V h The Cure that Cures Coughs, Colds, Grippe, Whooping Cough. Asthma, Bronchitis and Incipient Consumption, Is The CrERMAN REMEDY" BUT GOODS IN CHICAGO . r ;'!"ii"fH!:: ' a'TS XSSt 8fe - .iiPl.irli'.TT ...... .;. T;:.ii .)ri.tin Have you triad the .'.(' ijr system of buying EVcKiTHING you use at Wholesale Prices? We cansevc you 15 to 40 per cont.on your purchases. Wearc naw (reeling and will own and occupy the highest building in America, employ 2,000 clerks filling, cnuntry orders exclusively, and will refund purchase price if goods don't suit you. Our Gimral Catalogue 1,000 pages, 10,000 MatlratioM, GC.COO quotations costs us 72 cents to print ard mail. We will send it to you upon receipt of 13 cents, to show your good faith. MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. MICHIGAN AVE. ANO MADISON ST. CHICAGO. R LOOP POISON liryU.ouo"XoN Primary. Im on dary or Ter I fasa iirer In lftn5 clr. Toucan be treated pens anently M borne fur rm price asder wufunu ty. If yno prefer to con her wwllloo tract tu par railroad t areand acta! bill, aiut tvoeh arre , If we fail to cur. 1 f j o u bar taken m r ury, Iodide potash, end MIU ha, ache ant PUu, M ucoas latches hi mouth , H re Throat, Imple), Copper Colored Spots. Ulcer oa any pan of tlio body, lialr or Eyebrows falling rat. It la thla Secondary BLOOD POISON v guarantee! ear. W solicit to most obsti nate easea and challenge tha world for a ease we oiannot cure. Thla disaws hn. i... Jsttad the eklll of the moat mine at ph ya. Una. 8X800,000 capital behind Our DDCondt- Uonal gnaranty. A oeolateproor sent sealed on appUc.t.m. Addres. COOK REMEDY CO 901 auauolo Temple, ClUCAtHJ, ILU A BIG CLUB. cut this out anrt return to tin with 8)1. oo nnd we'll send the followlnir, postage prepaid i VKRMONT FARM JOURNAL 1 YKAR. StlWTORK WEFKI.Y TKIBl'NK 1 YEAR. AMERICAN POULTRY JOURNAL 1 YEAR. TBBORMTLIWOMAM 1 Y K . R. MARION llAltl.ANDHCOOK HOOK. TEN MOM I S IN A 1IAK ROOM. all For $1.00. Replar Cost $4.00. ThlB combination fills a family need. Two farm papers for the men The "Gentlewoman." an Ideal paper for the lartles-N. Y. Weekly Tribune for ull M n r ton Harlamt's Cook B ok with son PHK'eH and l.tMi praetleal recipe for the wile, and the book. ' Ten Nlrhtn In a Ilur Rivim." Hie greatest Temperance novel of the ntfe. A twe cent stjunn I'rtnirs sainpWs of papers and our great clubbing Hat. Vermont Farm Jonriial, w Vk V 0- AIM MaloNt., Wilmington. VI. Dr. Humphreys' Specifics net directly upon the disease, without exciting disorder in other porta of the system. They Care the Sick. so, CtJBSS. 1 Fevers, Congestion, Inflammation. .'J3 J W orm.. Worm Fever, Worm Colic. .'43 3- Teelhlng. Colic, Crying, Wakefulness .38 4- Diarrhea , of Children or Adult M 7 -rough. Cold, Bronehttl 33 H-.uralila, Toothache, Facaach. 33 -Headache, 8lck Headache. Vertigo. . .93 10 Dvaaepala. Indlgtlon, Weak 8tomach,3 S 11- uppreseed or Painful Periods 33 13 White. Too Prof ue parted1 33 13- Croup. Laryngitis. Hoarsened 33 14- hall Hhruni. ErTilpcla., Eruption. . .33 1 (-Rheumatism, Rheumatic Palm S3 ld-Malarla. Cbllla, Fever and Ague 33 19-Catarrh, Influenia, Cold In the Head .S3 30-V booplng-Cough 33 37-HldncT Dteae 98 Dft-Mervou Debility 1.09 3)0 Urinary Weahne. WettlngBed... .33 TT-Grlp. Bay Fever 98 Dr. Humphrey' Manual of all Disease at your Druggltta or Mailed Free. Sold by drugglata. or aent on receipt of price. Humphrrya' Med. Co., Cor. William i John Hta SHAKE PERFECT MEN ! OO NOT DESPAIR I lo Not anger Laawrl Tin toys and ambition of life ran f . ... ... Tho . r . worst caat of Uerroua Debll 'pe-Ve'VabTe'i;' .Give prompt relief to Inwmnla, falling memory and lb wait and drain of vital power. I nrur red by Indlecretlon or eice.te 3 1 mmmwm Imnart .ItfA. and potency torry function Brace npthe ytem. Olve .hbi and luatre to the .eye of young ITltal energy; orold. One 40o boy rD a boiea at a H teed cure or money raf nnd- let guaran- ted. Can b everywhere or EES In olaln wrapper on rwcelntof prlee arrieo in veat pww. m. by TU K PMHFKCTO CO., Caxton Bldg.. caicago." For side in Middlehurgli, Pa., by Middlcburg Drug Co., inMt. Picas ant Mills by Henry Hanling, and in Ppiin's Creek by J. V. Sampeell. Dr. Fennel's Golden Relief, p A TRCB PKCIIIO IM ALL. INFLAMMATIONS 5 Old Sore., Wouada, SbaeaMtl , K.raJl ( old. " A SUWg OUW Orlp. For an Pall lotldi or out r dealer. Wdaahy Wm ruSmU.TT. 1 'ljl a CAPITAL AND LABOR. Industrial Problem the Theme of Dr. Talmage's Sermon. Tell How the Contlamal War He Iwcra Them May Be Ended Lr.imi. Ilranii from He pent Strike. Copyright. I SOT, by I.ou1 Klopsch.J Washington, Aug. 11 In thla discourse Dr. Tnlninpje sug (.eats how the everlnstinjj war between capital and labor may tie brought to happy end. The text is L Corinthian! 12:21: "The eye ennnot sny unto tha hand, I hnre no need of thee." Fifty thousand workmen in Chicago censing work in one dny, Urooklyn stunned by the attempt to halt its rail road cars, Cleveland in the throes of a labor agitation nnd restlessness among toilers all over the hind have caused an epidemic of strikes, ami somewhat to better things I apply the Pauline thought of my text. You have seen an elnbornte piece of . machinery, with a thousand wheels and a thousand bands nnd u thousand pul leys, all controlled by one great water wheel, the machinery so ndjusted that when you Jar one juirt of It you jar all porta of it. Well, human society is s great piece of mechanism controlled by on great and ever revolving force the wheel of God's providence. You harm one pnrt of the machinery nnd you harm all parts. All professions. Inter dependent. All trades interdependent. All clnsses of people interdependent. Capital and labor interdependent. No such thing ns independence. Dives can not kick I.nznrus without hurting his own foot. They who threw Bhadrach into the furnace got their own bodies scorched. Or to come back to the fig ure of the text, what a strange thing it would be if the eye should say: I over see the entire physical mechanism. I despise the other members of the body. If there Is anything I am disgusted with, it is with those miserable, low lived hands. Or what if the hand should I sny: I am the boss workman of the whole physical economy. I have no respect for the other members of the body. If there is anything I despise, it is the eye, sested under the dome of the forehead, doing nothing but look. I come in, and I wave the flag of true between the two contestants, and I say : "The eye cannot aay to the hand : 'I have no need of thee.' That brings me to the first sugges tion, end that it, that labor and capital are to be brought to a better under standing by a complete canvass of the whole subject. They will be brought to pesce when they find that they are iden tical ia their interests. When one goes dowa, they both go down. When one rises, they both rise. There will be an equilibrium after awhile. There sever has been aa saception to the rule. That which is good for one elsss of society will be good for all, and that which Is bad for one clasa will event ually and in time be bad for alL Every speeeh thst labor makes against capital postpones the day of permanent adjustment. Every speech thst oapital makes sgalnat labor post pones the day of permanent adjust ment. When capital maligns labor, it is the sys cursing the hand. When la bor maligns capital, it is the hsnd curs ing the eye. As far as I have observed, the vast majority of capitalists are suc cessful laborers. If the capitalists would draw their glove, you would see the broken finger nail, the scar of an old blister, the stiffened finger joint. The great publishers of the country for the most part were bookbinders or type setters on small pny. The greet car riage nianufscturers for the most part sandpapered wagon bodies in wheel wright shops. While, on the other hand, in alt our large manufacturing establishments you will find men working on wages who once employed 100 or S00 hands. The distance between capital and labor is not a great gulf over which is swung a Nlsgnra suspension bridge. It is only a step, nnd the capitalists are crossing over to become laborers, snd the lsbor ers are crossing over to become csp italists. Would God they might shske hands while they cross. On the other hsnd, laborers sre the highest style ot capitalist. Where are their invest ments? In banks? No. In the rail roads? No. Their nerve, their muscle, their bone, their mechanical skill, their physicsl health, sre magnificent cap ital. He who has two eyes, two ears, two feet, two hands, ten fingers, has machinery thst puts into nothingness carpet snd screw snd cotton factory and all the other implements on the planet. The capitalists were laborers, the la borers were capitalists. The sooner we understand that the better. Again, there is to come relief to the laboring classes of this country through cooperative associations. I am not at this moment speaking of trades unions, but of that plan by which laborers put their surplus together snd become their own capitalists. Instead of being de pendent upon the beck of this capitalist or thst cspitalist, they manage their own affaira. In England and Wsles there are 813 cooperative associations. They have 340,000 members. They have a capital of $18,000,000, or what corre sponds to our dollars, and they do a business annually of $03,000,000. Thom as Brsssey, one of the foremost men in the British parliament, on the subject says : "Cooperation is the one and the only relief for the laboring populations. This is the path," he ssys, "by which they are to come up from the hsnd to the mouth style of living to reap the rewards and the honors of our ad vanced civilization." Lord Derby and John Stuart Mill, who gave half their lives to the study of the lsbor question, believed in cooperative institutions. Tha cooperative institution formed ta froy, N. Y., stood long enough to 11 ustrs te thai fact that great good might some of such aa institution if it were rightly carried on and mightily devel oped. "But," says some one, "haven't these institutions sometimes been a failure?" Yes. Every great movement has been a failure at some time. Application of the steam power a failure, electro-telegraphy a failure, railroading a failure, but now the chief successes of the world. "But," says some one, "why talk of surplus being put by laborers into co operative associations, when the vast multitude of toilers in this country are struggling for their daily bread and have no surplus'.'" I reply: Put into my hsnd the money spent by the la boring classes of America for rum and tobacco, and I will establish cooperstive associations in nil parts of the land, soma of them mightier than any finan cial institutions of the country. We spend in this country over $100,000,009 ivery year for tobucco. We spend over $1,500,000,000 directly or indirectly for rum. The tailoring classes spend their share of this money. Now, suppose the laboring man who has been expending his monev in those directions should I just add up how much he has expended during these past years and then sup pose thnt that money was put into a co operative association und then suppose he should have nil his friends in toll, who had made the same kind of expend iture, do the same thing, and thnt should be added up and put into a co operative association. And then take all thut money expended for overdress nnd overstyle and overliving on the part of toiling people in order that they may appeur as well as persons who have mure income gather that all up, and you could have cooperative associations all over this lund. I am not saying anything now about trades unions. You want to know what I think of trades unions. I think they are must beneficial in some directions, and they have a specific object and in this day, when there are vast monopo lies a thousand monopolies concen trating the wealth of the people into the possession of a few men, unless the laboring men of this country and all countries hand together they will go under. There is a lawful use of a trade union, but then there is an unlawful use of a trade union. If it means sym pathy in time of sickness, if it means finding work for people when they are out of work, if it meana the improve ment of the financial, the moral or the seligious condition of the laboring elasses, that is sll right. Do not srtlats band together la sa srt union? Do not singers band togethsr in Handel and Haydn societies? Do not newspsper men band together la press clubs? Do not minuter of religion band together in conferences snd associations? There Is not in all the land a city where clergy men do not coma together, many of them once a week, to talk over affairs. For these reasons you should not blame labor guilds. When they are doing their legitimate work, they are most admirable, but when they come around with drum and fife snd flag and drive people off from their toil, from their scaffoldings, from their factories, then they sre nihilistic, then they are com munistic, then they are barbaric, then they are a curse. If a msn wsnts to atop work, let him stop work, but he cannot stop me from work. But now suppose that all the laboring classes bended together for bene ficlent purposes in co-operative assoclstion un der whatever name they put their means together. Suppose they tske the money thst they waste in rum snd to bacco and use it for the elevation of their families, for the education of their children, for their moral. Intellectual and religious improvement, what a dif ferent state of things we would have in this country and they would have in Great Britain! Do you not realize the fact that men work bettor without stimulant? You ssy, "Will you dsny the laboring men this help which they get from strong drink, borne down aa they are with many anxieties and exhausting work?" I would deny them nothing that is good for them. I would deny them strong drink. If I bsd the power, becsuie it is dsmsging to them. My father said: "I becsme a temperance man in esrly life because I found that in the harvest field, while I was naturally weaker than the other men, I could hold out longer wan any or them. They took stimu lant and I took none." I know a gentleman very well who haa over 1,000 hands in his employ. I said to him some years ago when there was great trouble in the labor market: "How are you getting on with your men?" "Oh," he said, "I have no trouble." "Why," I said, "hare not you had any strikes?" "Oh, no," he said. "I never hud any trouble." "What plan do you pursue?" He said: "I will tell you. All my men know every year Just how matters stsnd. Every little while I call them together and say: 'Now, boys, last year I made so much; this year I made less; so you see I cannot pay as much as I did last year. Now, I want to know what you think I ought o hove as a percentage out of this es tablishment snd what vrages I ought to give you. You know I put all my en ergy in this business, put all my for tune in it and risked everything. What do you really think I ought to have and you ought to have?' By the time we come out of that consultation we are unanimous. There never has been an exception. When we prosper, we all prosper together; when we suffer, we all suffer together, and my men would die for me." Now, let all employers be frank with their employes. Take them Into your confidence. Let them know Just how matters stand. There Is an Immense amount of common sense in the world. It is always safe to appeal to it I remark, again, great relief will come to the laboring classes of this country through the religious rectifica tion of it. Labor is honered and re warded in proportion aa a community la Christianized. Why ia It that our smallest coin la this country la a paa- while in China It takes a half dosea pieces of coin or a dosen to make ont of our pennies In value, so the Chinese carry the cash, ss they call it, like a string of beads around the neck? We never want to pay less than a penny for anything in this country. They must pay that which is worth only the sixth part or the twelfth part of a pen ny. Heuthenism and iniquity and infi delity depress everything. The Gospel of Jesus Christ elevates everything. How do I account for this? I account for it with the plainest philosophy. The religion of Jesus Christ Is a demo cratic religion. It tells the employer that he is a brother to all the opera tives in the establishment made by the same God, to lie in the same dust and to be saved by the same supreme mercy. It does not make the slightest difference how much money you have, you cannot buy your way Into the king dom of Heaven. If you have the grace of God in your heart you will enter neaven. So you see it is a democratic religion. Saturate our populations with this gospel, and labor will be re spectful, labor will be rewarded, labor will be honored, capital will be Chris tian in all its behavior, and there will be higher tides of thrift set in. Let me say a word to all capitaliats: Be your own executors. Make invest ments for eternity. Do not be like some of those capitalists I know who walk around among their employes with a supercilious air or drive up to the fac tory in a manner which seems to indi cate they are the autocrat of the uni verse, with the sun and moon In their vest pockets, chiefly anxious when they go among laboring men not to be touched by the greasy or smirched hand and have their broadcloth injured. Be a Christian employer. Remember those who are under your charge are bone of your bone and flesh of your flesh, that Jesus Christ died for them and that they are immortal. Divide up your estates, or portions of them, for the relief of the world before you leave it. Do not get out of the world like that man who died In New York leaving In his will $40,000,000, yet giving how much for the church of (lod, how much for the alleviation of human suffering? He gave some money a little while be fore he diel. That wns well, but In all this will of $40,000,000 how much? One million ? No. Five hundred thousand? No. One hundred dollars? No. Two cents? No. One cent? No. These great cities groaning in anguish, na tions crying out for the hrend of ever lasting life. A man in a will giving $40, 000,000 and not one cent to Godl It is a disgrace to our civilization. Or, as il lustrated in a letter which I have con cerning a man who departed this life leaving between $3,000,000 and $8,000, 000. Not one dollar was left, this writer says, to comfort the aged workmen and workwomen, not one dollar to ele vate and instruct the hundreds ot pals children who stifled their childish growth in the heat snd clsmor of his factory. Is it strange that the curse of the children of toll follows such in gratitude? How well could one of his msny millions have been disbursed for the present snd the future benefit of those whose hands had woven literally the fabric of the desd man's princely fortune. O capitalists of the United States, be your own executors! Be a George I'rabody, if need be, on a smsll scale. God has made you a steward. Discharge your responsibility. My word is to all laboring men In thla country: I congratulate you at your brightening prospects. I congratulate you on the fact that you are get ting your representative!, at Al bany, at Harrlsburg und nt Wash ington. I have only to mention such s man of the past as Henry Wilson, the shoemaker; aa Andrew Johnson, the tailor; ns Abraham Lincoln, the boatman. The living Illustrations easily occur to you. This will go on until you have representatives at all the headquarters, and you will hare full justice. Mark that. I congratulate you also at the opportunities for your ehll dren. I congratulate you that you have to work and that when you are dead your children will have to work. I congratulate you also on your op portunities for Information. Plato paid $1,300 for two books. Jerome ruined himself financially by buying one volume of "Origen." What vast oppor tunities for intelligence for you and your children I A workingman goea along by the show window of some great publishing house, and he sees a book that coats five dollars. He says: "I wish I could have thnt information I wish I could raise five dollars for that costly and beautiful book." A few months pass on, and he gets the value of that book for 25 cents in a pamphlet. There never was such a day for tha workingmen of America as this day and the day that is coming. I also congratulate you because your work is only prefatory and introduc tory. You want the grace of Jesua Christ, the Carpenter of Nazareth. He toiled Himself, and He knows how to sympathize with all who toll. Get His grace in your heart, nnd you can sing on the scaffolding amid the storm, in the shop shoving the plane, in the mine plunging the crowbar, on shipboard climbing the ratlines. He will make the drops of sweat on your brow glit tering pearls for the eternal coronet. Are you tired ? He will rest you. Are you aick? He will give you help. Are you cold? He will wrap you in the mantle of His love. Who are they be fore the throne? "Ah," you say, "their hands were never calloused with toil! Yes, they were. You say: "Their feat were never blistered with the long jour ney." Yes, they were, but Christ raised them to that high eminence. Who i these t "These are they that came out of great tribulation and had their robes wsshed and made white in tha blood of the Lamb'." That for every Christian workingman and for every Christian working woman will be tha beginning of eternal holiday. Hash affords us aa example of aa without mesns. QUsago Dally X DO NT HESITATE BUILD for Young Men Von are builders In youth you success. Are you A FEW WORDS A course of business studies of at the Schtssier College of ADVICE Business will give you tha strongest, tha most uaefal, tha atost praetleal education that can be obtained anywhere, while the cost is insignificant. Q0HT HESITATE. ntr Schiultr Colltg now and build lor futurt tu cress and prosperity at thoutandi ofothon Aars dont ILLUSTRATED PROSPECTUS SENT ON REQUEST A mott eomplttt and avceestWf mall mm It provldtd for thost u ho cannot attind ptrnn Sfg. Particulars malltd Off rut. CHISSVU COLLEGE ri-i;;'Jrvil SsalBaSwItiiaSSaTSl SftA A POSITIVE CUBS NO-RHEUMATISM Is a P)fi i v Cure for any Pains or Aches, such as Muscular r.hcuinatisin, Sprains bruises or Neuralgia, This i.Tepii nition not only gives instant relief, but I have many tes timonials irom prominent residents of this and other towns showing that " NO-RHEUMATISM " has effected permanent cures in cases of long standing Muscular Rheumatism, which would not yield to the best treatment. Already a great reputation has been gained for "NO-RHEUMA-tism." Orders have been received from throughout the country for it. It is the eople's friend. There never was, or never will be, another remedy on the market to equal "No-Rheumatism." GUARANTEED TO CURE EVERY CASE OF MUSCULAR If RHKTTlvTATTSM. SPRATNS OR RRITTSFA II After an attack of la irrlppe, I was taken with severe muscular rheumatism. After trying seversl remedies and all to no avail, I decided to try "No-Rheumatism," and after several appli cation. I felt greatly relieved. I cheerfully recommend same. MUS. M . F. NAGLE, Shamokin, Pa. Berne, Pa.. May 2nd. 1899. I have had to uae a cane for year on account nf rheumatism . I was told to try Australian "No-Khetimatlam " I am pleased to say that the first bottle ha given greet relief hence cheer fully recommend It. Your truly, SAMUEL ZIMMKKM A N. Flahrrvllle, Dauphin Oonnty, Pa.. June 26, 1899. Having had great pain in my beck for some time, and receiving a sample bottle of "No Kheumatisiii," made three applications, snd am entirely relieved of pain ; also a pain on my breast, which 1 cured by one application. Adviae sll who are troubled with rheumatism or pain to try the same. JNO. O. KILUNUEU, J. P., FUhervllle, Pa. Shamokin, Pa , April 4th, 1899. Deer Mr : I have been suffering lor three (S) years with rheumatism. I tried every known remedy, internal and asternal, but never had any relief. I saw your advertisement of "No Hheumatlam," and I thougt I would give lta fair trial, an I purchased one (t) bottle, and after uting same. I received great relief. I have used five bottle of your (anions Australian remedy and now I am entirely free from aches and pain, and I cheerfully recommend "No-Kheuma-tlsm" to all sufferers of rheumatism. Your truly, JOHN H. OABLIC, Cer. Clair and Shamokin sis. Danville, Pa., June 1, 1899. After a few applications of the Australian remedy, "No-Rheumatlm," I waa entirely re lieved of muscular rheumatism and have not since been troubled by ilareturn. I take pleasure In recommending "No-Kheumatism" as a positive cure for muscular and inflammatory rheuma tlam. GEO. EISENHAHT, I have used the Australian remedy called "Xo-ltheumatlsm" for my daughter and also niv wife and found that same gave relief after a few application. Both had been suffering with rheumatism. I would adviae those who are subject to rheumatism to give the liniment a fair trial. Yours, Ac., A. WOLF. 180 N. Shamokin St, Shamokin, I'a. Shamokin, Pa., March Snd. 1899. I can heartily recommend the Australian remedy 'No-Rheumatism ' a a speedy and sure cure for Inflammatory rheumatism as I have not experienced any rheumatic pain since the flrat few applications of "No-Hheumatim." MUM. JOHN H. O'CONNOR, 800 North Shamokin St. Being a aufferer of periodical attack of muscular rheumatism I tried nearly every prepara tion known and had received no permanent relief. I had given in despair and resigneu mvaelf to those painful attack. At last I was persuaded to try the Australian remedy, 'iNo'Rneuiua tlanr" and after very few applications, nave not experienced any pain since. CH ESTKH O. KULP, Cor. Dewart and Orange St., Shamokin, Pa. wllllamsport, Pa , June 10th, 1899. y Dear Mr : The liniment you o klndlv sent me by mail came to hand, and although I liad largely recovered from my rheumatism when I received It, still at time I tell the need of ometMng of the kind, and I did use. some of it and received benefit from Ha nee, and from what I have seen of It I consider It a very fine thing. Thanking you again, lam very truly yours, J. JONES, 144 West Fourth Sts- Pottavlllc. Pa., April 10th, 189. I take pleasure in Informing you that your Australian remedy "No-Kheumatism,, entirely enred me afters few applications' and I cheerfully recommend It for rheumatic ailments. MRS. THOMAS F. MANNING. Baltimore. Me. M.y 4th. 1899. ,..,. I can cheerfully recommend the Australian Remedy No-Rheumatism , from personal ex perience aa the peedlest and sure cure for muscular rheumatism. W. B. STAKKLOFF, per .new Travelling sdlesman Davis O. K- Baking Powder. For sale by al! Druggists throughout the State. Price 50 cents per bottle. Manufactured by AM a ciin BotelXiindslurvt Blls.., a ITlVS U K- 0hamokin, Za. For sale in Middleburg by the Middleburg Drug Co. and in Centreville by Dr. J. W. Sampsell. Jy 20-3m G. A. R. ENCAMPMENT, PHILADEL PHIA. Reduced Bates vln Pennsylvania Ball- On account of the Thirty-third Annual En campment of the Orand Army of the Republic, to be held at Philadelphia on September 4, 5, S, 7, 8, and S, the Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany will sell excursion tickets from points on Ito line to Philadelphia. at rate of single fare for the round trip, except thst the far from New York and Baltimore will be SI; from Newark, N. J SJ6; from Elizabeth, N. J., tt.75, and proportionate rates from Intermediate ro'nts. Ticket will be sold on September 2, S, 4, and .good to return until September 12, Inclusive: but by depositing ticket with joint agent at Philadelphia on September 5, S, 7, 8, or t, sad the payment of ally cents, return limit may be extended to September 80, inclusive. Bids Tbips. Tickets for side trips to Washington. Old Point Comlort. Gettyetmrg, Antletam, and Vlri giala battleS id will also be sold at greatly rs Seeed rata. MfrSL SS&S Mdr STRENGTH Young Women of your own fortunes. must build for future building wisely ? mmmrm FOE RHEUMATISM 99 THE BERT OP ALL. For over fifty years Mas. Wntsurw's Sooth ing 8tbcp ha been used by mother for their children while teething- Are you disturbed at J night and bioken of your rest by s sick child suffering and crying with pelnof cutting teeth? If so send at once and get a bottle of "Mr. Win slow' Soothing Syrup" for Children Teething. Its value la Incalculable. It will relieve the poor little sufferer Immediately. Depend upon It, mothers, ,3here is no mistake about it. It cures diarrhoea, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, cure Wind Colic, softens the Gums, redoes Inflammation, and give tone and energy to the whole system. "Bra. Wlnslow's Soothing Sy rup" for children teething Is pleasant to the taste and Is I be prescription of one of the) old est and beat female physicians and nurses In the United State and Is fee sale by sll druggists throughout the world. Price, twenty-five cent a bottle. Be sure snd get "Bat, Wisslow's SooTirrso Svaur." VS-ly . 4 Mall Income assured. SS ets. starts yoa ot rs eir. tree. rolXTS vo.. i taw aub.