! A GOSPEL KSSAGL . I Tlx Dlffcreat UmVw Lead Why Imw Arm RMMKld ud Others Fall A Life mt Sim ud Worldly IrialSeBe U Hire FailnraTha Uh Worth. Urimg. Tixt: "What U your life?" James lr It. If we leare to the evolutionists to smeea ajbere we came from and to the theologians to propnwj wnere we are going to, we ft 111 hire leu ior oonsiaeraiion me Important ha that we are here. There ma be him doubt aDout wnere the flyer rises and some doubt aooui wnere tne river empties, but here ran be no doubt the fact that we are MiUuK on It. 80 1 am not surprised that terybody aaks the question, "Is life worth llviDgf (Solomon, in his unhappy moments, says it i not, "Vanity " "vexation of snlrlt -do good," are his estimate. The fact is that Kolomon was at onetime a poly Ram 1st tod that soured his disposition. One wife pakes a man nappy; moretuan one makes bun wretched. ltut Solomon was converted from polygamy to monogamy, and the last words he ever wrote, as far as we can read tbfm, were the words "mountains of spices." But Jeremiah says life is worth living. In book supposed to be doleful and lucu. rloua and sepulchral and entitled "Lamen tations," he plainly intimates that the blueings of merely living is so great and grand a blessing that though a man have muni uu uuu Kit inuiunuDDi ana aisasters be has no right to complain. The ancient nrontiet cries out in startling Intonation to ill litmls and to all centuries, "Wherefore d.ith a living man oomnlatn?" A diversity of opinion In our time as well u in olden time. Here is young man of Hint hair ana blue eyes and sound diges- tlou ami generous salary and happily iinanceu nnu on me way 10 oecome a part ir Id a commercial Arm of which he Is an important cleric. Ask him whether life is worth living. He will laugh In your face and nay: "Yes, yes. yes!" Here is a man yho has come to the forties. He is at the tiptop of the hill of life. Every step has tera a miiiiiuio bdu a nruise. rne people ie trusted have turned out deserters, and the money he has honestly made he has bwn cheated out of. His nerves are out of tunc. He has poor appetite, and the food ie dees eat does not assimilate. Forty miles climbing up the hill of life have been to him like climbing the Matterhorn, and there are forty miles yet to go down, and dun-eat Is always more dangerous than as- wnt. Ask elm w bet tier life is worth living, and he will drawl out in shivering and lugubrious and appalling negative, "No, 10. no!" How are we to decide this matter rlght eoimly and Intelligently? You will find the urne man vacillating, oscillating In hl oilnlon rrom dejection to exuberance, and II ne u very mercurial in nis temperament It will depend very much on which wav th wind blows. If the wind blow from the inrthwest and you ask him, he will say "Y," and if it blow from the northeast and you ask him he will say, "No." How ire we, men, 10 get tne question righteous It answered? Suppose we call all nations together in a great convention on eastern or western hemisphere, and let all those who sre in the affirmative say, "Aye," and ill those who are In thenegatlvesay, "No." While there would be hundreds of thou sands' of those who would answer in the af firmative, there would be more millions who would answer In the negative, and because of the greater number who have orrow and misfortune and trouble the noes would unve it, TUe answer I shall give till be different from either, and yet it will wmraenn useii 10 au wno near me tills day u the rlk'tit answer. If vou ask mo, "Is lite worth living?" It answer, "I all depends ihiu me kiuu 01 me you live. In the first place, I remark that a life of mere money getting is always a failure, De mise you will never get as much as you vint. The poorest people in this country ire the millionaires. There Is not a scissors grinder on the streets of New York or Brooklyn who is so anxious to make money u these men who have plied up fortunes jur after year In storehouses, in Govurn neot securities, in tenement houses, in thole city blocks. Ton ought to see thorn limp when they hear the fire bell ring. Ion ou(?!it to see them in their excitement then a bnnk explodes. You ought to see 'heir agitation when there is proposed a reformation in the tariff. Tholr nerves &mMellke harp strings, but no muslo in roe viiirnuon. Tney read the reports from Vail street in the morning with a concern tent that threatens paralysis or apolexy, tfmore probably they have a telegraph or lqhone in their own houses, so they, atch every breadth of change in the money nrket. The disease of accumulation has men into them eaten Into their heart, Wo their lungs, into their spleen, Into twiner, into tneir Dones. CaeSiLttg have sometimes annlvAi1 tha toman body, and they say it is so much aigaesla, so much lime, so much ohlorato it potassium. If some Christian! chemist ouid auulyza one of these flnitnclal Uo moths, he would find, he Is made up of pernud gold and silver nnil zlno and m and coal and iron. That is not a lite with living. There are too many earth luakes in it, too many agonies in it, too uy perditions in it. They build their Miles, and they open their picture gnl rles, nnd they summon prima donnas, matliey offer every inducement for hnppl w to come and live there, but happiness rill not come. They send f ootmanned and fwtllloncd equipage to bring her. Hhe ill not ride to their door. They send princely escort. Hhe will not take tholr UV. They mnkA thnlr mitaurn va trlnm. i arches. Khe will net ride under them. T Set U irolllnn thrnnn liafi Mi. She turns away from the banquet. itty call to her from upholstered balcony, "will not listen. Mark you, this Is the ""ore oi those who have had large accum ulation. And the il V(iti TVM1 (if 4 aba tntsa annntJ... tlmt the vast majority of those who u 1 the dominant idea of life money got g fitll fnr short of affluence. It isesti- Mted thill nnln .1.1.1,1 ..... . 1 . . - J iwu vui ui a uuu- "M business men have anything worthy kki'm u,!0"- A man who spends fe with one dominant idea of financial wumulntion sponds a life not worth liv- the Idea of worldly approval. If that "aominunt In a man's life he is miserable. lour years the two most unfortunote mai country taa two men nom- - ir me rresldency. The reservoirs uuu aiatriue ana maledlotlon 'luallv nil nn ntinn .1... .m... k . "m above hogshead, and about miteum wtueae two reservoirs will be brimming .Md a hose will be attaohed to each i.i " w"1 Play way, 00 these two nws nnd they will have to stand It r.le be abuse and the falsehood, and rlcature and the anathema, and the ." Ingand the 01th, and they will ta n,1An't ,nd rolle(1 over and over in Mil tbey are choked and submerged o strangulated, and at every sign of re JTonsclousness they will' be barked the nounds of polltloal parties Zrao ,0 ocean' An1 yet he- " n. me2 A0-day 8tru8Rlln tor that rhn . ' ?n(1 th"r9 re thousands of men low .1. h"'Plng them in the struggle, uil" ,"otle worth living. , Vou slandered and abused cheaper than . 1, ,,toa mUer soale. . Do not rtl!i , l0M t0 hTe nol reservoir olit mi 1 70xl ,8e ,n tho atte of high uu. ipre'.erinent yott ln Te'y 00" cla niSn1" truK8l tor what is callod ltrvi ' ' TeM thousands of peo- nii . ,ul0 l0,lt reaim, ana tney Won? T ,eni"". " bat is so-.'ittl it . .1. V " nnouw imng to acme, '4 Int.m now hB U ' Qooi morals ik ft Bro ot ecessary, but '1 M show ot wealth, U absolutely tndlspensabl. There are aaaa to-day as MOtorioos for their libertinism as the sight ta. famous for its darkness who move la what is sailed high social position. There are hundreds of out and ont rakes U American society whona auM svra man. tioned am one tha dlstlnralahed a-aaata at the great levees. They have annexed all the knows vises and are longing tor other worias oa aiarjoiiam to conquer. Good morals are not necessary In many ot the ex alted circles of society. Neither Is intelllimnea mmwaar. Tnn And In that realm men who would not know aa aavero rrom an adjective If they met it a hundred times la a day, and who eould not write a letter of acceptance or regrets without the aid ot a secretary. They buy their libraries by the square yard, only anxious to have the binding Russian. Their Ignorance Is positively sublime, making English grammar almost disreputable. Aad yet the finest parlors open before them. Good morals and Intelligence are not neces sary, bat wealth or a snow of wealth Is positively indispensable. It does not make any difference how you got your wealth, If you only got It. The best way for you to get into social position Is for von to buv a large amount on credit, then put your ywvimnj in your wiie s name, nave a lew preferred creditors, and then make an as signment. Then disappear from the com munity until the breeze is over and -come Dacx and start ln the same business. Do you not see how beautifully that will put out all the people who are in competition with you and trying to make an honest llv Ing? How quickly it will get you into high social position? What Is the use ot tolling forty or fifty years when you can by two or three bright strokes make a great fortune? Ah, my friends, when you really lose your uiuuoT uow quicKiy iney win let you drop, and the higher you get the harder you will drop. There are thousands to-dav In that renlm who are anxious to keep In It. There aro inousanas in mat realm who are nervous for fear they will fall out of it, and there are changes going on every year, and every month, and every hour which Involve heart breaks that are never reported. High so cial lite Is constantly in a flutter about the delicate question as to whom tbey shall let In and whom they shall push out, and the battle Is going on pier mirror against plur mirror, onanaeuer against cnaudoiier.wlne cellar against wine cellar, wardrobe against wardrobe, equipage against equipage. Un certainty and insecurity dominant in that realm, wretchedness enthroned, torture at a premium ana a lire not worth living! A life of Bin, a life of pride, a life ot In dulgence, a life of worldllness. a life do. voted to the world, the flesh and tha devil. is a failure, a dead failure, an infinite iauure. 1 care not now many presents you send to that cradle or bow many garlands you send to that grave, vou need to nut right under the name on the tombstome this Inscription: "Better for that man It bo had never been born." But I shall show you a II fo that Is worth living, a young man says: "I am hero. I am not responsible for mv annostrv. Others decided that. I am not responsible for my temperament, uou gave me tliat. Unt here I am In the evening of tho nineteenth century, at twenty years of age. I am here, and I must take nu acaouut of stock. Here I have a body, which Is a divinely con structed engine. I must put it to the very best uses, and I must allow nothing to damago this rarest of machinery. Two feet, and they mean locomotion. Two eyes, nnd they monn capacity to pick out my own way. Two ears, and they are tel ephones of communication with all the out. side world, and they mean oapaeity to catch the sweetest music and the voices of friendship the very best music. A tongue, with almost infinity of articulation. Yes, bauds With Which to welcome Or reslut nr lift or smite or wavo or bless hands to bely myself and help others. "Here is a world which nftorCOOfJ years of battling with tempest and aeolilout Is still grander than any architect, human or an gelic, could linvo drafted. I have two lamps to light mo a uoldnn lumn ami n sliver lamp a golden lamp set on tne sapphire mantel of the day, a silver lamp set on the Jot mantel of the night. Yea, I have that at twenty of age which delles nil Inventory of valuables a soul with canan. ity to choose or reieot. to relolce or tn suffer, to love or to hate. I'lato says It is Immortnl. Honoea savs it is immortal. Confucius says It Is immortal. An old book among tho family relics, a book with leathern cover utmost worn out and pages almost obliterated by oft perusal, Joius the other books in saying I am Immortal. I have eighty years for a lifetime, sixty years yet to live. I may not live nn hour, lint then I must layout my plans intelligently and for a long llfo. Hixty yeors added to the twenty I hove already lived that will bring me to eighty. I must remember that these eighty years aro only a brief fireiace to tne live nundrea tuousand mlll ons of qulntllllons of veors which will bo my chief residence and existence. Now, I understand my opportunities nnd my re sponstbilities. It thero Is nnv being In the universe all wise and all benerioont who can help a man In such a Juncture, I want him." Tne young man enters life. He is buf feted, he Is tried he is perplexed. A grave opens on this side and a grave opens on that side. He falls, hut he rises again. He gets into a hard battle, but he gets the vic tory. The main course of his lite Is in tlio right direction. He blesses everybody he comes in comnet wicn. uou forgives nis mistakes and makes everlasting record of his holy endeavors, and at the close of it God says to htm; "Well donei good and faithful servant. Euter Into the joy of thy Lord." My brother, my sister, I do not care whether that man dies at 30, 40,50, 60, 70 or 80 years of age; you can chisel right under his nnme on the tombstone these words, "His life was worth living." Amid the hills of New Hampshire, in olden tlmos, there sits a mother. There aro six children in the household four boys and two girls. Small farm. Very rough, hard work to oonx a living out of it. Mighty tug to make the two ends ot the year meet. The boys go to school in winter and work the farm In summer. Mother Is the chief presiding spirit. With ber hands she knits all the stocking for the little feetnnd she is tne mnntua maker roi- tho hoys, and she is the milliner tor the girls. There is only one musical instrument in the house, tho spinning wheel. The food Is very plain, out k is always won provided. Tne winters are very cold, but are kept out by the blankets she quilted. On Hundav. when She appears In the vlllngo church, her cniiuren around ner, tne minister looks down and Is reminded ot the lillde descrip tion of a good housewife. "Her children arise up and call her blessed; her husband also, and he pralseth her?" Some years go by, and the two oldest boys want a collegiate education, nnd the household economies aro severer, and the calculations are olosor, and until those two boys get tholr education there Is a hard battle for bread. One of these boys enters the university, stands ln a pulpit widely in. nuentiai nnu preacnes rignteousness, judg ment and temperance, and thousands dur ing his ministry are blessed. The other lad who got the collegiate eduoatlon goes Into the law, and thence into legislative halls, and after awhile he commands listening senates as he makes a plea for the down trodden and the outcast. One ot the younger boys becomes a merchant, start ing at the foot ot the ladder, but climbing on up until his success and his philanthro pies are recognised all over the land. The other son stays at home becnuse he prefers farming life, and then ho thinks he will be able to take care of father and mother when tbey get old. Ot the two daughters, when the war broke out, one went through the hospitals of Flttsbdrg Landing and Fortress Monroe, cueortr.tf up the dying and tho homesick and taxing tne last message to Kindred far away, so that every time Christ thought ot her he said, as ot old: "The same is my sis ter and mother.' Tho other daughter has a bright home of her own, and in the after-noou-i-tho forenoon Iiuvlog been devoted to her household she goes forth, to bunt up tne sign auu-10 encouags tne discour aged, leaving smiles aad benediction all along the way. But one day there start fly telegrams trots the village for these five absent ones, saving. "Come, mother Is dangerously IU.1' But before they eaa be ready to start they receive another telegram, saying, "Come, mother Is dead." Tne old neighbors gather tn the old farmhouse to do the last offloe ot respect. But as the farming son aad the clergyman, and the Senator and the mer chant and the two daughters stand by tha easket ot tha dead mother taking the last look, or lifting their little children to see once more the face of dear old grandma, I want to ask that group around the casket one question, "Do you really think her life was worth living?" A life tor God, a life for others, a life ot unselfishness, a useful life, a Christian life, Is always worth living. . I would not find it hard to persuade you that the poor lad, Peter Cooper, making ?;lue for a living, and then amassing a great ortune until He oould build a philanthropy which has bad its echo in 10.000 philan thropies all over the country I would not And It hard to persuade you that his life was worth living. Neither would I And It hard to persuade you that the life ot Sus annah Wesley was worth living. She sent out one son to organize Methodism and the other son to ring his anthems all through the ages. I would not find it hard work to persuade you that the llfo of Frances Lee re was worth living, as she established In England a school for the sclontlllc nursing ot the sick, and then when the war broke out between France and Germany went to the front and with her own hands scraped the mud oft the bodies of the soldiers dying In the trenches and with her weuk arm standing one night ln the hospital pushing back a German sol dier to bis ooucb, as, all frenzied with his wounds, he rushed to the door and said, "Let me go, let me go to my Hebe mutter," major generals standiug back to let pass this angel ot mercy. Neitherwould I have hard work to per suade vou that Grace Darling lived a life worth llvlnir the heroine of the ll'ohnar. You are not wondering that the Duchess of Northumberland came to see her and that people of all lands asked for her lighthouse and that the proprietor of the Adelphl theatre In London offered her f 100 a nluht just to sit Id the lifeboat while some ship- wrmTK scene wai oeing enacted. But I know the thought In tho minds of hundreds of you to-day. You say, "While I know all these lived lives worth living, I don't think my life amounts to much." Ah, my friends, whether you live a life conspic uous or Inconspicuous, it Is worth living, if you live aright. And I want my next seutence to go down into the depths of all your souls. You aro to bo rewarded not according to the greatness of "your work, but according to the holy industries with which you employed the talents you reully possessed. The majority of the crowns of heaven will not' be given to peo ple with ten talents, for mast of them were tempted only to serve themselves. The vast majority of the crowns of heaven will be given to the people who had one talent, but gave It all to God. And remember that our llfo here Is introductory to another. It Is the vestibule too palace, but who despises the door ot a Madeleine becnuse thero are grander glories within? Your lite, if rigidly lived. Is the first bar of an eternal oratorio, and whojdehplses the llrst note of iinyuirs symphonies? And the lire you live now is ull tho more worth living be cause It opens Into a life that shall never end.nud the last letter of tho word "tlruo" U the llrst letter of the word"aternityl" WHEAT CROP SITUATION. Estimated Drfluleiicy of 14,000,000 Quar ter in the World's Nupply. The Mnrk Lnne Express, of London, re viewing the crop situation, says: "The weather has been adverse to tho completion of the harvest, ami the quau- uir 01 fc-r'tiu sun out is consiiieraole. "1 lie I rcucli wheat crop is estimated at 31,000,000 quartern by tho chief writers of the l'arls pres. Correspondents of Eng lish uurinoss nrms state that the crop will amount to from 9:1.000.009 to 80.000.000 quarters. Tim Austro-Hungarian crop is stated to be 17.000,0110 quarters. If this Is true, It adds gruutly to tho gravity of tho situation. "The American crop Is reckoned bv enre. fill judges to beOS.500,000 (lunrters. or 11.- 000,000 quarters Improvement, to offset a dncllue of 0,000,000 quarters In ltiissia and (i.OOO.OOO to 10,000,000 quarters In France. "Ail the iigures point, therefore, to a do flelency in the worlil's suiiplv of M.000.000 quarters. Should the demand ho actually as large as this, tho stores of old wheat will bo used up, anil a crisis of groat serious ness will only lie prevented by aeuerallv good prospects for the spring of 1HSM. Wo ore not, however, entitled to ariruo that such prospects will be more than the aver age.- STUDENTS' AWFUL CRUELTY. A Horrible liming Kplaodo at the t'ni. vemlly of California. There will be no moro "rushes" at tha University of California If President Kel- logg's latest mandate is exercised. Half dazed, his Jnw broken, his face a blooding miisn, Benjamin Kurtz, a newly elected freshman, was found wandering about the campus nfter the rush between the two lower classes. In the strugglo some one put his heel on' Kurtz's face, and as a result ne is (iisngiired lor lire and may have sustained Injury of tho brain. An ex amination showed thnt a piece of flesh had boen torn from one nostril. The upper Hp bung only by a shred and the rpgged na ture of the scur made tho Injury all tho moro serious. The front teeth were gone. Four teeth had been knocked out of tho lower Jawbone, in which they bad been em bedded, and part of tho bono was broken out with thorn. Both tho upper und lower laws worn smashed and tho llesli of all the faco crushed and bleeding. Thoro wore two other serious casualties. HER SPECIALTY IS TWINS. A Colored Wire, Under Eighteen, Has Given lllrtli to Four l'uiii. Not yet elghteeo years old and the moth er of tour pairs ot twlusl This is the record mudo by Tearly Brad ford, a colored woman of East Ht. Louts. III. The remarkable young mother asked Dr. Woods, Supervisor of one Poor, for food to keep herself and children from starving. She has been a resident of East Ht. Louis five years, she says, having oome there from New Orleans, whero her hus band is now trying to get employment. All but three of her children are dead. The live onesnre healthful and strong, though quite young. Mrs. Bradford is very black. She will not be eighteen years old, she says, until November 25 next, nnd Is again approach ing motherhood. She was married when a child. Dr. Woods made a careful investigation into the statements made by Mrs. Brad ford and found them to be oorrect and the woman honest and truthful. 1 Not Young, Hut They Married. 1 Isaao Selover, seventy-four years old, a widower and a wealthy farmer of flpotts wood, N. J., and Miss Mary Phillips, a spinster, sixty years old, have just been married. Selover lived with his son, a married man, forty years old, but It Is said that he and his son did not agree. So lie thought he would get married again, and Miss Phillips agreed to become his wife. His children wereopposed to the marriage, but Selover lusisted that he knew his own business. Mutineers Kill Fifty-Nine Men. A mutiny has occurred among the troops of the Congo free State in the Toro Dis trict ot Africa. The mutineers, it is said, killed fifty-nine Belgian officers and men and destroyed ail the forts, committing depredations right and left. TOPIC FOR SUNDAY, SEPT. J9. "Losing Ont'i Lift tad rinding It." Johatil 1-M0-86. ' DAILY READINGS. LOSING AND FINDING LIFE. Sept. 13. Losing. Like Pilate. Matt, xxvit. 11-26. Sept. 14. Like Herod. Mark vl. 14-29. Sept. 15. Like Felix. Acta xxlv. 12-V. Sept 16. Finding. Like Paul. Acts xx. 17-26. Sept 17. Like Stephen. Acts vl. 8-15; vil. 54-60. Sept 18. Like John the Baptist Matt, xlv. 1-1!. Sept 19. Losing one's life and finding It. John xtl. 1-8, 20-26. Scripture Veraea. Ps. cxllx. 4; Trov. xviil. 12; xxil. 4; Matt. v. S: xvill. 3. 4; xxlll. 12; Luke I. 48. 52; xviil. 14; PhlL 11. 8-11; J as. Iv. 10; I Peter v. 6. LESSON THOUGHTS. We can have only one life a selfish, sinful, worldly life, which is ours by nature; or a "life hid with Christ' In God." We can not have both, but wo may begin the latter at once by the death of the former. In the business world transactions are sometimes made with actual loss, to the merchant, In the hope of a re suiting future gain which will more than balance the loss. The eternal Fain oi heaven may be purchased by the sacrifice of the short pleasures thut the world may offer. SKLKCTIONS. Many Christians at the present time could truly say to God, "Some of sell and some of thee," and that la the reason why their lives are so Joyless nnd ao powerless. Itut when a Chris tian han reached the stage where he can say to his Lord, "None of self, but nil of thee," then It is that his soul will be flooded with Joy that Is unspeakable and full of glory, and a divine power will be made manifest In his life to all those that come Into contact with him. It Is not hard to see, as other lives are studied, that blessedness entered them ln proportion to the fulness of the surrender. Just as the sunlight Moods a room according to the number of the windows that are ready to receive It. Our Saviour hath told you, the seed that would grow. Into earth's dark bosom must fit II, Must pass from the view nnd die awuy, And then will the fruit appear: The grain thnt seems lost in the earth below Will return many fold In the ear. Hy dcuth comes life, by loss comes gain, The Joy for the tear, the peace for tha pain! No pain suffered, nor service ren dered, nor work done for Christ, is lost. . . . The poorer we become for him. the t Ichor we shall grow. The more we forget ourselves, the more will he remember us. Labor World. It Is estimated that $40,000 a month will soon be paid to tho ruiMin packers of Fresno, Cal. American railroads aro employing 0110 hundred thousund moro men than they wero ln 18. The striking coal miners doubt whether tho sixty-live cents a ton rute will be ac cepted by the men. A syndicate tins been formed In Tlent-sln, China, for erecting a largo cotton manu factory tn that place. The Trades Union Congress, in llirmlng ham, England, pledged moral and llnanclul aid to the striking engineers, und favored an eight-hour day. The engineering strike tn England may drive manufacturers to the Continent. Many New England cotton and woolen mills which have been idle for a long time past, have started up, owing to the Im proved conditions of trmle. In New York on Labor Day there were no processions, no speeches, no dem onstration to show the public! tho growing strength of labor organizations. The Amoskeng Mills, Manchester, N. 11., started oa full time after a shut-down ot one month. Kight tliouxnnd operatives returned to work. All the big mills in the city are now running. Unlnstructed delegates who favor ac cepting the operators' terms to end the coal miners' strike were selected In the Pittsburg district to attend tho National convention nt Columbus, Ohio. William F. Cochran formally presented n fully equipped sU-story club house to the worklngmen ot Yonkers, N. Y. The Falls Conmunv. of Norwich (Vinn manufacturers of cotton goods, sturted ou full time In ull departments, giving em ployment to 600 bauds. The plant shut down August 14 for the annual repairs, but prior to tho shut-down the concern tin.) been operated short-handed. Labor Day was colebrated In Louisville, Ky., by a parade of 6000 men. lliislnes was largely suspended. The parade ended ut Phoenix Mill Park, where a pleiilo was given during the afternoon and evening. Hpeeches were made during tho evening by local lenders. Tus feature of the pa rade was the assignment of a section for the unemployed at tho end of tho Fourth Division. Htrange to say, thero was not one ln this division. The bcBt burglar-proof safes nre mode of alternuto layers of hard and soft metal, which are welded together. This combination will not yield to eith er drill or sledge-hammer. The harbor of nio Janeiro tins BO miles of anchorage, and is tho finest in the world. REVIVO HESTORcS VITALITY Made a Well Man 13th"r-T.TO of Me. Tie GREAT 30th Day. stibnoh xiihiviiczj-v produces the nhnvo rem II. In no ilaya. II art. iowurlull)f and inirkly. Hiir.a wli.n all othrrn fail loiiiig mu will reKini tlinlr hint manhood, and old mr ii will recover their youtlilul vieor bv umnn 1CKV1 V. It quickly and iulv rroioreii Nervoua nviia. Ii.t Vitality, lmiioieuvy. Nlnlillr KmlsMonn. Lost 1'ow.r. Fallliiu llimery, Va.tliui lii-ise.ind all effect of MUsttiiuio or i'iMiaiid Induction, wined until, uariim-iiily. LiwInnHKor niarrli!L It nototilrciireabyntnrtlnKit tliOM-nt of diai-am. but it avreat nerre Inula and hlmul liulldcr. Iirug in bark tha pink glow to pnlo a-lirrka and re storing the Urn of youth. It ward, off ini-anlty and Consumption. lualat on hiving IIKV1VO, no other. It can be carried in vent pon-ket. By mall, 1.00 per package, or au lor .VOO, with a poel tlve written gnanintoe to rute or refund Ihammai. .ft.!.-l ,a ' V 10YAL MElJlClHE C0..271 Watel A1C, CHICAGO. ILL 1 Tor sale at Mlddlobiirgh, Fa., by . W. 1L 8PANGLER. ' WANTED-AN IDEA5.a5S thing to patent Protect yoorldrasjtheymny bring yon wealth. Write JOHN WKDUIIV BUttN A OO., Patent Attorney, Washington U. C fur their IU0 prla offyr? afav rhrtMrt4 ijfj World loves . a Winner" 8 Jm. Our 'Ninety Seven W Complete Line of J MM 1 1 MjMruii mmn mL are the I O I Experience I Q MONARCH CYCLE MFQ. CO. 2? W CHICAGO HEW TOM L0I7D0H Retail Salesrooms: mJ UL7 S Dearborn 5t. N7-80 Ashland Ave. Wlh r Chicago W Baco-Curo The only scienti fic cure for the Tobacco habit. Has cured thontanils where other remedies fulled. (Write lor proofs.) lines not depend on the will power 11I the user. It Is I In Cure. VcKi'tiible . hnriuliiMS. lUrectlnns are clear: V Hi nil tin Tiihnmiiiiiu irniil until IliiroCuio li'itllles you tn slop. Is the On'iiimit Writ ti 11 U mi run hi llciiirtly that rounds vour mon ey II it fulls lli . lire. Baco-Curo Baco-Curo Baco-Curo Baco-Curo Investiate Hiui- 1110 Pefore taliluu any remedy for the Tobacco llalut. AlldriiKulslsare aiithoi lcd to sell lluco-Curo with our lion clad written Kiiaranti'o. One Inx $l.im; :i Ihixch iviiarnnleeii ciire li'.'il. If vour tlriutirlMt iliait mil keep 11, hi will wml it. Write Kl UKK A UIKMIt'Al. A jll'U. CO., I.ll ..,, H k (pLODD POISON n A SPECIALTYroSr: f.WVi,Sc?.u"''"u-hM,nmon.!reTh anr part of the body, llulr or Kyrhrow fiilllmJ ont. It Is this Secondury lll.ooi IM)lsi5 we guarantee to ere. , Wesohc It the" olAtll 5?.--i"rV",c"""e,"ro world f",r cne cannot cure, 'ihla din !,,.. baflled the skill of 1 ho iil IZtSh.Vii Ciana. 500.O0O c,.ii behind r u r m"u Uonnl rnaraotr. Absolut e l.roofH nom m'lli A n SOl.aliaMiao XemplecVcAiilLii0 Stove Naphtha Tho Cheapest and Best Fuel on the Market. With it you can run a vapor stove for one half cent per hour. Clve us a call and be convinced. W. E. STAHLNECKER, Middleburgh, Pa. W RIPANS are intended for children, ladies and all who prefer a medicine disguised as con fectionery. They may now be had (put up in Tin Boxes, seventy-two in a box), - price, twenty-five cents or five boxes for one dollar. Any druggist will get them if you insist, and they obtained by remitting the price to The Ripans Chemical company SPRUCE ST. 1 WE MAKE7l1 Quality Too! STYLESl Ladies', Gentlemen's & Tandem. The Lightest ltiiuiilng Wheels on Earth. THE ELDREDGE ....Am... THE BELVIDEBE. Wo always Made Good Sewing Machlntt ! Why Shouldn't we Make Good Wheals I National, Sewing Machine Co., 339 Rroadway, Factory! New York. Belvldera. Ills. TABULES may always be i-j). j.it. .fx I