ra r X w Mil . Hi MM S3 KIM mil line I IruJ (snJ tii J It! i,r. Its i. J; i hs Fan ft :rd i lfc( ! W !01ll la turn I tH4 .be nii'S h 5. I' ifS ' ol ml tit' Hit tr. I. Tw lit In iheili nbfcisl lit M n Hi' ol I'H inn" IB. b nlllt llwurf lt.l!" ,rl. suit on in , oar 011 , Bodj I W"J lleit'l ,bul.t ifdl' -not 1 I not!' nsryl ....hull'1 Iiai. yDl" .fit 3 hat becom of the old-faah- theannjT ' WIM M M OwL i ) Mid to be the wisest of bird m be ksspt ,h r ! .,i mWkA Wura nn A ....I JJjklDf. he sciatica takes hold at . as If wisest who says nothing but keeps fL ud Mrs opea lor ths beet remedy, ":,u ,d knows tt may result la "Pr ''i i. the boot known remedy tor lta r('T. and permansot euro. It pene- JTt and p-rmanent euro. It pen. L7t0 the seat ot the exaruoiatiag pain, Slikff M eurM PreVBBt" whnt -..imfs happens tns OI surgeon i "a to rW of the torment The owl f.,.kai then acts quickly, and the sciatica clier should act promptly to arrest the """L, ( ibe disease and to restore the r b. ,h U8 ol ot iacoo uu to lit nat 11 eonuiu" Bew'e Tkltt Vaafftr On Hundred iMIars Reward for - i'a.rah thai cannot ha nnraul hr anr cw , - - - ' W""- v. j. urnni A Co.. Toledo. O. .... a.niUraianed. hare known F. J. Chaa JJL the it 1 yeare, and blie him per. Ki. houorbl in all butlntM Uaniartiuni S Moaaciallr abie to carry out any oblige. iZiMtobr A'r.T.f?i.,. .... Wlt Uniw- . r . . - , ,y.,.urrli Cure Is Uken Internally, aot. L iVmlIv uion the blouct and mucoun tur Gntrtrti rtem. Tenmlale Mat fr Wti.ip.mil Pill are the beat. au k - IVillnn Brinteln. a graduate stiulrnt of Johns Hopkins I'nlvvnilty of Haltiinore, uorfiwrwl a monoitmph as a tlienln for a Znt which li' exiwfts to rrceire next June. r . . r,tf ma Hiini..i'i lit. iiiHifirviir 'l. t v.l.r'iiiirv 12th. lKiT.V'hpii 2.1 of the .wi i n K biiilm men of Hultlmore met at the L.mf 01 rimii r.. ".- ....... - Lt..rwnv liic ...... ..... . ., ',M ho rpHtort'il. It whs at. this meet C, ti,,t tin- comimiiy was oriilzi'il whlrh H.Li. hnl It tliH tl (). K. K. Mr. H.'iz- Lttln's monograph takew up the liiwlory of K nail fmi" I'lHt nivrht until trarks were a-- .... . In l- Y i. I.. IbLVl 'I Im nMli nlvfrwrv nf thi B. & O. li. H. Co. was J-Vb- t.D- lith. 1 IITSntopiird f ret- an1 prrmaucntly rurrd. No i(trrlimtily'ine of I)H. Kl.lNK'H liliiAT ImVI KKSTOHEH. r rw irii ihfii.ii.i i rrni- t. Stud to Vr. KliPe.MlArt hXI., 1'hila., i'a. 1Mt.H'a PtirA fur riinaiimn. L io miffrrrrs of Atlinia.-K. I. Town- .D.H Mowaru, in., iuny t, mi. Jnrr try a 10e. box of Carret. the flnrat rnd bnwfl rirti'storever niailn. Io London each day 400 children are born, nl 2S0 enter scuooi ior me ursi nine. Vo.To.Bnc for Ftlty Cent. bf-rffftW cured. Why not let No-To-Itac ilteor remove your m-sire ior lonnccn .a mniier. makes henllh ami mniiluxxl. Irtrunruulecd. M cents auU Jl.W, at all twists. the total Income of the London hospitals Is ke upon IM), pounds a year, KEM1KKABLK 1EC0TIBT or CROFULA SWELLINGS i Our Boy's Neck Crew Larger and Larger il we bccHine nlurnioil. In May we pur. el abottle of llooil's SnrKiipnriila anil the .1 lectin taking It. We gave our son Huod'i iiirilis until tho sort- wns entirely hralcil. -now prrmaiieully cured." W. C. Kiika- L Mllobure, l'a. Remember lOOCl'S Carina bot in tset theOnnTrne Bluoil Purifier. Hl.'e Dill "ct hnrmoniously with UH III IIOOU L'a tiurhupurlUa. 340,000 INSTANT WEARERS. QUGLASS )HIE HH bbbbbbbbI m BBBBBBBl B a. WORLD. tor 14 yeiim tl.li Rlioe.hv mmtlntcilie, linn iliKtuiiwii ai VOIIIIlfUlul.!. IniloriMid by 0Tt I oihiooo Kt'SITra UK tll llt'Kt III Kilo, (It anU mniibllilv ot (t nt lilt.oo. It In iiiadu In nil the ll.t BHArKS nnii HJ li und of evry vailely lenther. One d'uler In a tonn inn fx..liia ftliil mlvrr. tlced In local aHr on racplpt of -em.uii. able oi-iipr. Writs for catalogue to W. I. IMM til.AS, Urorktoia, JUaaa. NSI0NS. PATPMTfi ri aimc" E'VSMORRIS, WASHINGTON, 0. ft CMTi " 0- V ailon iiraa! ,w wm, .jajuiikuiii eislBai, Uy. suiou llli'N i..i.i... . ... . . t ' "'' r Co.. Mi B'way, N.V. I N B lj 07 a La4y r flaapeet. Mew Terk, tratai aiaaala. From tht Couritr, Buffalo, JT. T. -Hint Lulu Btevena, daughter ot Oeorgf Jievena, the well-kaown blaoksmlth, ot Oa port, Niagara, County, New York, has iur prlsed her Beighbor oonilderabiy, by not dying flye month ago, when the phyloiana wld ah could aot lire. Tbla was quit a remarkable ease. The young woman, who la very well known, on aooount ot her musical ability, bad been a Tory healthy girl, until about one year ago, when she began to fail, aad grew ao pale and apparently bloodless and no weak that after a few months she was glrea up to die. Last winter a physioiaa wao was a visitor at Oasport met Miss Stevens, aad aeelnc hat emaciated condition, and bearing from the uuai doctors mat ine atseaae) was anaemia, prevailed on the girl's mother to make hei try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Dlreotlyahe commenced the treatment she beiran to mend, and now ainoe February, when she oBciatia io lane tnem, sne naa beoomo well and strong and the pluture of good health. Tho mother ot the girl. Mrs. Stevens, savs: 'Every one In Gasport knows that Pink Pills cured Lulu, and I feel very thankful that we heard ot them in time to save my lahll.ra. Ufa. ' Dr. Williams' Pink Mils contain. In won, densed form, all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerve. They are also a speciuo ior 'rououis peculiar to femnlee, such as suppressions, irregularities and nil forms of weakness. Tuny build up the blood, and restore the glow ot health to pale ami sallow cheeks. In men thev affect a radical cure In all eases arising Irom mental worry, overwork or excesses ot whoever nattira. Pink Pills are sold in boxes (never In loose bulk) at 50 cents a box or six boxes for at.bo, una may be bad of all druggists, or direct by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Sohenentaily, N. Y. OLDEST HOOSIER. Nat St ran (ho, of Engtleb, Intl., I 103 Years Old. One of tho oldest nion In the country la Nathaniel StrnuKbn, who lives in English, Ind. Mr. Stratighn la now nearly J 05 yours old, having reached the century murk on May 8, 180-!. "Uncle Xattlo," an he Is affectionate ly called by tho resident of English, WM boru In Franklin County, Ken. OLDEST MAX IX IXttlAXA. lucky. lie moved to Crawford County, Indiana, In lHltl and Is still occupying, with his grnuddatiKhtcr'a family, the house lie entered ut that time. The old gentleman bousU that ho has nevet worn a piece of cloth that wns not spun and worn by the hands of mother or wife; that tye. wa never In a lawsuit, pro or con, and was never a witness In a suit at law, and that he did not Und tho need of eyeglasses until he wns over 83, in Ills younger days Nathaniel Strauuhn was a hunter, and his old llliitlock mus ket occupies to-day a place of honor over the wide llrephice of his room while below It Im tiKH his modern ethot cuu. In his prime Mr. Slrauirhn weigh' ed 150 pounds, and now. at the advanc ed age of 10.1, weighs 100 pounds. The descendants of this venerable man aru reckoned at about 000. Power of the Press. "Well, they are at It again." remark- d a leading bookseller to-day. "Some tern has been going the rounds' of the iress about a rare old book being found In a garret, and telling of what tn enormous price was paid for It by t bookworm. I don't know that Is the ?asQ, but my moll chows it. Why 7 Well, every time such Item Is printed I begin getting letters from people all )ver the eouutry, who think they have i book worth a fortune or two. As a rule, not one of the books In a thon land they write about Is worth any :lilng n't all. Because a book Is old Is o good reason It la very valuable, hut :hey keep writing every time some ro nancer writes a story of a rare book picked up in some out of the way ?bce." Pittsburg Dispatch i Bubbles or Medals. AH ELOQUENT DISCOURSE. Subject: "Vicarious Sacrifice. torv. ,Sars'?pa,.llal, W,,en you think of it how contradic !m ? or there can onl' one best in anything one rhVr TP"11' as thcre is one high"t mountain, one longest T lerVv ,i epe,S! 0c;ean- And lhat bcst sarsaparilla is ? 7. . . den.iT k . t 1 0U can ,nei8ure mountain height and ocean But h. a CSt ""aP-riila? You could if you were chemists. tesiV?i? y,nced o test it? The World's Fair Committee bot.l. 7Land Jthoroufihly. They y.ent behind the label on the of Z d!d thia "aaparilla test result in ? livery make tl at AvePrV Shu.t ut ? the Fair' ept Ayer't. So it was Fair tJ. M the only aaparilla admitted to the Worlds am-ihini .1 cmmitt found it the best. They had noroomfor Dlrilig i not the bcst- And as the best, Ayer's Sarsa the wo,T.: Ve d ,!h.e niedal and awards due its merits. Remember Pin, Zi l a bubble any brealb can blow; but there are bL ,,P k TU bubbles- Those others are blowing more old ont. PranUa' bubblcs since the World's Fair priclfcd the Din thTi . u bi" Ayer'8 Sarsaparilla has the medal. The the btthW " t,he medal Proves !t Cold. The pin that pricks t. . v uwi Bursapariua is Ayer s. Text: "Without shedding ot bloal is no remission." Hebrew lx., 2'i. John Q. Whltlier, the last of the great school ot American poets that made the last quarter of a century brilliant, asked me in tha White Mountalui one morning after prayers, in which I had given out Cowper's famous hymn about the "fountain tilled With blood," "Do you really believe there is a literal application of the blood ot Christ to the soul?" My negative reply then is my negative reply now. The Bible statement agrees with all physiolans and all physiol ogists and all scientists In saying that the blood Is the life, and in the Christ In u religion it means simply that Christ's life was given for life. Hence all this talk nf men who say tho Bible story ot blood is disgusting, nnd that they don't want what they call a "slaughter house religion," ouly shows their Incapacity oV unwillingness to loqk through the flgure of speech toward the thing signified. The blood that onthe dark est Filday the world ever saw oozed or trlokled or poured from the brow, aud the side, and the hands, and the feet of the illustrious sufferer, back ot Jerusalem, in a few hours ooogulated and dried up and for ever disappeared, and it man bad depended on the application of the literal blood of Christ there would not have bwu a soul saved for the lust eighteen centuries. In order to undorxtand this red word of my text we only havo to exercise a much common sense In roligiou a wo do In every thing else. l'aug for pung, hunger for hungor, fatigue for fntlgue, tear (or tear, blood for blood, life for life, wo son every day Illustrated. The act of substitution Is no novelty, although I hoar men talk ns though the Idea ot Christ's suffering sub stituted for our sufTeriug worn somotliiu abnormal, somellilug distressingly odd. something wildly eccentric, a solitary eplsodo In the world's history when I could take you out Into this city and boforo sun down point you to live humlred cases of sub stitution aud voluntary eulTorlug o'. ono iu behalf ot another. At 2 o'clock to-morrow afternoon go nraong the places ol business or toil. It will be no difficult thing for you to Hud mon who by tuolr looks show you that they aro over worked. They are promaturely old. They nro hastening rapidly toward their dooease. They have gone through crises in business that shattered their nervous system aud pulled ou the brain. They hnve n shortness of breath and a paiu In tho back of tho hoiid nnd at night an insomnia that alarms them. Why nro thoydrmlglug at business early mid late? For fun? No. It would be diflloult to extract any amusement out of that ex haustion. Beoiimo they nro avaricious? In many cosos no. li wau-e their own personal expenses are lavish? No. A few hundred tlollnrs would meet all their wants. Tno si m pie fact is the man is enduring all that fatigue and exasperation and wearnuil tear to keep his home prosperous. There is nil Invisililo line roacliing from that store, from that bauk, from that shop, from that scaf folding, to a unlet sceuo n few blocks away, a few miles a way. And thoro Is tho secret of that business endurance. Ha Is simply tho champion of a homestead for which lilt wins brpad nnd wardrobe aud e locution and prosperity, and in suoli lijittle 10,001) men tall. Of ten business men whom I bury nine tlioot overwork for others. Home sudden disease finds them with no power of reslst- iiuue, iiuniuoy are gone, i.ito tor lire, lllooil for blood, .substitution! At 1 o'clock to-morrow morning, tlm hour when slumber is most uninterrupted and most profound, wulk amid tho dwollini; houses of tho city. Here and there you will llud a dim light because tt Is the household custom to keep a subline. I llghl burniug, but most of the bouses from bimo to top ure as dark as though uninhabited, A merciful God has sent forth the archangel of sleep, nnd he puts bis wings ovor the city. lint yonder Is a clear light burulng, nnd outside ou the window casement Is a glass or pitcher containing food for n sick child. The food is set iu tho fresh air. This Is tho sixth night that mother has sat up with that suf ferer. She has to tho last point obeyed tho physloina's prescription, uot giving a drop too much or too little or a moment too soon or too Into. Hhn Is very anxious, for she has buried threo children with the sumo disease, aud she prays anl woops, eaoli prayer and sob ending with n kiss of the pule cheek. By dint of kindness sho gots tho little ono through the ordeal. After It Is all over tho mother Is taktui down. Brain or nervous fever sets In, nnd one da v she leaves tho con valescent child with a mothur's blessing and goes up to jolu tho three In the kingdom of heaven. Llfo for life! Hubstitution! The faetis that there are tin uncounted numb r of mothers who, after thev havo navigated a largo family of chililrun through all the dis eases ot Infancy ami cot them fulrlystarted up the floworlng slope of boyhood nnd girlhood havo only strength enough loft to dlo. They fudo away. Some call II oonsiiinntlnn Homo call It nervous prostration. Nome call It Intermittent or malarial indisposition. But i van it martyrdom or tno tlomestin circle. Life for life. Blood for bloo I. Su'wtifi. Hon! Or porimps the mother linirers loner enmili to see agon got on the wrong road, and bis lornier kindness becomes rough reply when she expresses anxiety nboui him. But she goes right on. lookmir cnrofullv nf- torhls up parol, remembering his every blrth dny with somo memento, and, wheii ho Is brought homo worn out with dissipation, nurses him till ho gets well and starts hi in again aud hopes and expects and prays and counsels and suffers until hor strength civ-.ta out and sho fails. Khe is going, and atten dants, bendiug over hor pillow, atk hor If tho bos any message to leave, and she makes greut effort to sav something, but our nt threo or four minute ol Indisliaut utter.inca they can catch but threo words, "My poor coy:" The s mnle fact is she dieil fur nim Llfo for life. Substitution! About thirtv-six veais lien there men! fortl. from our northern and southern hnn hun dreds of tbouauuds of men to do battle for thoir country. All tho poetry of war soon vnnisiiea ana left them nothing but the ter rible prose. They wndud knon deep iu mud. They slept In suow-bnnks. Thev nuir..l.,i till their cut feet tracked tho earth. They were swindled out of their honest rntlnna and lived on meat not lit for n nog. Thoy had jaws all fractured and eyas extinguished and limbs shot away. Thousnuds of them cried for water as they lay dylug on the Held the night after the battle aud got.lt not, 1 hoy were homesick and roouived nn mix. sage from their loved ones. They died in barns, In bushes, in ditches, the buwards of the summer hent the ouly attendants on their obsequies. Noonebut theiullulteaod. WOO KnOWS evervtuluc. knows thn ten-thru,. nndth part ot the length and bren lth and oopth nnd height of the nugulsh of the northern and southern lnittlni,ta tvh did these fathers leave their ohlldren and go to the front, and why did these young men. postponing the marriage day, start out into the probabilities of never coming bnok? For the country they died. Life lor life. Blood ior oiooa. Hubstitution! But we need not go so far. Whnt Is that monument in Greenwood? It is to the doc tors Who fell In the annthl.rn anl,lnln. Why go? Were there not enough siok to be ntteuded in these northern latitudes? Ob. yes! But the dootor puts a few medical books in his valise, and somu vlitls of nie.ll. cine, nnd leaves bis patients hero In the hands ot other physicians and takes the rail tralu. Before he gets to the interned regions be passes crowded rail trains, ruculnr extra, takingthe flying nnd affrighted popu- ao nrriyoa m n ouy over which a great horror is brooding, no IMPS fmm couch to ooucb, fueling of the pulse nnd studying symptoms and prescribing day af ter day, night utter night, until a fellow physlolan snyst "Dootur, you had better go home aud rest. You look mis erable," Bat fe cannot rest whlla ao many Jare suffering. On aad on ontH soma morning finds him in a delirium, in which ha talks ot home, and then rises aad says he must go snd look after those pati ents. He la told to lie down, bnt he lights his attendants until be tails back and is weakerand weaker, and dies for people with whom he had no kinship, and far away from his owa family, and is hastily put away in a stranger's tomb and only the fifth part of a newspaper line tells us ot his saorifloe his name just mentioned among five. Yet he has touched the farthest height ot sublimity In that three weeks of humanitarian servioe. He gns straight as an arrow to the bosom ot HI in who said. '! was sick, and ye vis. Had Me," Lite for life. Blood for blood. Substitution! In the legal profession I see the same prin ciple of self racrifloe. In IKttS William Free man, a pauperized and idiotic negro, was at Auburn, N. Y.. on trial tor murder. He ha I slain the eutlre Van Nest family. The foam. Ing wrath of the community could bo kept off hlra ouly by armed constables. Who would volunteer to be his counsel? No attorney wanted to sacrifice hU popularity by such an uugratefiil task. All were silent saveoue a young lawyer with feeble voice that oould hardly be heard outside the bar, pale aud thin aud awkward. It was William H. Seward, who saw that tho prisoner was idiotic aud Irresponsible and ought to bn put iu an asylum rather than put to death, the horolo counsel uttering thoi beautirul words: "I speak bow In the hearing ot a pooplo who have prejudged pr.soner and con demned me for pleading tn his behalf. He Isaeouvlet, a pauper, a negro, without Intel lect, sense or emotion. My child with an affectionate smile disarms my careworn fnco of Us frown whenever I cross my threshold. Tho beggar Iu tho street obliges "me fo giva because he says, 'God hlms you!' as I pass. My dog caresses mo with fondues it I will but smile on him. My horse recognizes mo when I till bis mnnor. What rowird, what gratitude, what sympathy nnd infec tion can I expect here'.' Thoro the pris oner sits. Look nt him. Look nt the ossein blagn nrouml you. Listen to their ill sup pressed censures and their excited fears au l toll me whore among my neighbors or my follow mcu. where oven in his heart I ear. expect to llud a sentiment, a thought, uot to say of reward or of acknowledgment, or even ot recognition? Oontlomeu, you may think ot this evidence what you please, bring in what verdict you can, but I nssev erite before heaven and yon that, to tho best of my knowledge nnd beliof. the pris oner nt the bar does not at this moment know why it Is that my shadow falls ou you Instead of his own." The gallows got its vie! im, but the. post mortem examination ot tho poor creature showed to all the surgeons and to ull tho world Unit tho public was wrong, that Will iam H. Seward was right and that bnrd, stony step of obloquy in the Auburn court room was tho llrst step of tho stairs of fame up which h went to th top, or to within one step of tho top, that last dnuied him through tho trenmcry of American politics. Nothing sublinier was ever seen in an Amer ican courtroom than William II. Sewuid, without reward, standing between tho fury of the populnco aud tho loathsome imbecile. Substitution! In tho realm of the Hid arts there was ns remarkable im instance. A brilliant but hypcrcritlclsed painter, Joseph William Turner, was met by a volley of iilmse from all tho art galleries iifjiurop"-. lies paint ings, which havo slno'o wop tho applause of all eivllln-d nations " Tho Fifth Plaguo of F.gypf." "Fishermen on a I,o Shore In Sipially Weather," "Calais Pier." "The Sun Ittsliig Through Mist" an 1 "Dido building Curtilage" -were then targets for critics to shoot nt. In defense of this out rageously abuse I lmiti a young author of twenty-four years, just one ve.ir out o' codege, came forth with his pen mi l wrote the ablest mid most famous essays ou art tlmt th't World ever saw or ever will sec John Buskin's "Modern Pain ters." For seventeen years this nuthor fought the battles of tho maltreated artist, and after, iu poverty and broken huartod ness, tho painter bad died nnd the public tried to undo their cruelties toward hlni by giving him it big funeral nnd burial In St. Paul's cathedral, his old-timo friend took out of n tin box l'.l.OOO pieces of paper con taining drawings by the old painter, and through inniiy weary and uncompensated months assorted nnd arranged them for pub lic observation. People say John ltuskia In his old days Is cross, misanthropic nnd morbid. Whatever he may do that ho ought uot to do, and whatever ho may say that he ought not to say between now aud his death, ho will leavo this world Insolvent as far as it has any capacity to pay this author's pen for lis chivalric and Christian defense of a poor painter's peu'll. John ltiiskln for Will iam Turner. Blood for blood. Substitution! All good men have for centuries been try ing to tell whom this substitute was like, and every comparison, inspired nn I unin spired, evangelistic, prophetic, apostolic an 1 human falls short, for Christ was tho droit I'nliko. Adam a typo of Christ, b'KVtuso he came directly from Go. I; Noah a type of Christ, because he deliver; I Ills own family from the deluge; Mulchisedccu typ t of Christ, because he had no pre lecessor or successor; Joseph a typo of Christ, bv.mso he was cast out by his brethren; Mosjs a typo of Christ, because hewasailclivererfrorn bond age; Samson a type of Christ, because of bis strength to slay the lions au l carry off tho Iron gates of impossibility; Sol mum a typo of Christ in tho aDIueuceof his dominion; Jonah a type of Christ. Icvaus-of the stormy sen In which ho threw hi.nself for tho rescue of others. But put together Adam and Noah and Melchisedec au I Joseph an I Moses an I Joshua nnd Samson and Solomon au I J uiah. and they would not ma'io a fragment of a Christ, a quarter of a Christ, tho halt ot a Christ or the millionth part ot a Christ. Ho forsook a throne and sat dowu ou His own footstool. Ho entno from tho top of glory to tho linttoni of humiliation and ohangel a oircumforenco seruphio for a circumference diabolic. On 'O waitel on by angels, now hissed at by the brigands. From afar and high up Ho eamo down; past meteors swifterthau they; by starry thrones, Himself mere lustrous; past largor'worlds to smaller worlds; down stairs of llrmameiits, and from cloud to cloud and through treo tops and luto the camel's stall, to thrust His shoulder uuder our burdens ami tako tho lances of p:iin through His vitals, und wrapped Himself In all tho ngouies which wo deserve for our misdoings and stool on tho splitting decks of a foundering vessel amid the druuehing surf of Ihese.i aul passed midnights oa the mnuutnius amid wild boasts of prey nnd stood nt tho point wnoro all earthly and Infernal hostilities churned on Him at once with thoir fce.m sabres our Substitute! Whon did attorney ever eaduro so much for a pauper client or physio. nn for tho pa tient Iu the laxarutto or mother for the child In membranous croup, ns Christ for us, as Christ for you, as Christ for nui? Shall any mnn or womau or child iu this nudience who has over suffered for another find it hard to understand this Christly suffering for us? Shall those whose sympathies have beeu wrung Iu behalf of the uutortuunto have no appreciation ot that one moment which was lifted out ot all the ages of eternity as ino: conspicuous when Christ gathered up all the sins of those to be redeemed under His one nrm, nnd nil his sorrows under Ills other arm and said: "I will stone for Iheso uuder My right arm nnd will heal all those under My left arm. Strike Mo Willi all thy glittering shafts, O oternnl justice! r.oil over Me with nil thv surgos. ye ooenns ot sorrow!" An t the thunderbolts struck Him from above, and the sous of trouble Ml led up from beueath. hurricane r.fter hurricane, nnd eyclonu nfter cyclone, und then and there tn the presenile ot heaven and earth and hell yea, nil worlds witnessing the price, the bitter prioc, thetinuscendent price, the nwfnl price, the glorious price, the in- n uite price, tno eterunl price, was unld that sets us free. A CoMtj'e Criminal IUvoikI . Mlnjo County, West Virginia, baa remarkable record. It la a young coua ty, and but few terms of court Lav been held. There are not quite 1.80C votes In the county, but there ar ovei 1.000 criminal cases to be tried, most ot thetu on Indictments returned by th last two fraud lurlea. Casrasm stimulate liver, kidneys aad bowels. Never silken, weaken or gripr: lUu "They say you bave no sympathy rot the struggling poor." "MeT said the accused gentleman. "I have notblns but ytupathy." Cincinnati Bnqulrsr. Mr. Vinslow's Southing Syrup forehlldrea trelbinir. xitlrna the glinia. rtsluce uinaniuia lioit, allay pain, rum wind rolic. -K.a but tie. Wnrs hlltnu or rnatlve. eat a CVcnret, rand) latliaitlr; cure guaranteed; 10..,Jtk. The funded debt ot Boston increased over Six milium Iu the last llacal year. Woman's Nerves, Mrs. Piatt Talks About Hysteria. When a nerve or a set of nerves suniilrinir violin inr ihiuy wim us inn nutri ment grows weak, that organ languishes. When the nerves become exhausted und j die, so to KHul. the organ fulls into de- ..... H'l.- I . . - 1 . i . .. vaj. ti ion is iu oe umici' i no answer is, do not allow the weukuess tti progress; stop the deteriorating process ut once ! Do you experience tits of depression, nltcr- iiiiiuig wiiu rcsufssiii-xK v Are your spirits easily niieeteu, so that one moim-nt von hui.r, ami the next full into convulsive weeiiiin'" Again, do you feel something-like a ball rising in your throat aud thivateiiing to choke you. ull tho sense iH-rvcrteil. morbidly sensitive to ' light and totiml, pain in ovary, ami unit) cs- pe-.-iany between the Ni-H.-r. :i ti::n. ; loss of voice tin I nervous ilTpcp.iu ? 1 f so. r.ro hysterical, your uterine turves arc nt f;:.:!t. YouniUrt do something1 to restore their to;:e. Nothing is bettor for the puriH.se than l.vdia I.'. I"uiliam-s Vegvtabie Com pound; it will work a cure. If you do not iiiilcrst:;::.l vor.r !:;to:-- write to - i:,.t i ... " . . . ........ . IUI.I..IU, j.ii:i. .miss., ;. ;;u mio will itivc V CI liouc.'d, rt :!clvnv, free of eh.iivje. Mi;s. I.i.xi 1'. Pi. a i r. Woniley ..bur Pa., h;:,l a t:'rvil.le cvperiem-e with t In- il!:i.-s we have just dcsfrila-d. Here i-. her own d.-jripliou of her sulVeniiirs: "1 thought I im;:!1 not be so be'vti'.c.l by an v.. Ihiiijr und Keep it ti ::iv.el!'. 1 !: ; lntcri:i (caused by won;!, tn.nl. lei in its Worst f,.Ir:n. 1 was ;;w fully nervous, low-spi-itcd an! uicl::,i- cholv. :;tnl every! In:i;, i:ii::;'in;ibl.. "Tiie nioi ieiil i wns iJur.e 1 would ery from hour to hour; n,,t i.:l-e whether' I lived orilin!. I tub! my liii'.luinil beli.'wrl I.yciii V.. I'ii:!;h-pi"s Vegetable Compound v- mid Uu me food. 1 took it anil am now well and strony, nnd roll ine- stouter. 1 have more color in my face than I have bad for n year nml u half. Please accept mv t hunks. 1 hope all who rend this and who sutler from nervousness vf this kind will do as 1 have done und be cured." set IS aT'lll I 1 v w Hi A resilient of Shswnee, Tennessee, sjys ; " 1 wjnt to tell k( the Icnetit I received iiem taking Ripans Tabules. My stomach had pot Info -ttrh a fx I could u.i digest mv victuals a! all . ficivlhiiig I ale I llnrw up, with j;ic.i! p.iin. i'l tnvihcst and bowels I tried several ilortois, lm ilut tin- n.. j;uoil. At l.i-1. alter pei.ilin ;.!-nil J-;. a fiicnd advised ne to try Kipans Tal iile-. lioniineH.nl nl)v; ll.na .in, I soon I could eat almost anything, and I had t'n- sitjsf.ictiuu ol knowing ih.t wh.it I rat ' would st.iv with me.' I :,m ;;r.del;.! tor such a nicln i'ie, and I hope before many years it will luve p'.nc m tlic imusc i f ncti ijauly in lliesc I nited States." A Town's L'uique l'reilcament, It has been discovered iu tho town of Jamestown, It. I., that It is Impos.lblo to secure a mau there tor jury duty, as they are all members of the Ore department. ' ALABASTINE. IT WONT RUB OFF. Wall Taper is I nsanitary. KAI.MOIIIXF. IH TKMI'(MtAlt, It OTIS, It I Its Ol-'' AMI MAI.K. Ir. a pure, H-rmanut and artistic wall coating, ready for Ilia brush by mixing in cold water. For Nnle by I'aint Dealer Kverywhrre. C I.l"al miouKh J ."iha.o CPCC A Tl"' C"r1 "howln 13 desirable tints, uU.i Alnluistlne BUiren hern lialir may rorurrr 1111.1. Souvenir Kia-k sent fro toiuivrin'in-nti.iiiiei: ihin paper, rbutranmit tiiri:." AI.A IIAMTI K '.. 4.raml ItanitlN. Dlich. ANDY CATHARTIC XJCUREC0HSTIPATI0H 25 50 SiMAjS ALL DRUGG'STS IPiSOIJlTRry CnSPlNTPFI. aarssereonillpstlon. fanrsreU in ths litral Imx flUOUbUlLLl tlUAnaniClLU ira. n.Tir eria or erint.hul raaae rairnalaralraanllM- k..,. pit and booklst 1W. Ad. RTRRMK0 KKDIIDT CO.. Chlnio. Hi.utnal. Cao., orN.w fork. lit THE STANDARD PAINT FOB STRUCTURAL PURPOSES l"stiiphlet, "HnggeMtlons for F.xterlor Decoration," Sample Curd nnd Dererlptlve Prleo Mst fnsi hy null. Aabralua Iloullntl, llullillna Fell. Hlenm I'acldtiH. Holler Cnvprlnus, Flre.l'rool' Puinu, Klc Aabeaiua .Voi.-Ciiiiilueli.ig uuil l:ieelrirul IiikiiIiiiIus .llnu rluls. H. W. JOHNS MANUPACTUKINa CO., 87 Maiden Lane. New ork. CHIHAUOi MUaMa Randolph St. riUI.ADKI.PHI A: l:u K3 Ni ttli 4lli St. HUSTON: T7 79 Pearl HI, "IF AT "FIRST YOU DON'T SUC- CEED," TRY AEOLIO