Democratic Sentinel, Volume 19, Number 46, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 November 1895 — Page 7

* L I Gave Up Hoping 1 would ever be better, I had suf-, sered so much from sour stomach, kidney troubles, and ether ailments. But Hood’s Sarsaparilla was the means of saving my life. After taking it I was strong and muscular, gained 14 lbs. I recommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla to all who long for health and strength.” Nicholas Schiehsf.b, Summerdale, 111. H aoH ’ c DHlc are tasteless, mild, effec- ■ lUUU S . rills tive. All druggists. cSc.

Artificial Faults.

Many things which are harmless in themselves are often condemned for wliat they are supposed to lead to; social pleasures are looked upon askance, and trifliftg things said or done without the least intention are exaggerated into serious transgressions. Honest opinions are made a cause of reproach, and failure to meet conventional requirements is regarded as a blot on the character. One would think there were enough in the world to be repented of and abandoned without setting up imaginary ones that have no foundation and can serve only to bring needless trouble and to confuse the moral sense. Observations and calculations have led Mr. A. Mallack to conclude that insects do not see well, especially at a distance. Their composite eye, however, has an advantage over the simple eye, in the fact that there is hardly any practical limit in the nearness of objects it can examine. The best insect eye examined would give a picture about as good as if executed in rather coarse woodwork, and viewed at a distance of a foot. In England and Scotland milkmaids believe that if they forget to wash their hands after milking their cows will go dry. This superstition is diligently fostered by the owners of the cows.

A NOBLE LIFE SPENT FOR AND WITH SUFFERING WQMEN. A Life’s Work Perpetuated through a Faithful Daughter, and Records of Priceless Value. [SPECIAL TO OCR LADT READERS.] What a vast amount of misery and Buffering has been prevented by the clearheaded foresight of one noble woman! She had struggled, labored, and sacrificed for the welfare of her sex. The eyes of the women of the world were upon her. As she recalled the past, and tried to penetrate The future, a smile of supreme satisfaction passed over her honest face as she remembered that her life’s work would be perpetuated. The room in which she sat contained hundreds of volumes of records; and, to her daughter, she said, “My daughter, this rooru, as you well know, contains the records of my life’s work, in which for many years you have so diligently assisted me. “ By earnest application you have compassed my methods; and it is a happiness to think that when I leave, the glorious work will, through you, go on. “ The mission is a noble one. Do as I have done: never permit a woman’s appeal to go unheeded. “ These records tell of every case ever submitted to me; and it is my wish that the facts they contain shall in time prove a much-needed education to the women of the world.” Thus did Lydia E. Pinkham hand over to her daughter, Mrs. Charles H. Pinkham, what may be termed the salvation of her sex; and that wonderful remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which all druggists consider as standard as flour, goes on redeeming hundreds of women from the fearful consequences of female diseases.

The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common . pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates ot its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card f,or book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a'perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it Dose, one tablespoonful.in water at bed* time. Sold by all Druggists.

TALM AGE'S SERMON.

fHE PREACHER CHOOSES AN INTERESTING TOPIC. Hia Views of the New Woman—Spiritual and Physical Health —A Word for Mothers—Their Influence and Counsel—A Strong Peroration. A Word with Women. Rev. Dr. Talmage took for the subject of last Sunday’s sermon "A Word with Women,” the text for the occasion being the following letter received by the distinguished preacher: Reverend Sir —You delivered a discourse in answer to a letter from six young men of Fayette, Ohio, requesting you to preach a sermon on "Advice to Youug Men.” Are we justified in asking you to preach a sermon oh "Advice to Young Women?” Letter Signed by Six Youug Women. Christ, who took his text from a flock of birds flying overhead, saying, "Behold the fowls of the air!” and from the flowers in the valley, saying, “Consider the lilies of the field,” and from the ducking of a barnyard fowl, saying, “As a hen gathereth her chickens under her wing,” and from a crystal of salt picked up by the roadside, saying, “Salt is good,” will grant ns a blessing, if, instead of taking a text from the Bible, I take for my text this letter from Cincinnati, which is only one of many letters which 1 have received from young women in New York, New Orleans, San Francisco, Loudon, Edinburgh, and from the ends of the earth, all implying that, having some months ago preached the sermon on "Advice to Youug Men,” I could not, without neglect of duty, refuse to preach a sermon on "Advice to Young Women.” It is the more important that the pulpit be heirrd on tllis subject at this time when we are having such uu illimitable discussion about what is called the “now woman,” as though some new creature of God had arrived ou earth or were about to arrive. One theory is that she will be an athlete and boxing glove and foot-ball and pugilistic encounter will characterize her. Another theory is that she will superintend ballot boxes, sit in Congressional hall and through improved politics bring the millennium by the evil site will extirpate and the good she will install. Another theory is that she will adopt masculine attire and make sacred a vulgarism positively horrific. Another theory is that she will be so aesthetic that broom handle and rolling pin and coal scuttle will be pictorialized with tints from soft skies or suggestions of Rembrandt and Raphael.

The New Woman. Heaven deliver the church and the world from any one of these styles of new woman! She will never come. I have so much faith in the evangelistic triumph and in the progress of all things in the right direction that I prophesy that style of new woman will never arrive, title would hand over this world to diabolism, and from being, as she is now, the mightiest agency for the world’s uplifting she would be the mightiest force for its down thrust. 1 will tell you who the new woman will be. She will be the good woman of all the ages past. Here and there a difference of attire as the temporary custom may command, but the same good, honest, lovely, Christian, all influential being that your mother and mine was. Of that kind of woman was Christian Eddy who, talking to a man who was so much, of an unbeliever he had named iiis two children Voltaire and Tom Paine, nevertheless saw him converted, he breaking down with emotion as lie said to her: ‘‘l cannot stand you. You talk like my mother.” And telling the story of his conversion to twelve companions who had been blatant opposers of religion they asked her to come and see them also ar.d tell them of Christ, and four of them were converted and all the others greatly changed,.and the leader of the band, departing for heaven, shouted: “Joyful! Joyful! Joyful!” If you know any better style of woman than that, where is she? The world cannot improve on that kind. The new woman may have more knowledge, because she will have more books, but she will have uo more common sense than that which tried to manage and discipline and educate us and did as well as she could with such unpromising material. .She may have more health than the woman of other days, for the sewing machine and the sanitary regulations and added intelligence on the subjects of diet, ventilation and exercise and rescue from many forms of drudgery may allow her more longevity, but she will have the same characteristics which God gave her in paradise, with the exception of the nervous shock and moral jolt of the fall she got that day when not noticing where she stepped she looked up into the branches of the fruit tree. But I must be specific. This letter before me wants advice to young women. The First Need, Advice the first: Get your soul right with God, and you will he in the best attitude for everything that comes. New ways of voyaging by sea, new ways of traveling by land, new ways of thrashing the harvests, new ways of printing books —and the patent office is enough to enchant a man who has mechanical ingenuity and knows a good deal of levers and wheels—and we hardly do anything as it used to be done; invention after invention, invention on top of invention. But in the matter of getting right with God there has not been a invention for (5,000 years. It is ou the same line of repentance that' David exercised about his sins, and the same old style of prayer that the publican used when he emphasized it by an inward stroke of both hands, and the same faith in Christ that Paul suggested to the jailer the night the penitentiary broke down. Aye, that is the reason I have more confidence in it. It has been tried by more millions than I dare to state lest I come far short of the brilliant facts. Ail who through Christ earnestly tried to get right with God are right and always will be right. That gives the young woman who gets that position superiority over all rivalries, all jealousies, all misfortunes, all health failings, all social disasters and all the combined troubles of eight years if she shall live to he an octogenarian. If the world fails to appreciate her, she says, “God loves me, the angels in heaven are in sympathy with me, and 1 can afford to be patient until the day when the imperial chariot shall wheel to my door to take me up to my coronation.” If health goes, she says, “I can endure the present distress, for I am on the way to a climate the first breath of which will make me proof against even the slightest discomfort.” If she be jostled with pertubatious of social life, she can say, “Well, when I begin my life among the thrones of heaven and the king and queens unto God shall •be my associates, it will not make much difference who on earth forgot me when the invitations to that reception were .made out.” All right with God, you are all right with everything. Martin Luther, writing a letter of condolence to one of his friends who had lost his daughter, began by saying, “This is a hard world for girls.” It is for those who are dependent upon their own wits and the whims of the world and the preferences of human favor, but those who take the Eternal God for their portion not later than 15 years of age, and that is ten years later than it ought to be, will find that while Martin Luther’s letter of condolence was true in regard to many, if not most, with respect to those who have the wisdom and promptitude and the

earnestses» to got right with God, I declare that this is a good world for girls. Importance of Physical Health. Advice the second: Make it a matter of religion to take care of your physical health. Ido not wonder that the Greeks deified health and hailed Hygeia as a goddess. I rejoice that there have been so many of maintaining aud restoring young womanly health invented in our time. They may have been known a long time back, but they have been popularized in our day—lawn tenuis, croquet and golf and the bicycle. It always seemed strange and inscrutable that our humau race should be so slow of locomotion, when creatures of less importance huve powers of velocity, wing of bird or foot of antelope, leaving us far behind, aud while it seems so important that we be in many places iu a short while we were weighed down with incapacities, and most men, if they run a mile, are exhausted or dead from the exhaustion. It was left untH the last decade of the nineteenth century to give the speed which we see whirling through all our cities and along the country roads, and with that speed comes health. The women of the next decade will be healthier than at any time since the world was created, while the invalidism which has so often characterized womanhood will pass over to manhood, which, by its posture on the wheel, is coming to curved spine and cramped chest and a deformity for which another fifty years will not have power to make rescue. Young man, sit up straight when you ride. Darwin says the human race is descended from the monkey, but the bicycle will turn a hundred thousand men of the present generation in physical condition from man to monkey. For good womanhood, I thank God that this mode of recreation has been invented. Use it wisely, inpdestly, Christianly. No good woman need si to be told what attire is proper and what behavior is right. If anything be doubtful, reject it. A hoydenish, boisterous, masculine woman is the detestation of all, and every revolution of the wheel she rides is toward depreciation and downfall. Take care of your health, O woman; of your nerves in not reading the trash which makes up ninety-nine out of one hundred novels, or by eating too many cornucopias of confectionery. Take care of your eyes by not reading at hours when you ought to be sleeping. Take care of your ears by stopping them against the tides of gossip that surge through every neighborhood. Health! Only those know its value who have lost it. The earth is girdled with pain, and a vast proportion of it is the price paid for early recklessness. 1 close this, though, with the salutation in Macbeth:

“Now good digestion wait on appetite And health on both.” A Word for Mothers. Advice the third: Appreciate your mother while you have her. It is the almost universal testimony of youDg women who have lost mother that they did not realize what she was to them until after her exit from this life. Indeed, mother is iu the appreciation of. many a young lady a hindrance. The maternal inspection is often considered an obstacle. Mother has so many notions about that which is proper and that which is improper. It is astounding how much more innny girls know at 18 than their mothers at, 45. With what an elaborate argument, perhaps spiced with some temper, the youngling tries to reverse the opinion of the oldling. The springle of gray or. the maternal forehead is rather an indiration to the recent graduate of the female seminary that the circumstances of to-day or to-night are not fully aiqrreciated. What a wise boarding school tb.lt would he if the mothers were the pupils and the daughters the teachers! How well the teens could chaperon the fifties! Then mothers do not amount to anyhow. They are in the way and are always asking questions about postage marks of letters and asking, “Who is that Mary D.?“ and “Where did you get that riug, Flora?” and “Where did you get that ring,” Myra?” For mothers have such unprecedented means of knowing everything. They say “it was a bird in the air” that told them. Alas, for that bird ip the air! Will not some one lift his gun and shoot it? It would take whole libraries to hold the wisdow which the dauglitcf knows more than her mother. “Why cannot i have this?” “Why cannot Ido that?”

And the question in many a group has been, although not plainly stated: “What shall we do with the mothers, anyhow? They are so far behind the times.” Permit me to suggest that if the motier had given more time to looking after herself and less time to looking after jou she would have been as fully up to date as you in music, in style of gait, in aesthetic taste and in all sorts of information. I expect that while you were studying botany and chemistry and embroidery and the new opera she was studying household economics. But one day, froa overwork, or sitting up of nights with a neighbor’s sick child, or a blast of the east wind, on which pneumonias are horsed, mother is sick. Yet the family think she will soon be well,, for she has been sick so often and always has got well, and the physician comes three times a day, and there is a consultation of the doctorn, and the news is gradually broken that recovery is impossible, given in the words, “While there is life there is hope.” Aud the white pillow over which are strewn the locks a iittle tinted with snow becomes the point around which all the family gather, some standing, some kneeling, and the pulse beats the last throb, and the bosom trembles with the last breath, and the question is asked in a whisper by all the group, “Is she gone?” And all is over. Maternal Supervision. Now come the regrets. Now the daughter reviews her former criticism of maternal supervision. For the first time she realizes wbat it is to have a mother and what it is to lose a mother. Tell me, men and women, young and old, did any of us appreciate how much mother was to us until she was gone? Young woman, you will probably never have a more disinterested friend than your mother. When she says anything is unsafe or imprudent, you had better believe it is unsafe or imprudent. When she declares it is something you ought to do, I think you had better do it. She has seen more of the worlci than Do you think she could have any mercenary or contemptible motive in what she advises you? She would give her life for you if it were called for. Do you know of any one else who would do more than that for you? Do, you know of any one who would do as much? Again and again she has already endangered that life during six week of diphtheria or scarlet fever, and she never once brought up the question of whether she had better stay, breathing day and night the contagion. The graveyards are full of mothers who died taking care of their children. Better appreciate your mother before your appreciation of her will be no kindness to her, and the post mortem regrets wiil be more and more of an agony as the years pass on. Big headstones of polished Aberdeen and the best epitaphs which the family put together could compose and a garland of whitest roses from the conservatory are often the attempt to atone for the thanks we ought to have uttered in living ears and the kind words that would have done more good than all the calla lilies ever piled up on the silent mounds of the cemeteries. The world makes applauditory ado over the work of mothers who have raised to be great men, and I could turn to ms bookshelves and find the names of fifty distinguished men who had great mothers—Cuvier’s mother, Walter Scott’s mother, St. BerI uard's mother, Benjamin West’s mother.

But who praises mothers for what they do for daughters who make the homes of America? I do not know of an instance of such recognition. I declare to you that I believe I am uttering the first word that has ever been uttered in appreciation of the self denial, of the fatigues and good sense aud prayers which those mothers go through who navigate a~family of girls from the edge of the cradle to the schoolhouse door and from the schoolhouse door up to the marriage altar, 'i hut is an achievement which the eternal God celebrates high up in the heavens, though for it human hands so seldom clap the faintest applause. My! My! What a time that mother had with those youngsters, and if she had relaxed care and work and advice and solicitation of heavenly help that next generation would have landed in the poorhouse, idiot asylum or penitentiary. It is while she is living, but never while she is dead, that some girls call their mother “maternal ancestors” or “the old woman.” Grief and Comfort. And if you have a grief already—and some of the keenest sorrows of a woman's life come early—roll it over on Christ, and you will tiud him more sympathetic than was Queen Victoria, who, when her children, the princes and princesses, came out of the school-room after the morning lesson had been given up by their governess and told how her voice had trembled iu tjie morning prayer because it was the anniversary of her mother’s death, and that she had put her head down on the desk aud sobbed, "Mother! Mother!” the queen went in and said to the governess: “My poor child! I am sorry the children disturbed you this morning. I will hear their lessons to-day, and to show you that I have not forgotten the sad anniversary I bring you this gift.” And the Queen clasped on the girl’s wrist a mourning bracelet with a lock of her mother’s hair. All you young women the world around who mourn a like sorrow, and sometimes in your loneliness and sorrow and loss hurst out crying, “Mother! Mother!” put ou your wrist this golden clasp of divine sympathy, “As one whom his mother comforteth so will I comfort you.”

Advice tho fourth: Allow no time to pass without brightening some one’s life. Within five minutes’ walk of you there is some one in a tragedy compared with which Shakspeare’s King Lour or Victor Hugo's Jean Valjean has uo power. Go out and brighten somebody’s life with a cheering word or smile or a flower. Take a good book and read a chapter to that blind man. Go up that dark alley and make that invalid woman laugh with somo good story. Go to that house from which that child has been taken l>y death and tell the father and mother what an escape the child has had from the winter of earth into the springtime of heaven. For God’s sake make some one happy for ten minutes if for no longer a time. A young woman bound on such a mission, what might she not accomplish? Oh, there are thousands of these manufacturers of sunshine! They are King’s Daughters, whether inside or outside of that delightful organization. They do more good before they are 20 yenrs of age than selfish women who live 00, and they are so happy just because they make others bupP> r . Compare such a young woman who feeis she has such a mission with one who lives a round of vanities, cardcaso in hand, calling on people for whom she doeß not care, except for some social advantage, and insufferably bored when the call is returned, nod trying to look young after she is old, and living a life of insincerity and hollowness and dramatization and show. Young woman, live to make others happy, and you will be happy! Live for yourself, and you will be miserable! There never has been an exception to the rule; there never will be an exception. Flan Out Your Life. Advice the fifth: Plan out your life on a big scale, whether you are a farmer's daughter, or a shepherdess among the hills, or tho fluttered pet of a drawingroom tilled with statuary aud pictures and bric-a-hrac. Stop where you are and make a plan for your lifetime. You cannot be satisfied with a life of frivolity and •aggie aud indirection. Trust the world, and it will cheat you if it does not destroy you. The Redoubtable was the name of an enemy’s ship that Lord Nelson spared twice from demolition, but that same ship afterward sent the ball that killed him, and the world on which you smile may aim at you its deadliest weapon. Be a God’s woman. Draw out and decide what you will be and do, God helping. Write it out in a plain hand. Put the plan on tho wall of your room or write it in the opening of a blank book or put it where you will he compelled often to see It. A thousand questions of your coming life you cannot settle now, but there is one question you ean settle independent of man, woman, angel and devil, and that is that you will be a God’s woman now, henceforth nnd forever. Clasp hands with the Almighty. Then you can start out on a voyage of life, defying both calm and cyclone, saying, with Dean Alford: “One who has known in storms to anil I have on board; Above the roaring of the gale I hear the Lord. “He holds me when the billows smile; I shall not fall; If short ’tis sharp, if long 'tis light; He tempers all.”

HE WON HIS CASE.

The Lawyer’s Witty Remark Had Its Effect on the Jury. Some gray-haired lawyer politicians sat In the hotel talking over their early experiences. The conversation was opened by the man from up the State remarking: “I see that old Dennis Keeny has Just died up in my native town. He was one of the last of the old-style lawyers who relied for winning their cases, not on their knowledge of law, but on their acquaintance with human nature. He was one of the best specimens of the class, too. Stories of his retort* and witty sayings are told all over his own and the adjoining counties. “The lirst time I ever heard him was In the case of a man who was on trial for shooting Into a party that had come to ‘horn’ him, a form of country celebration that you have probably heard about. Keeny appeared for the defendant. It was shown that the gun with which the shooting was done was loaded with dried peas instead of lead. Finally a very dlrty-looking witness was called, and testified that he had been shot In the right leg. On crossexamination the fellow appeared rather shifty, arid finally Keeny asked him to show the jury the exact spot where the pea took effect. The fellow demurred, saying that the shooting had been done six weeks before, and the wound had healed. At last, with great reluctance, the witness drew up his right trousers leg, exposing a limb well covered with dirt. Pointing to a spot which, If possible, was blacker than the rest, the witness said: “ ‘There; ttiat's where they went In.' “Keeny turned to the Jury, and In his most Impressive manner said: “ ‘Gentlemen, I leave it to your knowledge of crops; If peas had been planted In that soil six weeks ago they would be In blossom now.’ “The witness retired in confusion and Keeny won his. case.”

Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report Royal ABSOLUTELY PURE

HENRY CLAY’S DUELING.

The Famous Kentucky Statesman Hud a Number of Kxpcrienccs. Henry Clay was one of she men who professed sentiments against dueling which he did not practice, lie was wounded in an encounter with Humphrey Marshall in ISG9, when he was a member of the Kentucky legislature. Marshall was also wounded. The quarrel, singularly enough, was about a resolution which Clay introduced, recommending that members of the Legislature should wear only clothing of domestic production. A later duel and a more famous one was his encounter with John Randolph of Virginia, Senator from that State. Randolph spoke of the combination supposed to have been formed between Clay and Adams, by wliiqh Adams was elected President and Clay was made Secretary of State, as “a union of Bilfll and Black George —the blackleg and the puritan.” Randolph’s pistol went off prematurely. It was reloaded and when the signal was given to fire Clay’s bullet passed through a flannel dressing gown which Randolph had worn to the held. Randolph, who had told Senator Benton that he would not try to kill Clay, Arc'd into the air. Mr. Clay went to him Immediately, saying: “I trust in God, my dear sir, that you are untouched; after what has occurred, 1 would not have harmed you for the world.” Clay and Randolph were warm friends afterward. The duel occurred in Virginia, at the end of the chain bridge, just opposite Georgetown, April 8, 1820. Nine years later Clay said in the Senate, when a bill to prohibit the sending or accepting of challenges in the District of Columbia was under considei’ation, that “when public opinion is renovated, chastened by reason, religion and humanity, the practice of dueling will he discontinued.” The hill passed the Senate by a vote of 114 to I.—Once a Week.

A Hearty Welcome

To returning pence by Uny and tranquillity at night la extended liy the rheumatic patient who owes these blessings to lloatetter’a Stomach Bitters. Don’t delay the use of thia flue anodyne for pain und purifier of the blood an lualnnl beyond the point when tho disease mnnlfcata Itself. Kidney trouble, dyspepsia, liver complaint, la grippe and irregularity of the bowels ure relieved and cured by the Bitters.

A Libel on the Girls.

Women are now admitted to lectures at Edinburgh University, where they sit on the front seats. Recently eight women were attending Professor Tait’s lecture on the geometric forms of the crystals. “An octahedron, gentlemen," said the professor, “Is a body with eight plane faces. For example “Look at the front bench," broke In a man from the back seats.

A 50-Cent Calendar Free.

The publishers of the Youth’s Compnnion offer to send free to every new subscriber u handsome four-page calendar, 7xlo incites, lithographed in nine bright colors. The retnil price of tills calendar is 50 cents. Those who subscribe at once, sending 51.75, will also receive the paper free every week from the time tin* subscription is received to .Inn. 1, 1800. Also the Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's double numbers free, and tho Companion n full year, 52 weeks, to Jan. 1, 1807. Address the Youth's Companion, 199 Columbus Ave., Boston.

A Missouri rattlesnake at the Muse

um of Comparative Zoology at Cambridge has been observed to lose ills skin twice a year and lo add a rattle for every skin. Instead of losing the rattles as he does his skin, they are retained by tlie closing of the inner end of the old rattle over tlie knob of the new one, and, accidents excepted, the snake bears with him tills record of his age.

Beware of Ointments for Caterrh that Contain Mercury, an mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell und completely derange the whole system when entering It through tlie mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputublo physicians, as the damage they will do Is tenfold (o the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O;, contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and tmico'Et surfaces of the system. In buying Hull’s Catarrh Cure bo sure you get tho genuine. Ills taken internally, and made In Toludo, Otilo, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. t3E~Sold by Druggists, 76c. per bottle. Hnak-es in India. Statistics show that in British East India an average of sixty-five persons are killed by snakes, tigers, leopards, wolves, bears, hyenas, etc., every day - about 24,000 a year. Jayne’s Expectorant is both a palliative and curative in ail Lung Complaints, Bronchitis, etc. It is a standard remedy for Coughs and Colds, and needs only a trial to prove its worth. It is not tlie place nor the condition, but the mind alone that can make any one happy or miserable. Flannel next the skin often produces n, rash removable with Glenn’s Sulphur’ Soap. “Hill’s Hair and Whisker Dye,” Black or Brown, 50c. “The world” is a conventional phrase, which, being Interpreted, signifies aIF the rascality in it.—Dickens. I’iso’s Remedy for Catarrh gives immediate relief, allays inflammation, restores taste and smell, heals the sores and cures the disease. Waste of time is the most extravagant and costly of all experiences.

THE AERMOTOR CO. docs half tbs world's windmill business, because it has reduced tbeoeet of Wind power to 1/W wbat It wax. It hag manj branch f houses, and supplies Its goods and repairs aat four door. It can and doss furulsh a P 4 better article for loss mone» than ragJßDg others. It makes Pumping and twSalsTl Geared. Steel, Gatvanlsed-after-y Completion Windmills, Tilting r and Fixed Steel Towers, Steel Buzz Saw Frames, Steel Feed Cutters and Feed Grinders. On application It will name one of these articles that It will furnish untU Japnarr Ist st 1/3 the nsusl pricer It also makes Tanks and Pumps of all kinds. Send for catalogue. Factory: 12th, Rockwell and Fillmore Streets,Chicago C. N. V. 1 No. 47-98 WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS please suy you saw the advertisement. In this Da per. tew# LkJ in time Sold hy druggists aH

Put to Many Uses.

Sharks furnish quite a number of Valuable products. The liver of tho shark coutaius an oil of a beautiful color, that never becomes turbid, and that possesses medicinal qualities equal to those of cod-liver oil. The skin, after being dried, takes the polish and hardness of mother-of-pearl. The tins are always highly prized by the Chinese, who pickle them and serve them at dinner as a most delicate dish. The Europeans who do not yet appreciate the fins of tho shark as a food produet, are content to convert them into fish glue, which competes with the sturgeon glue prepared in Russia. As for the flesh of the shark, that, despite its oily taste, is enteu in certain countries. It is employed also, along with the bones, in the preparation of a fertilizer. The Icelanders, who do a large business in sharks’ oil, send out annually a fleet of a hundred vessels for the capture of tlie great flsh.

A Child Enjoys

The pleasant flavor, gentle notion and soothing effects of Syrup of Figs, when in need of a laxativft, und if the father or mother be costive or bilious, the most gratifying results follow its use; so that It Is the best family remedy known, and every family should have a bottle on hand. •. Life will depend largely upon what we do with leisure moments. Tile use of Hall's Hair. Renewer promotes the growth of the hair, ami restorea its natural color uuil beauty, free* the sculp of daudruff, tetter and all impurities. FITS.—AII Fits stonne-d free by l)r. Kline’s Great Nerve Jteatoi er. No Flu after Hint day's naa. Mar jalou* cures. Treatise and SI.OO trial bottls free to Fit caaea. Send to Ur. Kline, uat Arch St.. Phila, Fa. Mrs. Winslow's Hoothiso Sysop for Cblldron teething; tottona the gums, rnauoee Inflammation, allaya pain, curea winaooUo. 96 cenU a bottla.

Loss of opportunity is life’s greatest loss. Think of suffering with ■ • NEURALGIA yi. vIL y£J I When tho opportunity lies in a bottlo of ST. JACOBS OIL. It cures. • a aaasAAAASAAAAaA as aSA4Ai>eiSi9*Mll v /t'yvevfvevf'tvvvwvt vvvvv vt/evvv vvvrv" vvv 9 w vvvpvvvtvw* v vvvvv v* It Was Before the Day of SAPOLIO They Used to Say “Woman’s Work Is Never Done.” l AI AHIMP "I Ur Pi'!..'* j| Si Sis to” ji H ftfi, n IIIH i 1 H Guru kept mo from having 111 Mgr if 'm i W Hj H■Rk Hi quick Consumption.” - - Mrs. g IlKnnii ■ Bail mil U * D - BAR LINO, Beaver I I tot w (9 u. na N - *•> Juut> 13 - im k CONSUMPTION Cures Where All Else Falls. BHBT COUCH SYRUP, s TA-TES GOOD. USE IN TIME. SOLD BY UttUOQtSTH. BS CTS. jj T You might just as well /\ try to blow around a weather vane. as to help some Yf _ people by pointing out the right way. They == Mr —“—won’t see it. Even if you P _ jj' | ilfA I prove to them that it’s the fl 'ft LE nn n 1 / easiest way, and the safest, JJL. ...; ~J. 1.. and cheapest, they won’t walk - \ But this isn’t so with all. It’s L - only a few, comparatively. ' , Were not complaining. There are millions of women who have seized on Pearline’s way of washing—glad to save their labor, time, clothes, and money with it. Most women don’t need much urging when they fully understand all the help that comes with Pearline. «oo p?" %“SAMANTHA IN EUROPE.” W JfWjm A NEW BOOK BY JOSIAH ALLEN’S WIFE. P ‘ISr.KF 1 Agents Wanted ove b^‘a , r im r St t ! ons Agents Wanted y Whe ihuf ln.loalnh Allen's Wifellaa Been 10 Europe. Jootufc ' went slung, and Damn C. tie (irlmin. tlie famous artist and carlcaMritt, tail' IhfirwtK lowed them. They went to England. Ireland. Scotland, and Wales: also u> ITjn At .KSFSim/m France, Germany, ete The result* HP, that we have now In press gemma--11/ e.fjCUni fcrfHm 4 Ta a tbs's latest and greatest or ah her hooka, telling the “atl'H litre and MU -fteagßl'/ll mlt akaiiTitl ” slttryof their adventure* In strange cltiea, royal palaces, and Uj m/ “'■lw*.*,/ftflKjwiAsSU in otti-nf thews, place. They nlso visited the Pukrol Vermcus, Kttlalle. fßff'wl CSSS and other.they Imd met at the World'aFalrtn rnieaito. Baron de Grimm Wfg/jflt. VlttiA .*;'X• ■ ifrgwSß haa made over 100 Illustrations or the event* of the trip, all or which will Wg//ft\) appear In the book. With It. profound iniereat, depth of wit, fgf'/m ft Jmt-XK.yJ'-f gen nine hiiinoi', and sound philosophy, verily this book will sweep all ‘fZ Before It. Not only AiiKTlrsiis.lmt English, German, French, end other folk, tJ&'ttamr/awSfttrWmgajK? are eager to resd It. Aattmuy copies will sorely lie sold as wereof ullSaman- 1 I tha'a other book* combined■ more than half a million. Wide-n Wilke V ' - — jUSSTZ. About 700 page*. large Hgettla know what this announcement made Jortah a han’nome drainin' Oern vo. Price, by Mali «*•»•-» *»oam» to tbo«e who »ocuio gown out of nom ttora novating 1 A ait Iff'lj • Cloth.4li.soi And 110. for the Holidays. In the hmua . It wrn veru drumi Half Itunaia. 44.00. Write tor terms and territory At Oneo.

BEST IW THE WORLD. 1\ • \tot snA \w \ V wis (/ \ Tb\\oiv \s \tu\vi vwrw&Vtc&\y @THE RISING SUH STOVE POLISH la cakes for general blacking of a stove. THE SUN PASTE POLISH for a quick after-dinner thine, applied and polished with a cloth. Uorso Bros., Props., Canton, Mass.. T.X4. Mr. Win. J. Carlton, of Elizabeth, N. J., says: “I consulted a physician in the country this summer where I was spending my vacation, about a chronic dyspepsia with which I ha been a good deal troubled, it rakes the form of indigestion, the food I take not becoming assimilated. After prescribing for me for some time, the physician told me I would have to be treated for several months with a mild laxative and corrective—something that would gradually bring back tny normal condition without tlie violent action of drastic remedies. I recently sent to the doctor (Dr. Thomas Cope, of Nazareth, Pa.) a box of Ripans Tabules, and wrote him what 1 understood the ingredients to be—rhubarb, ipecac, peppermint. adoes, nux vomica and soda, ne writes hack: ‘1 think the formula a very good one, and will no doubt just suit you.’ " lUpant Tabulfw »r« nold by druirglftbi or by mall If tba prlc* (00 canta a box) la n*mii to The Rlpana < humlcal Company, No. 10‘riprtico Street, New Yt»rk. Sample ; vial. 10 centa. Poclf Wafer. Will ponltlvMj cure OATAKKH BRONCHITIS ana ASTI! Vi A. (live It a trial Frh». *I; by mall, *l.ia All Drugkt.t.. W. 1,. Ml .It A I'll.. Proprlw tors, 4019 Michigan St., IlnlTulo. Now \orb.