TO ANOTHER ONE. Rev. Dr. Talmage Preaches on the Sub. Jcci, Duty of the One With Single Talent. Try to Mtk ii Accurate Estimate of Yeuraell -The Valee of Sympathy. ICoprrlrht 1M.1 WARmxoToit, D. C.-Thii h a discourse by Dr. Talmage for those given to de preciate themselves and who have an idea that their best attempts amount to lit tie or nothing; text, Matthew xxv, 13, "To another one." Kxpel first from this parable ot the talent the word "usury. It ought to have been translated "interest." "Usury" is finding a man in a tight place and com pelling him to pay an unreasonable 'sum to get out. 'Interest" is a righteous pay ment for the use of money. When the capitalist of this parable went off home, he gave to his stewards certain sums of money, wishing to have them profitably invested. Change also your idea aa to the value of one talent. You remember the capitalist gave to one of his men for business puriioses live talents, to another two, to another one. What a small amount to last, you think, and how could he be expected to do anything with only one talent? I have to tell you that one talent was about 7200, so that when my text says, "To another one," it implies that those who have the least have much We bother ourselves a great deal about those Who are highly gifted or have large financial resources or exalted ofucial posi tion or wide reaching opportunity. Wo are anxious that their wealth, their elo quence, their wit, be employed on the right suie. One of them makes a mis take, and we say, "What an awful disas ter. When one of them devotes all his great ability to useful purposes, we cele brate it, we enlarge upon it, we speak of it as something for gratitude to God. Meanwhile we give no time at all to con sider what people are doing with their one talent, not realizing that ten people of one talent ench are quite as important as one man with ten talents. In the one case the advantage or opportunity is con centrated in a single personality, while in another it is divided among ten in dividuals. ow, what we waut to do in this sermon is to waken people of only one talent to appreciation of their duty. Only a few people have five talents or ten talents, while millions have one. My short text is like a galvanic shock, "To another one. The most difficult thing in the world is to muke an accurate estimate of ourselves. Our friends value us too high, our ene mies too low. To find out what we are worth morally and mentally is almost impossible. We are apt to measure our selves by those around us, but this in not fair, as they may be very brilliant or very dull, very good or very bad. In deed there are no human scales that can tell our exact moral and mental weight, nor is there a standard by which we can measure our exact intellectual height, so the hardest thing to do is to calculate our real stature or heft. But it will he no evidence of egotism in any of us if we say that we have at least one talent. hat is it and, finding what it is, what use shall we make of it? The most of the people, finding that they have only one talent, do as the man spoken of in the parable, they hide it. But if all of the people who have one talent brought it out for use before this century is half past and correspondents begin to write at the head of their letters li)M, the earth would be one of the outskirts of heaven. I ask you again, What is your one talent? Is it a cheerful look? Carry that look wherever' you go. It must come from a cheerful heart. It is not that inane smile which we sometimes see which is an irri tation. In other words, it must be a light within us so bright that it illumines eye, check, nostril and mouth. Let ten men who are accustomed to walking a certain street every day resolve upon a cheerful countenance as a result of a cheerful heart, and the influence of such a facial irrodiation would be felt not only in that street, but throughout the town. Cheerfulness is catching. But a cheerful look is exceptional. Examine the first twenty faces that you meet going through I ennsylvania avenue or Chestnut street or Broadway or State street or La Salle street or Euclid avenue, and nineteen, out of the twenty faces have either an anxious or a vacant look. Here is a missionary work for those who have trouble. Arm yourself with gospel comfort. Let the God who comforted Alary and Martha at the loss of their brother, the God who soothed Abraham at the losa of Sarah and the God of David, who consoled bis bereft spirit at the loss of his boy by saying, "I shall go to him;" the God who filled St. John with doxology when an exile on barren Fatmos and the God who has given hap piness to thousands of the bankrupted and persecuted, tilling them with heavenly riches which were more than the earthly advantages that are wiped out let that God help them. If He takes full pos session of your nature, then you will go down the street a benediction to all who see you, and those who are in the tough places of life and are run upon and belied and had their homes destroyed, will say: "If that man can be nappy, 'I can be hap py. He has been through troubles as big as mine, and he goes down1 the street with a face in every lineament of which there are Joy and peaco and heaven. What am I groaning about? From the same place that man got his cheerfulness I can get mine. 'Why are thou cast down, 0 my oul, and why art thou disquieted within me? Hope thou in God, for I shall ye praise Him who is the health of my coun tenance aud my God.' " Again, J your talent that of wit or humor? Use it for God. Much of the world's wit is damaging. Most of satire has a stint in it Ain.H n4 ..nr.;....,,. yitrioli. In order to say smart thinm . w-tav- vw BIU.I b tUIUKS how many will sacrifice the feelinas of a! J. lie sword they carry is keen, and viucm. me swum Liiey carry is Keen, ana It rs employed to thrust and lacerate. But few ratn In all Hie world and in all the yuurcucB reauze inai u wic is oestowea 1C is given them for useful, for improving, for healthful purposes. If we all had more of it and knew how to use it aright, how much it would improve our Christian con versation and prayer meeting talk and ser mon! Hubert South and Rowland Hill and Jeremy Taylor and Dean Swift and Lorenso Dow aud George Whiteiield used their wit and their humor to gather great audiences and then lead them into the kingdom of God, Frivolity is repulsive in religious discussion, but 1 like the humor of job when be said to his msoient crit ics, "No doubt but ye are the people, and wisdom shall die with you," and 1 like the humor of the prophet Elijah, who told the Baalites to pray louder, as their god waa out hunting or cn an excurion or in such loud conversation that he could not hear them. I like the sarcasm of Christ when He toid .the self-righteous Phari sees that they were so good they needed no help. "The whole need nut a nhiai ciun, but they that are aick," or when in mirthful hyperbole He arra gns the hypo critical teacher of Hia day who were so mi uiuiui- about utile tiling ana cere- uvuv uik imngt, saying, xe uunti guides that strain at a gnat and swallow uuu biie jtiuie is uii aomze wun epigram, words surprisingly put and phraseology that must have made the au diences of Paul and Christ nudge each other and exchange glances and smile and then appropriate the tremendous truths of ttie gospel. There are some evils you can laugh down easier than you can preach down. The question is always being asked, Why do not more people go to church, prayer meeting and other religious meet ings? I will tell you. Wo of the pulpit and the pew are so dull t,y cannot stand it. But when we ask why people do not go to church we ask a misleading quea tion. Mrre people go now to church than ever in the world's history, and the rea son is in ail our denominations there ia ft new race of ministers stepping into the Pipits which are not the apostU of hum arum. Bure enough, we want in the rd, army the heavy artillery, but wo fni.. ? ?,or ,meu w,,- Bums, weTt n.,V G.t,"!r. tok musks, and ThootinV A " T n "0nJ do a little cber. ,Th'ff",r,nt, from o'ner sol PtiS ,:,mcS, of 0od " ' UleTt CH.'i'' u ,hink ' ' went. But it u the mightiest of talento" Jto you know that this one talent will fetch the world back to Ood? Do you know it is the mightiest talent of the high heavens? Do you know that it is the one talent chiefly employed by all the nneela of God when they descend to our world the talent of persuasion? no yon realise that the romrh lumber lifted into a cross on the hill back of Jerusalem was in persuasion aa well as sacrifice ? That is the only, absolutely the only, persuasion that will ever induce the human race to atop its march toward the city of destruction and wheel around and start for the city of light. Now may the lvord this moment show each one of ua that to a greater' or lesa extent we have one talent of pecmiasion and impel us to the right use of it. You say you cannot preach a sermon, but rannot you persuade some one to go and hear aermon? You say you cannot Jing. but cannot yon persuade some one to go and hear the choir chant on Christ mas or Easter morning? Bend hunch of flowers to that invalid in the hospital, with a message about the land where the inhabitants never say, "I am sick" There is child of the street.' Invite mm into the mission school. There ia a man who has lost his fortune in specula tion. Instead of jeering at hia fall go and tell hirn of nchrs that never take wings and fly away. Buckle on that one talent of rwmiasion, O man, O woman, and you will do a work that heaven will cole bra te 10,000 years. Among the 114,000 words of Noah Web ster s vocabulnrv and the thousands of words since then added to our English vocabulary thcro is one outmastering word the power of which cannot be es timated, and it reaches so far up and so far down, and that is the word "come." It Iins drawn more people away from the wrong and toward the right than any word I now think of. It has at times crowded all the twelve gates of heaven with freh arrivals. It will yet. rob the path of death of the last pedestrians. ..It will vet chime so loudly ond gladly that all the toiling bells of sorrow wilU.be drowned with the music. It is piled up in the Bible's climax and peroration, "Arid the spirit and the bride say come, and let him that hcarcth say come, and let him that ia athirst come." Have it on the point of your pen, have it on the tip of your tongue. Monosyllables are mightier than polysyllables, and that word "come" is the mightiest of monosyllables. Shakna penre says of one of his characters, "Sbe speaks poniards, and every word stabs." We may say of others, they speak word?! which nrc of balm and music, are light and life. Master one of those words, harness one of these words, project one of those words, prove the full plentitude and pow er of one of those words. David Garrick, the dramatist, said he would give 100 guineas if he could say "oh" as George Whitefield said it. What might we not give if only we could say come" as Jesus said it? Some one has said that syllables govern the world, and I think that one syllable might save -the world. But I cannot particularise. What ever be your one talent, cultivate it. Once fully realize that you have some thing with which to enhance heaven vand take hold Of the eternities, and it will add a new bank of keys to the music of your soid. You are ordained to some kind of work by the laying on of the hands of tba Lord God Almighty. If you rannot do anything else, go around and feel sorry lor somebody. When some one asked, "What ia the secret oj William Wilherforce'a power?" the an swer waa, "His power of sympathy." And there are 10,000,000 people who have the same qualification if they only knew it. Sympathy! If you cannot restore the child to that bereft parent or, the fortune to that bankrupt financier or health to that confirmed invalid or an honorable name to that wrecked character, you can at least feel sorry for the misfortune or the bereavement or the suffering. Sympathy! If you have not the means to do anything else, go and Sit down and cry with them. That is the way Christ (lid when He went out to the desolated home in Bethany and the sisters told their snd story. He cried with them. Oh, cultivate that one talent Of sympathy! After the resurrection day and all heav en is made up. resurrected bodies .ioined to ransomed souls, and the gates which were so long open are shut, there may be some day when all the redeemed may pass in review before the great white throne. If so. I think the hosts .passing before the King will move in different divisions. With the first division will pass the mighty ones of earth who were as good and use ful as they were great. In this division will pass before the throne all the Martin Lathers, the John Knoxes, the Wesley, the Richard Cecils, the Miltons, the Chrysostoms, the Herchells, the Lenoxes, the George Pcahodys, the Abbott Law rences and all the consecrated Christian men and women who were great in litera ture, in law, in medicine, in philosophy, in commerce. Their genius never spoiled them. They were as humble as they were gifted or opulent. They were great on earth, and now they are great in heav en. Their surpassing and magnificent tal ents were all used for the world's better ment. As they pass in review before the King on the great white throne to higher and higher rewards it makea me think of the parable of the talents, "To another ten. I stand and watch the other divi sions as they go by, division after divi sion, until the largest of all the divisions comes in sight. It ia a hundred to oise, a thousand to one, ten thousand to one, larger than the other divisions. It is made up of men who never did anything but support their families and give what ever of their limited means thav could spare for the relief of poverty and aick nesa and the salvation of the world, moth ers who took good care of children by example and precept starting them on the road to hcav.n, millions of Sabbath-school teachers who sacrificed an afternoon's siesta for the listening class of young im mortals, women who declined the making of homea for themselves that they might take care of father and mother in the weaknesses of old age, ministers of the gospel who on niggardly stipend preached in the backwood meeting houses, souls who for long years did nothing but suf fer, yet suffered with so much cheerful pa tience that it became a helpful lesson to all who heard of it; those who served God faithfully all their lives and whose name never but once appeared in print, and that time in the three lines of the death column which some survivor paid for, sailors who perished in tho storm while trying to get life line out to the drowning, persecuted and tried souls who endured without complaint malignity and abuse, those who had only ordinary equip ment for body snd ordinary endowment of intellect, yet devoted all they had to holy purposes and spiritual achievement. As I see this, the largest of all the divi sions, from all lands and from all ages, pass in review before the King on the great white throne I am reminded of the wonderful parable of the talents and more especially of my text, "To another one." i ' newsy cleaning;:. Tho Salvation Army will cciallb a colony In Florida. , The first stock oschnnijo In S;t:;:i bus just becu opened at Tomsk. It Is proposed to hold a South Am:tl cr.n exhibition In Loudon next yenr. A bill to suppress Juvenile snioUins la to be introduced in the Inlo of Mun. Most of Chicago's big office building: li.ivu passed Into the bunds of n trust. Coulrollcr Color reports (lint (he not bonded debt tl Gioato:1 Is'cw Yo.k ia $303,081,5-18. A tvouuiu In Otlarn, Kirt., lm of fered to pn? fiooa i it v.oo: cf ti-o ex istence of God. Poslaee stamps Issued for tho Trnci vaal will bo tho fi4jt to bear Oo Lead of Edward VII. The People'a Om Co:nr.iny, cf Chi cago, la to pay tho city three and a half per cent, of Ha grot receipts., (Spending per year for tliree Fl?o Deportments: New Yo:k City, f?2,500, 000; Chicago, 1.500,000; Boston, 200,000. . "The nasties cf AffiicuUr.ro" la the. title of a work of which lOO.CJO copies ore to le distributed ft:j auiouj Mexi can farmers. COMMERCIAL REVIEW. Ocaeral Trade Conditions. New York, (special) Bradstreet's ays "The (teneral situation is still favor ble, the primary encouraging feature be ing the fine outlook for the country's crop. General distribution, retarded hitherto by the backward spring, has been stimulated by warm, sunny weather. "Reports as to quiet trade in iron and steel come from the East, where the de mand for pig iron is of a hand-to-mouth character. "The boot and shoe and allied trades note considerable activity in manufac turing lines, the Eastern shoe shipments have again exceeded the 100,000 case mark, and the total for the season is now nearly 30,000 cases ahead ol last year. "Such unanimity as to good crop re ports has rarely been seen at this per iod of the year. Much was made in speculative grain circles of dry weather at the Northwest, but recent rains have placed that section in a favorable con dition as regards the spring wheat. From the winter wheat belt reports con tinue optimistic, and especially favora ble advices being received from Kansas. "The feature of the week in textiles is a perceptible improvement in the tone of most cotton goods, which are in rather better demand at large Ea.stern markets. This, of course, docs not ap ply to the print cloths situation, which is one ot excessive stocks, curtailed pro duction and of goods selling below cost in many instances. Export shipments of cotton goods are heavy, although new business is lighter. "Wheat (including flour) shipments for the week aggregate 4796,084 bush els, against ,1.084.968 bushels corrected last week, 3,608.968 bushels in the cor responding week of 1900, .1.108.319 bushels in 1809, and 4..1o9,i,i3 bushels in 1898. Fcoin July I to date wheat ex ports arc 190.048.66j bushels, against 178.394,566 bushels last season and 209, 89S.175 bushels in 1898-1899. "Corn exports for the week aggre gate 2,204.902 bushels, against 2.704,594 bushels corrected last week, 4,374.145 bushels in this week a year ago. 3.845, 818 bushels in 1899, and $164,451 bush els in 1898. From Jnry 1 to date corn exports are 163.584.763 bushels, against 85,653.354 bushels last season and 151, 879,033 bushels in 1898-1899." LATEST QUOTATIONS. Flour. Best Tatcnt, $4.5034.75; High Grade Extra, $4.0034.25; Minnesota bakers. $2.9033.25. Wheat. New York, No, red. 79a 82c; Philadelphia. No. 2 red, 78379c; Baltimore, 78a8o-c. ' Corn. New York, No. 2, 49l4e; Philadelphia, No. a, 47J4a48c; Balti more, No. 2, 5oa5lVic. Oats. New York, No. 2. 33c; Phila delphia No. 2 white, 34'ja35c; Balti more, No. 2 white, 33Vi334C. Rye. New York, No. 2, 61c; Phila delphia, No. 2, 60c; Baltimore, No. 2, 5&a59c. Hay. No. I timothy, $17.00; No. 2 timothy, $16.50; No. 3 timothy, $15.50 a 16.00. No. I clover, mixed, $15,503 16.00; No. 2 clover, mixed, $14.00:115.00; No. 1 clover, $14.50; No. 2 clov:r, $i3.ooai4.oo. Greer. Fruits and Vegetables. On ions spring, per 100 bunches, 6oa8oc; do, new, Bermuda, per1 crate, $i.25a I.40; do Egyptian, per sack, $2.2532.40; Asparagus, Norfolk, per dozen, No. I, $i.5oa2.oo; do, Norfolk, per dozen, sec onds, $t.ooai.25; do, Eastern Shore Md. per dozen, prime $1.2531.50. Csbbsge, Charleston and North Carolina, per crate, 65385c; do, Norfolk, per bbl, 75a 90c. Celery, Florida, per crate. $1,503 a.50. Apples, $2.0034.25. Or3ngcs, $2.00 83.00. Strawberries, per quart, 5niic. Potatoes. We quote: White, Mary land and Pennsylvania primes, per bus, 5oa55c; do, New York prime, per bus, 58a6oc; do, Michigan and Ohio, per bus, 55a6oc; do, new, Florida, per bbl, No. 1, $3.5034.50; do, do, do, per bbl, No. 2, $2.0033.00; do, do, Charleston, per bbl. No. 1, $3.5035.00; do, do, do, per bbl, No. 2, $2.ooa3.oo. Sweets Maryland and Virginia, kiln dried, per bbl, $2.2532.50; do, North Carolina, per bbl, prime, $2.5033.00; do, (ancy bright Jerseys, per bbl, $2.5033.00. Beans and Peas. VVc quote: New York marrow, choice hand picked, $2.30 32.35; do do medium do do, 52.20a2.25; do do pea, do do, $2.l5a2.20. Blackeye peas, per bushel, choice new, $1,753 1.80. Black peas, per bushel, choice new, $1.70. Green pess, per bushel $1.25. Nearby white beans, hand pick ed, per bushel, $1.5032.00. Beans, im ported, per bushel, $i.ooa2.oo. Butter. Creamery, 15319c; factory, Iiai3c; imitation creamery, 13317c; Slate dairy, 15318c. Cheese. Fancy, large, colored, loSc; fancy, large, white, loaiojc; fancy, small, colored, uc; fancy, small, white, ii'4c. Eggs. State and Pennsylvania, 12a 13c; Southern, nai2c; Western stor age. 13c. Provisions. The market is firm. Jobbing prices: Bulk shoulders, 8a8'4c; do short ribs, p54c; do clesr sides, gc; bacon rib sides, 10c; do clear sides, io!4c; bacon shoulders, gc. Fat backs, 3'iC. Sugar cured breasts. 11 'ic; sugar cured shoulders, 9c. Hams Small, ii'Ac; large, 11c; smoked skinned hams, 12'Ac; picnic hams, 84c. Lard Best refined, pure, in tierces, 9!4c; in tubs, )'3c per lb. Mess Pork, per bbl, $16.00. Hides. Quote: Green S3ltcd, 6'ic; do do, dsmsged, 6c; do do. Southern, 5c; green, 6c; do. damaged, 5Jc; dry flint, 13c; do do, damaged, 11c; dry. salted, nc; do do, damaged, ioaio!-c; dry calf, 10c; dry glue, 6'jc. Bull hides, per lb, green, 5! ja6c; do do, per lb, green salted, 6c. Goatskin, I.sa25c Calfskins, green salted, 60380c. Sheep skins, 60375c. Spring lambskins, 30a 40c Live Poultry. Market is steady. Quote: Hens, 10c; old roosters, each, 25330c; spring chickens, l8a25c; winter do, 2 to 2jlbs, i6ai8c. Ducks, 839c. Geese, apiece, joa40c. Live Stock. East Liberty, Pa. Cattle steady; ex tra. $57ci5-S5: prime, $55ca5.6s; good. $5'.Vas.40. Hogs lower; prime heavies and best mediums. $5 9235.95 ; heavy Yorkers, $5.9035.92'; light do, $5,853" 5.90; pigs, $S.75a5-85; skips, $475:5.25; roughs, $4.0035.50. Sheep slow; best wethers, $4.3534.40, Chicago, 111. Cattle S:cii s a?tive; good to prime steers, $5.30116.00; poor to medium, $4.2035.20; cow.t. $2coai7j; heifers. $2.9oa4.oo; caK't . i.etive, $4.25 ab.co; Texas fed steers, $4 2535.40. . ' LABOR AND INDUSTRY We send coal to Japan. ! ' Mexico hag 136 cotton mills. German army includes dentists.' ' Uncle Sam leads in fruit growing. There is now a locomotive trust. Italy has 300 co-operative societies. Japan ha 3 thousands of unionists. China's Empress has 3000 dresses. New York has a Chinese ncwsiaper. Minneapolis has a servant girls' union. London boasts 2700 crossing sweep ers. ' Women insurance gents arc multi plying. 1, , . 1 C ;i A Golden Rale Horse Advertisement. A gentleman who has a Christian spirit and a horse for "sale advertises as follows in a Minnesota paper: We have a good family driving horse ior sale, providing you carry insurance. He is not over-particular as to feed. In fact, he prefers our neighbors' hay stacks and corncribs to our own. We feed him whenever we can catch him, which is seldom. He is partly gentle. The other parts are not, and you must govern yourself accordingly. VVc will throw in the derrick and tele graph pole combination which we use to hitch him tip with. If you are fond of driving we would advise you to engage a cowboy that owns a fast horse to do your driving, and be sure and get on top of the barn before he begins to drive the horse. For price and coroner's address ap ply to the owner. rnftsan'n Hurry. James J. Coogan. dc facto president of the borough of Manhsttan, recently applied to a Harlem horse dealer to purchase a trotter. The dealer brought out a handsome bay horse. "I'll guarantee that animal to go in three minutes easy," said the dealer. Coogsn understood the man to mean that the horse could go a mile in throe minutes and drove the animal up to the Speedway to try him. "1 found he was a slow plug and could not trot." said the friend of Croker in telling the story. "I drove back to the stable. " 'Here, you,' I said to the dealer, 'you told me this horse could go in three minutes! It took him four by the watch.' " 'Well, you must have been in a of a hurry if you coudn't wait a minute,' the dealer replied." Coogan did not buy the horse. Neofletl Farther Instructions. Prison Warden It's just been found out that you didn't commit that crime you've been in for all these years, and so the Governor has pardoned you. Innocent Man Urn! pardoned, am I? Prison Warden Y-e-s; but don't go vet. I'll have to telegraph for further instructions. Innocent Man What about? Prison Warden Seems to me that, considcrin' you hadn't any business here, you ought to pay the State for your board. Mark Twain Chlitsd. The president of the Chicago Press Club went to New York for the pur pose of inducing Mark Twain to come there to deliver a lecture for the benefit of the C. P. C. Mr. Clemens was up in the mountains of New York when the Chicago man arrived. The latter pa tiently awaited the return of the humor ist and succeeded in meeting Mr. Clemens in his study at a rather late hour. According to the Chicagoan, Mr. Clemens was not fsvorsbly inclin ed. Indeed, he was not in one of his happy moods. "I can't go to Chicago; I won't go." he said in an underscored voice. The Chicago man intimated that the Press Club would be willing to pay any sum which Mr. Clements saw fit to name. "That has nothing to do with it," Mr. Clemens replied. "I wouldn't go to Chicago for $io,ood, nor anywhere else. Now, that settles it. I am going to have some rest." At that, the voice of a young person, the .Chicago man says it was a girl's voice, was heard from the top of a stairwsy. "Don't get excited," ssid the voice., Mr. Clemens turned his face in the direction of the stairway and scowled. "You go to bed." he thundered. Thcrt turning to the Chicagoan he said in a voice almost musical: "Perhaps I ni3y come some other time not now." Then he turned his face in the direc tion of the stairway again and listened. There was a subdued giggle at the top. And the face of the grizzled humorist became radiant. Jut to He Quarrelling, "Edgsr and I qusrrel all the time about automobiles; he S3ys he won't have a horse, and I say 1 won't have anything else." "So you are going to get a convey ance of some kind?" "Oh. goodness, no; half the time wc can't scrape up street car fare." 'Xbirtv minntos is ail the time required to dyo with ruTSAit Fadeless Dyes, tola by ail druggists Holland has nine miles of cnnnl for every 100 square miles of surface. 2700 miles in ' A man's conscience often depends upon the condition of his liver. AV Yonr lenr for Allen's Foot-Tits. A powder to shake into yonr shoes : rests thi tret. Cures Corns, Buniom, Swollon, Rore, Hot, Callous. Achinir. Hwcatiiic Feot and In prowine; Nails. Allen's Foot-Eiuo makes new or tifjht shoes easy. At all drmrfcist ant shoo stores. 25 cts.' Pamplo mniled FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmsted. Leltoy, K. Y. The purest Chinese is spoken at Nankin, and is culled "tho language of the manda rins." Ilnll's Cntarrh Curl is n liquid and Is taken fn'eninll;.-, nnd uct directly on the blood mid nmoou" Kurfacos o. tho systoui. Writo for tog timouliilo, free. lUnnu'ucturod by F. J. Ciikney & Co., Toledo, O. Chinamen plow with u crooked stick with a steel point fastened to it. The motive power in a water buffalo. FITS permanently cured. No fit or nsrvoiu ness after first riny! w of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Hestorar. 92 trial bottle and treatise froo Dr. It. U. Kmxs, Ltd.. 31 ArchHt.. l'hilu., Ta. The lai'iicst enclosure for deer is said to 1 the Koynl l'uik in Copenhagen, Den- bo man; -4200 acres. Mr. Window's Ponthiup; fyrnp forchildren (nothing, soften thn pirns, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, euros wind colic. 25c a bottle. A wren lives three years, a coldGnch fifteen ami a sparrow as much as forty. 1 do not believe Piso's Cnro for Consump tion has an equal fur eoughs and colds. Joiix F. Boteb, Trinity Springs, Jnd., Fob. 15, 1900. Cold was first discovered in California in 183. Ills Khsve. He was one of these smooth-faced young men who chew gum because it's ladylike and smoke cigarettes because it's manly. He couldn't have stood un der the mistletoe in a shirtwaist for five minutes with tempting something with a deep bass voice and whiskers to me ander that wav. "Hair cut?'r asked the bsrbcr, as he threw his hesd back on the rest. "Naw, course not," indignantly . re plied the customer. "Can't you see I want a shave?" The barber heaved a weary sigh as he lathered the face, which looked like an advertisement for somebody's com plexion balm. Then he picked up a neck razor, whipped it over the strop once 3iid scraped the lather off with the back of the instrument. "By Jove, a shave makes a man feel better!" ejaculated the smooth-faced one, rubbing his hand gently over his skin. "That's the fourth one o' them things to-day," growled the barber. Woman's Legal Position. Thus in New York State, for In stance, a woman has a larger control of her real estate than her husband has of his. She. if she likes, may make out a will whereby she cuts him off or ignores him entirely, whereas he cannot sell, mortgage, will, or alienate any of his real property without her consent in writing, and in some instances under seal. He must reserve to her what is commonly known as her dower right or n life interest in one-third of all his real estate possessed or acquired by him during their married life. It is thus impossible for him to alienate his real property without his wife joining in the deed to bar her dower. Thus does the law protect the woman in the enjoyment oti her property rights. Popular If Sot rrofltshte. "I see Indianapolis is getting some new banks." said the Chicago man. "Yes." answered the Indianapolis man, "but if they want to become really popular they will cut loose from the old plan of making a fellow give security when he wants .to borrow a little money." GrayHair "l have used Ayer'i Hair Vigor for over thirty yean. It has kept my scalp free from dandruff and hat prevented my hair from turn ing gray." Mrs. F. A. Soule, Billings, Mont. There is this peculiar thing about Ayer's Hair Vigor it is a hair food, not a dye. Your hair does not suddenly turn black, look dead and lifeless. But gradually the old color comes back, all the rich, dark color it used to have. The hair stops falling, too. $1.00 a bottls. All JrsirJfls. DYSPEPSIA ylelda to nature)' modlolne. 4 It entitlf mrrm lrpptia rd all ftnmarh. uvpr. kiunpyunci bow) diaorrier. An on rivalled aperient and IflXMttret InrliroratM arid tnnf-a lite whn nyntm. A naturnl win!-mine oiviifa. muiclnl Tuum, eou (iMiuiwu iu maun 11 nmr and chair to bMtla, hip and ii. A lot. bottle m tvhwI tn 2 ffallona4 oi tinrnrt(lcne(l water. Bmrk on very txtiiia, ,"aT CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO.. Louisville. Kt. If your dmpglut cannot unnpljr you, end ua one dollar And we will expreaa you a bottle. Be sure and eWe the name Of your nearrat exprotn office. Addreaa, J. C.AYER CO., Lowell, Haaa. jffil'.Virr.lThompson't Eyt Walir AGENTS WJK? Brohard Sash Lock and Brohard Door Holdir AtiT worker averywhera can earn hia; mrrner; mwats a niadjr demand for our pood. H Ample 1Mb lock, witli iri -n, torm. etc., free for 3c ii&uip tor poaUtfe. Till-: liltOIIAKO 4 O.. Htatlon "O," A'UiiaUelpli.o., WILLS PILLS BIGGEST OFFER EVER MADE. For only IO Ont we win Bond to any P. O. 1 drt(t, It) lUys' trttatiueiit of the heit ltiMtcine, on earth, and put you on the track how to muke .Hon it rlRM at vniir limn. AMrHii ell orlM to The It. It. Will llrdlrlir (ompnnv, -it IK I !.. hctli!,, lliitfiTNtoivn, MA. Ilraurh Ollloeai KUIudlnnn Ave.. WumIiIiih iuii, , C. SRTFJ32J3eT?Sz ....V ?T.? . bUHtS rrttHt ALL tl!t MIU. I CouKh tirruD. Tamea Guod. Use I intlmo. H"ln hy rtruirBi.tn. "The ftanre tliat made Wrmt Point fataena." MclLHENNY'S TABASCO. ?BW DiaCOTOKTt ttmm Qutflk relief and eurse voma nonlaU end 10 dara treetmeo eRJLSM QMS. Boa B, AtUatft, DROPSY eeeei. Bou of laeti mottle. Vree. Dr. M. a. UsECERTAinS'CUBE. IT PAYS TO ADVKHTISB IH Tills rAftK. U .N U 1. f n i imsl mm fen " f - A LUXURY WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL! Ono Hundred Tears Is a Inng timo, but Crab Orcbnnl Water has boon in uso for that length of time, and each jrer.r adds to it) reputation. It is no artificial compound. It is prepared in Nature's labor atory rs a certain remedy for llyspcpeia and Cum f ration. The sun's diameter decreases at the rate of live miles in a renrury. Its present dia meter is 800,000 miles. Lion Coffee is not GLAZED. COATED, or otherwise treated with EGO mixtures, chemicals, glue, , etc etc Lion Coffee is a Pure Coffee. Watch our next advertisement. Just try a package of LION COFFEE and you will understand the reason of its popularity. LION COFFEE is now used in mil lions of homes. "IT PAYS YOU TO BUY LION COFFER" ( We'd like to give housewives a few reasons why It pays them to buy LION COFFEE, 'Til a brand upon which they csn always rely, ; And it pays them to buy LION COFFEE. - 'Tis the purest and the cheapest, the wholewmeit, too. It gives satisfaction the whole country through. It ii NOT glaied or colored, has natural hue And it pays you to buy LION COFFEE. There's your quantity full, and your quality right, So it pays you to buy LION COFFEE. There's also some other inducements in sight That pay you to buy LION COFFEE. A Lion head on every wrapper you'll find. Each package Is with a big Premium List lined. Which points out nice presents of every kind So it pays you to buy LION COFFEE. You can get Silver Spoons, Thimbles, Scissors or Pir.s, So it pays you to buy LION COFFEE, Gold Ring or Gold Watch that your praises well wins. So it pays you to buy LION COFFEEL Umbrellas or Pictures, or Cutlery fine, Clocks, Handkerchiefs, Bclti-things in every line. In which ute snd ornament often combine. So it pays you to buy LION COFFEE. There sre toys for the bsby, the girl or the boy, So it pays you to buy LION COFFEE, F rom Dolls up to Kites each a suitable toy. So it pays you to buy LION COFFEE. There are Household Utensils for everyday use. And Pictures as pretty as Art can produce. So to lack all such goods you hove no excuie. Since it pays you to buy LION COFFEE. In every package of LION COFFEE you will find a fully illustrated and descriptivo list. No housekeeper In fact, no woman, man, boy or girl will fail to find in the list some articlo which will contribute to their happiness comfort and convenience, and which they may have by simply cutting eut a certain number of Lion Heads from the wrappers of our one pound sealed packages (which is the only form in which this excellent coffee is sold) ar-ice CO., TOLEDO, OHIO. ?. V V fe v re V : V V re re re v re re re re re v re fe re Undigested, decaying food remnants, In the mouth and stomach, giving off pestiferous gases, are the cause j that awful breath, so repulsive as to cause a halt In friendship, affection, love, any form cf Intimacy. Nobody can stand its overpowering stench, and It Is a cause of terrible misery to those afflicted and their dear ones. There Is only one way to cure It disinfect the digestive canal with CASCARETS! Clean It out, keep It clean, let CASCARETS stimulate the lining of mouth and stomach, and put it in shape to work nafrally and properly. Nothing but CASCARETS will bring about the desired result BE SURE YOU GET THEM! I ens. Detroit Free Pi. 4. ter Sted om it to ped a-dat "I have fceea using CASCAHKTS and aa a mild and effeeuvo lajaitvo tbey are simply woodertul. My daughter and I were bolbered with sick stomach and our breath was very bad. After taking a tew donas of r-icreu we have Improved wonderful 1. Tbey area gre&i. bolp in the family." WlI.HSl.WINA Nosu I1W Rlttenbouse St, Cincinnati, Ohio. 1 or It thro ler not see har- nr.n t i.j .......... 1 m- 6- 1 X. BEST FOR BOWELS AND LIVER. firprl 'in t.r-s. ..,u-iT THIS IS tit THE TABLET illirrilt T OTM sOI tjevrel eraeM, wwewdtettla, MKi.m, fm fern, ha4 klMl, Wla4 mm tho MaiMcW, Mttafan hwU, rl Bitk; mmm m . " mmm Mmmmm. tl r wM du-S roalrtv rum mrm frV law lln kiikkM MM hu U Mkir t utabitai.r, It U m ,rhrbr I amli IkiMaia a.4 hutun m m that mmmm snwwvw Urn . " tfcf CAkCAm . Mr. wr "" SMt be watt st i .a t aatil m tm fmrnt Jlhc Taaa aar a4l rtal. ll4Wth.. iaaav, SaWSB SS..iaa -awawiaa tm naaaraa hs raSaaaaS. . JOc 25c 50c KEVES SOLD IN BULK. DRUGGISTS ffAiAWTtiD to rrxti rive 'r Mr ir lis Mr - rev AMsrra aaaaal4. Naw II la aver ! allllaa have m aaar. -aa f V ailiMr aaaalciae la the warla. T hi I. abaolaia araa'.f l ar S w has laslawlal. a have tajta, aal wMI aallCaJM - t arwataaa Sa aara r saaaar reraa. hay mmv, ' aa. '. 1 a ia a -ar, haaa ' arfalTatt W at .an . U I, aatr a a.a V a . itaf m ,a aa ftirs,,!, w sa arm -aai w aa raw ( a haaa IW h -aa. 1 .tar Mnrf"lai r . .- tw m 4' veay.a wall h le ' ' , area mg ian m.mm a. a -a aaa. ra n a wnaare a e has 4 as r-a. m aw. raw - i a a v i t l s r r - m .- a i " - i h- m w. a i el ) e) el el e) 5 eft e) ej ej el el el el e) el el el 1 el el el el el el 1 i) )