attfftBi Coldi 1 had a terrible cold ind could hardly breathe. I then tried Ay er 'a Cherry Pectoral, and it gave me im mediate relief.'' W. C. Layton, Sldell, 111. How will your cough be tonight? worse, prob ably. For it's first a cold, then a cough,' then bron chitis or pneumonia, and at last consumption. Coughs always tend downward. Stop this downward tendency by taking Ayer's Cherry Pec toral. TbrMiltM! lie, Mc.i'lt. AtUrofiltlt. Oonmlt Tour dortorlfeiaTt'TakatTIl tli.n do a. ! any.. If he tell you not to ttke It. then don't Uke It. He knowf. Leave It with him. W ri willing. . iVKIt CO.. i.aw.11. Mail. - I ' ,I-M,M,J iOZODODT. 4 PERFECT LIQUID DENTIFRICE FOR THB TEETH " BREATH EACH SOZODONT TOOTH POWDER HALL&RUCKEUNiw York Cannons and Thumleratorma, Tht Weather Bureau has issued an other broadside against the practice which has grown up in a number of Eu ropean countries of bombarding the heavens to avert storms and carry them in another direction. Some of the argu ments advanced will apply accurately to the Weather Bureau itself. It claims to score a success whenever it shoots at a thunderstorm cloud that docs not pro duce hail, although the chances arc greatly in favor of there being no hail in the cloud. Whenever the Weather Bureau shoots at a storm and drives it away it scores a success, but when it does not drive it away it keeps discreet ly quiet. That is a habit common to those who experiment with the ele ments. Boye Will lie liojra. "Pa," said Mrs. Methusalem to the oldest of his race, "I wish you'd speak to Abimelcch. He's been pulling Bil dad's nai'fi.again." "Lemme" see," quoth the patriarch, "how old is 'Bini now?" "He's two hundred and forty-seven his nex' birthday." "Well, you must make allowances for th' boy, ma. He's young yit." On tha Ark "Let her turn as she likes," observed Noah, as he leaned against the star board rail of the ark and watched her maneuver. "Let her turn as she likes. When we get through with this trip no body is going to rise and ask about he tactical diameter." Could ltlow Hie Own Inference. Cholly And did Miss Chipper say anything about me? Miss Cuttings She said you were just as bright as ever. From Puck. Trifling that Costs. Neglect $ Sciatica and Lumbago And ym mvt be dirab!ed ar,d $ Incapacitated for work for J many Ion? dayo, I St. Jacobs Oil 5 Wl)l cure surely, rltht wr. y Q and savo time, money atid 1 5 suffer!!!!. It V Conquers Pain J g PrJce.'asc and 50c. J? j SOLO BY ALL DEALERS ID ilEDICTKC. WET WEATHER. WISDOM! X Vfs Trl ORIGINAL , , tomes oiled CLOTHING ACK OU YELLOW WILL KEEP YOU DBY if NOTHING ELSE WILL TAKE NO SUBSTITUTES CATALOGUE! FRH! SHOWINfi PULL LINE OF ASMf NTJ AND HAT3. A ...'.TOWER CO.. BOSTON, MA33. v ASTHMA-HAY FEVER igr"-" FREEiTRIAL BOTTLE. tow DbWHW E.t30?ST..N.Y.CiTV $900T6 $1500 A YEAR We want Intelligent Men and Women a Traveling kepreiwutiillvc Xaxm M.nti anleiy SM to ioa a year and all cxikum eixutdlus to czietieac aud ability. We aleo ul Ik.I repicMiiteliveei (alary r9 to ii et mUimii.iun)puilliia' npon the time touted. Bend aump fur lull paritculiue aa ,t. po.ltuu prefered. Addreae, lepl, M. 1 TiUt VS1X, COMPANY, rhiladtlpula, fa. 1 x v n xr Id PsL CURED BY rGS- tDR.TAFJ S jjjjK I F p fVlf li-StNO TOR I nNOHMB AllKHICAN t.IY, InAenan a $ rK-B. bunval biwiMitJ. Art- -?it:3Jiu jtr 1 '' 1" tl 1 1 OolU IHrdiil at Ilifluiu Kmnmltlun. I rJUtisNNY'S.TAIIASCO DCOR OF MERCY. Rev. Dr. Talraage Snys There Will Be Salvation for (he Morally Shipwrecked. Yield Not to Iht Force ol Immoral Oravlia- Hon Helpfulness of Kcllj'on. fCopyrlfht, Mrt.1 WAflTTTTCOTO.f, T). C In this discourse Dr. Tnlmnze depicta the atmgle of a mnn who deairea liberation from the en thrallment of evil and r.hows how he may be et free; text. Proverbs xxiii, 35: "When fball I awake? I will seek it yet again." With an insight into hnmnn nature audi an no other msit ever had, Solomon in thesn worilH ia aketching tlie mental proceua of o mnn who has stepped aside from the path of rectitude and would like to return. WishiiiR for aomcthing better, he aoys: "When bIiiiII I awake? When ahall I (?et over tl.ia horrible nightmare of iniquity?" But adzed upon by uit vradirated appetite and piinhed down hill by liis paasiona he cries out: ' I will aeek it yet again. I will try it once more." About a milo from Princeton, N. J., there ia A skating pond. One winter day, when the ice was very thin, a farmer liv ing near by warned the young men of the danger of akating at that time. They all took the warning except one young man. lie, in the apirit of bravado, said, "Boys, one round more." Ha atruck out on hia akatea, the ice broke and hia lifeless body waa brought up. And in all matters of temptation and allurement it is not a prolongation that ia proposed, but only just one more indulgence, just one more ain. Then comes the fatality. Alan, for the one round morel "I will seek it yet again." .... Our libraries are adorned with elegant literature addressed to young men, point ing out to them all the dangers and perils of life. Complete maps of the voyage of life the Bhoala, the rocks, the quicksands. But auppose a young man is already ship wrecked, suppose he ia already off the track, suppose he has already gone astray; how can he get back? That 1b a question that rcmaina unanswered, and amid all the books of the libraries I find not one rtrt nn th.it aiibiect. To that class of persons I this day address myself. You compare what you are now with what you were three or four years ago, and are greatly disheartened. You are ready with every passion of your soul to listen to a discussion like this. Be of good cheer! Your best days are yet to come. 1 oiler you the hand of welcome and res cue. I put the silver trumpet of the gos pel to niv lips and blow one long, loud blnat, saying, "Whosoever will, let him come, and let him come now. The church of God is ready to spread ft ban quet upon your return, and all the hie rarlis of heaven fall into line of ban nered procession over your redemption. Years ago, and while yet Albert Barnes waa living. I preached in his pulpit one night to the young men o Philadelphia. In the opening of my discourse I eaid, O Lord, give me one soul to-nmht!" At the close of the service Mr. Barnes intro duced a young man, saying, "This ia the young man you prayed for.' But I aco now it yvat a too limited prayer. I offer no audi prayer to-day. It must take in a wider sweep. "Lord, give us all these souls to-dav for happiness and heaven! 1 So far as God may help me I propose to chow what are tha obstacles to your re turn, and then how you are to surmount thoso obstacles. The first difficulty in the way of your return is the force of moral gravitation. Just as there is a natural law which bring down to earth anything you throw into the air, so there is a cor responding moral gravitation. I never shall forget n prayer I heard a young man make ir.'the Young Men's Christian Asso ciation of New York. With trembling voice nnd streaming eyes he said: O God, Thou knowest how easy it is for me to do wrong and how hard it is for me to do right! God help me!" That man knows not his own heart who has never felt the power of moral gravitation. In your bovhood you had good asso ciates and bad associates. Which most impressed you? During the last few years you have heard pure anecdotes and im pure anecdotes. Which the easiest stuck to your memory? You have had good hab its and bad habits. To which did your soul more easily yield? But that moral gravitation may be resisted. Just as you mav pick up anything from the earth ond hold it in your hand toward heaven, just so, by the power of God'a grace, a fallen soul may be lifted toward peace, toward pardon, toward salvation. The force of moral gravitation is in every one of us, but also power in God's grace to overcome that force. The next thing in the way of your re turn is the power of evil habit. I know there are those who say it is very easy for them to give up evil habits. I cannot be lieve them. Here is a man given to intox ication, who knows it is disgracing his family, destroying his property and ruin ing him body, mind and soul. If that mnn. being an intelligent man and loving his family, could easily give up that habit,' would he not do so? The fact that he does not give it up proves that it ia hard to give it up. It is a very easy thing to sail do.vn stream, the tide carrying you with great force, but suppose yon turn the boat up stream is it so easy then to row it? As long aa we yield to the evil in clinations in our heart and to our bad i aniline down stream, but the moment we try to turn we put our boat in the rapids just above Ningara and try to row up stream. .... A phvsioian tells his patient that ho must quit, the use of tobacco, as it is de stroying his health. The man replies, I can ston that habit easy enough. He quits the uss of the weed. He goes around not knowing what to do with him self. He cannot add up a column of figures: he cannot sleep nishts. It aeema as if the world had turned upside down. He feela his business is going to ruin. Where ho was kind and obliging he is scolding and fretful. The composure that characterized him has given way to a fret ful restlessness, nnd he has become a com plete fidget. What power ia it that has rolled a wave of woe over the earth and shaken a portent in the heavens? He has quit tobacco. After awhile he says: I nm going to do aa I please; the doctor does not understand my case. I am going back to my old habits." And he returns.: Kvervthing assumes ita usual composure.' Hia 'business aeema to brighten. The world becomes an attractive place to live in. His children, seeing the difference, hail the return of their father's genial riia poiilion. What wave of color has dashed blue into the sky and greenness into the mountain foliage and the glow of aapphire into the sunset? What enchantment has lifted a world of beauty and joy on his soul? lie has resumed tobacco. The fact is we all know in our own ex perience that bnbit is a taskmaster. As long as we obey it, it does not chastise us. But let us resist it and we find that we are lashed with scorpion whips and bound with ship cable and thrown into tlio track of bono breaking Juggernauts. In Paris there ia a sculptured represen tation of Bacchus, the god of revelry. Ho is riding on ft panther at full leap. Oh, how suggestive! Iet every one who is speeding on bad ways understand he is not riding a dodlo and well broken steed, but that he ia riding a monster wild and blnodthirstv and going at a death leap. I have also to say if a man wants to return from evil practices society repulses him. The prodigal, wishing to return, tries to take some professor of religion by the hand. The professor of religion looks at him, looks at he faded apparel and the marks of dissipation, and instead of giving him a firm grip of the hand of. feii him the tip end of the longer fingers of the left hand, which ia equal ti strik ing a man in the face. Oh, how few Christian people under stand how much gospel thcro ia in a good, honest handshaking! Sometimes wheu you have left the need of encouragement and some Christina man has takeu you heartily by the hand have you cot felt thrilling through every fiber of your body, mind und soul an encouragement thut was just what you needed? The prodigal, wishing to get into good society, enters a prayer meeting, borne good uiau without much sensii greets hi 111 by aaying: "Why aro you here I You iti'O about the Iiibt pi'ivsou that I expected to see in a piayer meuliiij;. Well, tlio dying thief tvna nived, nnd there is hop for you." You do not know uiivdiin( about ItiMJ. uuk'U Jim lavs tvataad, that whoa a mnn tries to return irom evil courser of conduct he runs against repulsions innu merable. We Bay of some man, "He lives a block or two from the church, or half milo from the church." In all our great cities there are men who are 6000 milea from church vast deserts of indifference between them and the houso of God. The fact is we must keep our respecta bility though thousands perish. Christ aat with publicans nnd sinners, but it there come to the honse of God a man with marks of dissipation upon him people are almost sure to put up their hands In horror, as much as to say, "Is it not shocking?" How these dainty, fastidious Christians In all our churches are going to get into heaven I do not know unless they havo an especial trnin of cars cushioned nnd up holstered, each one a car to himself. They cannot go with the great herd of publi cans nnd sinners. ' 0 ye who curl your lip of scorn on the fallen, I tell you plainly that if you had been surrounded by the same influences instead of sitting to-day amid the rul turcd Bnd the refined and the Christian you might have been a crouching1 wretch in stable or ditch covered with tilth and abomination! It is not because we ore naturally nny better, but bccniise the mercy of God has protected us. Those that ar brought up in Christian parentage should not bo so hard on the fullen. 1 think also that men are oftn hin dered from returning by the fact that churches are anxious about their member ship, too anxious about their denomina tions, and they rush out when they see a man about to give up sin and return to God and ask him how he is going to be baptized, whether by sprinkling or immer sion, and what kind of a church he ia going to join. , Oh, despise not parental anxiety I The time will come when you will have neither father nor mother, and you will go around the place where they used to watch you and find them gone from the house and gone from the field and gone from the neighborhood. Cry as loua for forgiveness as you may over the mound in the churchyard, they cannot answer. Dead! Dead! 1 God pity the young man who has brought disgrace on his father's name! God pity the young man who has broken his moth er's heart! Better that he had never been born. "Better if in the first hour of his life, instead of being laid against the warm bosom of maternal tenderness, he had been coffined and sepulchered. There is no balm powerful enough to heal the heart of one who has brought 'parents to a sorrowful grave, and who .wanders about through the dismal ceme tery rending the air and wringing the hands and crvinff: "Mother! Mother!" Oh, that to-day, cy all the memories of the past and tiy all tlio hones ot the fu ture, vou would yield your heart to God! May your father's God and your mother's Ood be your Uod loreverl ; This hour the door of mercy swings wide open. Hesitate not a moment. In many a case hesitation is the loss of all. At the corner of a street I saw a tragedy. A young man evidently doubted as to which direction he had cettcr take. His hat was lifted high enough so you could see he had an intelligent forehead. He naa a stout cnest ana a roDust develop ment. Splendid young man! Cultured young man! Honored young man! Why did he stop there while so many were going up and down? The fact is that every young man has a good angel and a bad angel contending for the mastery of his spirit, and there were a good angel and a bad angel struggling with that young man's soul nt the corner of the street. "Come along with me," said the good nngel; "I will take you home. I will spread my wings over your pillow. I will lovingly escort you all through life under supernatural protection. I will bless every cup you drink out of, every couch you rest on, every doorway you enter. I will consecrate your tears when you weep, Vour sweat when you toil, and at the lest r will band over yom grave into the hand of the bright angel of a Christian resurrec tion. I have been sent of the Lord to be your gunrdian spirit. Come with me," said the good angel in a voice of unearthly symphony. 1 Was music like that which drops from a lute of heaven when a ser aph breathes on it. "Oh, no," said the bad angel, "come with me. I have something better to of fer. The wines I pour ore from chalices of bewitching carousal. The dance I lead is over floors tessellated with unrestrained indulgence. There is no God to frown on the temples of sin where I worship. Tbo skies are Italian. The paths I tread a-r through meadows daisied and primrose:.. Come with me." The young man hesitated at a time when hesitation was ruin, and the bad angel smote the good angel until it departed, spreading wings through the starlight, upward and away until a door swung open hi the sky, and forever the wings van ished. That was the turning point in that young man's history, for, the good angel ilown, he hesitated no longer, but started pn a pathway which is beautiful at the opening, but blasted at the last. The bad nngel led the way through gate after gate, Una at each gate the road became rougher (und the sky more lurid, and what was pe culiar, as the gate slammed shut it came to with a jar that indicated it would never open. Past each portal there were a grinding of locks and a shoving of bolts, and the scenery on each side of the road changed from gardens to deserts, and the June air became a cutting December blast, and the bright wings of the bad angel turned to sackcloth, and the fountains that at the start had tossed with wine jioured forth bubbling tears of foaming blood. And on the right side of the road there was a serpent, and the man said to the bad angel, "What is that serpent?" And the answer was, "That is the serpent of stinging remorse," On the left aide ol the road there was a lion, and the man aiked the bad angel. "What ia that lion?" The answer was, "That is the lion of all devouring despair." A vulture flew through the sky, and the man asked tht bad angel, "What is that vulture?" Tht answer was, "That is the vulture waiting for the carcasses of the slain." And then the man said to the bad an gel, "What does all this mean? I trusted in what you said nt the street corner; J trusted it all. Why have you thus de ceived me?" Then the last deception fell off the charmer and he said, "I waa sent from the pit to destroy your soul. watched my chance for many a long year. When you hesitated that night at th street corner I gained my triumph. Now you are here. ' Hi, ha! You are here! Come, now, let us fill the chalice and 'drink to darkness and woe aud death! Hail, hail!" ' Oh, young man, will the good angol sent forth by Christ or the bad angel sent 'forth by sin get the victory over yout isoul? Their wiugs are interlocked this moment above you, contending for youi 'soul, as above the Apennines eagle and .condor fight in midsky. This hour de cides eternal desliuics. Dcptfh of the Karth's Atmosphere. The Belgian Royal Meteorological Observatory has recently publibhed the various estimates of mathematicians regarding the depth of the atmosphere lurrounding the earth. The calcula tions of these fcavanta are certainly lufflclently curloua and divers to re flect discredit upon them all. Blot es timated the depth at 40 miles; Bra vala, 70 miles; Mavln, 81 miles; Cal landiaw, 100 mllos; Schlaparolli, 125 miles; Marie Davy, 187; and Rltter, 216 miles. During tba early part of the nineteenth century It was general ly accepted In Great Britain as 47 miles, but tha fact that meteors are Incandescent at a much greater height' than this seems to entirely controvert this idea. Sir Robert Ball makee tho statement that meteors have been seoit at an altitude of over 200 miles and since they only become aeoable when they coma In contact with the at mosphere, it would ueera that, If Sir Robert U correct, Bitter's estimate U the nearest to the murk. Philadelphia Times. THE SABBATH SCHOOL. International Leison Comments For November 17. Subject: The Childhood of Moses, Ex. II., 110 Ooldeo Text. Prov. axil, 6 Memory Verses, 7-10 Commentary on the Day's Ltsroo. 1. "A man." His name waa Amrnm and his wife's name was Jochcbed. K. fl: ?0; Num. 20 : 59. "Honse of Levi." Thus Mosns's parents were both of the tribe of Levi. 2. "A son." Thre were two children older than Mosos, Miriam (15: 20), who was probably from eight to ten yenrs old er, nnd Aaron (7: 2), who wm three yenrs older. (7: 71. "Goodly child." The text simplv says that he was good, which signi fies that he was not only a perfect, well formed child, but Hint he was very beauti ful. This very circumstance was wisely ordained by the kind -Providence of God to be one means of his preservation. Scnrccly anything interests the heart more than the sight of a lovely babe in distress. Hia beauty would induce even hia parents to double their exertions to save him. and was nrobnbly the sole motive which led the Egyptian princess to take such partic ular care of him. nnd to educate him as her son, which in nil likelihood she would not have done had he been only an ordinary child. "Hid him." That is, kept him within the house. 3. "Ark." A amnll covered bo or has. Icet. f5he did not mnke it then, but took it and prepared it for her purpose. "Of bulrushes." The papyTua plant, a thick, strong and tough reed, which sometimes reaches a hciirht of from ten to fifteen feet. "Slime." The mud of the Nile, which, when hardened, is very tenacious. "Pitch." Mineral tor. Boats of this de scription are seen dailv floating on the surface of the river, with no other calk ing thon Nile mud (Inn. 18: 2), snd they are perfectly water-tight unless the coat ing is forced off by stormy weather. "Flags." A general term for sea or river weed. The spot is traditionally said to be the Isle of Rhoda, near old Cairo. 4. "His sister." Miriam. It appears that Moses had only one sister. Num. 2(1: (59. "Afar off." So as not to ahow her anxiety. "To wit." "To know." R. V. It was her duty to see whether Pharaoh's daughter found him, and whether he was in danger from nny cause. 6. "Daughter of Pharaoh." It has been estimated that she was about sixteen years of age at this time, and that Moses was born in the sixth year of the reijrn of Rameses II. "To bathe" (R. V.I The women of Egypt are now kept jealously secluded in harems, and it is not enstom ary for them to bathe in the Nile. But it has been shown that the women of an cient Egypt were quite unrestrained, and had liberties, such as women in Christian lands do now, and bathing in the river was a common practice with them at that time. "At the river." Tho water was there fenced off ns a protection from the crocodiles, and doubtless the princess had an enclosure reserved for her own use, tho road to which seems to have been known to Jochebcd. "Walked along." Hence the discovery of the nrk was not made by them, but by the princess her self, a providential circumstances, ns it led her to a personal interest in the babe. "Sent her handmaid" (R. V.) Her imme diate attendant. (J. "Paw the child." As soon as she saw tho child she knew that it wns one of the Hebrew children, for only a Hebrew moth er would have need to hide her child in this manner. "The babe wept." The sight of a beautiful babe in distress could not fail to make the impression here men tioned. See v. 2. t It has been conjectured that the cruel edict of the Egyptian king did not continue long in force. eo chap. 1: 22. "Had compassion." Thus the babe found a protector in the very family of the king who decreed its death. "Save the boys." Our great cities are filled with children who are exposed to a worse fote than Pharaoh's decree or croc odiles in the river. legislation is too stern and severe, and will destroy instead of save. Only recently two six-year-old boys were arraigned in the Chicago police court. Such a course is the worst that could pos sibly be taken with such small children. Official charity is also too rough to be trusted with the little life that must be lifted out of the slum. Tender hands are needed to dry the tears of theso "weep ing babies." We must look to Christian women. They should use their eyes to see the facts, and not be so busy about their own luxury and comfort that they pass the pbor pitch-covered box unnoticed, and they should conquer the prejudices of rare and the fear of lowering themselves. 7. "Hia sister." Miriam had drawn near enough to see and bear everything. No doubt the child had been carefully in structed by her mother. But God's hand wag, directing matters and to Him, rather than to any human wisdom, must the praise be given. 9. "Nurse it." By thus taking the child the mother became from this time in some sense the recognized servant of the princess; for otherwise how would she en joy more safety with her babe than be fore? "Thy wages." She was doubly paid. She had not only the wages which made her safe as the servant of the royal princess, but she had tho infinitely bettor wages of seeing her son safe, and having the privilege of caring for him and train ing him. "Took the child." No doubt this God-fearing mother trained her child very carefully. Children should be very thankful when they have Christian par ents who bring them up in the knowledge snd fear of God. 10. "Unto Pharaoh's daughter." Though it must have been nearly as se vere a trial for Jo?hebed to part with him the second time as the first, she was. doubtless, reconciled to it by her belief in his high destination as the future de liverer of Israel. "He became her son." Ity adoption, nnd the high rank afforded aim advantages in education which, in the providence of God, were made subservient to far different purposes from what his royal patroness intended. We can obtain tn idea of what his education was from Acta 7: 22. But Moses had not only a moral and an intellectual training, but, iceording to Josephus, he had also a prac tical preparation for the great work that a-as before him. It appears that the Ethi opians came into Egypt and routed the irmy thot was sent to resist them, where anon the command waa given to Moses. He immediately took the field and de feated the enemy with great slaughter. His military achievements outshone in popular estimation his intellectual attain ments, and he returned from this cam paign the most popular man in the king dom. "Called his name." What name he had from his parents we know not, but whatever it might have been it was ever ifter loBt in the name given to him by the princes of Egypt, Monster fjttarrt of Japan. "We expect 6oon to get here," said nn attendant at the zoo the other dny, according to the Philadelphia Record, "a specimen of one of the rarest and most curious animals in the world. I mean the monster lizard of Japan. It often attains a length of five feet and will then weigh over fifty pounds. It Dimply Infests the mountain lakes of Japan, and, as It's very voracious, soon exterminates all the &nt that happen to be there. The Japs hunt U for the Bake of Its skin, which they suppose bus marvelous medicinal qualities. The lizard belongs to the salamander fam ily and Its skin, like that of the sala manders, contains a poison which the ampheblan can eject from certain ijluTlde. Frogs Inoculated with this (Kilson will parish Inside of half an fiopr, and rabbits so treated will die even quicker than that. But the beast Is hard to get and there has never, I thiuk, been one brought into this coun try. Howavor, wo have heard ol sev eral now In a museum In Tokyo and there U talk of buying thorn for ou liluce." Worth Knoirliiff Abti Ko need of cutting off a woman's breart or man's cheek or aose in a vain attompt to cure oancer. Ko need to apply burning plas ters to tb flesh and tortnring thrsi nlriad? wmk from suffering, Ilotanto Wood Halm (B. B. B.) give a safe, speedy and certain care. The most horriblo forms of enneer ol tii face, breaai.womb, month, ilomvh, large tnrnora, ngly cancers, cutlrg, festering sores, persistent pimples, blood poison, Cf frrrh. rheu matism, terrible itching, scabby skin diseases, etc, or all sanceeefnlly treated and rnrert bv Botanic Blooa Balm (B. B. B.). Drngglttv H. Bamplo of medicine sent freo, also many testimonials, by describing Tour trouble snrt writing Blood Balm Co., l'i Mitchell btrcet. Atlanta. Oa. True to Iter ( o!nrs. Now, the Eminent Reformer and the F.mancipated Woman were about to be wedded. In (act, the ceremony was being per formed. "With this ring." said the Eminent Reformer, "I thee wed." Here there was a breathless hush over the audience as the Emancipated Wo man made a gesture of dissent and ex claimed: "And this after your campaign against ring rule? Never!" Saying which, she swept out of the church. The audience was divided in its sur prise over the injection of politics into matrimony and the sipht of an Emanci pated woman sweeping. Largeat In the World. Walter Baker & Co., Ltd., Dorches ter, Mass., ore the lnrgest manufactur ers of cocoa nnd chocolate In the world. They received a gold mcdnl from the Taris Exposition of last year. This year they have received three gold medals from the Tan-American exposition at Buffalo. Their goods are the standard for purity and excellence. Uamc ntlonnblo. Teacher "What docs b u l l y spell?" Johnny "iy, er u'm-m " Teacher "Come! Come! Suppose a great big boy were to strike a little follow, what -would yon call him?" Johnny "I don't dust to tell ycr Ma'am." Catholic Standard and Times. Dyeing Is as simple as washing when vou use PufNiH Fauelkss Dtes. Hold by' all druggists. In a hurricane blowing at eighly miles an hour the pressure on each stjuare foot of surface is three and a half pounds. State of Ohio, Oitt of Toleoo, i Lucas Cocsty. f Frank J. Chenkt makes oath that he is the sonior partner of the Arm of F. J. Chexht & Co.,dolngbusiness intlio CityofTnledn, County and Stato aforesaid, and that saiil firm will par tho sum of one HUNnncn voi.laiis for each and evory case of cATAnnit that cannot be cured by the uso of Hall's Catarrh Cons. Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to before ms and subscribed in my , , prcsoneo, this Glh dav of Dccembsr, j beat, I A. D., 1SS6. A. W.' Oleason. 1 '""v- ' Kofnrii Public. Hall's Cotarrh Cnro is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the systoni. Bend for testimonials, free. F. J. Cuknky 4 Co., Tolodo, O. Sold by Druggists, 7flc. Hall's Family l'illa aro the best. The people with tho biggest ideas sel dom havo anv money to carry them out. Ttest For tha Howels. No matter what ails yon, headache to a fancer, you will never get woll until yonc bowels are put right. Cascaiikts help nature, cure you without a grips or pain, produnj easy natural movements, cost you just 1) cents to start getting your hoaltli book. Cab oauits Candy Cathartic, tho genuine, pnt uu in metal boxes, every tablet has 0. 0. 0. stamped on it. Beware ot imitations. Even the professional swindler works his way in the world. H. H. Green's Sons, of Atlanta, On., are the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world. Sea their liberal offer 111 advertisement in another column of this paper. The girl who marries to please her family assumes an awful responsibility. FITS permanen ily cored. No n ts or nervons ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle ami treatise free Dr. B. II. Kline, Ltd., 081 Arch St., I'hila. Tn. A bent pin on a chair is no joke if you can't see the point. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, soften the gams, reduces Intlamraa tlon, allays pain, cares wind oulio. 253 a bottle True happiness, with some people, con sists in being able to say "I told you so." Fiso's Cure is the best medicine we ever nsed for all offeotions of throat and lungs. W. O. Kwdslet, Varbaren, Ind., Feb. 10, 1909. Dull caro isn't a marker to a dull rnr.or. mmt With many millions of families Syrup of Figs has become the ideal home laxative. The combination is a simple and wholesome one, and the method of manufacture by the California Fig Syrup Company ensures that perfect purity and uniformity of product, which have commended it to the favorable consideration of the, most eminent physicians and to the intelligent appreciation of all who are well informed iu reference to medicinal agtents. Syrup of Figs has truly a laxative effect aud acts gently with out in any way disturbing the natural functions and with perfect freedom from any unpleasant after effects. In the process of manufacturiug, figs are used, as they are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinally laxative principles of the combination are obtained from plants known to act most bene ficially on the system. fo dct its beneficial effects J bviy the eriirerMa.rufactJred by Louiovilla. Ky. 5&n rVane.iaco.Cal. Mcw YorfvIM roii sit bv all Mrs. Kate Berg, Secretary Ladies' Aux iliary of Knights of Pythias, No. 58, Com mercial Hotel, Minneapolis, Minn., After Five Years Suffering Was Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. "Dear Mrs. Pixkiiam: Whatever virtue there is in medicine seems to be concentrated in Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I suffered for five years with profuse and painful menstruation until I lost flesh and strength, and lifchadnocharmsforme. Only three bottles of your Vegetable Compound cured my X became regular, without any pains, and hardly know when I am sick. Some of my friends who have used your Compound for utcrina and ovarian troubles all have the same good word to say for it, and bless the day they first found it." Mrs. Kate Berg. $5000 FORFEIT IF THE ABOVE LETTER IS NOT GENUINE. 'When women aro troubled with irregular, suppressed or painful menstruation, weakness, leueorrhopo. displacement or ulceration of tho womb, that bearinfr-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, bloating (or flatulence), general debility, indigestion, and nervous pros tration, or arc beset with, such symptoms as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, "all gone" and " want-to-be-Ief t-alone " feelings, blues, and hopelessness, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine, for you need the best. Mrs. Plnkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address Lynn, Mass. V UNION'MADE "Mr..,, Gilt 1 Mire Who Cannot Bo Equaled At Any 1'ric. For Mor Than ft Ooarfer of Ci:nry iUo roputatluu of W. L. IkiuitUfl J-3.no and fcUKi Blmns fur cHlcd ail ni Imr rnnkm sold nt those prlcoi. Ihi i'xt'fUi'tit rtiput:tlon 1K(S been Wnil IiV Rifrit nlntin. W. f. l'uuffliisshfK's liavatoKtve bottt rB.it- iii-uii iii;w. muor !.i:u and ma so unofB hocaui.e htt ropm:u(nn fr the beet $3.00 ouu f&fto tlioot must bo mittinniniMl. nre zuiutu of the name hlLrh-aratle lwth- era um! In ttA.OO and fcO.OU shoes mid are just as gooa in every wty tx'iu by li LKjukla ituriM In American t It If mIIIuic diutt nn vnn cunm? If you do you sixfold send your M a mm m. m GUN CATALOGUE. IT'S FREE. It Illustrates and describes alltbe different Winchester Rifles, Shotguns nd Ammunition, and contains much valuable information. Send at once to the Winchester Repeating Arms Co.. New Haven, Conn. $8.00 one of the buys best made 8Q0 Lb. Platform Scales ever Sold. Well made. WILL LAST A LIFE TIME. FULL Size Platform. Catalogue free. tonus rim pats the fhkiqht). B1NUIIAMTUN. N. . WILLS PILLS D133EST OFFEUY-i MAD:, For only l Dcim w will Malta nf P. U l Crrm, lu days :rtinu of tha us iuUotu i eurtli.aad pat you uu iu tr.nlt uow w in tic !.. eyrltfUi; your ho.m Ad'ira nil order t. fu li. II. WllU tlvdlrW- Compnity, lIU. lift h -41.. Iljirttfwn. .Wd. HrAtinii (I Jljdi lVOludiunu Are.. Wuh li.iftuu. It. U, W Xtfr' Jml Except fr0j 't is REFRESH0 Ahd AJa 1 ,.i -uf(r, HABrTUALCoHSnpATlf ToOvERpiAB" Permanently pwuooiavra SBYOVER 'DEALERS The ttnndard Tim nlrravt lcn tl:icrit so hirh tl::it tho Trrarcri'iccivrarnoro vn!iv for liis mniif"7 in t'laW. r.. I)(.i'fln ga.uj ::id th.toahor U.an ho can IT"t cljcwherft. V. JL. i)oucla fnakf r ond nrllc iroro Ci.oo nnd f hot-It tl 1:111 ftiiv nthfp Inn niiinufacturrrB In thoTorld. r.T COLOR EVFT.FTM nam Trti.ifc upon taring V. L. Lour 14 thtm W.La duu ar.d rrlca I'issad her cm reHjtt of price nnd SS crnti additional for cur- Ti:i8c ir.Konit'ur.iircTnci.ta 01 i'xji as Known: btjuc iiyioi ud usually worn ; plain or mo torn horivT. medium or liuht toles. irom ficlnrv In w. mr.r t mm if. tit and Hm l-.t alu.a duaJuni " name nd address on c postal card for a mm mtmmm bmmi i nDHDQV FEW DISCOVERT; i J f aar 1 a7 I quiak rltf and nni wont Booat ol twliinonialt nd 10 dare' irveu .Vre. Dr. H. M. ttJaXUTSSOHS, Bos U, AUule.CS. USECERTfilP.CURE.?s IT DAVC 1 ADVERTISE II rAIO THIS PAPER. UN (J in. UUHtS VHtnt ALl tLbt FAILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tiuuta Uood. Ute I in timp. toin vv rtHtciri".. ' ion NICE JO PCR DOTTLe 1.11 IF
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers