4 Lrsl'r. K"0'1 "PP'Gt. kep renr I jnre ana T"T "i t-ams Sarsaparilla lHt-!n f.-irl th One True Hlnol Purifier, od'i Pillll"c nilluusiK-ss, lii'iiduclie. 25c -tnr K. P. twmis, Detroit. Midi., . I'lii- e.f'i-t "r '''" Cure is Luiiu, .,- ( urr fr Cotisnmi tlon is nn A No. I I'i'.l.., Al-tH 11. WM. Hvlea on HUM. .. tin- humorous mi'Uiorle con- i.j with E:iKliil Judges Ih one ol ire Hj li and "Is hurm. This em ! i.inst nun well kuowu In his pro- ion f'r lil work on "HUN." nnd ns f:icn lliio opportunity fornllltera- his associates were ncousTomou utow tlx' name on the horse, w Men i.iu n sorry steed. E here cee Hyloa on Hills." they took uro In saying, arm as the Jinigo .,r i-vi-iT afternoon, thcr Indulged v iii their little Juke. Hut the truth ilnit tlx horse hail another name vn only t tlic master nnd his man; when 'i too-curious client lmiuircil , tlio .1 nlr'"s wlicro.'ilii.uts. li wns liv tln servant, with ft clear con i,v. "that master was out uu HusI- Itiiu) Inx In Scotland. nil it has been estlnmted that over imii acres are devoted to the main :i (. cf iln-r In Scotland, and thnt t 5,wu stiivs art- auuually killed. IIKKIiLKSS AYOMKX. 1 mm WJ n .Siil I'mnlty fur Their Ni-fc-lrct. women only heeded first symp--i,i rvousncss, buckucho. bent!- ussitudo, loss of nppctite iiml Mccp; palpi tatioti. nielun clmly," blues, n etc., mill at once removed the cause with l.yilia K. I'illkll.'l Ill's Vegetable Com pound, tin ro would 10 much lc-nsk-buffering. - . ,. Hut they are . or their physician fs to l;!a;ne, thi-v drift luto some distre..'in(f j iI;hiisc. The Vegetable Com-. I lit onto rcinovcs ull irregular! "f this monthly period : inllain n, iilt-erutioii uiid tli'-plaeemeiit wnmli, uud till ft untie tri'uMes, pr legists have it. Write to Mrs. inn lit Lynn,' Mass., if vim vi?-h i. lvii.i', which the will irive vuu h"ii!d nut be alive tn-day. if It "t Ih i h for l.yilia '. I'iiiUhniu's 'al.le Cumpiiuiid. 1 v.as hulTeriii y frmn an attack of feiiK.lt! n1-', mid iiotliing I hail tri"il pv me relief; when by t ho of a friend 1 began the Com After using it two months I ilifl't -rent jfirl, and noV at the end I :i til entirely cured. "--.Mils. AMli AM', rutohoyue, L. I. uud Countrv W. WO SUNDAY KOI AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE. lxilak BIAS VELVETEEN BINDINQ fir skirt cdrjes. sneiis water rev. It is rai le ant! never If your dealer will not Supply you e Will. ouirj i,be't end mr.terralt malhd free. rs-ru;r,c Mule Eanv." n nev lock ty H. o-.x-r of the UJieV Horn Jmrnal. M. Co.. . o. box OW, N. y, city. take substitutes to ' a few Pennies. It xvoiCt yon. Ahvays insist on WS Root beer. ' i Th. rhu, , r. PMI4I k IODIE SOUTH (n '""trM MontM il . . " .'"'"'ril'llull bo ri. l,.T rar, ."""V."':'"1'' "fl-r I., tntpii.lui-1. it . . I:.", 'V"""'"" liiir-il in lli ' Br,-7 rf..r ..lily V4 rl. lo '""'y '' rfl,l from miy i-iiniluerlllc Ti'liu. W' P.. '..h IV. ..Ll. nj want men rv,-rv wh.ro In ir hl'lllK I'llKI-'l-. ...,ll. . .. ob..iliu..lv 1.... lrii 1,111111m, JIW i.M.la, '11 Ik IftiiLFni...... ' - ...... a iir.ii, . ii ii. Iiun. Ma., HoiUpuri. 111. L, " MH. loll, !., KSS?(Vy Prosecutes Claims. l-l T IDI"" u ,'loii IIU..-U. I'm v sj a i Via ADY: Subject) "Klnilnfm for Another! hake." It! "I UlOrH JPt (IDT tllM U ftt of th houifof Haul, thnt 1 tuny nhnw him kind. ti-.Tor Jonnlhnn'n PnkcV Ho Jlim. hlbohi'th ilwolt In Jcrualom, for he 1i ont eontlnnnlly at tlio klntr tnl.l.. and mi Inmo on both hli foot." II Hsmunl It., 1 and 13. Wm there ever nnythlnn mom romantln and chlrnlrous thnn thn lovn of David and JotinthnnV At one time Jotmtlina mi) up and David was down. Now David la up and Jonathan's family la down. As you have ofton heard of two sol, Hon. before Ruin Into battle making a covenant thit If one Is shot the survivor will take charge of the hotly, the watoh, the moment" nnd porhnpa of the bereft family of the one that dies, so David and Jonnthna had made a covenant, and tinwttint Jonnthan laileml David Is Inquiring ahout his family, thit he mar show klml ness unto thorn for their father Jonathan's take. Careful search Is ma le, and a son of Jona than by the exenoUlnttly homely name of MephllHwliPth Is found. Ill nurse, In hlsln fanny, had let him fall, and the fnll had put both his ankles out of place, nad thoy had never been sot. This decrepit, poor man Is brought Into the palace of Klntr David. David kiuos upon him with mnltlnit tender ness, no doubt seeing n his face a resem blance to hi old friend, the deceased Jona than. Tim whole bpnrluir of Klnir David toward him seems to say; "Ho (jlad I am to see you, Mephlhoshuth! How you remind mo of vour fiither, my old friend nnd bono factor! I ma'le a bantaln with your fathers Rood ninny years niro. nnd I nm Rolntf to keep It with you. What can I do for vou, McpliUmMieth? Iam resolve 1 what to il' I will make you n rich man. I will restore to vou the couilscate, property of your trnind fnlher Haul, nnd you shall bo atrtict of mine as lomt as you live, and you ahull be seatinl at mytnl'l" nmontx the prlncis." It was too much for Mcplillio-iheth. and he criej out airalnst It, cnlllnn himself n dead dojr. "llo ttlll," says Dnvhli "1 don't do this on your iccountj I do this for your father Jonathan'! lake. I can never foru'et his klndnesn. I remember when I wn b iiindu 1 from plnee to place bow hn befriended m. Can I ever foritet how he strliied himself of hlri courtier ii,pare ntul travn It to-mo Instead of my shepherd's eont, nnd how ho took off his own sword and belt nnd jrnvo them to me Instead of my slliiir? Oli, I can never foritet him! I hxd as if couldn't do enoiiKh for you, his son. 1 don't do it for your ake, 1 do It for your fattier Jonnthnn'! snke." So Mi'phllio.sheth dweit Iii Jerusa lem, for he did eat continually at. the king's table and wns lamti on both his leel." Tin-re Is so much gospel In this ipmlnt In cident that I Bin embarrassed to know wlipre to beuin. Whom do .Mephibosheth anJ David mid Jonathan make vou think of? Mephlhosheth, In tlio llrst place, stands for th" disabled human soul, l.nrd Byron ' scribes sin at a chnrmlnit reeklessnewi as a KMllatilry. as a Don Juan; (ieortrn Hand de scribes sin as triumphant In iiKiiiy Intricate plots; Oavarnl, with his enraver'n kolfe, always shows sin as a jjn'at Jocnlnrltyi bui. the Hlble presents Itns a Mephibosheth, lain on both feet. Hln, liko the nurse In the con text, at. empted to carry us mid let us fall, and we linvu U'en disabled, and la o.ir whole moral nature wonie doer-pit. Kometlini-i ' theoloKinna liiinclo about n technicality. They use the words '-total depravity," slid some peoplo believe In the doctrine, nnj some reject If. What do you nuaii'y total depravity? Do you mean thnt every man is as low ns ho can be? Then, I d ttot buliuvo It either. Uut do you menu that sin has let us fall; t. at, It bus scj-. ' fled and wounded and -fwfijpled our tire moral or lire until we ca.inot n"', K might and are lame in both fvetf Then I admit your proposition. There is Dot so much difference In an African JungU with barklnir, howilug, hissing, tlgblnt; quadruped and reptile, and paradise, with Its animals eoniintr before Adam, when he fatted them nnd stroked them and gave hem nnaies, so that the panther was as tame as the cow nnd tlio condor as tamo as thodove as there is bet ween tho human soul disabled and tbnt soul as (Jod oriKlnnlly con structed It. I do not care what the sunt 1 mentalis's or Ih" poets say In regard to siu. Iu the name of (lod I declare to you to-day thnt sin Is disorganization, disintegration, ghastly disfiguration, hobbling deformity. j our nio.ii-ru iniMii.gian tens you that man Is a little out of sorts; he sometinies thinks wrong; he sometimes acts wrong; In deed, his nature needs a little moral surgery, nn out.sido splint, a slight compress, a little rectlllcatloii. Keliglon is a good thing to have; it might some day como into use. .Man Is partially wr ug, not all wrong. Ho is lame In on" foot. Jiring the salvo of diviuu grace nnd the uiiilmi nt nnd the pulu extrac tor, and wo will have his one foot cured. Mnn is only half wrong, not nltogotln-r wrong. In what is man's nature right.'' In his will, his nllectloiis, his Judgment? No. There is an old book that says: "Tim whole bend Is sick and the whole heart faint." Mi plill.oslieth lame In both feet. Our belie! of the fact that sin has scanlle I und deformed rur souls Increases ns we go on In years. When vou started life you thought tuat man was a little marred by sin and ho was about etie tenth wrong. Jly the timo you had gon i through tke early experience of yot.r trade or occupation or profession ycu be lieve I tluit man was about half wroug. I.v the time you came to midlife you believed that n.an was three-fourtlis wroug. Hut within these past few years, slnee you have been so lied about and swindled and cheated, yuu have come to tint conclusion that man in altogether wrong, nnd now you can say with the prayer book and tho lilble, "There Is no health in us." Now you believe with tho prophet, ''The heart la deceitful, above all things, and desperately wicked." What ever you may have Ix-Uoved before, now vou believe that Mcpblbosheth is lame on both feet. Agnln, Merhibosheth in the text stands for the illHubled human sou: humbled and re stored. When this Invalid of mv text got n command to uomo to King David's pulaeo he trembled. The fact whs that the gnindfa her of Mephibosheth had treated David most shockingly, and now Mephlboslieth says to himself: "'What does the king want of me? Isn't It enough that I am laiiic? Is he going to destroy my life? Is ho going to wreak on me the vengeance which liu holds toward my grak Ifiither, Haul It's too bad." Hut go to the palace Mephibosheth must, slm-u tun king has commanded it. With stall and crutches and helped by his frieuds. I see Mephibosheth going up the stairs of the palace. I bear his stuff and crutches rattling on the tessellated Moor of the tbroueroom. No sooner have these two persons confronted each other Mephilt csheth nnd David, the king than Mep hibosheth throws himself flat on his face be fore tho king nud styles himself a dead dog. In the east when a man styles himself a d"g he utters the utmost term of selt-abnegatluu. It is not a term so strong In this country, where. If a dog has a fair chaiiee, he some times shows more nobility of character than some human specimens that we wot of. but the mangy cuts of the oriental cities, as I know by my own observation, are utterly detestable. Mephiboshetb gives the utmost term of self-loathiiig wln-u he compares him self to a dog, and dead at that. Consider the analogy. When the com mand Is given from the palace of heaven to the human soul to come, ilio soul begins to tremble. It says: "What Is (lod going to do with me now? Is He going to destroy me Is He going to wreck His vengeance upon me?" There is more than one Mephiboshetb trembling now because (lod has summoued hi in to the palace of divine grace. What urn you trembling about? God has uo pleasure in the death of a sinner. He does not scad for vou to hurt you. lie sends for you todc you good. A Hootch preacher had the fol lowing circumstance brought under his ob servation; There was a roor woman In the. parish who was about to be turned out be. cause she could not par her rent. One night she hoard a lond knocking at the door, and she mad no answer and hid herself. The rapplnn continued louder, louder, louder, but she mmte no answer and continued to hide herself. Hhe wan almost frightened un to dnth. Hhe said. "That's the offlwr of L the law come to throw me out of my home." a tew nays alter a Christian philanthropist met r In the street and said: "Mv poor woman, where were you the other night? I ca-ne round to your house to pav vour rent. Why d-dn't you let me In? Were ron at home?" "W'hy,"eherordled,''wns that you?" "Yes, that wns me, I enme to par your rent." "Why." she said, "ff I had had nnr ldn f was vou I would have let you In. I thought it was an officer come to cost mo out of my home." O Koul. Hint loud knocking atthegateto-slnv Is not the sheriff come to put you in jail; It Is the txvt friend vou ever had come to be vour security. You shiver with terror because you think It Is wrath. It is mercy. Why, then, tremolo before th-t King of benven and earth calls vou to His palaco? Stop trembling and start right away. "Oh," you sav, "I can't start. I have been so lamed by sin and so lamed bv evil habit I can't start. I am lame In both feet." Mr friend, wo come out with our firayers and sympathies to help Von up to ho palace. If you wont to get to the palace, you may get there. Hlart now. The Holy Spirit will help you. All vou have to do is Just to throw yourself on vour face at the feet of tho King, as Mephibosheth did. Mephlboshoth'a canlnlnl comparison seems extravagant to the world, but when a man has seen himself ns ho really is and seen how he has been treating the Lord, there Is no term vehement enough to express his self condemnation. The dead dog of Mephlbosheth's comparison falls to describe Ihe man's utter Inathlmr of himself. Mephlbosheth's posturing does not seem too prostrate. When n soul Is convicted, f rot he prays upright. Then the muscle of his nook relax, and he ir uble to bow his hen I. After awhile, by an almost superhuman ef. fort, he kneels down to pray. After awhile, when he has seen O.jd nnd soon himself, he throws himself flat on his fa"o nt th feet of the King. Just like Me,iiib,.t,, Th fa"t Is, If we could soo ourselves as do. I sees us, we would perish nt tho peetacle. You would have no tlm" to overhaul other peo. Pie. Your cry would be. "tied be tne-iful to me. n rinner." And again, Mephlh ishoth In mv text Itunds for the disabled huiii'iu soul 'saved for the sa'te of nnotiier. M"ihlhoh"tli would uevcr lmv got into th palace on bis own account. Why did David ransack the realm to And that poor man nn I then bet.w unon him n great foi tune and command a farmer Df the name of Zlbu to eulture tli estate and five to this Invalid Mnhlbosheth half th- proceeds every year? Whv did King David make such a mighty stir about a poor fellow who would never be nf imv use to th" throne of Israel? It was f.ir Jonathan's sake. It was what Hubert Hums e.ills f,.r "in. 1,1 Inng syne." David could not forget what Jona than had done for him In other dnvs. Three times this chapter has it that' all this kindness on the part of David to Mophlb. oslieiu was for his father Jonathan's sak... The .laughter of peter Martvr, through the Vice if her hiisbai d, i-anie down to j.eiiurv, and 'he senate of Zurich took care other for her ' uher'ss'ike. Sometimes a person has atip ed to you for helpnud vou have refused him. but when you found ho was the son or brc ;ierof sotuo on- who ha 1 1 n our bene- he" riu former daw. and bv a glance you saw tho r-seiiil,:,eii of your old friend in the faee of the applicant', vou relented, nnd yuu (aid. "Oh, 1 will doth'w for voiirinther's ns.' ." You know by your experience what mytixtmoirji. Now, mv fri is, i i.p that principle thnt you an ! I are to get Int-: tUo King's palace. The most Important pari ot cverv prnver Is t'lo last thr,i or four words of It, "I'm '".njt's sake." Do not rattle off those word--li tioilgh they vrere merely the lllilshiu. -'r-klff-cl- lli f.rnver. Thor -sr the mo-t irtant part of the prayer. When Ii In deftness you go before Ood and si.v ''of .Christ! sake," it roVii ln.au r,jr npi-n'Oods mlad all the memories o: llethlelii-ra and (ienin-saret nnd Golgotha. When you sny before God. "l-'or Christ's sake," you hold before God's mind even grown, uvery tear, every crimson drop o! Hi ' nly begotten Hon. Ifther" is nnvtliinu Injall I In universe tlmt will move God'to an n.'t of royal beiiela-tlon. it is to sav, "Kr Christ's sake." do. I H muidpo. t' bt, but He Is not strong enough to re. si-lt that ery, "For Christ's mke." If a llUle child should ki I behind Go l' tljrona and should sav, "Tor Christ's sa." Ilia great Jehovah Would turn nr ,und , ,i His throne to look nt le-r mil listen. N. prayer evir gets to In n .en d a f,,r Chr.-r- solhe. N i soul Is ev uufo.-te 1 l i.; ;,,r Christ's sk". The world will never bore, ileeuied but for Christ's sake, (liiriiatve, however tllliistrious it may be aneuig luei,, before God stands only for inc.iiisisti-n,- nnd sin. t ut tin r ' l u name, ;i p. ; ,-u". name, a -blessed ti ime, a glorious name, im everlasting name, that we ruav put i: n our Hps as a siierarmnt and upon ,on forehead lis a crown, nnd tint is tin name of Jesw, our divine .foMithnn, who stripped Himself of Ids robe mil put on our rags ami gnve us lli sword and took our broken reed, so that lenv, w lietlu r we lire well or sick, whether we .no living m dying, If we speal; that name It move? Iii-aven to the center, und God wiys; "l.'-l the pi ' r soul como in. Carry linii up into the ihroneroom of the palace. Though be may Uuvoheen lu exile, though sin uiav have erlpp!ed him on this side, and sorrow may have crippled him on the otherside, and he is lame in both his feet, bring hna up mt, tho palace, fur I want toshow him evir.n.st lug kindness, for Jonathan's sni;c." Again, Moihlboslieth In my text Mauds for the disabled human soul lifted to th" Klng'i table. It was more difficult In those times even than If is now for common men to get into a royal dining room. Tho sub jects might have come i-.rouud the rail of the palace, nad might have seen the lights kin dled, and might have heard the clash or the knives and tho ra tio of the golden gobleis. but not get In. Htout men with stout lout could not get in one In all their lives to one banquet, yet popr !enbtioih"tU goes In, lives thorC, and Is fery day ut tho table. Oh, what a gutting up In mo vorld it was for poor Mi-nhibos,.i! Well, thoueli you and I may bit woefully lamed with sin, for our divine Jonathan's sake I hope wo will all get In to dine with tlio King. before dining wo must be introduced. If you ure Invited to a company of persons where there are ili.-tingiilshed people pres ent, you are Intro luced: "This is tho Sena tor." "This Is th" Governor." "This Is the President." Jiefore we sit down at the King's table iu heaven 1 thin!; we will want to ho Introduced. Oh, what a time Hint will be, when you and I, by the grace of Uod, get Into heaven, nud are Introduced to the migniy spirits there, and some one will say: "This Is Joshua." "This Is l'aul." This is Moses." "This is John Knox. Hiis is John Mil ton." "This is .Martin Luther." "This is George Whllulleld." O i, shall we have any strength lelt after tu-'U a round of cules tlal introduction Yea, we shall be potentates ourselves. Then weslinll sit dowu nt tho King's table with the sous und daugh ters of God, mid nun will whisper ueross the table to us and say, "Heboid what manner of love the Father hulh b-stowed unon us that We should be called the sons of God!" And some one nt the table w,ll ray: "How long will It last? All other banquets ut which 1 sat euded. How lung will this last" and l'aul will answer, "Forever!" and Joshua will say, "Forever!" an I John Knox will say "Forever!" and Goorgo Wlntelleld will say, "Forever!" And the wine at that baniiet will be old wine. It Will be very old win". It will be the oldest wine of heaven, it will Initio wine that wis trodden out from the re I clusters ou the day when Jesus trod the wiui press alone. Wiue already more than eignt tcu centuries old. And uo oil" will deride us as to what we were iu this world. So one will bring up our Imperfection here, our sins here. All our earthly imiierf no tion completely oovered up ami hid den, Uephlhosheth' feet under the table. Kingly fare. Klnglr vesture. King ly companionship. We shall reign for ever and ever. 1 think thnt bnnquot will mean more to those who had it hard la this world than to those who had it easy. That banquet In David's palace meant more to Mephibosheth than to any one else, because he had boon poor and crip pled and iespised nnd rejected. And that man who In this world Is blind will liefter appreciate the Ugnt of heaven than we who In this world ha I good eyesight. And that man who in this world was deaf will bettor appreciate the music of heaven thnn we who In this world hn l good hearing. And those will have a higher nppre.-latlon of the rnv locomotion of that land who in this world wore Metihibosheths. HO my soul, what a magnificent gospel! H lakes a mnn so low down and rales hltn so high! What n gpei! Come now, who wants to be dniiipieted nnd Implaeed? As when Wllberforce was trvlng to got tho 'emancipation bill" through tho lirlllsh parliament nn 1 nil the Hritlsh Isles wore . anxious to hear of the passage of that I 'emancipation bill," when a vessel was com ; Ing Into port nnd the captalu ot the vessel know thnt the p-oplo were so anxious to ; get the tidings, he stepod out on the prow of the ship nnd shouted to the people ping ; before he got up to the dock, "Free!" nud ' they cried It, nnd thov shouted It, nn I they , snug it all through the Ian I, "Free, frei-r . Ho to-duv I Would like to sound the news ol your present and your eternal emancioation until the nngeis of God hovering lu the nlr, nnd watchmen on the battlements, nnd bell- men In th town cry It, shout It, sing It, ring i it, "Free, free!'' i come out now as the i mosscni,crof the ratneeto Invite Mephiboh- eth to come up. I nm here to-dav to tell vo! thnt God has a tvalth ol kindness to li- tios ! upon you for His Son's sake. The doors ol tne palace nro open to receive vou. The cupbcirers have already put th" eiiallc -s on , the table, and the great, loving, tender, svm- pathetic In-art of God bends overtoil this I moment, saying, "Is there any that is yet ' left of the house o( Suul, that I may show him kindness for Jon-ithmi'g sake?'' USE OF THE SENSES. Ilublt mi l experience I'lny n I'nrt In SitIiiii mill llcoriiig. If wi nsk ourselves Just how It Is that we see, bear and ris-elvi- Impres sion from the sense, we shall soon discover two things. The lit'st Is that tin' explanation 'e see with our eyes." "we bear with our ears." Hi-,, is not quite satisfai-tory. ll is oasy enough to explain how- eertaln rays of light Impinge on tin- n Una of tin- eye. and certain waves of air on tin- ilrum of tin- 'ill'; but lln these purely plivsieal things nn' converted into pnivh psy chical tilings ot' si.ij an. I 1,. ar, n;,' liu one eau explain. Our second discovery will be that It Is not by the eye alone Hint wc see, or by the ear alone tlmt we bear. Mem ory, or. rather, experience or habit, plays ;i great part in all Heiwat ions, though we do hoi oflili not loo it, unless our attention Is drawn to the fad by Sotno r'.IVHMi-l.-i nee that pills experience it fault, an I thus produces a sense illusion. Have you ever noticed, fur Instance. how experience helps you to recognize the position of sounds'.' If one made a liolso nt a little dislaiio,- froi i ymi, you could instantly icll fro.n what direction It came, liei-ause experience lias taught t on to Juluc of this matter through do very Might ililTcrciiie iii the intensity of sou.;, I ill ji;UMivn e:i'-s. All expell tneiit will readily prove ti.ls. . Htop tli left cpj: t'vmly with cot- '.oil-wool, and go Into a dark room with someone i-V-e who carries a bell. Let the other person Hlrlke the bell ill dif ferent parts of the room, yourself rc m. lining still. No matter where the bell is, it will always seem to pm to sound mi your right side, ffven though It may aetiially be near the left ear. IVrsoiis deal' in one ear can never tell whence a soiim! i-o!i"-. It taLts two car j to ilo this. Half the mistakes of t'o!s world art made by people who tliitil; they nrt. correcting mistimes ,,f others. M A ICK IC'PS. ri i r-i'.i i!c. (rein. I- lour Mini I i-ed. WIUAT-No, 1 iuu .$ il 4 i.:, No. il red ll.' i .i It'llV Nn u j. u,, i i,r, So t )ell. IV rliel!., 1.' .M ilr-l rur. , . i. OA I Nn J S I. Hi .No. it nlille a h K-.Ni. 1 si .Nn. ' wrr'eril 4il I l.nl K - w oo-r i menu i e n u. :i Ir Hnrjr MniiKi.i m oiler ., :. . ht- pour si II A 1 -.Nn 1 liiiielli; 11 I Mlieil i li.vi r. .N,i : il u i-j lliiy.iioui siiKoim i.i is to Fl'.-.N- n iWioie.M.l, leu i.' ;,o ii io bri.nn Mhbllliifc-a pi oi j ji 111 mi, lulls. in in) M si ff'IKA W - M lnul ii 7. To" "o ', s oi I miry I roil in ta, Hl'TI Kit- Klsm t rsmiiciy j" , j, iuiu y t ronmoiy Irai.i l-uiiiili UolL o u I MKKsK tiliiii. iiuw 7 l rk, uo -, h trultuotl agetttUles. Al'l'l ks bid h 01 4 vi 1IiANi- llaiia-iilckt'J, per bit..,.. I Uj 111 1 0 1 A 1 lir..s-.nu , in ir. I1.1 f iii ijj l AUIiAut -lluuia iou, bill ..... 1 ,;i J01 tiMws- I I'liow . ij.i ;w 411 I'eultry, t-io. ( lilckKNs, V pair 1 I KHUh.t in tlili.s-l'tt. 1. let Him,, frasu .11 I :'.'' ' VI ci 1.' 41 I', I'll :,n .4 ; 1 11 u Mlaielbtnauiia. SEEH8 i lover w Ilia I ill j s ir, '1 uiiotlijr, i riiue ., i ;j 4 ii iiniu liiana 1 o) 1 llAl l.tt hliLI", unw Ji SO tlUtll -t-uulill), asoul, t L.I .... .') icj aio 'l.i...t'W 4 4 llhtl.N.NAli. KI.OIK W nfcA 1 -Nu I lu'U M k. Su. S lllllN-MlAeU UAle fctadS UL 1 I llll - nil lo I I i;si a t'.i 4.' bi S.I w rboiK. VtlitAl Nil. lleil . tUit.N-Nu. 4 MlluU... OA IB Nu ft tills. . lit I IKK -( rauoiiury ttai 1'a. niaia ... iiiin-ry ... I'lllliDLLl'lllA. 3 K'4I riira.. M.W tUKa. rU't'ltPatanu a li Tt'4 IS VtllKAT .Nu ienil el tOH.N .Na V if, OAl! VtliltsWaniuru iftl HL 1 1KM vreaniBry lv tciiS Mate hiiU I'i'uu Jl 1J LIVE STOCK, (IMU1L STOCK VAlllll, KAsr i.niturv, IX. tSTTLB, frlms, ,.'( to 1.4(HMIia.v... 1... t 4 .'' 14 4 81 Oouii, i.veu to l,.ite lb 4 id 4 .'! lltly. l.Uto to l.iwm, ., 410 4 10 rsir ha-lit aisria. J lo luw lbs ... i M 3 in Cbuiuitiu, vou iu isjurti a yj a 5) UUtiS. Medium, s I'm 1 11 1.5 ''fvy a no :nt lttoikl. aud hiiiu. it uj V SJ . sassr. Good. SS to W lba 3 si) 4 no air, ?u to 80 lbs. , ao a 70 Cvuimvu il ii) 'a UJ The Frank Rtatensswt of hu lasta ( Isethel Chareli. , , From tht AdvfrUtrr. "leiirfi, tt, Y. Dn. rTmuAWB. 7ir Sir '-My )fr has been A inffererfrom rheumitlsm f'V more tbnn three years, suffering at times with ter rible pslns ln her limbs, nad other times with a sever "crick" In her back whloii causes jtreat aifony. 8h spent muoh for physicians and medicine, bat secured only temporary relief; llnslly the onnclude I to try Pink Pills. Rtie has taken eight boxes and I can say from the llrst one she has Im proved until now she Is almost entirely fri irorn pain, and has grown much stronger nud feels confident that, by the blessing ot God, thoy will offset n permanent cure. We iiish creni pleasure in recommending the:n to our friends. (Signed.) Itsv. J. H. Ilrcxsra. I'listor llethel A. M. E. Church, Klmlra, New York. Dr. Williams' Pink Fills contain. In a eon-ib-nseil fcrm, all the elen,ont necessary to give new life nnd richness to the bloo I 1111 1 re-tore shuttered nerves. Ther are an un billing spfelflo for such di- -asc as n comotor ntaxia, partial paralysis, 8t. Vitus' dance, sciatica, noiiiafgia, rbei mutism, iiervous headache, the after effce; of la grippe, pal pitation of the heart, pals and sallow com plexions, all forms of weakness either In male or female. Fink I' lis are sold by all dealers, or will be sent postpaid on receipt of price, BU cents a box, or six botes f,.rf J 50 (they are never sold in I utk or bv the li n, by addressing Dr. Wi Ilia us' Me llolue Com pany, licheuectady. N. X Twenty-two Annmite lrat"s were re.-ndlv bi'bended In one batch i n oil" of the bridge at Hue, China. frtry il.nnmrth IVitWni FloaMnr-rViral Sjrap f four rr,-rr. send wru pors to Dol.l'lni Soap M('( Co., l lillu l. ii-'i s, l-i. They will artel y,,n Irss Of rlisrhr, pe-lnva t'C'l, a Wori--'rr lee'et 1'ir In lurv. v.'i- 1 r rx, I- iii 1 In rl' th, r, fi.wly U luiiiulU. U&M iiuuU until Auimtl Ut inly. The Tyrol has ,27;i tavern-, with It'.rio -1 l ed-. '1 h" number of : oirl-ts la-t e.ir v.., . VJ1 .g'.'.-i, who spent 10,2; 1,111111 Horn..' t ITS stopis'd fn e ti) Dn. Kiii ' (,m t Niiivi: I ; l. 1 111 It. Nn lo- nfnr tit 1 i,nV it-'-. Miirteloiisi ures. Tn iiti-e 1 id f-' hi t i'i il bo! tie free. Dr. blllie.f'll Arch St., I'llllil , l'n. Mr. Wlii-Iow'-i Sent h.ng synipfori 'biblreii I'll blng, sot 1 ens t he k 1: 11 is. nil m is I n ll.on ma -t.oa, iiihiy 1 paiuuure Hiud t ol 11 . :."'- u I, . Gladness Comes With n better tinilcrstatidiug of th transient, ii:M tire of the tnatiy physf icnl ills which vanish bob re pn'mer ef fort s gent le IT, rt s pleasant cllorta rightly directed. There Is comfort in the kt'iowled'j tlint fsti many forma ot tsickness nre ted tine to nnv aetunl dia ensc, but simply t) n roti-d Ipatcd condi tion ot the system, which the pleasant family laxative, ."syrnpof I- ms. prompt ly removes. That Ik w hy it Is the only remedy with milll-nisof families, and Is everywhere esteemed so bi;:hly by all w ho'valuo good health, its beneficial rlfects are due to I he f ltd, that It Is thJ one remedy wlil.-h protnutes internal cleanliness, without, debilitating tho orrans on which it nets. It is therefore nil important, in order t get itsbeno ficial elTeets, to nolo xvhen you pnr chase, that yml have the ponuino article, which is ma nu fad tired by the Oil 'forma Fig Syrup Co. only, nnd bold by all rep Utalde tlrug rits, Jf in the ei'i'iyment of pool health, ntnl the system is rerular, tin n laxa tives or other rctncili 's are tu t needed. If alllictcil w itli any aefieil ilisi use, 011a may be cuimicti-l,' I t' 1 1 he line t sli illful physicians, lo:' if in peed of a laxative, then one sin in id h live t he be st, and with the well-inform e, every w here, Svrnpot ' nr st.niils hii'bc -t nn I i ; tuott largely Used and ifives most "t-nei 'll sat isf action. r n 1 flDlSltl :,n 1 u m-'jv h 'I e P k soni UllUlil ' 1 M.W m .. a '111ta.na s d Si ft Tt i ft Si si a i t i d si r"rt-, .1 ' . "The North Pole made use o'i 'u. ".s e A r.s A AJ A AJ o&Wt! I 0 IIS tmAh I 1'3 W Always at the front and wherever " BATTLE AXTT gees it is the S biggest thing in sight. It is as re- S markable for its fine flavor and quality as for its low price A 5 cent piece f, of " BATTLE AX" is almost as g large as a 10 cent piece of any other Q equally good tobacco. & rTTI 'frriX7i uTflV I I it n Am IB V k n , 1T "Wash us with Pearline! "That's all we ask. Save un from that dreadful nilildnq; It's wearing; us out ! "Wc want Pearline the original washin-roinpound the one that has proved that it can't hurt us Pearline! Don't experiment on us with imitations! We'd rather be rubbed to pieces than eaten up." .! VERY FAIKR IN THE i'ORTII CAN MAKE MORE MONEY IN THE MIDDLE SOUTH. Its ran maVo twii- - tmn-li. Mr can ri ,il ,,r' l,rm (srin and ,-1 isl, r a- ihhmv ,-r ferhla lU'Olt-t dl'WII liri'r. M H hll Hill In (.inn. I.,r hk I,, SMIl ., I . . .... ...... ol Inrin Nu ih-"Hciil. .Xrl lo-i- in, . h,,l ii,,r i I.I , liu ) i-' I n-lil . N --r . Is-i n I m imn - si r . .lulnn ." '" lf.V"0ai .eei-:r. wi-lla I, r It I.I. i iciC'll,. n,,,l a-. l ll,, ,,i,. l,- u Saul l, li U a i,ltai.iira In iu to aniinrr iliriu, NOI TIIUKN III.I1I;s:KK:U.V LAM! ( lltlPAW, Muiiervillc, 'iVuu. "A aood Tale Will Bear Telling Twics." Use Sapclio ! Use SAPOLJO.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers