "" I it science haa heeu able to cure in all Iniim e..i.UhatlA:Urrh. Hall's Catarrh ineonly positive cure now knuwj to tivo H al fraternity. Catarrh belnit aonn Sal disease, requires a constitutional 11 tit Hall's Cafirrh Cure Is taken inter. '"'St.hiS directly upon the blood and mu t't if aces of the system, tliurwby destroy, ilr- foundation of the disease, and giving rn.eiit atrruKtli by building up the oon , a and n-slntlng nature. In ilninir Its ii The proprietors have so much faith in live powers that they offer One Hun rv liars for an v awe that It fulls to cure. ." r list of testimonial. Address K. .1 . ' H r. K V i Co., Toledo, O. . 9 DrnnKli-ti, 7re.. p,,,,; Tamil t 1111 are the best. 1 .' is Dalv. the copper magnate. Is a good '"''"ih a rifle, and spends his vaeatious In 1 for big gAine. luir .li" feliaee Spit sail Sowks Vuur Life l.riT. "''"U tobacco easily and forever, be mar "'Y ill of 1110, nerve anil vli.'or, take No To '"' i wonder-wor'.'er, that mo.ei weak men '"! .Ml druggists, 50u or H. Cure guaran. " "30vlet end sample frco. Address ' Ueromly Co.. Chicago or New York. jonlrt Crokcr Is said tube an expert thi if. , I- 'i'".1 Irmanrntly cured. No fits or nervous. ! er first ilav's use of Ur. Kline'" Oreut 'Oil eKtoreri' t rial buttle and treatise free I'ft I. Klink. Ltd.. Kll Arch St., l'lilla.. I'.v. heh i . wli ca contains two women veterinary tot- u'ii' t Prudent Man Setteth VT; His House vr Order. ' ' thr human tenement should be given n; .. jore careful attention than the i,l s:," live in. Set it in order by Zionu renovating your whole system "', blood made pure by taking h h .SarstparilU Then every organ J..u"t promptly and regularly .. .. r ScVUafxVuL in ii, SHY; the vera, ether In t' tU a tb isely soil I tV All forms of skin d'sease. snrh lis Tetter, Sait Rhemn. K zenis. King worm, etc., qui' kly cured by Tetter ne t If your druugist hasn't got It, lend .Vic. In stamns to tho mvniifwe. torsf. J. 1 . ftnuplliue. naTJliiimii, ipnel iinnii; .6i, for a liox postpaid. 1 e-tl-f"j I mimluls of lots of people cured, I i Itent for the asking. Krea: e, SUt I'trn, i'lthn nn ennU iTae no other- n.i... It On. I.uut. ilmt. wns t o bo liindo. hum K't-Si ,f t "36ITUllONSGUflR.rUEEb i li jw-iuniHUin anil ftiiinn r-ri-iiiu-r v.vir- i IKIIlil i jm it iiilentu at year from 1 tttijles. i liLiui IR'S BUSINESS COL'OE. Bsltlmnrs.Mn. ir Pur yrmmKrmeimaEmBBm'i Mint -i m srae:l t " " oue.4 tfleiNinson as a l!ury;lur. , wli id $asse has written a paper on jon'p Rnlallon with Children," 0 j men' Journal. In It he relatej el. (of his youthful days, as nar L'rus" 'hlriself by Stpvenson. He was u''r'", itlo'.fellow when In the summer lovi'i after reading a number of Vl''r I n?ve's ' a )a' kind, he wa3 .J," ona Sunday afternoon along a well en Edinburgh suburb. There mpuri j derted house, furnished, but Ir'ivi'i 4are'oker. It struck young he'j-n 4iat It would be a flne thing nirdi ; lnjif the house, which ho ac joiIu)' I" roamln8 from room to ,ublos ktiig at books and pictures In tltoment, until he thought he noise In the garden. Terror ills.' tiuu .-iiiii.l '"'J nlm us ne imagined nim- ttri'iijr-iifred and conveyed to prison Pri4e'i'b.urch folks were returning b di; ' f""'81 Into crying, then ninn- yof-lJ out as he had come in. 1 com;f'J . l,ub."iJwiio Ever U.hT it of ii I . ... id Hi" wonder if It Is hard to ild, N iject stories?" He "I should ''IMght be. I know it's hard to lod'g'fcJ'-Somervllle Journal. is not - o for i" ' . i to t Try ;i ordli 1 ts ot 1 omen's ills." and the women who consult Mrs. Pinlcham find j'T'l h,er counsel practical assistance, ndesei ts Pinkham's address is Lynn. i k luminal, liatriii'i'll's. Maiiel Good, Correctionville. uouui'i 'tells how Mrs. Pinkham saved lit r'We. She says: vid i-e-i 1 cannot thank you enough for ''"'"yjiat your medicine has done forme, nwiiutiif an recommend t as one of the best Vhutevipdicjnes on earth for all women's rfuip i Is 1 suffered for two years with female weakness and at is wer t;became bedfast. Three of our best doctors did me no I'l'cou.'iifj so I concluded to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable cts, owpound. After taking a few bottles of your medicine, I was led Ira th! ietted , t i ,i'('JS.i i'" if j ' r yWift very thankful for what it ltu nfmS that everv. uffe"ng f S i Mto VfeP woman may be per I li -3 V'Vl suaded to try your medicine." ds. urnal: ire alrtl imboi u head rely cured. I cannot praise it enough." THE NAME STEWART. tYhat Is the Correct Spelling of tho Hint? At a rrcent meeting of the Clan Stewart Society In Glasgow, Col. John Stewart of ArdvolnJlch, who presided, referring to the different ways of spell ing the clan name, said that the "dif ferent ways of spelling the name arose cither from accidental causes or other well-defined reasons. The final letter 't' was substituted for the 'd1 of the original name 'Steward' for tho sake of euphony. The spelling of the name Steuart was quite accidental, arising probably from the Illegibility of the writing of some member; while the Knelling of Stuart was caused by Queen Mary, on her return from Trance, us ing the French spelling of her name, to which she had been accustomed, and many clansmen perpetuated the royal spelling. But In whatever way they rpelt their name, they all came from the original stork. Nor docs this end the matter, for It may be remembered by many that the Earl of Galloway re fused to take part in the collection of the "Stuart exhibition" In London In 1889, because the committee refused to spell th name "Stewart," as his lord ship himself does. He maintained that this was 'he only correct orthography, and held alcof from the exhibition which disregarded this assertion. This, however, seemed rather high-handed, especially when wt discover by refer ence to historical documents that near ly all the famous people of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries spelt their names In two or three different ways. In short, there was no "proper. spell ing," though M;iry Queen of Scots al ways wrote "Stuart," for the simple reason that she was educated in France and the French alphabet had no "w." Earlier kings of her race spelt their names "Steward," or "Stewart," or "Stuart," at the fancy of the moment when they held the pen. We have near ly thirty different ways on record of spelling the surname of Stewart in English, Gaelic, French. Latin, Italian, Spanish and Dutch, as follows: Stew ard, Stewart, Stewartt. Stuart, Stuard, Steuarde, Steuard, Steuart, Steuert, Stewort. Steort. Steubhart, Steubhartt, Stiubhart, Stcvyard, Stlurt, Stowart, Sturgard, Stuyarde, Styward, Stuardus, Estuard. Estuarza, Stlvard. Stivardi. It la contended that "the right etymol ogy" Is S-dew-ard the Lord High, or the High Lord that Is, the lord next to the king In power. DOC IN A DIVORCE COURT. . HIooiIIiouikI at Ilucharvst Ticks l'p lilt of Evidence. A certain well-known Inhabitant of Bucharest Is the director of a manu factory which, being situated In the outskirts of the city, he goes to early each mornlng.returning late In the aft ernoon. Tho director was some few years ago married to the daughter of a rich merchant. He also possesses a splendid bloodhound. which had become very clever In finding and bringing an Jost object of his master or mistress. Little did the director, when teaching his dog this trick, fancy to what pur pose he was doing It. Among his In timate friends he reckoned a certain banker, and visiting him one after noon, accompanied by his dog, he no ticed It sniff around the waste paper basket, and then bring out from among the scraps of paper a green silk hand kerchief, which seemed strangely fa miliar to him. He seized It and pock eted It without the banker noticing, and soon after took his leave. The lady was packed off to her parents and proceedings for a divorce commenced. She ultimately confessed to having given the handkerchief ma a memento, which the banker had thrown into his waste paper basket to be found by the intelligent bloodhound. Some Interesting; Curiosities. Some Interesting discoveries have been made in Lough Derg, Ireland. As a number of men were engaged drag ging a portion of the lake adjoining Terryglass for tho remains of a man .had been drowned, the search party happened on a lot of peculiarly inter esting curiosities, amongst them being the head of an old Irish elk in a fine state of preservation, with enormous antlers, the tips of which were eleven feet apart. Tho teeth are three Inches long. The other discoveries included a well-preserved dug-out boat or canoe, supposed to be of great antiquity. The articles are attracting much attention at the Carrlgahorlg barracks. HE ills of v.'omen overshadow their whole lives. Some women are constantly getting medical treat ment and are never well. "A woman best understands MELP FOR SUFFERING WOMEN JK-sgSSJJEcOT able to do all my house ;AftiirtF!l,':l nrnrlr T Ijnniv that vnne S.ft-'-i?! medicine raised me from bed of sickness and Get Mrs. Pinkham's advice as soon as you begin to bo puzzled. The sick headaches and dragging sensation come from a curable cause. Write for help as Boon as they ap. pear. Mrs. Dole Stanley, Campbellsburg, Ind., writes: " Dear Mrs. Pinkham I was troubled with sick headache and wai so weak and nervous, (' I I II could hardly go. A 1 fnend called upon me one :inz and recommended Lydia E. P.'nkham's Vegetable f ijipound, saying that she knew that it wo.ild cure me. I then tor your medicine and after taking five bottles of it, I r? REV. DRJfALMAGE, THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY DISCOURSE. Sullied! Tlie Chariot of Trlomph tleHe Ion llepresenls 1,1 f p. Not the Grave Advlca About Physical Health and a Prescription For Prolonging Life, li'ojirrlKlit, Lonli Klop'h, 1SIW.1 W'AsmnoroK, I). C In this discourse Dr. Tulmage gives proscription for tho prolongation of life and preaches the gos pel of iihvsleal h.ialth. The text is l'salins xel., 1, "With long life will t satlsf,' him." Through the mistake of Its frlen is relig ion has been chiefly associated with sick beds and graveynrds. Tlio whole subject to many people) Is odorous with chlorlno and carbolic, acid. There' are people who cannct pronounce the word religion with out hearing In it the clipping chisel of the tomlist'.ne cutter. It Is high lltno that this thing were changed and that religion, instead of being represented as n hearse to 'arry out tho dend, should be represented ns a chariot In which thu IIvIub are to triumph. I liellglnii, so f cir from sulitraetlng from one's vitality. Is a glorlons addition. It Is snnallve, curative, hygienic. It is good for the eyes, good for tlm enr, good for the spleen, good forthe digestion, good for the nerves, good forthe muscles. When David in another part of tho psalm prays that re. Ilglon niny lie dominant, he does not speak of It ns a mild sickness or an emanclntlon or nn attHck of moral and splrltunl cramp, lie speaks of It ns "the saving health of all nations," while iod lu tho text proinlsus longevity to the pious, saving, "With long life will I eiillsty lilin." The fact is that men and women dio too soon. It Is high time Unit religion iolund the hand of me. Il eal science in attempting to Improve human i longevity. Adam ll ml years. Metliuse- , lull lived Mil year". As late in the history 1 of the world as Vespasian there were at ! one time In his empire forty-live people 185 years old. Ho far down as the sixteenth century Peter .;irtnn died at lH.i years of age. I do not say that religion will ever take the race hack to antediluvian longe vity, hut I do s:iy the length ot life will be increased. It Is snld In Isaiah, "The child shall die n hundred years old." Now, If, according to Scripture, the child is to lie a hundred years old. may not the men and women reach to .100 and 4110 and .10Jy The fact Is that we are mere dwarfs and skeletons roiupwred with some of the generations that are to eoine. Take the African race. They have been under hondago for centur ies. Olvo them u chance, mid they de velop a Frederick Douglass rr n Tousnaint L'lluvortnre. And, If the white race shall be brought from under the serfdom of sin, what shall he the hody, what shnll bn the soul? llollglon has only Just touched our world. Give it full power for a few cen turies, and who can tell what will bo the strength r.f man and the beauty of woman and the longevity of all? My leslgn to allow that practical roligion is the friend of long life. 1 prove It, lirst, from the fact that It makes thn care of our health c positive Christian duty. Whether we shall keep early or late hours, whether we shall take, food digestible or indigesti ble, whether there shall be thorough or In complete niastlcntlon, are questions very often deferred to the realm ot whimsicality., but the Christian man lifts this whole problem of health Intotlio accountahleand tho divine, lie says. "God has given me this body, nnd llu has called It the tcmplu ot the Holy (Uiost, and to deface Its altnrj, or mar Its walls, or crumble its pillars, is a (lod defying sacrilege." Ho sous God's, caligraphy lu every page, anatomical mid physiological. He says, "God bus given mn n wonderful body for noble purposes ' that arm with thlrtytwo curious bones wielded by forty-six curious muscles liud all under the brain's teleg-! rnpby, :1," pnuuds ot blood rushing through' the heart every hour, the heart In twenty four hours beating 100,000 times, during the twenty-four hours tin) lungs taking in llfty-sevou hogshead of air, and all this mechanism not more mighty than delicate mid easily disturbed ana demolished. The! Christian innn says to himself. "If I hurt my nerves, If I hurt my brain, if I hurt: any ot my physical faculties, I insult God nnd call' for dlro retribution." Why did' God to. I the Levites not to offer to Him 111' sacrillce nniinals imperfect and diseased? He meant to tell us in all thu ages that we lire to offer to flod our very best physical condition, and a man who through Irregu lar or gluttonous eating ruins his health Is not offering to God such a sacrillce. Why; did 1'kuI write for his cloak at Trons? Why should such a great mau as Paul be nox ious about a thing so InHignlllcnut us an. overcoat? It was because be knew that with pneumonia and rheumatism be would' not be worth bait as much to Gid ami the church as with retplralloii easy aud foot iree. An intelligent Christian mau would con-' aider It an absurdity to kneel down at night aud pray nnd ask God's protection while' nt the same lime be kept the windows of bis kedroom tight shut against fresh air. He would just as soon think of going out on the bridge between New York and Brooklyn, leaping oft mid then praying to (lod to keep bin) from getting hurt. Just, as long ns you refer tills whole subject of physical health to the realm of whimsical ity or to the pastry cook or to tho butcher or to the baker or to the apothecary or to tbu clothier you arc. not acting liko n Christian. Take earn af all your physical forces nervous, muscular, "bone, brain, cellular tissue for all you must be brought to judgment. Hmokiug your nervous sys tem into lldgets, burning out the coating of your stomach with wine logwuoded and stryobniued, walking with thin shoes to' make your feet look delicate, pinched at: the waist until you are nigh cut In two: and neither part worth anything, groaning about sick headache aud palpitation of tha heart, which you think cmno from God, wliau they came from your own folly! What right has nuy man or woman lo de Ince the tomple of the Holy Ghost? What' Is tho ear? It Is the whispering gallery of! the soul. What Is the eye? It Is the ob servatory God constructed, its telescope sweeping the heavens. What Is the hand? Au Instrument so wonderful that, when the Earl of Drldgowater bequeathed lu his will f 10,000 for treatises to be written on the wisdom, power and goodness of God, Sir Charles Hell, the great F.ng' li anatomist and surgeon, found Ills grea., " i lustration lu the construction ot the human hand, devoting his whole book to that subject. So wonderful are these bodies that God names His own attributes, after different parts ot them. His otnnls clence It Is God's eye; His omul-i presence It is God's ear; His omnipotence It is God's arm; the upholstery of the Inldr.lglit beaveus It is the work ot God's lingers; bis life-giving power It is the breath of the Almighty; his dominion "the government shall be upon his shoul der." , A body so divinely honored nnd so di vinely constructed, let us be careful not to abuse It. When It becomes it Christum duty to take care of our health. Is not the whole tendency toward longevity? If I, toss my watch about recklessly aud drop It' cm the pnvemeut and wlrd It up any time of day or night I happen to think ot it and. often let it run down, while you are care ful with your watch aud never abuse it and' wind it up just nt the same hour every; night aud put it lu a place where it will, not suffer from the violent changes of at mosphere, which wutoh will lust thu longer? Common sense answers. Now, the human, body Is God's watch. You see the hands: of the watch, you see the face of the watch;! but the beating of the heart Is the ticking! of the watch, lie careful and do not let it1 run down. Again, I remark that practical religion Is a friend of longevity in the fact that It' is a protest against dissipations, which ia jure and destroy the health, liad men and women live a very short life. Their sins! kill them. I know tiuudreds of good old' men, but I do not know bait a dozen bad old men. Why? Tlioy do not get old. lord Byron died nt Ulssolonghi at 3ti years of age, "himself bis own Mimeppa, his un bridled passions the horse that dashed with him Into the desert. Edgar A. Pod died nt Baltimore at as years of age. Tnu black raven that alighted on tho bust above bis door was delirium tremens Only this and nothing more. Napoleon Bonaparte Hvel oDly just nc voud midlife, then died at St. Helena, aud one of his doctors said that his disease was Induced by excessive suufnng. The hero of Austerlltz, the man who by one step of his toot In the center of Europe shook the earth, killed by a snuff boxl How many people we have known who have not lived out half their days because of their dlsspa tloua anil Indulgences! Now, practical religion is it protest ugalust all dissipa tions of any kino. "Hut," you sny, "professors of religion have fallen, professors ot religion have got drunk, professors of religion have misap- firoprlated trust funds, professors o! reiig on have absconded. " Yes, but they threw away their religion before they did their morality. If a man on n White Star line steamer, bound for Liverpool, in mid Atlantic jumps overboard nnd Is drowned, Is that anything ngalnst the White Star line's capacity to take the man across the ocean? And if a man jumps over tho guo wale of his religion and goes down never to rise, Is that any reason for your believ ing that religion hns no capacity to take the man clear through? Iu the one case, If he hail kept to the steamer, his body would bave been saved: In the other case. If ho bad kept to his religion, bis morals would have been saved. There are nged people who would hnvo been dend twenlyflve years ago but for tho defenses and the equipoise of religion. You have no more natural resistance thai: hundreds of people who lie in the oemo terles, to-day slain by their own vices. The doctors made their case ns kind and pleasant as they could, ami it was calle I congestion of the brain or something else, but the snakes and the blue flies thai: seemed to crawl over the pillow In the sight of the delirious patient showed what was the matter with hint. You, the age I Christian man, walke I along by that un happy one until you caino to thu golden pillar or a Christum life. You went to tho right; he wont to the left. That Is all tint difference betweou you. If this religion Is a protest against all forms of dissipation, then it Is an Illustrious friend of lougevitv. With long life will I satisfy him." Again, religion Is n friend of longevity in the fact that It tnkM thu worrv out of our temporalities. It Is not work that kills men; It Is worry. When a man become n genuine Christum, he in n lies over to Go t not only bis affections, but his family, his business, his reputation, bis body, his iiilud, ills soul, everything. Industrious lie will be, but never worrying, because God Is managing his alfalr.-. How can be worry about business when In answer to his pray ers God tells III n when to buy and when t sell? And It he gnlu, that Is best, aud If ho lose, that Is be.it. Suppose you bad a supernatural neigh bor who came In and said: "Sir, I want you to call on mo In every exigency. I am your fast frieud. I uould fall back on 420. 000,000. I call foresee u panic ten year... 1 hold the controlling stock in thirty of tho best monetary Institutions of New York. Whenever you are in trouble call on me, ami I will help you. You can have my money, and you can have my Influence. Here Is my bund lu pledge for It." How much would you worry about business.' Why, you would say, "I'll do the best i can, and then I'll depend on my friend's generosity for the rest." Now. more than that Is promised to every Christian business man. God says to htni: "I own New Yorit mid London and St. Petersburg and l'ekln. and Australia ami California are mint. 1 can foresee a panic a hundred years. I have all the resources of the universe, ani I am your fast friend. When vou get In business trouble or tiny other trouble, call on Me, and I will help. Here Is My hand in pledge of omnipotent dell V( ranee. How much should that mau worry? Not much. What lion will dare to put his paw on that Daniel? Is there not rest lu tills? Is there not an eternal vaca tion lu this? "Oh," you say, "hero Is a man who asked God lorn blessing In a certain enterprise, and he lost tWOO lu It! Explain that." 1 will. Yonder Is a factory, and one wheel Is going north, aud the other wheel is going south, and one wheel plays laterally and tho other plays vertically. I go to the manufacturer and I say: "(I manufacturer, your machinery Is a con tradiction! Why do you not make all the wheels go one way?" " Well," he says, "I made them to go in opposite directions on purpose, aud they produce the right re sult. You go down stairs and examine the carpets we aro turning cut iu this establishment nnd you will see." I go down on the other floor, aud 1 sou tip) carpets, nnd I am obliged to oonfesi that, though the wheels In that factory go In opposite directions, they turnout a beauti ful result, and will lo I am standing ther .looking at the exquisite fabric an old Scripture passage comes luto my mind, "All things work together for good to them who love God," Is there not a tonl : lu that? Is there not longevity lu that? . Nupposo a man Is all the timo worried about his reputation? One mini says ho lies, another man says he is stupid, an other says he Is dishonest, and half a dozen printing establishments attack him, aud he is in a great state of excitement aud worry mid fume and cannot sleep, but religion comes to him and says: ".Man, God is on your side. , Ho will take enroot your repu tation. If God be for you, who can be against you?" How much should that man worry about his reputation? Not much. It that broker wbosoinu yearn ago lu Wall stroet, after bo ha l lojt money, sat down and wrote a farewell letter to his wife be fore lie blow bis brains out If, instead of taking out of bis pocket a pistol, he had taken nut a well read New Testament, there would have been one lu-s suicide, O nervous and feverish people of tho world, try this almighty sedative! You will live twenty-live years longer under its soothing power. It Is not chloral that you want or morphine that you want. It Is the gospel of Jesus Christ. "With long life will I satisfy him." Again, practical religion is a friend of longevity in the fact that it removes a II cor roding care about n future existence. Every man wants to know what Is to be. Before I had this matter settled with refer ence to my futuro existence the question almost worried me luto ruined health. The anxieties men have upon this subject put together would make n martyrdom. This is n state of awful iinhealthiness. There are people who fret themselves to deatli for fear of dying. I waut to take the strain off youc nerves mid thu de pression, oil your soul, and I mako two or three experiments. Experi ment first: Whon you go out of this world, it does not make any dlffereneo whether you have been good or bad, whether you believed truth or error, you will go straight to glory, "Impossihe," vou say, 'My common sense as well as my religion teaches that the bad mid the good cannot live together forever. Yon Kive mo no .'omfort In that experiment." Experiment the second: When you leave this world, you will go Into nu Intermediate state, where you can get converted and prepared for heaven. "Impossible,'' you say. "As the tree fnlieth, so must It lie, und I ci.Unot postpone to an inter mediate state reformation which ought to have been effected lu this slate," Experi ment the thlrdi There is no futuro world. When a man die, that Is the last of htm. Do not worry about what vou urn to do la another stale ot being. You will not do anything. "Impossible," you bsv. "There, is something that tells ino that death is not the appendix, but the preface lo life. There is something that tells mo that on this side of the grave 1 only get started nnd that I shall go an forevor. My power to think says 'forever;' my affections say 'forever;' my capacity to enjoy or suffer, 'forever,' " Anrnlnle of Hubert Hums. Robert Burns was once standing up on tho quay at Greenock when a weal thy merchant belonging to that town had the misfortune to fall In the har bor. A eallor plunged in, and, at the rink of his own life, rescued tho mer chant, who could not swim. When tho rescued man was restored to con sciousness it was found that the flight and the wetting were the only bad con sequences of his mlEhap. Calling for the sailor, hl preserver, the merchant, presented hlra with his thanks and a shilling. The crowd loudly protested against Btich shabby conduct, but Hums, with a scornful Bmllo, beggod them to be silnt, "for, said he, "the gentleman must know best what his life Is worUi." fthakespeore's I.Atulis. Shakespeare, among his many allu sions to the sweetness, the Innocence, and the helplessness of the lamb, only once cites it as an article ot food. The common run of literature Is stenciled, not written. Christ changes the city by changing ie cititen. Latest News Gleaned from Various Parts. KILLED IN COLLISION. LoroinotlT Crushed Into Jlr of it Freight Train Near Mlngrn l'nprr flsnled Vlelil of Apples In Montgomery County riainot Dsmsga Bird anil Ani mal Store In Scrsnton. A collision on the Philadelphia A ll-adlng Ilallroad near Biugen resulted In the death of A. E. Townsend, a well-known condiio tor In the pusneuger service. Mr. Tonsend and other members of a crew that brought up an excursion train, were returning to Philadelphia on Engine No. 073. The en gine was going at good spm d when It cinshrd Into the rear of a freight train; Conductor Townsend Jumped before the collision. His head (truck a rail with uch force that his skull was fractured. He was taken to St, Luke's Hospital at Bethlehem and died at 1 o'clock without regaining consciousness, The uufortunate man's wife nrilved at the hospital I few mlnutrs after his death. She Was completely prostrated. When taking a train for Philadelphia at the Union Station. be wa still sull-rlng fro::, the shock and had to be carried lo the train. Townsend llvvd at New Hope, Bm-ks county. He whs S3 yean old, and besides bis wife, Is ur Tivcd ly three children. Clreat Apple Crop. Throughout Montgomery county the cr"p ot apples Is big beyond precedent. Iu ninny orchards limbs of trees are breaking down under the weight of the fruit. Tuu enormous yield of apples has made them a drug on the market. In many orchards the fruit Is allowed to decay where It lulls, ns the low piles do not wurrant the time and trouble of marketing It. Mure elder will te made the present season thau lor rnnny years, and lovers of cider vinegar will have no trouble iu oblaluiug it at rei sonable price. At one elder mill near Nnrrletown ll.i 00 gnlloi s of cider for vinegar was li e product forthe month of August, and that of September and October will be considera bly greater. Tlluro is a noticeable teudein y toward rot on the growlug apples, and It Is feared thut this may prevent them Irom being kept through tuu winter. The peach crop, as elsewhere, bus been a failure. Mushrooms nru very scarce aud In places wberu they abounded In previous years they are not to be seen this season, as the dry weather has operated agalmt their nutural production. f lie Tramps All llnil Cash. A posse of citizens In Lower Salford Town ship corralled n gnug of tramps, encamped alout a log lire, lu the wooiU near Harl. yh vllle. Eight trumps were captured, nnd three or lour eluded arrest. Magistrate Aldorfer committed the men lo Nurrlstonn jail for trial on the chnrge of vagrancy. Whon searched at the prison about llfly pcuudsof "lino rut" tubncoo were found lu their pockets. One tramp bad H8 In money, and another bud 443. Four other trunks bad various rums, ranging from t3 lo 15 hidden In their clothing. (July two of thttu were without cash. fseril Death In Air tight Closer. Archie Pulllli s entered an iiir-tight Bell telephone c o.et In n rear room of thu Lynd l.utst Hotel, Sliamokiu, tn repair the Instru meut, when the spring-look door ac cident ally closed, making the young mau a pris oner. He grew faint, but hud strength enough to ask for help from the cei.trnl nfllii", after 'Which he collapsed. Manager It iup lust no time lu reaching the hotel and opetilug the closet. Phillips ws carried In to the open air and revived. Machinist llnrlsd Through Spnce. While Marshall Chandler, a machinist em ployed lu the Sharpless Separator Works, West Chester, was operating n lathe his clothing was caught In a large belting and be was burled Willi terrllla force against the root of the building. Ills skull Is supposed lo be fractured and he is i tnerwite I ndly In jured. He was taken to the Chester County Hospital. Monkeys In a Fire. Vox's bird and animal store, on Spruce street, Scriintou, was the scene uf an excit ing Are. The llremen broke la before tbu flumes bad filled the storeroom and released some of the animals. Badly scared dots and monkeys ran, eras d with pain, through the orowd of spectators, causing much con Mentation. Iluudr diof birds and animals Were destroyed. Iron Ore Mints Opsned. A Philadelphia mining company lias leased the (arm of It u ben J. Erb, ut Sassamnus vllle, for the purpose of mining for Iron ore. Operations have already beeu commenced lu nn nbaudoued shaft which was sunk twenty years ago. A i excellent quality of ore ban been secured. Killed While Trying lo Hoard Train. Edward Boyle, agsd 14 years, of AHec town, while at. emptlug lo get oil a moving coal train At Fullertpn, fell beneath the wheels nnd bad his head nnd legs cut off and bis shoulders orushed. The accldeU wus witnessed by several people. Will Not Kxhlbit at Paris. The Harrlsburg Foundry nnd Machine Works has joined hands with the many other mauu'aeturers la this and other couulrl. t I y Its determination not to exhibit at the Paris Exposition lu 1900, ns a result of the unjust cundemualiuu of Captain Ilreyfus ly the Benuot court maitlal. Mangled Itmly on Tracks. The remains of a man mangled beyond recognition were found on the tracks of the Ueadlug ltailwsy a short disunion below Qdiikertown. They are believed to be those uf Washington itoberts. Several traius bad evidently run over the body. Deaf Man Mat Dsalh as Anticipated. John Taylor, nged C8 years, was killed by an Erie freight englue nt Hharuii, He wus deaf aud often remarked that some day be would meet bis death on the railroad. His iwlto and four oulldren survive. In liner. N. If. Palmer, a book Tnt of Illnghnm. ton was sent to jail 'iy Alderman David, son, iu default of f3PJ ball, charged 1 h 'fraud by W. N. ltosj, of Bursi ton, iu eon. nsctlon with to-; sale ot the righ: to sell cer. tn.1 u books ; .Tube Ohley, of Phoenlxvllle, w lo was ar. rested In Potutown, charged by Vary Fill man With taking ber poekotbnok ly repre senting himself as a polluninan, wu sent to Jail by Magistrals Bnlr, lu defuult of bull, 'for trial at court. Prospectors bave been looking for bitu minous ooal uear North l)"ud, and several five-foot veins bave beeu located, Boms of the finest tire clay in the Btats has also bs-n found. Eastern capitalists are Interested, It Is stated, and bavs leased 6000 acres of laud Id that vicinity. Rnr. Jsni's 0, CsldwMl wss killed In runaway accident ia Ocrmsotowu, ossr I'Ullsdolpbla. IVORY SOAP PASTE. l:i fifteen minutes, with only a ciUe uf Ivory Sonp and water, you can make a Ivtter cle.m-in paste than 5-011 can buv. Ivory Soap Paste will t.il-e spots from clothing; and will clean carpet:-, nis, kid gloves, .-lippt-rs, patent, nianu-l, rnset U-athcr and canvas shoes, leather Kits, painted wood-work and furniture. The special value of Ivory Soap in this form arists from the fact that it can be used w ith a d.'.iup sponge or cloth to cleanse many articles that cannot be washed because they will not stand the tree applica ti m of w ater. lon...,.!'J,?';9r N? ',0'' MI'IN';-T" "ne rlnt of N.lllrp oalrr nJJ ore and nne-hslf miners th innif il I .J ! "'ip i .Iissoeej, Kcir.nve from the lire anj In an air-tight i;:a;s jar. coevsoHT taea av )mi rtETURNED AFTER MANY YEARS New York Man Oat lib) Kawmrd for Staking a Klondike Ailventarer. From tho New York Pre-s: If ever a man cast hla bread upon the waters, not even expecting It to return to him. It was John V. Heilly, the proprietor of the Hon Ton niiiBlc hall. Reilly "grub staked" a man who worked for hlra to go to the Klondike Inst spring und today he is richer by $15,000. Arnold McPherson. a relative of Senator Mc I'herson of New Jeiiiey, was the man be assisted. .MrPherson died in I)iw fon City several mouths ago, leaving nil his earnings to his benefactor. Reilly heard of his good fortune only recently. McPherson was a ne'er do well, who loafed around the barrooms In Klghth avenue. In the early part of 1898 ItelKy took pity on him and put him to work. MrPherson did odd Jnos, receiving In return his board, clothing nnd a little spending money. Mr Pher Btin had the Klondike fever badly. Pay and night he importuned his employer to fit him out for an expedition. Pin ally Reilly consented. He "grub stak ed" McPherson with clothing, tools and fooikand then bought him a ticket to Dawson City. McPherson started away, vowing eternal gratitude, and that was the laBt Heilly saw of him. Months rolled by and Reilly thought iMcPherson was dead. In his morning mall a few days ago Reilly found a letter bearing the postmark of Dawson City. "News from McPherson r.t last," said Reilly. And truly there wa-i news of a kind that made Reilly's eyes bulge out. The letter was from P. J. Conway, a Dawson City lawyer. It said that McPherson had died theie in last May. Before he died he made a will leaving all his earnings to his benefactor. The amount was about $15,000. McPherson. Mr. Conway euld, had located on several good claims 011 the Ynkon, whlrh had panned out un usually well. McPherson saved $15,001 and when l e became ill he thought of Heilly and left the money to him. Reilly's attorney will communicate with the Dawaon City lawyer as to obtaining the money, as well as pos session of the clalnid left by McPherson on the Yukon. Spearing is It It "Hobs.' Did you ever take a cork, stlrk through It a horseshoe nail, put on the top of the cork two or three feathers, tie a long string around the cork und then spear for apples or potatoes? Just try It some time, and see how pro ficiently and how straight you can learn to throw the bob in a rhort time. The cork keeps the horseshoe nail iu without slipping and the feathers servo to guide the bob through the air. In this world a man must either bt anvil or hammer. Longfellow Does vour head ache? Pain back of youreyes? Bad taste in your mouth? It's your liverl Ayer's Pills re liver pills. They cure constipation, headache, dyspepsia, and all liver complaints. 25c. Alljiruggists Want your nitiiutiii-he or liuuril buuuUtul liriiwn iir l l'-h black ? Then line BUCKINGHAM'S DYE ir. REAYE-S I bave brcn ualnir CAiCABITI indai a mild mitl etlWtivc Innmlvu tluy tviu t-hui)y wmi-i.Hrfiil- My tluuKhitir and I wtr Itutlu-nxi lth W-k HLomui'ti und our tiivitth with wry tmil. AIUT tukmpT a low linnet uf I'iui htu v t.uvv ImprtiveU WuuUuifultjr. Tiicy are a ureal bul tu lUa family." W II.UKI M1N a Na' Ki ll ,17 ItUutuUuuM) HI., Ctuc.uuatl, Oblo. Pleanant. Pnlatuhin Poirnt. Taato Oonrl. !o Good, Nel Slcikeu. W oaken or (Jrliw. lUc. me. 0O0. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Surilmg Rfatay 1'naaar, (. MMlrat, X.w Varft, alt Iff) Tft Bf IM'lauil suaral trrd lr slldrus- BAB jg5 CANOV if lk Jy CATHARTIC 4 "S vnadi mash Muavnca0 tool In rnnvenient SUhe Innl ,1,0 I, will bun u.11 ill nun MMHtifs. hoil live minutes slier the uup Is esocus a oambli co Cincinnati Tin' rich uf the world's cunlnclds Is 471.81)0 tiiuiire mile,,. Tn Cnia Cuitatlimtlon Forever. Tnlic t'.iNru.ittM t'uiiiiv ('Htimrlic luo ort&o, U C. C. I', (nil 10 1 iiv. lriii!Ki8U refund money. Tin' inrn uf I'iilcHKu MK-ud t V'OO.OOO s year fiif hllHX t'h. IMmiV Cure fur ('unMiiitiitluti Is an A No. 1 AkMiiiih im l I i I ii... V. H. Williams, Autl in li. 111., April II, 1WH. More th.m 4.CCO persons Are Annually burled In t lis psiiperi.' cemetery in Ilerliu. No To-Bao fur Slfty Cents. Gusrnnieed tobacco habit eure, makes weak toen strouii, blood pure. 100,11. AUdrura'sie Tin rc 1k aii Irelsnilin mperntltlon thntaru bitli xtriiun lienple sre l orn to ituod luck. M r. vinlnwV Snnthttitr Syrupfor r.lilMrsrt li vtlii up1, tul ten t!ietfu!im,reiurinir iiittninniA tii. 11, h!1u t. pnlii, unci, n mil uoilu, Jm. a uottle. The sri'Hti'Kt cuHtiuners the lYui'lft rtlntlllors have lire the .Ispnncfce. Educate Vour Bowels With Casearets. Candy Catharttu, cure constipation forever. 10c, ISo. If a 0. 0. fall, drug-iOsis refund money. A French MVicty of ctisrlticA la seeking to cMHtilii.li a tree delivery In Morocco. Kidneys, Liver and Bowels Cleanses the vstem riv EFFECTUALLY OVERCOMES -rTtJ NitualCoWtipation PERMANENTLY Buy THe GENUINE MAN'F D 6y (AUl9RNIA7GfSVRV'P(. fOB Mi. nu rwia' aswr an. etattnill. UTjrLrLTLTLi 1 uxiOjxnjTJTjajxixrLn Kansas 5n flip h a sa a, saw Philippines In rtiiUltiK rftpntaHon t or fonrac laiiiuiisiil tu Will UIVIU Kansas In tho Cornfields, Wtatflkta anil orrhirda haa a)ra1r iiiartft m rnuta(lon for nitauMc yitldt lhai aalnnl.kia. ike -.( 1 rM.l. 1 ad and aalt lutnoo furulali ba-ii icr uiduairiaj aavaiopmaul. Uetul fur frea copy uf "What's tha Mattar With I ' .. .... ,. aiwnt lio iivskra' xuur.ion tickets i. oanis ra itoms. Add eaa U. F. Bl ItNETT. Q. E. P. A.t.. Tits Atcblios, Topokt Santa Fs Railway, UTT BROADWAY, NCW YORK. N. V. VV. L. DOUGLAS $3 & $3.50 SHOES ""'O" Worth 4 to S compared Kith other makes. Indorsed by over 1.00O.OU0 weurers. ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES Tint utaiuni .... W. i. ! aaaia anS yrlaa aUaavS .. Sanaa. Take no aubatltute clulinail to lm as good. I'.urxeatUh.ker tit ts and sa w alioea tn thu world. Your dealer atmulil kevp thein tf out, w will aeiid yim Almlroii rucaltituf nrli-e. stale . . a klud of leather, alaa aud widih. pialu or cap toe. atalogue U Free. W. L. finiini as SHIIR CO., BrorMce. . If amtoiM with eoe eyas, use I Thompson' Eya Watir UN Ullt Sir ili Acts gentiv on the lyt Daat l i,uiill fcrup. Ts.tua (lood. TJee I i Cl. Inllme. hf driiUKtal. ill