* BMY “ \ v Se Oh, What Splendid Coffee. Mr. Goodman, Willlams Co, Ill, _writés: “From one package Salzer's “German Coffec Berry costing :5c 1 grew 300 Ibs. of better coffee than I can buy in stores at 30 cents a I.” A, C5 . A package of this coffee and big seed and plant catalogue is sent you by John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, ‘Wis., upon receipt of 15 cents stamps and this notice. Conservative Investors Can largely increase their income by placing sis accounts in my hands. Twenty years of all Street experience, in addition fo relighls INSIDE INFORMATION, enables me to vise you most successfully. Write for particulars, which are interesting to those having money to invest. CHARLES HUGHES, Invest- zens Broker, 63 Wall Street, New York ye : Dragging Music Into a Play. “I once saw a raft scene in an En: glish play,” says a noted play actor. “Suddenly one of the shipwrecked par- —4y cried out: ‘What's that I see float ing toward us on the waves? ‘A grand plano,” shouted another. Then the plano was hauled up on to the raft and one of the famishing castaways played a ‘Rhapsodie Hongroise,” by Liszt. That cured me of ‘dragging in music by the hain?” Was Nervous Troubled with Her "Stomach-— Could Kot Sieep—-Hood’s Cured. “About a year ago I was troubled with my stomach and could not eat. I was nervous and could not sleep at night. I grew very thin. I began taking IIood’s Sarsaparilla and am now well and strong, and owe it all to Hood’s Sarsaparilla.” Mary PrTErs, 90 South Union Street, Rochester, N. Y. Remember “creased—so that man, for instance, hag Hood’s Sarsaparilla Isthe best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier, Hood's Pills cure all liver ills. 25 cents. Tne Oyster. The sentiment which annually. greets the return of the oyster from its sum. | mer vacation may not be of an esthetic sort, but certainly it Is as remote as possible from mercenary considerations of commerce. And yet the oyster not only stands for a great delicacy, but for a great industry that will in time be vastly greater. It is shown by Gov- ernment statistics, for instance, that of the 35,000,000 bushels of oysters con- sumed throughout the world each: year 30,000,060 bushels are supplied by the United States, and that the oyster fish- ery excels any other fishery in impor: tance. Add to this that the industry is especially important in the States of New Jersey and Maryland—the latter alone producing one-third of the world’s crop—and it will be scen that there are special reasons why Philadelphia | should be cordial to the oyster, and should greet its advent with a degree of effusiveness not extended to any other thing. in the edible list with the possi: ble exception of the Thanksgiving tur- ‘key.—Philadelphia Record. RELIEF FROM PAIN. Women Everywhere Express their Gratitude to Mrs. Pinkham. irs. T. A. WALDEN, Gibson. Ga., writes: “DreAR Mrs. PiINkHAM:— Before tak- "ing your medicine, life was a burden to me. I never saw a well day. At my monthly period I suffered untold misery, and a great deal of the time I was troubled with a severe pain in my side. Before finishing the first bottle of your Vegetable Compound I could tell it was doing me good. I continued its use, also used the Liver Pills and Sanative Wash, and have been greatly helped. I would like to have you use my letter for the benefit of others.” _ Irs. FLORENCE A. WOLFE, s15 Mulberry St., Lancaster, Ohio, writes: “DEAR MI Pixgnay:=For two ears Twas troubled with what the | local physicians told me was inflamma- tion of the womb. Every month I suf- fered terribly. I had taken enough medicine from the doctors to eure any- one, but obtained relief for a short time only. AtlastIconcluded to write "to you in regard to my case, and ean say that by following your advice I am now pefectly well.” Mrz. W.R. BATES, INansficld, La., writes: * Before writing to you I suffered dreadfully from painful menstrua- tion, leucorrhcea and sore feeling in the lower part of the bowels. Nowmy friends want to know what males me look sowell. Idonot hesitate one min- ute in telling them what has brought about this great change. I cannot praise Lydia E. Pinkham’ Vegetable €ompound enough. It is the greatest { have no eyes, will suddenly withdraw { most sensitive to sudden increase of the-bath—which-al-pewly-admitted-pa- ‘manifest when about $700 in bills was remedy of the age.” Eyes Not Necessary. Eyes are popularly considered to be quite necessary to sight, but this is an error, if we are to believe Dr. Nagel, a recent German experimenter. Many creatures without eyes ‘can see; at least they can distinguish perfectly well between light and darkness and even between different degrees of light. This is the lowest degree of see: ing, to be sure, but still it is really sight, and differing scarcely more from the vision of some insects that possess eyes than this does from our own clear sight. “a : Creatures that see without eyes see by means of their skins. All skins, says Dr. Nagel, are potential eyes; that is, they are sensitive to light. In ‘animals that have eyes the sensitiveness has been highly localized and greatly in- a retina very sensitive to light, and ap « expanse of ordinary skin which pos- sesses a sensitiveness to light so slight that it is hardly conscious of it. Yet his skin is sensitive in some degree, as is proved by the fact that it sunburns —that is, light may cause a disturb- ance in the pigment of the skin just as it does in that of the eye. In the eye the disturbance is accompanied by a nervous change, which sends a tele graphic message along the optic nerves, and there are messages, also, but their tidings imprint no image on the mind; they simply express discomfort—cry out “sunburn.” But in many eyeless creatures the lack of eyes Is in part made up by in- creased sensitiveness of the whole skin surface to light. Darwin long ago no- ticed that earth worms, although they into their holes at the approach of a lighted candle. Some creatures seem light; others to sudden diminution. A Home-Grown Experience. A man went into an icehouse to cool off. An abrupt and impetuous hired man closed and locked the door and went away. The next day was Sunday and the hired man did not come back. While the man who yearned to cool off waited for the return of the hired man his object was accomplished in a very thorough manner. He cooled off The mufifled door gave back but echoes to his blows, and his voice could find no place to escape and sound the alarm. When he grew tired of walking and swinging his arm to keep warm the chunks of ice that were piled around him did not offer a tempting bed. Hun: ger gnawed at his vitals and refused to be satisfied with diet of raw air. Dark: ness settled down like a six months’ Arctic night, and. the only sound which broke the profound stillness was the man who wanted to cool off trying to swear. The hired man opened the door on Monday morning, and the man who wanted to cool off crawled out more dead than alive. ‘When his tongue had thawed out he began to abuse the hired man. “Fool!” retorted the hired man. “Fool, you are a lucky dog and do not know it. Don't waste your time in abusing me, your benefactor, but go and write a book of impressions on Alaska.” Then the man who wanted to cool oft saw that his fortune was made. —Chi cago Record. Land and a Living Are best and cheapest in the New South. Land #3 to $5 an acre, Easy terms. Good schools and churches, No blizzards. No cold waves. New illustrated paper, ‘Land and a Living,” 3 months for 10 cents in stamps. W. C, RINLAR- SON, U. P. A, Queen & Crescent Route, Cincinnati. A woman who was recently taken to the Taunton lunatic hospital from Brockton remonstrated strongly against removing her stockings preparatory to tients are obliged to take. She was finally persuaded te do it, and the sin- cerity of her objections was made found in them, =... To Cure A Ocld in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. ~ “The one-eyed plowboy of Pigeon’s Roost” is what they call Colonel Chandler, candidate for Governor of Georgia. Birmingham, ¥ngland, turns out five tons of hairpins every week. Chew Star Tobacco—The Best. Smoke Sledge Cigarettes. Tron horseshoes have been found dat= ing back to the year 481. I use Piec's Cure for Consnmption both in my family and practice. r, Gi. W. PATTER- sON, Inkster, Mich., Nov. 5, 1804 Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for chfidren teething, softens the gums, reducing inflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colie, Z5c.a bott'~, NO MISTAKE. =2y ; ol x 0) in twenty-four tints and is superior | ing that can possibly be made by hand. To BE Mixep wir Conn WATER, FEF SEND FOR SAMPLE COLOR CARDS and if you cannot purchase this material from your local dealers let us know and we will § You Will Realize that " They Li as” Cleanly,” f You Use Thousands have becn cured promptly of NEURALG EHR. FO COI! ALLS CALCIMO FRESCO TINTS FOX DECORATING WALLS AND CEILINGS _ grocer or paint dealer and do your-own kal-- This material is made on scientific principles: by machinery and milled ¥ that ** They Live’ Well ‘Who Live Ra Ap SEE RG Purchase a package of CALCINO “xo | somining, to any concoction of Glue and Whit- § TRE ETO HE TR TTR aa AAck No. 088. This highly Pol- ished solid oak 5- e| 54 inches high, 8? inches wide, 19 inches deep. Each drawer is furnished with the best locks, and $3.39 buys this exact tails for $8.00. (Order now and avuvid disappointment.) Drop a postal for our lithographed. Carpet Catalogue which shows all colors with exact distinctness. If carpet sam- les are wanted, mail us 8c. in Stamps. hy pay your local dealer 60 per cént. more than our prices when you can buy of the mill? The great household educa- tor—our new 112 page special catalogue of Furniture, Draperies; Lamps, Stoves, ~ Crocxery, Mirrors, Pictures, Bedding, Refrigerators, Baby Carriages is algo yours for the asking. Again we ask, why enrich your local dealer when you can buy of the maker? Both cata- logues cost you nothing, and we pay all postage. Julius Hines & Son BALTIMORE, MD. Please Mention This Paper, Pork Dangerous—Veal Unwholecsome “Pork is the source of trichina; for this reason it should be cooked thor- oughly. Hogs are almost always fat- tened so as to be actually diseased be- fore killing, and we find here also a common .source of tuberculosis; it is also generally believed that pork eat- ing is a common source of scrofula,” writes Mrs. S. T. Rorer in the Ladies’ Home Journal. “I certainly know that persons who -indulge freely in pork have very unhealthy, rough and easily irritated skins. Veal (equally indiges- tible with pork) may mot contain the dangerous germs of the mature ox; the fibre, however, is dense and dif- ficult of digestion. Unless it be thor- oughly boiled and chopped rather fine it had better not be eaten at all. It should never, under any circumstances, be given to children.” THE MARKETS. Late Wholesale Prices of Country Produce Bs 3 Quoted in New York. 8 MILK AND CREAM. 1'he average price paid for the surplus on the platforms has ‘been 214c¢ 8B qt. net to shipper. Receipts of milk and cream at thd different railroad distributing points in and near the city for the week have'¥peen as follows: } Average daily receipts of the week. fluldmilk, cans. 1... hu he 23,1817 Condensed milk, cans................. 14 Cream, cans BUTTER. Creamery—West. extras... $ BIrsts. ea, Thirds to seconds........ . State—Thirds to firsts. .... Stave Dairy tubs, extras.... Imitation Creamery..... sive Factory, fresh flrsts Low grades CHEESE. State—Full cream, new,large Small : Part skims, good to prime. Full skims. .? State and Penn—TFresh Jersey—Fancy Western—Choice....... dee Bouthern—Choice BEANS AND PEAS, Beans—Marrow, choice, 1897 Medium, choice, 1897, Pea, choice, 1897 — Red kidney, choice, 1897... 1 6! White kidney, choice, 1897 1! Yellow eye... ......0.:... Lima, Cal.; © 601bs....... Green peas, hags FRUITS AND BERRIES—FRESH. Apples, Ben Davis 00 Greening, © bb 00 Baldwin, 8 bbl....... Grapes, Del., ¥ basket .® . .. Catawba, ® basket........ k F? Concord, © basket — Cranberries, Cape Cod; P bbl 7 i, Jersey, ® bbl 70 bb pd fd od fd pd pk LAO TR NN oN Wy PDDPIRDD “IDOI 2D CLS WC CLO Ct P3080998 DD SS State—1897, cholce, B 1h + 1896, prime Pacific Coast, 1897, choice. . “Good to prime Old odds.................... " LIVE POULTRY, w\ PIB®Y Fowls, $ 1b Chickens, # Ib Roosters, ® 1b Turkeys, ® Ib Ducks, @ pair............. . Geese, P pair Pigeons, B pair DRESSED POULTRY. Turkeys, ¥ ib Chickens, Phila Western, dry picked........ Fowls, State & Penn., ® Ib. . Western dueks.............. Geese, Western, § Ib Squabs, B® doz HAY AND STRAW. Hay—Prime, # 100 Ib........ Clover mixed Btraw—ILong rye Short rye Oat RIPIDD 9999393 VEGETABLES. Potatoes, Jersey, ¥ bbl L. I., in bulk Sweet, @ bbl. : Cabbages, #100 ve Onions, white, ® bbl......... ! Red, # bbl Green peas, Va., P basket. .. Egg plant, © bbl Tomatoes, # carrier String beans, ® basket Squash, B bbl Hubbard......... idee Tuarnips, Russia, B bbl Celery, # doz Carrots, ¥ bbl Cauliflower, 8 box Beets, bbl... —....... oy Lettuce, ¥ basket Spinach, B bbl Kale, per bbl Spinach, per bbl Brussels sprouts, ¥ qt GRAIN, ETC. Flour—Winter Patents Spring Patents. ........... 520 Wheat —No. 1 N. Duluth No. 2 Red. Corn—No. 2 Oats—No. 2 White. HOOT WW P NON 99RD 2338888] 3383] AIRPDP ARDPARD® AD Rye—Western..... . Barley—Feeding... . § Lard—City steam LIVE STOCK. Beeves, city dressed 7 Mileh cows, com. to good..20 00 Calves, city dressed...... cv 3 SRNONS BY ENIENT DIES GOSPEL MESSAGES. “Stirring Folks Up’’—Fourteenth Sermon in the New York Herald’s Competitive Series ta hya Pennsylvania Minister Dr. Talmage On Ordinary People. “Ahab, whom Jezebel his wife stirred up.”’—I. Kings, xxi., 25. A large part of the evil and a larger part of the good in the world would never be Jone but for the doers being stirred up o it. Life is much like the sea; there seems al- ways some wind to smite the. surface or some stealthy undercurrent to send its rest- lessness up from the depths. The lesson is many sided; if fully consid- ered it covers the whole eomplex question of life’s relationships. It is not one part.of "the world against the other; part of the world giving, the other ever receiving im- pressions, for one who is stirred up by evil may be a constant impulse to another’s good. 7 No matter how weak one may be or how dependent on others, there is still some power going forth—consciously or uncon- sciously—which makes more positive the good or evil of the world’s conflicting forces. * We find ourselves pressed by life’s im- pulses or irritations. Its attractions and rgpulsions find ready allies in our inclina- tions, and often we fail because we under- estimate the opposing forces, or we joyously realize that we have been impelled to a usefulness we had thought beyond our power. w The example of Jezebel—the Lady Mac- beth of Scripture, the “new woman’ of nearly three thousand years ago—is not chosen because women are more prone to stirring up to evil than men, though blessed is the woman who ‘stirs up” her husband whenever he needs it, and happy is the man who never stirs up his wife to any- thing but good. We are ready to condemn "Jezebel for having stirred up Ahab to evil, but we of- ten lose sight of how Ahabinfluenced Jeze- bel. His negative weakness provoked her positive badness, We sometimes comfort ourselves that we are not bad because we do not great sins, forgetful that our very weakness may provoke some one else into sinning. Ahab wanted a piece of ground that was near the royal palace. It was the property of Naboth, who, with true ancestral rever- ence, refused to part with it. Piqued by Naboth’s refusal, Ahab went to bed, turned his face to the wall and refused to eat. Ahab, the king, peevish as a child because he could not have his own way! It was then Jezebel’s murderous plans were formed. Ahab’s peevish sulkiness stirred up the wickedness of Jezebel. Had hebeen noble she could not have been so evil. “Whom Jezebel his wife stirred up’— stirred up to evil. Had that power been turned to good even weak Ahab might have been one of the world’s helpers. The power for great evil reveals the pos- sibility of great good; the power in the direction of wrong is the measure of benefit if turned in the opposite direction. Who can estimate what the world would have lost had not Wendell Phillips heard his true hearted wife say, “Wendell, don’t shilly-shally!” That put an end to possible vacillation. Was Lady Palmerston’s “‘stir- ring up” worth while? She spent her life in “placing and keeping’ her husband in his proper position. What a rare tribute was paid by General Charles H. Taylor to the memory of Eben D. Jordan when in a Boston Globe editorial he said, “No man of my acquaintance ever possessed a rarer gift of developing the gifts of other men, and no one ever helped others with more patience and generosity.” Ie stirred up to their best possibilities those whom he met; he made them by his help what, possibly, they never could have been without him. Are those who are near you weak and sinful because you have not stirred them up to be their best selves? The world will ever be grateful toDr. W. , Robertson Nicholl for his persistent stir- ? ring up of Ian Maclaren. He gave him no rest until he led the world to the “Bonnie Brier Bysh,” which, like the bush Moses saw, is aglow with God. Despondent we sometimes are because all the world seems against us. If we put curselves in right relations with God He will give us of His power and we shall be masters, not servants, of fate. Most happily it has been said: Likoethe winds of the sea arg the waves of fate As we journey through life; Tis the set of a soul That decides its goal, And not the calm or the strife. How are you using the forees which come upon you? Have you so ‘set the sails” that the very winds which are in- tended to drive you far out on the tempest tossed sea shall help you into a harbor of safety? Are the dens so numerous and heavy that they you to the earth? Then learn of the fabled hero who by every touch gained increase of strength. Jesus ‘‘set His face steadfastly to go to Jerusalem’ because His soul was set on doing God’s will. Paul said, “All things work together for good to them that love God.” To asoul set on doing right even the opposing forces will bring benefit. , | __From the naggings of a jealouswife John Wesley learned lessons of patience, from the stormy days of companionship with scolding Xantippi Socrates drew lessens of self-diseipline. We influence. by what we are. Not our seeming but our being sends forth its influ- ! ence to stir up to right or wrong. You have | watched the groundswell as the waves dashed, surging and moaning, upon the rocky shore, and though there was no vis- ible cause, you knew of the tempest far out on the ocean. So we influence and are in- fluenced. You have taken in your handan opal— the sympathetic stone. It was dull and colorless until the warmth of your hand caused it to glow with radiance of color. So there are lives about us; dull and unin- teresting they seem. but the stimulus of human sympathy will make them shine as with God’s own glory. You are stirring folks up—to what? Horace BR. GoODCHILD, Pastor Baptist Church, €laricn, Penn. ORDINARY PEOPLE. Dr. Talmage Discourses Upon Ordinary or Inconspicuous People. Text: “Salute Asyncritus, Phlegon, Her- mas, Patrobas, Hermes, Philologus and Ju- lia.”—Romans xvi., 14-15. : Matthew Henry, Albert Barnes, Adam Clark, Thomas Scott, and all the commen- tators pass by these verses without any especial remark. The othertwenty people mentioned in the chapter were distin- “guished for something and were therefore discussed by the illustrious expositors; but nothing is said about Asyneritus, Phlegon, HMermas, Patrobas, Hermes, Philologus and Julia. Where were they born? No one knows? When did they die? There is no record of their decease. For what were they distinguished? Absolutely nothing, or the trait of character would have heen brought out by the Apostle. Butthey were good people, because Paul sends to them his high Christian regards. They were or- dinary people moving in ordinary sphere, attending to ordinary duty, and meeting ordinary responsibilities. What the world wants is a religion for ordinary Joople. Ifthere be in the United States 70,000,000 people, there are certainly not more than 1,000, extraordinary; and then there are 69,000,000 ordinars: and we do well'to turn our backs for a little while upon the distinguished and conspicuous sil [eons of t2e Bible and consider in our text seven ordinary. We spend too much of our time in twisting garlands for remark- ables, and building thrones for magnates and sculpturing warriors, and apotheosis ing philanthropists. The rank and file of the Lord’s soldiery need especial help. The vast majority of people will. never lead an ATIT. will never write a State Con- stitution, will never electrify a Senate, will never make an important invention, will never decide the fate of a nation. You do not expect to; you do not want to. You will not be a Moses to lead a nation out of bondage. You will not be a Joshua to pro- long the daylight until you can shut five kings in a cavern. You will not be a St. John to unroll an Apocalypse. You will not be a Paul to preside over an apestolic college. You will not bea Mary to mother a Christ. You will more probably be Asyn- critus, or Phlegon, or Hermas, of Patrobas; or Hermes, or-Philologus, or Julia. Many of you are women at the head of househofds. Every morning you plan for the day. The culinary department of the household is your dominion. ‘You decide all questions of diet. regulations of your house are under your supervision. To regulate the food, and the apparel and the habits, and decide the thousand questions of home life is a tax upon brain and nerve and general heglth alleviation. decide the health of the world. You have only to go on some errand amid the tav- erns and hotels of the United States and Great Britain to appreciate the fact that a vast multitude of the human race are slaughtered by incompetent cookery. Though a young woman may have taken sons in painting, and lessons in astronomy, she is not well educated unless she has taken lessons in dough! They who decide the apparel of the world, and the food of tho world, decide the endurance of the world. Then there are all the ordinary business men. They need divinoand Christian help. When we begin to talk about business life we shoot right off and talk about men who did business on a large scale and who sold millions of dollars of goods a year; and the vast majority of business men do not sell & million dollars of goods, nor half a million, nor-a quarter of a million, nor the eighth part of a million. Put all the business men of our cities, towns, villages and neighbor- hoods side by side, and you will find that they sell less than a hundred thousand dol- lars’ worth of goods. All these men in or- dinary business life want divine help. You see how the wrinkles are printing on the countenance the story of worriment and care. You can not tell how old a business thirty. the days of their life —harnessed in. busi- ness. Not grace to lose a hundred thous sand, but grace to lose ten dollars. employes in a factory, but grace to super- the small boy that sweeps out the store. hundred of clear gain. Such or do not sell, whether customers pay or do not pay, whether tariff is up or tariff is a dead failure—calm in all circumstances, and amid all vicissitudes, That kind of grace wo want. Then there are all the ordinary farmers, mediately shoot off to talk about Cincin- natus, the patrician, who went from the through the dictatorship, days, went back again to the plow. ers? them will be patricians. Perhaps none of or a hundred acres of the old homestead. oxen, and to keep cheerful broken in and trampled out the strawberry bed, and gone through the large quantities that they must be kept from the water lest they swell up and die. Grace in catching weather that enables them, without imprecation, to spread out the hay the third time, although again, and again, and again, it has been almost ready forthemow. A grace to doctor the cow with hollow horn, and the sheep with the foot rot, and the horse with the dis- temper, and to compel the unwilling acres to yield a livelihood for the family, and to help the older boy in business, and some- stiff with age, and the a little short, got be ankles will breath will tigo. I know flve hundred farmers just as noble as he was. What they want is to know that they have the friendship of that Christ mer’'s life, as when He said best parable out of the scene of a farmer boy ¢oming back from his wanderings, and the old farmhouse shook that night with rural jubilee; and who compared himself said that the eternal God is a farmer, de- zt Come, now, let us have a religion -for merchandise, in everything. I salute across the centuries Asyncritus, Phlegon, Julia. dinary, thank God that you are not extra- ordinary. almost to death with extraordinary peo- seems to say, “That is well done.” plain as it is on the high peaks. The world never forgives a man who knows or gains or does m8re than it can know or gain or do. If, therefore, you feel that you are ordinary, thank God for the defenses and tranquility of your position. ; Then remember, if you have only what is called an ordinary home, that the great deliverers of the world have all come from such a home, And there may he seated, reading at your evening stand, a child who shall be potent for the ages. Just unroll the scroll of men mighty in church and Stite, and you will find they nearly all came from log cabin or poor homes. Genius almost always runs out in the third or fourth generation. You can not find in all’ history an instance where the fourth generation of extraordinary people amount to anything. . Let us all be content with such things as wo have. God is just.as good in what He keeps away from us as in what He gives us. Even a knot may be useful if it is at the end of a thread. A Sensitive Pensioner. Pension Commissioner Evans recently received from a pensioner in San Antonio, Texas, an express order for £879. It was money which the sender believed he had not properly received. Mr. Evans had an investigation made of the case, and ascer- tained that the pensioner was honestly en- titled to the money he was receiving, viz., $12 per month for deafness, and directed the entire amount be returned to him. Pauper Descendants of Columbus. A Spanish DewWspAper announces that the last two descen lumbus are now occupants of a poor house of Cadiz. { All the sanitary | absolutely appalling if there be no divine | 1 They who provide the food of the world lessons in music and may have taken les- | man is by looking at him, Gray hairs at | Now, what is wanted is grace—divine | grace for ordinary business men, men who | are harnessed fromimorn till night and all | Not | grace to supervise two hundred and flity | vise the bcokkecper and two salesmen and | Grace to invest not the eighty thousand | dollars of net profit, but the twenty-five | a grace as | thousands of business men have te-day— | keeping them tranquil, whether goods sell | down, whether the crops are luxuriant or | is the | We talk about agricultural life, and weims | plow to a high position, and after he got | in twenty-one | What | encouragement is that to ordinary firm- | The vast majority of them--none of | them will be Senators. If any of them have | dictatorships it will be over forty. or fifty | What these men want is grace, to keep | their patience while plowing. with balky | amid the | drouth that destroys the corn crop, and | that enabies them to restore the garden | the day after the neighbor’s cattle have | Lima-bean | patch, and eaten up the sweet corn in such | schooling for the children and little extras | thing for thu daughter’s wedding outfit, | and a little surplus for the time when the | and the | swinging of the eradlethrough the hot har- | vest fleld will bring on tho old man’s vere | Better close up about Cincinnatus. | who often drew His sinriles from the far- | ‘*A .sower | went forth to sow,” as when He built His | to a lamb in the pasture field, and who ! claring: “My Father is the husbandman.” | ordinary people in professions, in oceupa- | tions, in agriculture, in the household, in | Hermas, Patribas, Hermes, Philologus and | First of all, if you feel that you are or- | I. am tired and sick, and bored | pie. You know as well as I do, my brother | and sister, that the most of the useful | work of the world is done by unpreten- | tious people who toil right on—by people | who do not get much approval, and no one | The weather of life isnot so severe ontha | ants of ‘Christopher Co-"| A Vigorous Battle. From jhe Neth Era, Greensburg, Ind. The following is a straightforward statement by a veteran of the late war, Ne comrade will need further proof tham their friend’s own words, as here given. Squire John Castor, of Newpoint, Ind., is the narrator, and an honest, respected citizen he is too. He said: ‘I have been troubled with rheumatism in all my joints ever since I went to the war. It was brought on by my exposure there. It came on me gradually, and kept getting worse until I was unable to do any work. I tried several physiciansg but they did me no good. They said my trouble was rhouma-— tism resulting in. disease of the heart, and that there was no cure for it. Neverthe- loss I had lived and fought the disease for thirty years; and did not intend to die, simply because they said I must, so J I I Wanl'lo Swear to That. hunted up some remedies for myself, and finally bappened on Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. I asked some of my neighbors about the medicine, for it had been used by several persons in the com- munity, and they recommended it very highly.t I procured a box. The pills helped/me right away, and I continued taking’ them. I commenced taking them last fall, and finished taking the sixth box a few months ago. I am not bothered with the rheumatisin now —the medicine has cured me. I can most certainly rec- | ommend Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale | People.” These pills are not only good for rheu- { matism, but are valuable for any disease that ‘arises from impoverished, or bad | blood. They do xox act on the bowels. How’s This ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any ca-e of Catarrh that cannot bz cured by tall’s Catarrh Cure. 3 ". J. CHENEY & Co., Props., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che- ney tor the last 15 years. and believe him pe: fectly honorable in all business tran-actions and financially able to carry out any obliga- tion mide by their firm. ! Wrst & TrUAX, Wholesale Druggis:s, Toledo, Jh.o. WaALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken infernally, ct. Ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur- | faces of the syst Price, Tac. per bottle. Sold y all Druggists, Testimonials free. all's Family Pills are the best. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervons- | ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free Dr. R. H. Kring, Ltd.. 931 Arch St..Phila..Pa. 2036290970000080080000048] § FOR 14 CENTS We wish to gain 150,000 nes cus- ¢ and hence offer 1 Pig. 13 Day Radish, Pkg. Early Spring TT ‘“ Karliest Red Beet, Bismarck Cucumber, Susees Victoria Lettuce, lic ¢ londyke Melon, 1bc g Jumbo Giant Onion, loc ¢ Brilliant Flower Seeds, lic a Werth $1.00, for 14 cents. ( ¢ Above 10 pkgs. worth $1.00, we will ¢ mail you free, together with our q great Plant and Seed Catalo. ne ¢ upon receipt of this notice and l4c. ostage. e invite your trade and 4 Ro w you once try Salzer's § seeds you will never get along with- ¢ out em. Potatoesat $1.50 ¢ ( ai a Bbl.Catalogalone Sc. 020 2 JOHN A. SALZIER SEED CO., LA CROSSE, W.8, 080880538806 2CC0E3223008¢ KLONDIKE GOLD FIELDS OF ALASKA. Now is the proper t'me for all people con- templating making a trip to Klondike to get informacion. Write the undersigned or CALL ON BIG FOUR AGENTS nd « “ " ; POO VIVOWES OW advertising matter taining to - Rotes, Routes, Sailing of Steam- ers, Equipment, Baggage, Supplies, and all detailed information. i. 0. McCormick, Warren J. Lynch, for circulars a per I’ass. Trafiic Mgr. Assist, GL P.& TT. Agt CINCINNATI, O. AND TUMOR PERMANENTLY cured without knife, plaster or pain. All forms of BLOOD DISEASES shoroughly eradicated from the systeni: Six weeks Heme Preatment for $10. Book of Information free. NATURAL REMEDY CO., Westfield, Lacs. LOOK, LADIES, LOOK! THE LORD’S PRAYER written in ink (English er Latin,) in the Circumf{er- ice of a gold dollar, with your name in Italian + cript inside the border. Enclose one dollar with order: write plainly and send to R. SMELIIE, (Yeunman,) 171 Latiield St... Erooklyn. N. Y, TENTS Attorney-at-Law and Solicitor N. W., Washingion, LD. G es in all varis of the country, Lig =: & I | SE T Garden & Flower with a world-wide reputation. Catalog free to all. JAMES J. BH. GREGORY & SON. Marble head, Mass. Ladies Wanted. TO TRAVIELfor ¢ld established house. Permanent position. $40 per month and all expenses PW.ZILEGLER & CO; 25% Locust St., Philadelphia. —HENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS, JOHN W. MORRIS, WASHINGTON, D.C. Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. 8 yrs. in last war, 15 adjudicating clai $1.60 POTATOES Fi argest Eeed POTATO growers in Ameri The * Rural New-Yerker” gives salzer’s Early Wisconsin a yleld of T36 bushels Prices cheap. Our great 8 ook, 11 Y¥arm Reed Samples, worth $10 to get nsiart, for 10c. postage. JOH A, BALZER SEED CO., Lalresse, Wis, 4 >) + Binca. y For Poultry, half cost of ENGIN Yard, Cemetery Fences, Iron Posts, Gates, etc. I K.L.SHELLABARGER, 43 F. St., Atlanta. Ga. PNU 8's : Netting. Also best Farm cansave ae FETT Freight peid catalogue free