V . ' M ST a . . j Mnm or nooai 7b ttronir and -ora wha ih iDKv "w oodls Sarsaparilla lbt bft-ln fuct ! OneTrna Blood Purifier, sod's Pills are the ontv pills to tnk with Uood'a Sarsaparilla, THE CATARRU KEMEDI Li Hat Made Ur. Ilsrtraaa Famons. here re m towns la the United States Lhioh the fame of Fe-ru-na has not spread tiBafdiio? remedy for catarrh. Those ,'e who havo been eured by It, of this f . 11- i . IllOUS BtKi supposedly lucuruuis uisoaso. Li.l the ula 1 news to tneir irionds. it nas L jfiatly forty years slneo Pe-ru-na Wan Tuqul-h this dreadful disease and all Ink these years Its oures are unnuin U, It Is now an undiluted faot that L-oa will cure catarrh, and thousands ot Ule are yearly adding their testimony to train of this assertion, ureal IS mo joy that household, one of whose members bwa f.vllng slowly biifore tholr eyes, bl'a-ru u i with it undevlailng surety L -a hack health to the wuk body. . . ...... i i. t . r. u.irtmau s i.uusi uojk on oainrrnai Vara Is now finished, and will be gent to any address for a short timo by the hi-na vrux juuuuiuciuuujr company, Ubus, Ohio. LttrrallK'. txn of CascaroK enndy ca f.k,nut iivor aud bowel regulator made. - Y proportion of blooj to the total boy lit UllOIll out) lO ie:i. Xo.To.Hnc for Klfty Outs. LnrU.l)iilriin I. Why not let N i-To-Hao Nts or remove your lustre lor mincco? Ivs irnia'V. mikes hi in a niiii manhood. k cimruulieu. iai ccuu aua ji.iu, ul all .Us. incle microbe can become tlio parent of B.ouy.OOO.OOO offspring In Hi hours. )onbt Dispelled. netliiH'S a horrible, doubt conies V uie ami I can't believe that you me more than you did your llrst t In all of the four years that wo U together she never wore a wnlst hooked up ou the shoulder, bcenuso didn't daro to ask me to fustett It lier." id he was never doubted again. land Leader. Feathered VentrlloaiiUta. hiltliologlsts assert that some birds, lally sparrows, thrushes and roI. have vcntrllonulsil powers. Birds. ki surprised In Biiiglug, will bo al and then give forth a faint sonc seems to come from a distance. L-n the singer may be actually not bcr than ten feet away. UIE DRESSES AVELL." HER CLOTHES OFTEN COVER A LIVING DEATH. T Is the hlirlnn of Men' Worship, I Women Vlo With Kaoh Other to te Tliruiselvei Attractive. remark, "She dresses elegantly,'' very common one in this age of th and prepress. paten vie with eaeh other iu mak ing themselves at tractive, for men nrtmiro a stylishly dressed woman. Hood clothes add to the charms of the woman in per fect health, but arc ill-befitting thofco who through ignor ance or care leshiuss havo suffered tho inroads of fe male diseases to stamp them ns physical wrecks. It is unfortunate, but true, 'that some physi cians allow women to suffer needlessly, be cause man can rork from theory, and at best only i, w iiiioui removing the cause. '1 is nbundant thut Lvdia. E. lam's Vegetable Compound re s tho cause, gives strength to the tned organs, viirorous health to f stem, and therefore beauty to i-'eaml form. I'inkhum, Lvnn. Mass.. trl.wlltr p. free of cliargc all letters. one of tho results : reo months ago, I w roto you a GOSPEL KESSAGB. SabjMt: "X Farmer's Counsel." Tiitt MSeek Itlro that raafceth fhe aevea tan and Orion." Amos v., 8. ing my troubles, which 'uflaintuation of tho womb au.l t- I had not seen a well day 1110 birth of my second child, 1 affo. I had spent hundreds of lor doctors nnil nnli.lo. f 'h pains as 1 endured. M v back ' feet and limbs were swollen, w as almost lmT.iWn. M could not walk any distance. wy?Ur, Bnswer to ny lttcr. ('lowed i n , . ' IW.i. v J"ur advice, favehee,, using Lydia E. Pink- -u.1,,, u, for thrc0 nionthgi n work all dar Wit.llf.nf. rn in irocoaimcnded tho Compound to miiu giauiy rccoin It to all n-ilfnon ..... M with female troubles.-LynU FrmjSt , Urccnsburg I'a. ! t a 7 T . mil ri ''If- Tmi ri A oountry farmer wrote this text, Amos of Tekoa. He plowwl the enrtli and threshed the eram by a nw threshlni maoliine just tnventeJ, as fonnsrly the ratlin trod out the grain, lie gathered the fruit of the ayea more tree and scarlfll It with an Iron comh jutit before It was irettini; rtpe, as it was nec essary and cnttomary In tnat way to tnko from It the bitterness. Me was the son of a poor shepherd and stuttered, out before th tammerina'rustlc the rhlllstines and Syrians and Phamluians and Moabites and Ammon ites and E lomlies and L r.iellto tri'mtile 1. Moses was a law River, Daniel was a prinee, Isaiah a eoartlor and liavid a klug, but Amos, tho author of my text, was a peas ant, and. as might be supposed, .nearly nil his parallelisms are pastoral, his prophecy full of the odor ot new mown bay, and th rat'le of locusts, and tho rn nbUi ot oarts wilh sheaves, sad the roar ot wild beasts de vonrlmt the floe Ic while the shepherd eamo out in their defence. Ho walehtid the herds by day, aud l y niuht liiliublieil a booth made out of ouihes, so that through these branches he could wo the stars all night lonf, and was more familiar wi'h thn-n than we who bavo tight roofs to our housns ami hardly ever see the stars except among the tail briolt chimneys of the grout towns. Out at seasons or tho year when tho hetds were lu special danger ho would slny out in the open Held all through thn dnrknesi, his only shelter tho ciirlaln of the night heaven, with tho ftellnr embroideries and silvered tassels ot lunar light. What n life of solitude, all alon with his herd! Toor Amos! And at Vi o'cloek nt night hark to the wolf's bars, aud tho lion's rour, and tho bear's growl, an 1 tho owl's te Whit, to-wlio, and the serpent's hbs us lie unwittingly steps, too near while moving through t'w) thieket!-! 8n Amos, like other hnritHinen, got the hnblt of stil lying tho map of the heavens becaun it was so muoh of the time spread out before him. He notlnud soino stars a Ivunn ng nnd oih rs reaodinu. Ho associated their dawn an I setling with cortaiu s-ascmsof tho year, lie had a pootie nature, and ho r a I night by night, and mouth by month, and year liy year, tho poem of the constellations, divmity rhytlimle. But two rosettes of stars especially nttraetvd his attoui ion wlillo seated on the grouud or lying on Ills back under tho open seroll of the imd-nlglit heavens I he Pleiades, or seven stars, and Orlou. Tnn former group this rustlo prophet associated wilh spring, ns it rises about tho 1st of May. Tho latter ho associated wilh tho winter, as It cornea to tho meridian In Janua'y. The riulados, or seven stars, connected with all sweetness and Joy; Orion, tho herald of the tempest. Tho uno.euts wore the more apt to study the physiognomy nnd juxtaposition of the heavenly bodies because they thought thoy had n special influence upon tlmenith, null perhaps they were right If tho moon overf low hours lilts and lets down tho tldoi of the Atliiutio ocean an I the eleetrln storms in tho suu. by all so entilla admission, affect the earth, why not tho stars huvo propor tionate olToetr And them are some things which, muko mo think that it may not have boon all super stltution which conuocted tho movements aud appearance of the heaveuly bodies with great moral events on earth. Did not a meteor run on evangelistic orrand on the first Christmas nUht nnd designate the rough cradle of our Lord? Did not the stars lu their course light against 81sera? Was it merely coincidental that bo ore tho dtruc tlon of Jerusalem the moon was blddou for twelve oonsccntlvo n'ghts? Did it merely happen so that a nowstir appeared in con stellation Cnssiopeln, and then disappeared just before Charles IX of Franco, who wa respousinio ior mo nt. n irtnoiomow mas sacre died? Was it without slgnllloance that In tho days of tho It imnn Emnnrnr Justinian war and famine were preceded by mo uiuioess oi .uosun, wni jii ior nearly n year gave no mora light than tho moon. nl. though there were no clouds to obscure It? Astrology, after all. mny have been some, thing more than a brilliant heathenism. Ko wonder thut Amos of tho text, having reard these two anthems of the stars, put down thostout, rough staff of the herdsman ainl took iuto his brown hand anil cut and knotted lingers the pon of a prophet and ad vised tho recreant people of his time to re turn to God. saying, "rtuek him that maknth the seven stars an I Orion." This command, Which Amos gave 785 years B. C. Is lust as appropriate for us, 18j7 A. D, In the llrit place Ainos saw. as we must ice, that the Ood who mado tho Pleiades aud Orion must bo tho Clod of order. It was not so much a star here aud a star there that Im pressed the inspired herdsman, but seven In one group ami seven In nnottier group, lie saw that night after night and season ntter season, nnd decade after decade, thev Inn! kept stopof light, each one In its own place, a M.-lorliood never clashing and never contest ing precedence. From the limulleslod called tho lMeiades the -'suven daughters of Alias," and Virgil wrote In his 'VKueld" of "stormy Orion," until now. thev hav observed the ordor established for their coming aud go ing; order written, not In manuscript that they may be pigeou-holed, but with the hand of tho Alaiiinitv on the dome of the stv. ho that nil Nations may read it order, pcrjht ont order, sublime order, omnipotent order. What a sedative to you nnd me, to whom communities and Nations sometimes seem going pollmoll, nnd the wor-d ruled by some fiend at haphazard, and iu all directions mnU administration! The (lod who keeps seven Worlds in right circuit for 0000 years can certainly keep all the affairs of liilividuals and Nations aud continents in ailjustui 'iit. Wo bad not honor fret mm-h, for tho peas ant's nrgumeiit of l ho text was right. If Hod enn take euro of the seven worlds of the J'leiiules and the four ohief worlds of Orion, lie can probably take care of the one world we Inhabit. So I feel very much as my father felt one day whou wo wen going to'the country mill to get a grist ground, nn i I, a boy of sewn years, sat In the buck part of tho wagon, and our yoke of oxn ran away with us, and along a labyrinthine road through tho woods, so that I thought every moment we would bo d'l-hed to pieces, nnd I madon terrible oulery of fright, and my father turned to me with n face perfectly c.iln an I salrt; "Do Witt, wh;it are ou crying alicnuV I guess we cnu ride as last us the oxen can run." And. mv hearers, whv should woo uffr ghted and lose our equilibrium iu the swill movement or worldly events, e-peeiaiiy when wo are assure l that it Is not a y.ike of unbroken steers that lira drawing us on, hut that order and wuso government are In the yoicer Jn your occupation, your mission, your spoero, ao tno best you can nuit taeu irust to uo.t, and If things are all mix! und ills' quieting and your brain is hoc and your nenrt sick get some on- to go out with you into the starlight and point out to you the Pleiades, or, h tier than that, get luiosomo observatory, and through the telescope see farther than Amos with the nakul eye coniii namely, 2u0 stars lu the I'leindes, end that In what is called the sword or Odoa n cm is a nebula computed to be two irilllou two hundred thousand billion or times larger than the sun. Oh, be at peace with the tied who made lhat aud coutrola all that, the Wheel of the ronstellailons turning In the Wheel of galaxies for thousand of years Without the breaking of a cog.or the slipping of a band, or tne simp of an axle. For your J 'acidity and comfort through t te Lord esus Christ I charge you, ".Ser-k Hint taut mnketh the seven iarsuutl Orion." Again, Amos saw, as we must se, lant the Hod who made these two groups of the text was the Ood ol Light. Amos saw that Cod was not satisfied with making one star or two or toree stars, but Ho masessoveu, and. having finished t-nt group or worlds, makes another group group after group. To the l'leludes Ho adds Orlou. It sueais that Ood likes light so we'd tht He) keeps mat luff it. Only one being la the universe tnowa the I'aiiatlcsot solar, lunar, stellar, meteorle creations, and that is th Creator Himself. And they have all been lovingly christened, eaeh one a name as distinct as tho names of your children. -He telleto. the number of the stars. Ha oalleta them all by their names." The seven Tleiades had names given to them, and tU-y are Alcyone, Herope, tano. Electra, Sterope, Taygote and Mala. But think of the blillnus and trillion of daughters of starry light ihat God calls by name as they sweep by Him with beaming brow and lustrous robe! So f ind is God of light nstural light, moral light, spiritual light! Again and again Is light harnessed for symboltzatlon Christ, the bright and morning star; evangelization, the daybreak; the redemption of Nations, sun of righteous ness rising with healing iu His wings. Oh. men and women, with so many sorrows aud sins and perplexities, if you want light of comfort, light ot pardon, light ot gto luess, in earnest prayer through Christ. "Seek Ilitu that maketh the seven stars nnd Orion." Again. Amos saw. as we must eo. that tho Ood who made these two nrchipclugops of stars must bo an unchanging God. There had been no change In the stellar appearance in this her tsman's llfetitn-, and bis father, a shepherd, reportet to him that there had boon no ohaugo In his lifetime. And these two clusters hang over the celestial arbor now just ns they wore the llrst night that tl.ey slioueou the E leuia bowers; the same as when tho Eyptians built the pyramids from the top ot which to watch them; the same as when tho Chaldeans en'cuhted the eclipS' s; tho sumo as when F.lihu, according to the book of Job. went out to study tho aurora boreal Is; tlio sanit) under Ftolomaio system and Ooporulcan system; tho same irom uaustnenes to l-ytlmgoras aud from r.vthag.iras to II rschel. Hurolv a change less Ood must have fashioned tho rieiado and Orion! Oh, what an anodvuo amid the ups and downs of life and the flux and reflux of the tides of prosperity to knov that wt have a changeless Hoi, '-tlies,idtiyc.-terlay, to-day and forever!" Xerxes garlanded an I knighted fie ofecrs man of his biat iu the morning an I hanged him In (he evening of the same day. Fifty thousand people stoo I around til l eo'ii niii of tho National Capitol shouting th. midlives hoarse nt the Presidential inaugural, and in four months so great were me antipathies that a rutllati's pistol In a, Washington depot exprossiU tho sentiment nt many a ilKip polntod office seeker. The world nils in lis chariot and drives tandem, and tie- horse alien I Is Iltt7.a, and the horse behind i. Ana thema, l.or I I'obliatii, in King Jnm-s's time, was applauded and hud :lj.t)0!) a, year, bat was afterward execrate I and lived on scraps stolen from tlio royal kitchen. Alexander thoGieat utter death re natned unbiiried for thirty days b cause no on wont I do the honor of shoveling him under. Tho Duke o Wellington refused to have his iron fenen ' niendod becauso it hu t boon broken by an in- iiinate. i populace in Home hour ot political excitement, and ho left it lu ruins that men might learn what a llekVi tiling is human favor. "Hut the meiey of the I.or l ts from everlasting to everlasting to them Hint fear Him, and His righteousness unto the chil dren's children of such as keep Ills coven ant, ntul to those who remember His eom niandmeuls to do thorn." Tills moment "eok Him that maketh the seven stars and Orion." Again, Amos saw, as wo must see, thai the Ood who made those two beacons of the- ori ental night sky must be a Go I of love and kindly warning. Tho Pleiades risim; In mid sky said to all tho herdsmen mid sip-pherds and husbandmen, "Come o,:t nnd enjoy the mild went her aud cultivate your gardens and Holds." Orion, coming In winter, warned them to prepnre for tempest. All navigation was regulated by those two constellations. The ouo sail to shipmaster and crew, "Hoist sail for the sea mid gather merch in- diso from oilier lunds." Hut Orion was the storm signal nud snld, "ltnef sail, make things snug or put Into hurlmr. for the liiorl Crtnes are gutting their wings out." As the F.elade weretuosweet evangels of the spring, Orlou was the warning prophet of tho winter. Oh, now I got tao beat view of God 1 ever had! Thero are two sermons I never want to proven tno one that presents God so kind, so indulgent, so lenient, so imbiwlo that men may do what they will against Him, and fracture His every law, aud put the pry of their Impertinence and rebellion under His throne, find while they tiro spitting la His face ami stub)) ngnt His heart He takes them up In His arms and klses their Infuri ated brow and ohoek, saying, "Of such Is the kingdom of heaven," The other kiud of sermou I never want to preach is tho one that represents Go I as all lire and torture and thundercloud, and with redhot pitchfork tossing the human race Into paroxysms of Inllullo agony. The sermon that 1 am now proaorlug believes In a God of loving, kiiid'y warning, tho God ot spring nnd Winter, the God of tho Pleiades aud Orion. You must remember that the winter is just as importune us me spnn j. I, it one winter pass without frost to kill vegetation and Ico to bin I the rivers an I snow to enrich our fields, and then you will havo to enlarge your hospitals and your come cries, "A green Christmas maues a fat graveyard," wad Ihe old proverb. Storms to purify the air. 'f horaiometor nl three degrees below r.oro to tone up the system. December ami January just as Important as .May ami June, I tell you wo 0"o I thesiorms or life as much as we do the sunshine. There are more mini ruined by prosperity than by adversliy. Il we ha lour own way in llle, before this we woul i have been impersonation of cellL.li uessaiitl worl Illness uu I dis.-usting sin and puffed up I'.nlllwu would have been II o,liiliis Cannr, who was mado by sycophants to be. liev that he was divine, an I tuo freckles on his face were said to be as the stars of the llrinumeiit. One of the swiftest transatlantic vovneos madeono summer by tho F.lrurlu was be cause she had a stormy wind abaft, chasing her from New York to Liverpool. Hut to those going In the opposite direction the storm was a buffeting an I a hindrance. It Is n La I tiling to have a storm ahead, push ing us back, but if we be God'- child ron nnd aiming toward heaven the storms ot life will ouly chase us tho sooner Into the harbor. 1 am so glad to believe Hint the monsoons, typhoons and minimis and siroccos of the bind and sea are not unchained man ncs let loose upon Ihe earth, but are under Id vim. supervision! I am su glad that the God ol 1 tlio seven stars Is also the Co I oTOr on! It was out of Dante's suffering came the sub lime "Diviiui Cjiu i.e lin," mi I out of Jolin Mlllon's bliu lne-w came '-Para Use Lost." an ! out of miserable inllilol ntt.i -k euuie tlie "Hridgewa er Treatise" In fuvor of Christi anity, an 1 out of Daviil-scxilecame thesongs 'A coiisolati Si, and out ot the MiiTcrings of Christ en. nu the po-sibilliy ot ihe world's re dempt.oii, anil olit (f your bereavem 'tit your persecution, your poverties, vour m's fuiluues, may yet eumeuii eternal heaven. Oh, what a mercy It is I hat In tne text and all up and down the II bio God Indue. -s us to lookout toward other worlds! Hlble us. tronomy iu Gmiesis, lu Joshua, in Job, lu the Psalms, lu the propu.-ts, major and in nor; in Ht. John's Aoocalvnse. nranileiulv saying: "Worlds! Worl .! Worlds! u't ready for thorn'" We have a nice little world here that we Mick to, as though losing that we lose all. We are afraid of lulling off this lit 'lo raft of a world. We are afraid that some meteorin Iconoclast will some night smash It. and we want everything to r volvu around It an I aredisapp.iliitud when wo II ml that it ruvolv-s around the suu in. stead of tli j sun revolving around it. What it fuss wo makii a bo iu this little bit of a world, Its ixioteuco only a short lime lie. twoeii two spasms, the piroxysin by which It whs liur.H i from choas Into orJcr and tim paroxysm ot its demolition. And i nm g ad Hi it so many t xts ea'l us to loon off to other woilds, many of them Inrgerani giandnr and morn n-jplen lent. "Look there," sasJob. "at M.iziroth un l Areturils end Ins sous:" "Look there." under ChrUtly pilotage. Do not let ns bos i Kiiaiea arjout our own itolng off this lime Mrgo or sloop or eanal boat ot a world to get on soma Great Esstern ot tho heavens. Do not let ns persist In wanting to stay In this barn, this she,!, this outhousot a world, when all the King's palaces already oeruple t by many of our bet friends are" swinging wile open their gate to let us in. When I read, "In My Father's house are many mansions," I do not know but that each world is a room, and ns many rolirus as there are worlds, stellar stairs, stellar gal leries, stollur hallways, stel'ar w'ndows, stellar domrw. How our departed fi.ends must pity us shut up la theio cramped apart, msnts tired if we walk fifteen mile, when they some morning, by one stroke of whig, can make circuit ot the whole stellar system and bo back in time for matins! Perhaps youder twinkling constellation is tho nsi. dence of the martyrs; that groun of twelvo luminaries may bo the celestial homo of the apostles. Perhaps that ste-p of light is tiia dwelling place of angles cherubic, serai 'tile, nrchangclic. A mansion with as many rooms as worlds, and all their will lows illuminated tcr festivity! 0!i, how this widens nnllirtsand stimtt. lnt.-s our expectation! How little u makes tho present, nnd how stupendous It makes tho future! How it consoles us abou. our pious dead, that, Instead of being box-d up mill under the ground, have the range (, as many rooms iu th.ire are worlds mid wel come everywhere, for It is tho Father's house, iu which tin re are many mansions! O Lord Goi or t lie seven stars and Orion, how rau 1 endure tne transport, the ecstasy, ot such a vision? 1 mn-t obey mv text and seek Him. I will seek Him. I seek Him uow, for 1 call to mind that It is not the ma terial universe that is most valuable, but the spiritual, and Hint each of us pm n soul worth more I haa all the worlds which tlio inspire I herdsman saw from Iks booth m the hills of 'IVk.-iu I had studied it bofor hut ti e cnthe Ira! ot Cologne, Germany, never Impresse.! mo as it did one sum-iier It is. ad uiitoUy the Crando-i tl ithi slru 'lur" in tho world, os foiiudati.ui laid in only a few war "ng. conpb'te l. Joi-e than I! Id years in billl l ing! Al, F.ur.ip ) tac I bir its c"iistrii"iloii. lis c un p"i ol tlM .Mug!, with precious stones enough to purchase n king t un. Its ohaj.i l of St. Ague.-', with imM"rpn sot palming. It'i spire springing .'ill foe; in'olle heavens, lis stain" I gliiHi Hi, i chorus iw all n -h colors. Slatu -K on 'it- 'ling th i pil'ars and encircling nil. Siat.ios abi.ye statues, until sculpture can do p. i more, but f.iltrs and bills ba -k against carve l slnl .s a'i dinvn mi pavement over which the king-, an I pic ois .if the earlli have walked tije.uiiiwsiomil. Nave nnd ul,!c and transept and portals combining tlio splendors of sunrise and sunset. Interlaced, interfo'ialed, inlerooluanie grandeur. As 1 Hbmd outside, looking at th" double range of Hying butt resound the b.iosti.f pinna dos, higher and higher nnd higher, unlil 1 almost reeled froni diz;; less, I ex"!alnied: "Great doxolo.-y lu .sloii"! !. '.on prayer of many Nation-!" Hut while stauillngtlioro I saw a poor man enter and put down his pael; mid knee, be side his burden on the hard lloor of that cathedral. And tears of deep emotion came Into my eves a' I mild to tnys df, "There is a soul worth more than all the material sur roundings. That man will live aiterthe hist pinnacle ha fallen, and no! one stone ot all that cathedral glory shall remain un crumbled. He Is now Liu: irus In rags and poverty and weaiiness, b it immortal, and a son of the Lord Cod Almighty. Aud the prayer he now offers, though 'mulct many superstitions, 1 helluva (led will hear, and among tho apostles whose sculptured lorais stnnd In the surrounding niches lie will nt last bn lifted and into the presence or that Christ whose sufferings are represented by the oi ui-illx before which he hows mid be raised iu dii-tlmo out of all his poverties Into llle glorious home bill t Ur bun mid built for us by 'Him who iniiketh the seven star and Orlou.' " VIEWS Or BIMETALLISTS. Fi uiiee and Conn an y Snld lo i:e Supporter ul the Movi'iiicnt. Tiie February number of n prominent English magazine will contain tin important review of tlie bimetallic, situation in kuropo by the lenders of the movement in England, France an 1 Germany, mid arranged Hpeelnlly in view of the visit to Europe ot .Senator IM ward O. Wolcolt, of Colorado, who is now III Pari. M. F.dmond d'Arlols, Secretary of the French llimetalllo League, contributes n careful aillcleoii tliosltuutmu and the steady growth ot the movement iu Trance. In it ho declare there is no doubt that tln'Fr h Government nud a great majority of Hp' French Pni iiament are In fuvor oi bluii tallism. Ir. Otto Areiiiit, a menil uml the H.'iclislni! and of the Prussian Diet, Honorary Seen!, lary of the German liimotnllie League, le. oiares ii. at oniy j.ugianii eioes tlio way. Germany, lie a ids. Wi participate lu aeou. terence called by any oilier Power. Should n conference be siiuiuioue.l, says Dr. Ar.'ii'll, the Ger.iiau r.arll.iiiient can be reibiil upon to be its strong supporter. Lord Aldoiihani. who Is u Director of toe Hank of Lnghind, say: " I here 1 pi, doubt that l'riinc! and the fulled Suites by agree. in : together could themselves u ainlain n 1.1 uielallb! law. bat, for tho greater certainty and eoisildoin'n, it would bo n asonable that they .should a-i; f.ir I'.nglau I and German' e.i- ipi raliou." PHOTOGRAPHIC TtLESCOPt. Map lining Made Ii y HI rum ol the ;rii. 1 iislrioneot nt Asniulpa, 1'i ru. Word has just heeti received from Proftl sor llailey ut the Uarvart O scrvatory, lu Ari'ipilpa, I'eru. of the entire success o( the work doiio thero with the Hruce photo, graphic teles ope. This te'eseope, designed by Professor l'lekoring, has au aperture of sixty cenumeire.s nu I a local length or 313.8 contiuv'tr.'s. It was constructed by Alvah C nrk A Son, mi I then sent to Peru, where It was mutinied nnd use I by Professor Haib y. With this telescope the llnrvar I Obsorvatury was preparing to Issue a map of tho entire sky, Init as thu Astro-phutograplib! Congress has undertaken the :i'no task, the Harvard Observatory will online lis work to smaller parts of th a sky, such lis the .dagebaule clouds. A ii'i nbor or Ihe completed plate.; hay,) ! ju-t arrived iu C ambri Ige nud nr being ex I amliied w.th inueh Interest by the local astronomers. The Imago nro formed of black dots on a white background. I'lnles have also arrived of the spe.-tra of very faint s;ars photograph".! with prisms I'lajod over toe olih.-el-lass of Hm iiei.ruikeut. UNITED STATES CATTLE LEAD, tiilcii-st.nc KISui,. liiip.irbilbiiiH 1ito I.iikUihI Diir.n h:h. Tiie Chler of the Il.irean of Auliu:'.! In.iiie lrr the Agifcultiiral ib-p iriiiient, Wash, lugton, i u receipt ol a circular from u co.iimissiou agent of London, giving the toial number of citUenud sheep revel vo l at Deptlor.l, England, during the year Js.d. ami tho average prices, beside the prices ou each market nay lor entile from the United Slates, South Ainer.ca and Caunda, respec tively. The total call lo receive! iroin Hie three section were as follows, with the aver- u.,-e prious iu p iniiiei per p iilu i; uiimii niacn., cattle, H'i.'Jij, p iiind; 8h), Vi.b'Jl, J.'Jl p r noun I. Souili amnriea, entile, i'jfj, 4.J.J pouii I; sheep. il ll,02N, 5.3ii per poiin I. Miniidii. emtio, yii.sij, 4 7i i,er poualx sll'-ej), :n2:,s, S.S0 p -t pound. The details pr isent a condition most grati fying to the' United Stu i-s catlPi growers. CoimuuoiiHly throughout the" V"ar Uirllcl States catilu have co.iimatiJul "the higho.it prices. ' . Companion In Aaiotlen. A student at WUllaaiatowa Collect tad bu inarrttd short time previous to entering tho college, and was led to fear that this fact might debar him from enjoying some of tho privileges of the Institution. Accordingly, In a great auto of perturbation, be called to sec l'reldent Hopklus. After some con versation the young niau at last man aged to stammer, with a crimson face, apropos of something eutlroly Irrele-' rant: "II nm a married man!" "Ah." said President Hopkins, smiling at him with great benignity, "o am I." And there the stud-nfs trouble ended. The Meaning of It. Very often we give the wrong meaning to a word and thereby make serious mlv.akvs. For luslnnce, the true and literal meaning of the word rheumatism Is "aches or p ilus of themusdis. bonesnn l joints nf tho human body." It I mi neral mi l not specific. Also the word reli ( does ln.t mean cur. lleliel may be but a .-hurt cessation (, pain. Hut when wosnyS:. .1 icobsOi! cures rheumatism promptly and "-ri;anetit!y, we n can it eou piers pain ipncklv with no return of K, un less tils stiller r gives cause lor a new attack, und I hen IUwill cure again. It matters nut whether it ischronlc, iieuloor lullamioatorv, It will 'lire. That is Mire, l o wuro of It. too llewnrd. 8100. Tlisrsadorsnr this paper will bs plessed te ! 'mn that then, ii nt least one ilr-d-d iPsskk that so eaee lei iirnu bIiIo iu t urn in ml m it;e. and tint is Csiarih. Hull's C'tnh oine is th on!v pesilhs iiirn known in ti, medlcul fralcr oti. Catnrrli being a con .tim. lion it discus , r.-.u res a ionir.iitiou.il tn nt ii'iit. Itad'sriitni'rh Jeru is lai .-a intrriui.lv, i d iiirduo ill on tn bio,, I ,.,d ,,,,. si; .'! of t ho K,.r, t IirrxUv ib-Mroviio- ie oaMdiiti..ti.f Km .l;-s... and giving In.'. a- ..i-'its:rrn:th b, building no i onsi ,ti ;,, Hoi assisti,,,. i. runs iu lining iis Mori;. ' l.r prie.r,eloi s b u ,. .. ,;i. 'i la, i h in ii o irni .vo J.'ir. is Hoi' I 'i i (,r,,.r (ia llunili. d !i.,ltHrs ' -tie ,n.i-niiUi I O s lo I'lire. r-Mli.l li.r Im soaalble. Ce They say there is a 'skeleton li" the Ilamiltons' closet. She Bosh! They live la a flsju Brooklyc Life. ' . , J!?.",!:'"0 0i t,v t aCsacaret, caaujr cathnxiu-; cure KUarantee I; loo.. I-io. BUCKINGHAM'S DYE For the Whiskers, Mustache, and Eyebrows. In one preparation. Easy to apply at homo. Colors drown or black. Tint favorite, Iicoju-.l' II P. 11 .11.1. I I'n, l'r i-' m, X S. .1 !" :. ln....i, sen: Gorit'omeii o 3 catif jctorv. U h is. N. i I REVOLVER FREE. WATCH FREE Idooihcr nrt.clrs. ttistiiollnnr). b'radourotlrt I I" I . if l-'si im nii b'. ,! . On rNr.y , l f-o'd l,Y Ibll ee Huli a Fduou I V ITSst..ppi'.lt'. bis art. r Pr i . . Nr.m k IlKsini.i.i is, . s, ml in 1 r. lv s.l.lu III I,, I ?, .1, II, M , I M, .1 11 ll'ii I .''I v ., -I t '('' . ' 1 1 " .. i Ii. -l y. '"' - ' i .-Li i. s . i. . " ' " !-. t J''P ..:.....' ' I . A-j-l r-s.s'a; , i. o . .n i . I,,:,, ,.:, ,.,. " ' ' ' f" .: ,' i . ii I,. ; ..:v',:;',', ,;;';;;'; . ; A. ..." . U INVfON .U !.. II.," i nisi.!,,,1 ..:tdo, o. atis tlie 1 r-t. ;! p'Cei'tnrnt'v i un d. No - ' id' I 'II. K I.IM.'s I ,;S IT "" M: nl Is, HI ,, r,.;,t. c,'. d An li !., I uiia., i'a. Mrs. Wlnsl. Ii'iiliin.r fn tlon, allajs p l SO(,;(p J.y i,s i no eains, ,. don iiili ores w ind t olic ! I" l :1 i . I .' sou's l-'.yi I :!i . .lo i lesu -uulri. Hrui..:ists Ur I- fori bildren s iiillau'l.ia , - 'O .iboltli . Tlioiiiti-"lliollle After pls;, '.'U. il hi I'iso lalu-tiorl, Pa., id u'in-n I! M I'll llle up. Ia:il. .. I M.O. Will- M SM'I Vitus' I i.i alio i aires. i'. nn" bottle Ur, iiriilur, I roilonia. 1'Vtiiht' N. S ('AsesnrTS silmulate liver, kidney Umcls. Mover s.cseu. weaken or grille nnd llle. t? YDUR A!AT W'T CiRCJiAd. E. KRAUECR bW. Mil fll.V, Pft. WEI I Dri,lill2 Madiis WLLL for any depth. I.me Imnrorrinri'l.. 4 11 dinner .llnlirra LOOMIS & NYMAN, Tiffin. Ohio! lui.d. D.J.L.STb.PHtM0 .11. LUiAr.o.i.oli lu. n 1IM f. r I IV M.r.st-l; Sell 'I I Ol'. f, I' is. H, III'! ;oi i ;i'i,im. , , . HOD M 1. .11 ll.,l.-,l , ,N, rk I'M 3 .'M 'l' ' kUti;i 1 1 );l X 'Hi ' If' I r 'H'-' 7 i r- a I I' " Im t- fa , jwmH r m t.iJ.1 -Am w A i'!ii!i'ii!;iii ivsiiliri"; in I). C, ;iss'.'iis tli.it In- si tJis.-n.-il tiniiocsiiiiii ;iiKi fil:i tisiiiss. Ik- Irii'd icnsuiii'il ui.iiiv plivsiti.ms Willi tlio linpc .f pt'ttiiKr curcil or i'i ii iviu'i, inn rvniims sirint-il t rclim- luin. AlU WOlllil Tslivct, N. '., V;isl'dni;ton, lor iii.niy yt':irs wilh i!ysu CVi'IV KllOW'll li'llU'dv, nt' tii i J :iikI I'lili'llV in k'l' tlli'.-i ; k'l l i' .1 llll nl l:kl U':is loili'il ill lii-s Minn lrli listless. ;is tliounh life v;ts sorii lv woith liviii"' w.ii .ilii jcti'il to tho ;kl ol TaeuLEs; iikI coikIikIoiI to trv them. ATI it t.ikitiL; lh.' lirst two or llirue In- wits siiipiisi J to fnul tin- ivlii'l' thi'V invo iiuilsoun lie Celt: IiIm- ;i new nun. I h- h.is in-ver hct-n without Rip.ms T;iIjij1..-s since, nor has he suffered since. ki:aso.s row i'si.(. 4 Walter Baker & Co.'s I Breakfast Cocoa. ilH : Il.vausc il i., absi'litU'Iv pure. . Iliv.iusc it is not nu.li hv Un- ;o i.ioil Iiutili i'naT', wliiih tliiinir.tis aiv u:. l Uivati c I'ciiis ul t-j iiiu-,1 ouhiv uie ii: Bi'ati'- ivl. It r. IH.iJl' l'V a niclli.P'.l wlii.-li preserve noimoii. ,l Ilk' iW'iulsitc n.i:ui-al ll.uur and n.r ui tin- hc.ins. Ikx-.iir.e il i', tin- iin);.t fsoiRimi.-a!, coMiiit; lc:s limn one cent a cup. lie sure that you iret thr (-cnulne arllilc mode by WAI.TCK nAKI.K A CO. I tit., lliinlicsiiT, iM. I slalillshcd I7S0. t per per says Ht. Jolin.. "at the moon uu.ler Christ's feel!" "fjio; there." miiv:i ' Lorn? Wlt fur an Kcllioe. josiiua. "at ttp sun etaii Iinir s'ld above I he only total oclips i vluble In En it uenu; "liO K i nere. savs .Hoses, ".it i m years to uonie ill Im in Hiu i me pirKiuiK iiimaineiii. "jj-juls I bore," ays A -nos, ihu hordsiuaii. "at the sewn stars and Orion:" Jio nc ct us he so sad ;lnud Violent lieitln In ISIHI. Thi.iv. wnfi 1 u..l1... 1... ...1..1.I. . ,L. about those who shove oil fro. n this wend i Cuiied t,cs last yiw. 10 -HiA-gH'WTTJrBSrT'' 23 so 1 ALL DRUGGISTS ABS0LUTEL7 nniRINTFFn ,rt c" asrtMriBitipno. runWts tim ioi llUJUllUllilll U 0 H H H I C L U .I,,. ,,.r r,iBor rrlnf.hol muNnulinlimlu. K...I I"""" miairi irrr. Ad. M nil. oil KKnr.ni iu., rnirmo, nnnirrsi. I an. , or sen lor. ''Say Aye V and'Ye Wer be Harried." Don't Re fuse All Our Advice to Use ii FOLIO