BP.,-. ""' What Is Ce!cry King? Itlrnp lie-n drink, aud Is .1 positive cure (or oonaUfMtloo headache, nervous disorders, TheHtiintinrii I. Inoy dlseasoa, and tli vnrl cuv troubles arlslnK rrom a disordered stoni- neb ni'd torpid liver. It inn, most agreeable medicine! and i recommended by physlclani generally Remember, it caret const! patio n, relcry Klnu Is sold In 280, iinil.TOc. puckugos by druggists and dealers. 1 b:jy goods in mm I'SVf i'i l r;i-rl i - Cnlalaouo system ot k;: frr, l.v .rj 1 .1 mi you u . ,c ..1 wholesale Prices wo . ii save va IS t" K per rei.tcnyour purchases. V 3 .-.vc ;v erecting and will owr.and occupy the 1 "-' r it . litdlngin America, employ 2.000 clcrt $ tilling cow try orders exclusively, ami will refund r . r-.has? price it poods don't suit you. Car Bsncrel Csialoguc-t.OOO psaes, I6.0PC i'-i ir:itii;'s. G0.000 quotations OOStS IIS 72 i ' us to print and mail. We will send it to you tjo i receipt c( i& cents, to show ourr,oodlaiih. MONTGOMERY WARD & CO- MICHIGAN AVE. AND MADISON ST. CHICAGO. SSVW, --7 TUT.Tf A SPECIALTY;; Mary ULOoii l-oisoN NrmsoentU Rliroalu I&M35 i1ith. Vou can be treated st hnuinforsauie pneouinlcrf:ime(;inrau tjr, If jrou prefer toootnehtra wewlllooa Imettqpaj railroad farssnd betel blllaaod 1 1 WS SSlI t.U'lim. If Vuil hiirn tub nn ....... Bocharee, If wulail to care. If yi'U have taken nier cury, loxuae Dptashi and (till bars SChst and m nc H i ar. Mucous Patches tn moulh, Sore Throat, l'iuiplt'H, '-p;ier V lllored 8doU llleer trr pan of the body, HalrorByebrowi rullinc out, it ts thiB secondary iii.oor) ( OISON es sroenintee to cart, We solicit thon tst obstl- onto discs ana ChaUenre the world flr a kihp weeeanoteure. Tnisdisesss has tjwsri " """"" ' i most .iniieiit nnm. PHmtton. Add: COOK KENEDY CO. ! VjT JUaauuiu Temple, CBIOAftO, ILI , mmm49 1 Our fsSMM "nine I llnind." i'ii i - ami miiiii li s reaily April aotli. Writ i. w ii. : we will aeutl I whtarssdri ritcsfwlil I lie lnwcrtlinn rnattilnb. , wsdtUTsrfroiBCluesgo i ' i 1 ' . i nr bl. i ma, i ilro.1. AlONTfiOMEPY WARD 4 C0 CHICAQO. i,vVifflirbUrg Garble Works. -? f-J. f iVfiff DEALBH IS ; DGALBH IS , 11 l4 . IARLE AND SCOTCH GRANITE IctcrniPQ nnd lUiUUUUU uuu iCernetery Lot; Enclosu re (!d Stones Cleaned and Repaired Prices as Low as the Lowest -. ATISPACTION GUARANTEED. J. A. JKNKINS, Ag't., Orows;rove, Pu. A BSQ CLU t.mt this out and return to ns ritbCl.oo and e'U semi tin follnwlnir, sostagi prepaid i VERMONT FARM .TOP UN v I. I YEAR NKW YORK WKKKLV TIHBUNEl YEAR. AMERICAN PODLTRY JOUHKAL 1 YEAR. THE OENTJ-B WOMAN I YEAR. MARION II A ELAND'S C'OOE B( kiK. T ICS NIOIITS IS A BAH ROOM, MJ For Regular Cost $4.00 Tbtscombtnatlnn fills it,i"iii need, Twofara pipers fur the raen The "Uenilewomon," an Ideal paper for the ladles N, Y. Weeklj Ttlbuni ror all Marlon Harland'a cooi B'iok with m nana sad 1,000 nraetie.it recipes for tbe wile ind the link. "Ten Ni'lit In i llirEoon," I in grpati'Kt Teinpersnce novel of ttts ige, A ten l ent stamp brtuirs laatpls ol papera and oui irreaf clubbing list, yeriBoiiI?aroiJonn!a!,wpULBrrscHVRRD' nil MilioSI.. Wlllillnslim. VI. SEND US ONE DOLLAR ! via t.ilfl bit 1&-Ih. nrw I - '' tall-rn I 1 .-r ,.). UttSKMYtMU (ilU AMI IHHlil umik mmu, by rri-ttfltt C.O.D., FUl.J.t-t tf riniintliin i-.XHIIllll it ' tl"t tu I If l ouiitl rf t- and ii- rrvftleat Mmr Kill. v . t vur uw ir hrnnl nni.i.r M.P.M n,r W'HIiL MRU. ' ' $13.00 the It " WRITF Fnttnrit mil FREE pent wltll Hi r nr f &IUVt CATALOU'Jt. ajil freight obSiaSfl. Till 9tore If eie No. R, OTen I tB'ixlMll. top IsiiMil lumilo from In' t pli( I run, extra larife rluei, lieaTy rover-, hem y llniiiirii and KrAt4'Mi Ifervr. tivrn :.i lf, Itfavr tln-llnet ovun iloor, hantlinnne Dlratl pUU-U nmanii'iitntiiitirt and trlmmlnir, pxlra fckftrt 'iwp, iriniiineHlafifllaliiMwrrUiallaH rMt?r,olr, hanil pome larrt iiriiami'nleil lia-it-. 9,l rul barser Hit, Atnl Wr rnrnlfh I'RKS an azwa wood irraO, r .In .- It a -r-fty-t nri liri. K laM S A Rl'lUIItU urtRlITKK villi every alove and iriiarnntxe aate di'llvrry to your rail romdatallon. Your liK-al ili-alar would charfj you IC'i m for mrh tovr, the fn licht la only about (l.ui for i iti'. .. .1' i i. ii..., i,i , ii,il,,,i fin mi Adiln--". SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO.dHC.iCHICaCO, ILL OWa, Siit S Ca. arc laorsoffclj raUabla. Sallat.J ' I Ocavih Brnm Tbki- (Jikm. Uae 1 id time, fold by di laafZa Ba' tlsiKI,yli In time. Suld by ilrunslitta. 11 1 n T '. !; :: i-r.ialM.ssi! rJSv ' - -ir.-'.""1" mm mmm a - " Vs Innnmontc (Too. c? 3T ask. W WINTER ON THE HILLS. rThst do the city housellngs know Of Winter hale and hoar. Who crouch beside the back-log's slow, lleblnd the battened door? Not theirs the wonder of the waste White league on league outrolletJ; Not theirs 'neath spacious skies to taste Tbe tonic of the cold! Sot theirs the North Wind's breath to breast Till each vein tingles warm Die while he drives along the west The horses of the storm! Not theirs the snows ss soft as sleep That hill and hollow hood; N'or the oracular silence deep Within the druld wood! Not theirs by night, undlmmcd. to mark The spangles of the Dear: Nor through the dark from arc to arc The pale auroras flare! Not theirs to share the proffered part Of wealth he holds In store; Not theirs to know the constant heart Of Winter hale and honr! Clinton Scollard, In N. Y. Independent. WHEN RETRIBUTION CAME TO CAIN By Wulkor Kennedy IN brooded all the afternoon in the secluded hollow among the lulls, Iicside him lay Ins brother, so fair, so beautiful, so still that a wintry ' coldness crept through his own body 1 at the thought of hirn. Sometimes an awo fell upon him nt Abel's failure to answer his angry questions, nnd he grew wild at his obstinacy. But Abel would awake. He must awake. Cain would wait until speech came back to the bluish lips. And so he lingered, al ternately thrilled with horror at the change lie had wrought in his brother; then nervous with rage ot the tender life he had so cruelly marred. The sun sank toward the sky line. Its heat bent secthingly upon the rock which walled the lonely glen. The sky ubove was lovingly blue. Ills broth er's flocks grazed in pence upon the hillside, suspecting nothing. 11a. k of thehillstbemountainslifted high their aerial diadems. The sun sank lower, and evening was coming on. How sad the motionless palm trees looked! Something was gone. Ifo must awake his brother. Now that tho madness had died out of him, his heart grew warm toward Abel. They would go home laughing together. "Awake, my brother, awake," he said. "Why dost thou trouble me tlius? 1 will nener deal with thee so again. Come, I will help theo derive thy flock home. Be not so still, Abel, but let me hear thy laugh." But the dead spake not, Tbe blue evs continued to look bevond him at tremor of life ran through the white , n i v i limbs of the stricken man. Cainy&hook him gently, and then with passionate vigor, but the pallid body lay limp In bis arms, nnd ho knew that his brother had gone before him, leaving but this silent, semblance behind. Hut whither had he gono, and what was It that had gone? Fenr entered his heart like a knife. The sun hnd sunk low, burning its , fires to a lambent blue the other side of the hills. Tbe birds sang plaintive ! It in the twilight; and then (mother sound fell uoti his ears, filling him with speechless dread. ' The sheep upon the hillside were ideating for their shepherd. i,nt should we do? He went to the , month of the glen and looked out upou the plain. Yonder In the distance wns the habitation of his father and moth er. He shuddered at the sight of it. As ono who walks in his sleep he left the glen and was making his way down the hillside, when a ipjestion was whispered to him: "Where is Abel, thy brother?" And before he thought, he answered aloud: "1 know not; am I my brother's keeper 7" Then he glanced about to see to whom he had made reply. Had he an swered the evening wind, or yon der golden-dyed cloud, or some spirit of the mysterious hills? He could not tell, for no one was there, no shadow even of a presence. Hut that question stirred the depths of his be ing, and he knew that wheuhe returned to bis father and mother they, too, would ask Wim what of his brother. A ctorm of madness came upon him. Ahead of him lay the Land of Host, through which ran the river that Sings, Never more could he go that way. NeTer more could he meet his mother's eyes; never more lay down in his father's tent. And so, forsaking the beaten track, 1 he fled, around the hills, scrambling j from rock to rock, from brake to brake, striving nt every step to place behind him the Land of Kest. He came to a pass that ran along the brow of a precipice, and he lied into a grewsome defile which rounde into the haggard and stony recesses of the hills until it seamed lost, and he was cut from sight of that hated Land of Peace. The stars flickered in the silvery veil of the twilight, and he flew as one ac cursed. Thorny shrubs, prickly vines an(' t"'atHng cacti lacerated his bare limbs, and with blood trickling from a hundred smarting wounds and a fury of escape in his brain, he fled like some f renzied animal pursued by fearful foes. Angry mountain streams tried to thwart his progress, but he plunged recklessly through their cold waters. Hissing cataracts impeded his way, but he dashed blindly into their seething spume, and climbed over their slip pery, moss-covered basins. Nothing held him, nothing ..frightened him, ; nothing daunted him. It was what was left behind that caused that terror in his heart; the dangers and darknesses ahead were a joy to him. Deeper and deeper he went into the umknown. ways of tbe hills, faring Ions dizzy abyMM And sleek: SaXnt till nlg-ht came upon him, yet gate him co pause. lie was grateful for being cow in the blessed land of shadows. Ere long luminous eyeballs gleamed linnr. him aa he mihd on ward, hut the madness In his veins repelled them, 1 "What is It I fee! toward thee?" he nnd he could see them fleeing in an- I aiJ f,r 1J,tIe while- "II is Bome Imal terror from him. Writhing things Nstaf so sweet as to be a pain. Leave coUed in his way and hissed vengefully i m no more, or, fairest child of earth. t him, but slunk away at his swift I couId not 1enr ,llis P3" m.v .online-. Even the c-low worms in i teart if deprived of the sight of thee. the grass paled nt his. presence, and the 0 1 songbirds of the night were silent as his feet went scurrying through the gross. It seemed to his shivering soul that all nature looked upon him as a ftarful thing a thing exiled and ac cursed Then the moor, eame ..n, and the leaping cascades nnd angry mountain streams glowed pallidly. Livid mists nf o-rcn flams roe from th earth and suffocated the forest ways. But the tortured man kept on, for rest was not in his soul; only the passion for ilight. And all the while he was go ing upward and toward the far line that marked the mountain tope where they met the sky. Steep and rugged was the way, and I he knew not what was beyond. The great trees fell off, and a thin, starved growth succeeded; then n wilderness of jagged stones, bare of aught save lichen embroideries. But he passed on swift ly, a racing shadow, knowing no fa tigue, no pain, until he reached the top of the ridge; and there he paused and looked ahead of him, at the star 1 first, and then nt what lay at his feet The mountain sloped down into what seemed to him a cloudy void; and now the impulse thAt had taken him up ward took him down the sides of the hills. He felt that he had put a bar rier between himself ntxl the Land of Ik-M, and gradually there stole upon him a sense of dreamy fatigue; yet he proceeded downward, untjl he saw lights gleaming nt Intervals on the plain. He stopped beside a tiny rill of water to refresh himself. A bank of moss, un der a large acacia tree, invited him to rest. He kneeled dowu and quenched li is thirst from the clear, trickling stream; nnd ulmost as a tired child, he dropped upon the mossy bank. Then merciful sleep blotted out the crime of the first murderer. He slept until fur into the coming day. Once a lion eame to the stream to drink, sniffed at the heavily-sleeping man, and then in a hangdog way de parted. Some noisy birds flitted about him on a tour of inspection, and with drew, chirping excitedly, to their fa vorite tree. Hut he lay tljere, brawn--ily, wildly beautiful, and slept as if he had never slopt before. Toward the evening there came one, half affrighted, who put an end to his slumber. lie awoke at the call of a voice, and looked tup to find a woman bending anxiously over him. "My mother," ho murmured, half s dream. "Nay, not thy mother," answered the swept voice of the woman, as she drew back timorously, yet laughing shyly. He raised himself and looked at her, looked anxiously, wonderingly nt her white and rounded beauty. XevcT had he seen aught like her, though her eyes spoke to him of tho brother whom he had loved and slain. Hut a certain sadness haunted those eyes and twined itself in a shadowy way around her mouth; and, nt liis eager gaze, a blush came into her face and spread itself in pale rose waves over her face nnd neck. "Do not flee from me as all things else flee. Hide here awhile that 1 may look irt one who seems kind. Let me breathe this unknown sweetnesa and help me drive thi6 heaviness from my heart." "Thou luist come from afar country," she ventured to 6ay, reaseured. "Knowest thou 6uch a place as the Land of Hest? Thence I came." "1 know it not. It must be-across the Hills of the Sky, which none of our people have ever ascended." "I seek the Laud of the Forgotten. May this be it?" "Nay, this is the Land of Wander ing." "Then it is here, perchance, that 1 must spend my life." He burled his face in his hands and mused; and the woman, seeing him thus in reverie, slipped noiselessly away, as if she would escape his pres ence: 6he hnd not gone far down the stream when he gave a cry that brought Caiu wondering tohis feet. He hnd thought flint she was still beside him, but to bis surprise he beheld her at some distance, nnd in deadly peril. A great bowlder, loosened by some action of the wind or water from its place higher up the mountain, was rolling slowly downward, its passage retarded now nnd then by a stout sap ling or nu outcropping scrap of rock. Each impediment gave way before it, and in a few moments it must reach the spot where the woman, paralyzed with fear beyond all power of motion, stood directly in its path. The sight brought back to Coin that same resist less fury which had come to him when he had slain his brother. He was on his feet instantly, but he could not reach her in time, for she was too far down the rnvine the bowlder was nearer. Thrilling with a new and imperious emotion, he sprang with a lithe leap ncross nn intervening ledge to where the bowlder hung for a mo- ment held back by a gnarled fir, and, ! instantaneously nnd unflinchingly set- I blood, mnde rich by a judicious admix ting his naked shoulder against its ture of nourishment, physical nctivities jagged sharpness, he heaved sidewise nnd happy thoughts, nnd paints them with superhuman might. I there ns nrt could never do. The skin The huge brown mass, swayed thus out of its bnlance, turned from its course and went plunging downward upon a new track, tearing it wild way through brush and brambles, but leav ing the crouching woman safe to one aide. Aa the thunder of Its descent echoed sororously up from the far deeps af the ralley, Cain, with a treaulous 1 ry of Joy to her whom be bad tared, fel faint and quivering upon the sward. When he opened his eyes the woman knelt beside him, staunching a cut on hia shoulder and touching hi face with 1 her soft hands ,Thou can!rt not -eIart from me again. , -t f 3 1 . 1 1, T 1... -1 O V- Why, indeed, should I let thee go? Is there not strength enough left in the onus of Cain to hold so frail o thing ns thou? But no; thou disiirniest me with thine eyes." The woman looked lovingly upon his beauty nnd his strength, and sa ; Boftly: "whnt would thou have of I m?" ' know not I know not, he said. I helplessly, as one who longs, but longs for what he knows not. Then the dark ness wna made clear in his mind and he thus concluded: "As my mother is to my father, so be thou to me." Though a woman, he knew she was not as his mother. Ileautiful nnshe was, he felt that there was something in her that corres-poncicd with the fatal flaw in himself. Yet this did not repel him. It lacked some time of the fulling of night when they descended into the plain, whose lori,' grass waved mysteri ously in the pale twilight, and, band in hand, wandered until they beheld the outlines of a city with temples nnd tow j i .1 i i i . . v. - " u"u P" " ." kv. To him this was n wonder; but she told him it was there she lived, and thither he must go with her and no harm would befall him. And thero he- found toil that helped him forget awhile that deed in the lonely glen in the Land of Hest. And she who had led him into the Land of Wandering became his wife. Of that union were born two sons, nnd, when Cain liKiked npon them, his soul often grew wck within him, for one was like unto himself, and the other wns Abel come back to life again. Strange to 1 say, he loved the fair-haired boy with aurpassing tenderness, and the sight I of the dark-browed youth was almost hateful to him. And Adah, his wife, I loved the laughing, blue-eyed loy, too, nnd saw In him the beautiful dream of a mother's love come true. And Cain waxed very prosperous. II is great strength, derived from tbe wild woods, served him well in the be ginning. This begot skill, and, after that, there came to him the sense of power over other raen. In the coune of time he became chieftain over the Shadowy City. Despite the crime that hnd sttnined his soul, he had attained everything that the heart, could desire, and be knew that he had mastered the wild demon within that had once risen and slain his brother. Could it be, he wondered, that he had done no wrong at all? One evening he had held a revel In his palnce in honor of the councilors of the city. In ma.Tniflcenoe it had sur passed anything of the kind ever given by a chieftain, nnd It wus late before the guests had departed. Cain hnd dis missed his slaves until the morrow, nnd he sot alone in the banquet-room medi tating upon the splendor nbout him, and almost doubting the reality of the honors that had come upon him. Hut many aa they were, he knew that they ('id nut satisfy his SOUl, for deep rOWTJ In his heart was ever a gnnwing wish for a word out of the old days and for a glimps of that secluded hollow in the Land of ilest beyond the Hilla of the Sky. Even in the moments of his high est triumphsi the rooks and trees of that glen would come waverlngljf be fore his eyes. While he tait thus moodily dreaming at the table, a young man entered the apartment noisily and stood before him. He hnd evidently been under the impression that the hall was deserted, for he quailed at sight of its. solitary oc cupant. Somewhat abruptly lie saluted his father, and then his tremulous hand sought a glass, tilled with red wine, which stood upon the table. liaising it to his lips, he drained it to the dregs. An unaccountable terror seised the soul of Cain. The frown upon the youth's brow.'the madness in his eye, the disorderof his appearance, recalled something from the past, and he saw himself In the son who sitood before him saw his old self when the demon lived within him. Then a deadly intui tion broke upon his mind, causing him to rise painfully nnd demand: "Where is thy brother?" The father's face was white as death while the youth hesitated, asif to evade the question, and then said, with a sneering laugh: "Am I my brother's keeper?" Intolerable pain, remorse, despair nnd murder passed over the fnce of, Cnin. He moved to spring upon bis son nnd rend him to pieces, but his inten tion was stayed; a look of intense and hopeless ngony flitted ncross his face, he tottered and fell dead amid the. wine cups of the table. Saturday Evening Post, A Clear Complexion. A daily bath, dully exercise in some form and a habit of deep breathing are prime requisites to the possession and retention of health and prettiness. A smooth, firm, soft, velvety skin and a clear complexion nre also greatly de pendent upon a liberal and enslly di gested diet. Toor soil will not produce beautiful roses or luscious fruits; so with the roses on youthful cheeks. Na ture dips her brush into the bright red is an clastic structure. nfTordin.9; an ex tensive surface for the swent glands to open upon. In some parts of the body these glands number twenty-five hun dred or more to the square inch. Each little gland secretes nnd pours forth that form of effete matter known as In sensible perspiration. N. T. Ledger Monthly. JESUS TEACHING BtklXlTY taaday School Trunin In Ihr Inlrr atloaus Series for April IU. 180O John I :t 1 1 I 7. Based upon reloubet's Select Notes. GOLDEN TEXT.-l have given you an ixample. John 13:15. THE SECTION Includes the whole chap ter, together with the other accounts of the Lord's Supper. TIME. Thursday evening, April G. A. D SO. The night before the crucifixion. PLACE. An upper room In Jerusalem: perhaps, as Edershelm thinks. In St. Mark's house. EXPOSITION. 1. Jesus and His Disciples Assemble In an Upper Koom. Jerusalem, early Thursday evening (v. 1). After the anointing In Bethany (our last lesson 1 after sunset of Saturday (the. Jewish Sabbath), Jesus the next morning made His triumphal entry into Jerusalem. nnd taught in the temple both Mondni and Tuesday. Wednesday. April j. was spent in retirement at Hethnny in prep aration for the awful day of cruci fixion. The next morning He sent two of His disciples to the city to prepare for the celebration of the Passover. I 1. "Now before the feast of the prws- over:" That Is. Immediately before; just ns He- was about to sit down with His disciples to the Paschal feast. Abbott- This is simply a note of the time nnd place. "When Jesus knew:" He was fully conscious that His last hours on enrth were nt hand when it was nppointed thnt "He should depart." the Creek expressing the net of going over from one place or sphere to an other. This is one reason for or condi tion In which "He loved them unto tine end:" "to the end of all the ages." The word may olso mean "to the uttermost" (margin of 1!. V.), the uttermost of His nnture. the uttermost degree possible to love. II. The Strife us to Who Should He Greatest. Luke SSiS-l-.IO. We cannot understand the full meaningof our les son unless we turn to Luke and read nbout the contention among the dis ciples, probably its they were- assem bling It: the upper room before sitting down to the table. It was apparently twofold, who should be greatest, nnd who should not be lenst, and wns n very strange scene on the eve of the most solemn time in nil their lives. III. Jesus Washes His Disciples' Feet. An Object Less :i nn( Its Teachings, Vs. 2-17. 2. "And supper being ended:" The It. V, I- tuni c correct here, during supper. The . riginnl phrase is, "and supper hauug been, begun," or served. Jesus, by wailing till supper was fully begun, gave the disciples ample oppor tunity to repent nnd take the lower in stead of the better places, nnd to wash one another's feet. 3. "Jesus knowing:" Fully conscious that He was the Son. of Cod, with all power and glory, to which He was soon to return. This verse sets before us the Infinite condescension ot Jesus, and reenforces the lesson of the act that fol lows. No disciple could ever claim that he was too great, too glorious, or of too high rank, or of too supreme power, to do the humblest service for man. 4. "He riseth from supper:" This was the Passover supper, not the Lord's Sup per, which was instituted later in the evening. 6. "Then cometh He to Simon. Peter:" In the order of washing. "Lord, dost Thou wash my feet?" The emphasis lies first on thou, and then, a little slighter, on my. 8. "If I wash thee not, thou hast no part with me:" Cannot share my king dom, my character, my work. Hcoause tho first condition of disciplcship wns submission to Christ, even when He eonld not understand all the reasons for the command. Because this washing was symbolical of spiritunl cleansing, and Peter himself understood it) so (v. 9). 9. "Not my feet only, but also my hands nnd my head:" If the washing meant having a part in tho work and character of Jesus, and being with Jesus, ha could not have enough of n cleansing so precious. In spite of his errors his heart glowed with love to his teacher. He had begun to learn his U-s son. 10. He that is wnahed:" Bathed all over. A different word from "to wash" that follows, which means to wash a part, as the hands or feet. "Necdethnot save to wash nis feet:" The bathing represents the new birth; the washing the feet, the cleansing from daily Im perfections, the daily prayer "forgive us our debts." 13. "Ye call me Master:" Teacher, with the definite article, the teacher. "And Lord:" One who lias authority over you. You accept my instruction, and obey my commands. 14. "If I then:" The I is emphatic. "Ye also ought to wash one nnother't feet:" Apparently this is what they hnd just been unwilling to do when they first came in. Bend here vs. 34 nnd 35. 15. "I hnve given you an example:' A copy to be imitated, like nu archi tect's plan, or a sculptor's model, or n painting to be copied. "Thnt ye should do nS I have done to you:" Imitate the principle, the spirit, the soul of the act PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS. The washing of the feet signifies that the soul must be cleansed before one can have part in the Kingdom of Cod Jesus' washing the feet of Judns the trnitor shows the wide sweep of II is love, and the love with which His chiurch should seek to help nnd snve even the worst men that may enter the fold of the church. To this day, even in the Christian world, one of the subtlest and the mos common of the temptations with.which we are assailed is the same which tried the disciples the desire to be account ed the greater. Base jealousy of others, on nccount of their superior riches, talents, honors, or social position, often sadly mars what are otherwise lovely Christian characters. John Rnakin invariably dlnea In soli tude, for be finds that conversation has 1 i ... x. : .1 : I a uuu tucvv uuuu 1111 ui0c.nuu. ! 5 What Shall v FOR THE DEUCATl actx You have tried iron and 1 nttta t,-nf-. Rut fu t - T pj.ic ano mm, jner sallow rS corrij-.'.;-v;cn worries you. Prr- 9 haps she lias a little tucbinrr cwT air j. Her bead acl,; J it study. Give her I anisiiccnno vili, e f a The c:l will feed her xvast ner 9 body; the glycerine will soothe ' her co igh, o.::d the hypophes- i h'tss will g;.vc new power ;.nd viror to her nerves and brain, f Never say ycu cannot V 1 take cocM-ver oil n until ycu 6 have hire. Scott's Emulsion. I u You will be obliged to change J yonr opinion at once. Cnildrtn 0 V especially become very fond 0 V cf it; and infants do not know f when it is added to their food. ? 5ot and Ix.oo : all druggist. O a SCOTT & DOWNR, Chatr.ists, Nrw YcrV I v HUMPHREYS WITCH HAZEL c u R E S Piles or Hemorrhoids Fissures & Fistulas. Burns & Scalds. Wounds & Bruises. Cuts & Sores. Boils A Tumors. Eczema & Eruptions. Salt Rheum & Tetters. Chapped Hands. Fever Blisters. Sore Lips & Nostrils. Corns & Bunions. Stings & Bites of Insects. Three Sizes, 25c, 50c. and $1.00. Sulil by druggist, or sent BOStfaM on receipt of prior litaruiiEvs' iED.cs., 111 IIS wiinasi., v.T.r. $5 r. . , r r- uuiiBD M DltDtl m K1VI AFTER SHIPMENT; IF NOT, RETURN, NO MONEY WANTED IN ADVANCE. Wltn even Qmi'it KltchcnCiMntl we Beiid, free, 1 copy of "IV every- Day Cook Book," containing 81S pages nf ibt e 1 Be 1 ever rns ti 11 u ml Id 53 The top nf psn'nrt a 17 in. -. . 17 a Inches: hi-lirht.il nllMl nhhlHi" . r inches: hal two mi'titl-hnttom Mim. one hnldlnn H IV; the nl her p-i rt It loni-il tur t-nrn-lili-iil, grannm, suinir. m.; VM lane drawer ; 01m bread hoard, which lUMWJ '.rami-. Price, complete, only S5, on board cars In t .n.n, with 1 .... ..... I. iNmlf fl-i PflV 111 SU tlUY.4 If VH kitchen furniture vou ever saw; If not entirely pl-:i-4 return at mir expense. No deposit, no piarantyi quired from any nUib'e person. In ordering M M w say vnu ii' 11 reitin-r in mm wirr vuii, i i j ""rv" ant and that vuu accept our Kitchen Cabinet offer Na. 8. Order to-di'iy ; or, send for Illustrated uirriihir So. I Mittl VUI F.Y IN. CO.. 355 IT. Hirriwi it. CkiM , f n. , ii,i,.1.,i. Vnllnv fimilllim I, IHillTki through ri-MUrm always from factory to nrrmie lllllaalla DrlOM. Don't accept u worthless lnillai.ui A m aan miua 1 en PIIIT ! 4 SZ d i . an iir, it1 1 areas mmm aiww mmmmm w ZJm net ftiM-rtai hiu mbbm ji.us- i Sa ll'l SSIS Inaaa nllhNI I al,lb Hnn'l rrU-ft sstlsfsrtiirr ilT, send no monev. - . ana BCDU w m ,, mA l fnimM Msful f U I al'U null i-iiiini DUisa iu au j'" on.r prlf., SI. 69 " ck.riM. THESE KNES-PANT mVilT'T" bats SS 4 U I i MM sa. lai art est etsfTwasn at N.M. Mas. will doubts Hi and knees, l.u.l 1MU aa Illustrate! MM . arwu.! I ....,,1,1 1 ... SH? kk ILL-WOOL Oakollrauhatr., neat, hamln " ' IV tarn, fine serge lining. Clavta. patent Interlining. I j i i --A fiw.niSllnnaewtna.S tallr...aeelktMitoat, a snlt any hoy or parent urea be proud of. ros rasa cum Saarias rr'I', uS (suits, overcoat! or alitor), for bora 4 TO 10 "'l wiM rov Saasjai aaek Ba. toe, contains fashlen tin'. Sails aad avaeaaaas asadsto araar from St.MaJ Sample aen t free on application. address, SEARS, ROEBUCK CO. (Inc.), Chicago, U . ... II imd mi.Hmi. kw .j. nwler. Ca, aratksttaaai; rauaait. mm PERFECT MEN DO NOT DESPAIRl 4 1W Infrr LaDVr! 1 loyaand amtilltona u' m.l ne reaion-a w you. ,, worst cases of Nervous Pjaj iv am- aoiwiiuKTij vni PIRl'MTO TABLE1 tilvo prompt relief to Ipaoaaa falling memory and inews. unit drain of Tltal iwwers.ir.i- red by Indiscretions or xr of early year. Impnrt and potcucy to every tm .. .. . 3a hlroini to 1 . and luatro to tbeyaaV eyes .1 I mid. Otic .Oe box reDews I V ', "Si a l-ixes hi i.Sv a com-f9 111 I IJMaM Sff9 .t iiirenr noil -v rofund- ,f ,m ., -r.-.l In vest i-orket. rldMJtT every" 1 mailed In plain wrapiieron ; ' J d.t;ii: im- I'.i-ECTO CO.. Caxton Bldg . CBicage-"! For sale in Middlebrirtrlii Pa.( Middleburg Drug Co., mMt I'l'-i nut Mills liy IK-nry Hardnijr, :"' Pfmii'ii ( Vcck l)y J. W. Biinpeell' 2 7 So.vt 'lllllllTOttHrOS S2.75-.i J Sand No Motray. &'"- state tout kaajM ad "W'jvI number of laehea arouno j arasal taken over unJ'r, .1 close up under arru. ni." .1 . .-r-r- .ntedand tbenioXM a?rl ! nSSSXZtmi i " T a nf li'l for woo, tSsnSlSEimSm urn tSSiSSitSfm aultobla forbot!iraav:-"-cl(pj ffttaranrewa far' and Ortreoato at frSTSJS to Bia, write j fc J -J ."I. : c-i Kitchen E WarU Easy. j 9 i J l ml