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iERMONS OF THE DAY :ELICIOUS TOPICS DISCUSSED BY PROMINENT AMERICAN MINISTERS. he Sixth of the New York neruld's Com petition Sermons Is oil "The Power of UentlenesK"—Kev. Dr. Tulinaee Dis courses on Christ as a Village Lad^ TEXT: "Thy gentleness hath made me reat."—Psalms, xviii., 35. There is little in tho popular Idea of gen leness to mane it desirable for God or man. Ve think of it as lacking in vigor and a ong way removed from greatness. So sug restive is it of weakness and softness that ?e want very little to do with it. Our ideas of gentleness need rectifying. Ve speak often of a gentle horse. What to we mean by it? That horse is gentle hat is nervy and full of mettle, able to pass inytbing on the road, and yet so easily übdued that the voice of a little child rould bring him to a standstill at once, 'hat man is gentle who has the strength of Hercules and the tenderness of a woman, lentleness is power withholding itself and pending itself in goodness. A good illustration of gentloness was hat on a Spanish battle field. A gallant •"rencli soldier's swo rd was uplifted to trike his foe to the earth, but he saw as the word was about to d escend that his an agonist had but one farm. Instantly he tiiyed his sword, brought it to a salute >nd rode on. Gentleness in a woman is love's mighty nagnet, and will attract its own from the ■nds of the earth. A woman without it is . monstrosity, a warrior with it is greater ar than he who shows his power by burn ng villages, destroying crops, executing irisoncrs. The great general at Appomnt ox, considering the interests of the men n gray, treating them as his countrymen, ilencing the salute already under way to ■elebrate victory lest they should be fur her humiliated, and sending tho defeated >nes home well fed and equipped for labor in tho farms, declaring himself a gentle nan as well as a great soldier, and did nore in that hour to make his country jreatthan other great men have done in a ifetime. Grant could have crushed the iouth in that hour; instead, he caressod it s a mother her weak and wayward child, nd melted it to tears. We speak often of the power of God, but t is the gentleness of God that works the reatest wonders. It is this that makes ion great. See tho gentleness of God at he beginning. It is not the strong arm, •ut the tender heart, that concerns itself ?itli fallen man. It is not a king's voice hat we hear in Eden, but a father's, 'athetic cry that, "Adam, Adam, where art hou?" When God came down in human esh to save a world He came in tho .ime spirit. A still and quiet night it was hen tho Saviour was born. The stars loked down peacefully upon the shepherds 5 they watched their sheep. The world as wrapt in slumber. It was into this illness and quiet that God's angels camo ud God's glory shone around. Gentle ords those were the angel spoke—"Be not 'raid." So sweet and gentle was the music 112 the angelic licst that no one save the lepherds heard it. Tho spirit of the Gospel is the same. It summed up in the words: "A bruised •ed will He not break; the smoking llax He ill not quench." It is by gentleness that od seeks to win tho world to righteous ?ss and truth."The Lord God is a sun." )oner or later cold and icy hearts must ve way before Him. We need more gon eness "before the earth can become like •aven-gentleness on the part of parents, au can shout at your children nnd bring .em into trembling submission; you can rash them into obedience: you can starve IOUI into submission. The strong can ring the weak to terms for a while by any 112 the methods. But if you want to show )ur child the sweet reasonableness of rnr position and to make him docile, obe ont, trustful, sit down and talk gently ith him and seek to make his heart your vn. We need more gentleness on tho part of •eachers. "The servant of the Lord must >t strive, but be gentle toward all men." le Great Treacher was so gentle that Sl on the Pharisee asked him to dine with in; the poor harlot lingered neir His feet ressingiy; Zaccheus and Matthew, the iblicans, l.ecamo His loyal disciples, and en a thief, in the agony of crucifixion, ied, "Lord, remember me." The world eds nothing moro than it needs gentle ss and love. Human hearts are hungry r the music of gentle voices and the touch tenderness. Why should we not all try show that we are the sons and daughters the gentle God? Sough, rude boys have been made great time and eternity by the sweetness and Rtleness of mothers nnd sisters. Dull, Iful, petulent scholars have been made oughtful and earnest by the tender pa nt love of self-denying tenchers. Souls mil, mean, selfish, sinful, nave been ide great by the gentle, faithful labors those not willing that any should perish, The night of life is coming on apace. It !1 be sweet to have the gates swing in rd at our approach to the city eternal, d to be welcomed by some watching for r home coming, nnd to hear from joyful s such words as these: "Thy gentleness th made me great." ItlCHABI) G. WoOPBBIDGE, stor Central Congregational Church, Middleboro, Mass. CHRIST AS A VILLACE LAD. . Tulmuge Discourses on tile Boyhood of Jesus. TI:XT: "And the child grew nnd waxed ong in spirit, filled with wisdom, and • face of God was upon Him."—Luko xi., Concerning what bounded the boyhood Christ, the preacher said, we have whole raries of books and whole galleries of ivas and sculpture, but pen and pencil 1 chisel have, with few exceptions, <sed by Christ, tho village lad. "Yet, bv ■ee eonjointed evidences," he said, "I nk we can come to as accurate an idea what Christ was as a boy as of what rist was as a man. First, we hnvo the Bible account of His .'hood. Then we have the prolonged nc int of what Christ was at thirty years of ;. We have besides an uninspired book t was for tho first three or four centuries or Christ s appearance received by many inspired, and which gives a prolonged ount of Christ's boyhood. The so-called apocryphal Gospel, in i'-h the boyhood .*f Christ is dwelt upon, o not believe to be divinely inspired, and it may present facts worthy of consid tion. Becauso it represents the boy -Ist as performing miracles, some have ■rtbrown that whole apocryphal book. : what right have you to say that Christ not perform miracles at ten years of !. as well as at thirty ? He was in bov )d as certainly as divine as In manhood, jn while a lad lie must have bad tho ver to work miracles, whether He did lot work them. When, having reached nliood, Christ turned water into wine, t was said to be the beginning of mir- J s. But that may mean that it was the inning of that series of manhood mir es. In a word, I think that the New Testa ot is only a small transcript of what us said and did. So we are at liberty to ove or reject those parts of the apocry .l Gospel which say that when the boy •Ist with His mother passed a bp.ud of ives, Ho told His mother that two of m, Dumaehus and Titus by name would the two thieves who afterward would •ire on crosses besides Him. \yn g that re wonderful than some of Christ's man- K1 prophecies? Or the inspired story t the boy Christ made a fountain spring pi the roots of a sycamore tree so that mother washed His ooat in the stream —was that more unbelievable than the hood miracle that changed common water into a marriage beverage? Or the unln spired story that two sick ohildren were r<* covered by bathing in the water where Christ had washed. Was that more won derful than the manhood miracle by which the woman, twelve years a complete in valid, should have been made straight by touching the fringe of Christ's coat? Is that more wonderful thnn the manhood miracles by which Christ reanimated the dead ngain and again without going where they were or even seeing thera? "From the naturalness, the simplicity, the freshness of His parables and similes and metaphors in manhood discourse I know that He had been a boy of the fields and had bathed in the streams and heard the nightingale's call, and broken through the flowery hedge and looked out of the embrasures of the fortress, and drank from the wells and chased the butterflies." Dr. Talmage referred to Christ in the mechanic's shop, having been taught the carpenter's trade by His father, Joseph, "His hammer pounding, His saw vacil lating, His axe descending and the per spiration from His work standing on His brow." Then said the preacher: "I show you a more marvelous scene—Christ, thesmooth browed lad, among the long-bearded, white-haired, hlgh-forehoaded ecclesias tics of the Temple." Following other events recorded in the apocrypha, the preacher asked if they were more wonderful than events recorded in the New Testament. "If Christ were divine was He not able at ten or twelve years to describe tha human system as well as though He had been fifty years standing at an operating tablo or in a dissecting room? In othet words, while I do not believe that any pari ofi'the so-called apocryphal Now Testament is inspired, I believe niuch of it Is true, just as I believe a thousand books, none of which is divinely inspired." "A child twelve years old, surrounded by septuagenarians. He nsking His own ques tions and answering theirs. Let me intro duce you to some of these ecclesiastlci. This Is the great Babbin Simeon! This is the venerable Hllleli This is the famous Shammail Theso are the sons of the dis tinguished Betlrah. The ilrst time in all their lives these religionists have found their match, and moro than their match. Though so youns, Ho know all about that Temple under whose roof they hold that most wonderful discussion of all history. He knew the meaning of every altar, of every sacrifice, of every golden candle stick, of every embroidered curtain, of every crumb of shrew bread, of every drop of oil in that saered epiflce. He knew all about God. He knew ull about man. He knew all about heaven, for He came from It. Ho knew all about this world, for He made it. He knew all worlds, for they were only the sparkling morning dewdrops on tho lawn in front of His heavenly palace. 'Tut these seven Bible words in a wreath of emphasis: 'Both hearing them and ask ing them questions.' I am not so much interested in the questions they asked Him as in the questions Ho asked them. He asked tho question not to get Information from the doctors, for He knew it already, but to humble them by showing them the height and depth and length and breadth of their own ignorance. The radiant boy with any one of a hundred questions obout theology, about philosophy, about astrono my, about time, about eternity, may have balked them, disconcerted them. Behold the boy Christ asking questions, and listen when your child asks questions. Ho has the right to ask them. The more ho asks, the better. Alas for the stupidity of tho child without inquisitiveness! It is Christ like to ask questions. Answer them if you can. Do not say: 'I can't be bothered now.' It is your place to be bothered with questions. If you are not able to answer, surrender and confess your incapacity, as I have no doubt did Rabbis Simoon, and Hil'.el, and Shaminai, and the sons of Be tirah when that splendid boy, sitting or standing there, with a garment reaching from neek to ankle, ami girdled at the waist, put them to their very wits' end. It is no disgrace to say 'I don't know.' The only being iu tho universe who never needs to say 'I don't know' is tho Lord Almighty. "Bat while I see the old theologians standing around the boy Christ, I am im pressed as never before with the fact that what theology most wants is more of childish simplicity. Why should you and I perplex ourselves about the decrees of God? Mind your own business and God will take care of His. In tho conduct of the universe I think He will somehow man ago to get along without us. If you want to love and serve God, and be good and useful and get to heaven, I warrant that nothing which occurred eight hundred qulntilllon of years ago will hinder you a minute. It is not the decrees of God that do us nny harm; it is our own deerees of sin and folly. "You need not go any further bnck in history than about one thousand eight hundred and sixty-four years. Something occurred on that day under an eclipsod sun that sets us all forever free, if with our whole heart aud life we accept the tre mendous proffer. Do not let tho Presby terian Church, or the Methodist Church, or the Lutheran Church, or tho Bnptist Church, or any of the other evangelical churches spend any timo in trying to fix up old creeds, all of them imperfect, as everything man does is imperfect. Our own denomination made Itself absurd by trying to revise its creed made hundreds of years ago. You might as well try tore vise your grandmother's love letters. I move a new creed for all the evangelical churches of Christendom, only three arti cles in the creed, and no need of any more. "If I had all the consecrated people of all denominations of the earth on one great plain, and I had voice loud enough to put it to a vote, that creed of three artioles would bo adopted with a unanimous vote. This Is the creed I propose for ull Christen dom: "Article first—'God so loved tho world that He gave His only begotten Hon, that whosoever believoth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life.' "Article second—'This is a faithful say ing, and worthy or all acceptation, thut Jesus Christ camo into the world to save sinners, even tho chief.' "Article third—'Worthy is the Lambthat was slain to receive blessings and riches and honor and glory and power, world without find.' "But you goto tinkering up your old creeds, and patching and splicing and interlining and annexing and subtracting aud adding and explaining, and you ill! lose timo and make yourself a target Tor earth and hell to shoot at. Let us have creeds not fashioned out of hunianFin genuities, but out of scriptural phrase ology, and all tho guns of bom bard irtent blazing from all the port holes of Jull delity and perdition will not in a tfiou sand years knock off the church off God a splinter as big as a carabrio neodle. What is most needed now is that we inther all our theologies around the boy Ju tho temple, the elaborations nround "tlfe sim plicities, and the profundities arouid the clarities, the octogenarian ofscholajfcic re search around the unwrinkled eflpek of twelve-year juveneseence. 'Exce» you become as a little child you can in tip wise enter the kingdom;' and except you Mcome us a little child you cannot uuderstiJfrl the Christian religion. The best thiA that Rabbis Simeon and Hillel and NlSrninni and the sons of Betirah over dldflras, in the temple, to bend over the lad wflo, first made ruddy of cheek by the the Judeau hills, and on his way me chanic s shop, where he was to ba tho support of his bereaved stopped long enough to the venerablo dialecticians of the Okßnt, 'both hearing them and asking Home, referring to Christ, claimed: Eeee deus! Behold the have exclaimed: Ecee Homo, Bejfl>d the man. But to-day. In conclusion subject, I cry: Ecce udolescence! the boy." A TEMPERANCE COLUMN. THE DRINK EV-lt. MADE MANIFEST IN MANY WAYS. Trust In Goil—Tteer nnil Dyspepsia—A Medical Expert Shows the Appalling; Physical and Mental Eflccts of lieer l>rinkiiiK—Supreme Duty of the Hour. Put thou thy trust In God, Hnd He will lead Thy faltering footsteps through tempta tion's maze; lie will sustain thee in thy time of noed And guide thoe onto better,brighter days. Weak from the constant battle with the world, Saddened with thoughts of resolution? vain, 4-gainst thy soul the shafts of sin are hurled, And in the struggle e'en thy will is slain. But God is ever-watchful, and He knows The longing of thy tired heart for strength, His grace can reach thoo through surround ing foes. And bring thee safely through them all, at length. So put thy trust in God: His loving care Will be around thee likeanarmor strong, His presence will be with thee everywhere, And thou shalt walk unscathed of any wrong. —Sacred Heart Heview. lleer and Dyspepsia. Dr. Norman Kerr snys that malt liquors are one of the main sources of the indi gestion so common in our midst. The continued irritation of the delicate lining membrane of the stomach by the alcohol in even the mildest beers persisted in for a lengthened period, is extremely apt to give rise to a train of dyspeptic symptoms, which tends to make many an othewise happy life miserable. A lifetime of total abstinence would, I am persuaded, havo wardod off two-thirds of the dyspepsia 1 havo been calledupon to confront. The liver suffers severely in many cases in which beer has never been taken to ex cess. I have frequently observed consid erable enlargement of the liver in persons noted for their very moderate but constant drinking, who seemed the picture of henlth while alive, but whose sudden and unex pected death necessitated a post mortem inquiry. In nursing, stouts and beers are especi ally pernicious. Their use has wrought untold mischief to many mothers, and un dermined the tender constitution of a vast multitude of helpless and Innocent infants. I have said nothing whatever of the damage resulting from beer-drinking to excess, or of the appalling extent of men tal and normal evil inseparable from the general social use of beer. My warnings are on purely scientific and dietlc grounds, against steady, limited indulgence In such liquors as are weakening to the system, and invite gout, rheumatism, dyspepsia and other unhealthy bodily conditions." There is no call for us to drink beer, how ever moderately. We can enjoy better health without * Intoxicating drinks than with them. Our Creator neither implanted a longing for them, nor provided a supply, of them for our use. They are not, in the true sense of the word, a food. 13uty though they can do us little, if any, good, they may do us much harm. Many nre killed by them, both for time and for eternity, nnd even their continued moder ate use tends in the direction of loss ol health, lessening of strength and shorten ing of life. Let us all, who desire to avoid gout, rheumatism and dyspepsia, shun ale, beer, porter. Btout and all other kinds of fer mented and distilled liquors. The Supreme Duty of the Hour. Our readers must have observed how continuously in our editorials we have urged upon temperance workers the im portance of assailing the fortress of moderate drinking and overthrowing that stronghold as being the key to the situa tion. We nre glad to seo tlint Miss Wlllard, in her address as rresidont at the National W. 0. T. U. Convention, at Buffalo, called attention to this strategic point in the battle against alcohol. She said: "The supreme dutv of the hour is to con vince the moderate drinker that ho is doing himself linrin. If only this belief was gen eral, men would soon become a law unto themselves to such a degree that statutory enactments would be but the outward ex pression of an inward grace. Upon the sullen fortress of moderate drinking the artillery of temperance reform must con centrate in future years. It has been an incalculable gain to make drunkenness a disgrace instead of an amiable peculiarity,' as It was 100 years ago; or a pardonable; peeeadlllo, as it was in the memory of tbei oldest inhabitant; or a necessary evil as it was n generation back. The forces that have workeA to this end aro precisely the same that must now be directed against so-culled 'moderation.' We must stoutly maintain the position that there Is no moderation In the use of what is harmful. Happily, in taking this position wo have 'great allies' of which the greatest Is the dictum of the modern sciences." Greatest Cause of Poverty. Trade unions, technical schools and benevolent societies have done much to elevate the condition of the laboring popu lation in England, but it is still much lower than In the United States, and In many places descends to degradation. John Burns, the English labor reformer, was asked what was the greatest cause of poverty In his country. •'Drink," was his laconic reply. "What is the greatest obstacle to the ad vancement of the working classes?" "Drink," lie said again. , "What is the reason that the working classes of Great Britain are less intelligent,: less tidy and less ambitious than those of! the United States?" "Drink,"' lie again ejaculated. ' "What is the greatest incentive to crime nnd vice among the working people?" "Drink." "Is there any hope for the elevation of the working cinsses of your country to the same standard as those in the United States?" was asked. "Not as long as there is a public liouso at every cross-road In Great Britain," he replied. Doctors oil Drink. The twenty-seventh annual meoting of the American Association for the Study and Cure of Inebriety was held in Boston, under the Presidency of Dr. Lewis D.- Mnsou. Among the papers rend was one by Dr. T. D. Crothers, of Hartford, Conn., on "Thelnsanity of Inebriety." Hesaid there were neurotic scorms which impelled men to drink at certain defluite periods which returned with the same regularity as the tides. These were veritable insanities. A 1 large number of men thus affected were sulTering from paresis, also from moral paralysis—a condition of things in which' the person was unable to determiue his proper relations to people in general. TU<f continued use of alcohol destroyed tnel moral idea, and made the person untruth ful, dishonest, intriguing and unreliable. An Inflexible ltule. There is a ilrm of glass manufacturers in Philadelphia which was established in the early part of the century, whose founders, strict and consistent members of the So ciety of Friends, not believing In the manu facture or sale of intoxicating liquors, es tablished a rule which has never been vio lated. These manufacturers have never made a whisky flask, nor any sort or de scription of bottlo intended to contain either malt, vinous or spirituous liquors. Temperance News and Notes. The mau who drinks champagne at night generally feels real pain In tne morning. HELPS FOR HOUSEWIVES. To Cook Marrow Bones. Saw the bones in even lengths, covei each end with a flour and water paste, and steam for twenty inmites to hall an hour. Serve upright with the paste at one end removed, and send a rack of dry toast to table with the bones. To Make* Meringues. Beat up six whites of eggs to a very stiff froth, adding a pinch of salt be fore commencing to whisk, add slow ly half a pound of very fine caster su gar, two ounces of peeled and coarse ly-chopped or shredded Jordan al monds and about half an ounce of crystallized orange-flowers. Shape the meringues on buttered baking tins, or put the mixture, equally di vided, into square or oval paper cases and bake in a very slow oven for an hour. Dredge with sugar in either case. Chestnut Pudding. Boil some chestnuts for about a quarter of an hour in plenty of water, blanch and peel them; pound in a mortar with any desirable essence (very little of it) and some light French white wine; put into a small preserving pan, cover them with the wine, beat tlie yolks of three eggs and the whites of two, some grated nut meg, a pinch of salt and a little melt ed butter; add gradually one pint of milk (three-quarters of a pint of cream is preferable), sweeten to taste; stir it over the lire in a china saucepan till thick; put the mixture in pie-dish, lined with puff or other thin paste, and bake iu fairly hot oven. Ideal ('auliflowpr. The tempting green and white of the cauliflower that dainty vegetable which Mark Twain declares is "cab bage with college education" —is still prominent in the markets, and a fa vorite with nearly every one, be sure that the bead is firm and white and the leaves fresh and green. Dark spots indicate one too long exposed. Pick off the coarser outside leaves, and soak top downward in cold salted water for an hour, to bring out any tiny insect or worm that may lurk within. Tie in a piece of cheese cloth or coarse net to prevent break ing, and cook iu boiling salted water (uncovered) fifteen or twenty minutes, until tender. Use no more water in the cooking* than is absolutely neces sary, as cauliflower, like cabbage, loses much of its food value by the action of the water, drain, serve with a cream sauce, or, to give it addition al nutrient value, add to the cream sauce three tablespoonfuls grated cheese, pour over the cauliflower, sprinkle three tablespoonfuls more over the top, then a light layer of bread crumbs. Set iu a hot oven for , about twenty minutes, or until a rich golden brown—Washington Star. Household Hints. Mis stove blacking with vinegar; this will make it stick better and also give a better polish. After washing lamp chimneys rub them with dry salt, which will give a brilliant polish to tlie glass. A few thin slices of sour apples add ed to a salad of watercress, dressed with a French dressing, will be found an improvement. To cool a hot dish quickly, set it in cold water and salt; this will cool it far more rapidly than if it were stood in cold water only. An excellent liniment for sprains, bruises, pains, etc., requires iu its composition two ounces each of chlo roform, alcohol, ammonia water, spirits of camphor and tincture of aconite root, and six ounces of sweet spirits of nitre. Mix and apply with friction. Eggs may be kept for winter use by packing them in clean, sweet oats, covering each row of eggs with the oats. Nail np the box, and turn it over occasionally. The oats must be dry, and the box kept in a dry place, for if the oats mildew or get mustj the eggs will become musty also. An excellent cleansing wash for car pets, quite as efficacious as that sold at 50 cents a gallon, is made as fol lows; Put thirty cents' worth o) ground soap-bark, five cents' worth of ammonia water and a cup of vinegai into one and a half pails of water. Boil half an hour and apply with o sponge. Pretty mending bags for silk stock ings are made iu the half-moon shape familiar in cretonne as the general darning bag. A soft silk of auall-ovei pattern is selected, and the usual nee dlecase added in the centre of the semi-circle; the whole bag is made upon a slightly reduced plan from that generally used. The don'ts for laundering white silk handkerchiefs are: Don't iron while wet with a very hot iron, or the silk will shrivel and spoil; don't fail to rinse the soap thoroughly out of them, or they will be coarse and hard; don't rub the soap directly upon them, or wash them in hot water, or they will become yellow to a certainty. These are the directions,by negatives, to wash them well. Gold "Dust." The gold that remains in the pan after the earth has been washed away is called "dust." Some of it is fine as the finest sand, some the size of a pin head and some as large as a pea or the end of your little finger, but it is all known as dust. Lumps the size of a hazelnut, a walnut, and larger are called nuggets. You can buy as much of anything you want for an ounce of dust as you can for v S2O gold piece. All stores in mining dis tricts are provided with gold scales, and the miner's gold is accepted as so , much coin of the realm.—Denver Times. A Huge Pjtlion. A python twenty feet in length, that Hied in the reptile house of the Lon- 1 lon Zoological Society last month, | w*s the largest reptile ever confined • there. There is a general impression • that pythons reach a length of forty leet or more, an absurdity made mani iest when the authorities assert that the femnle Indian python still in the gardens, and but a trifle o w eighteen feet long, is the longest snake in cap tivity of which there is any record. General impressions as to the length of these great reptiles are due to the absurd pictures that formerly decorat ed geographies and other works msed sometimes as text books, showing a picture of a python in the act of crush ing and swallowing an Indian buffalo. That was a ridiculous picture that was the father of many [of the "freak journalism" pictures of the present day. The London python, which was a real instead of a fabulous reptile, was just over twenty feet in length. It was obtained in Malacca, and was presented to the society by Dr. Hamp shire on August 29, 1870, and had, therefore, lived rather more than twenty years in England. During that period it had been fed principally with ducks, of which it sometimes swallowed four or five at one meal. Its food was offered to it once a week, but it sometimes refused to eat for a month together. The specimen will be mounted for the Tring Museum. Some Tricks of Heredity. Dr. Conklin gave many peculiar in stances of family characteristics run ning through many generations. In one family it was noticed that three extremely long hairs appeared on the eyebrows of the children generation after generation, and in another family a small mark on the ear was reproduced for three generations by actual knowl edge. Twins and triplets usually ap peared time and again in the same family, and while the marked heredi tary characteristics might be latent in one generation, they would appear in the next. He said that in Italy many hundred years ago a son was born who had six fingers and the number of his descendants who were similarly affected was countless. The facial ex pression, the color of the eyes, the hair, the carriage, and many little oddities appeared and reappeared. In his own family he noticed a peculiar manner of crawling on the floor in childhood was repeated in descend ants and could not be corrected.— Pittsburg Times. rfik rfiifc my rfc ,r> rfwi> Avcr's Is your hair dry, harsh, and brittle ? Is it fading or turning gray? Is it falling out? Does dandruff trouble you ? For any or all of these condition? there is an infallible remedy in Ayer's Hair Vigor. INf# •OR INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL USE. CURES AND PREVENTS Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Influenza, Bron chitis, Pneumonia, Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago, Inflammations, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Frostbites, Chilblains, Headache, Tooth ache, Asthma, DIFFICULT BREATHINC. CI'RES THE WORST PAINS in from on* to twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR after reading this advertisement need anyone SUFFER WITH PAIN. Uiuhvnv'H Heady Relief INn .Sure Cure for Every I'niu, Sprain*, Bruises, Pnius lu tlie Rnclc. ClieM or Limbti. It wots ' the Firat anil IN the Ouly PAIN REMEDY That instantly stops the most excruciating pains, allavs inflammation, and cures Congest ions, whether of tne Lungs, Stomach, Bowels or other glands or organs, by one application. A half to a teaspoonful in hall a tumbler of water will in a few minutes cure Cramps, Spasms, Bour Stomach, Heartburn, Nervousness, Sleeple?s ness. Sick Headache. Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Flatulency and all internal pains. There is not a remedial agent in the world that will cure fever and ague and all other malarious bilious and other fevers, aided by RAD WAY'S IMLLS. so quickly as KAD WAY'S HEADY RELIEF. Fifty cent* per bottle. Sold by Druggist*. RADWAY & CO.. bo ELM ST., NEW YORK. A Good Tale Will Boar Telling Twice." Use Sapolio! Use SAPOLIO OC CTS. IN STAMPS # . I Seat to BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 18* Leonard St., 5. 1 Wty 112 will aeonre for yon by mall, U 112 afiC nAAI/ prepaid, a copy of • 100-page M w /\9C DV/Uii filled with valuable information relating to the care oi Hone*, or a CIU Dnnir teaching yon bow to «o care tor anl Wml wi\Ela DVVIVj handle fowls aa to make their raising axoAUble. Ohiehena oaa be axle mnaar-aarneta. IF* kM~'hsv that 4oM.it.- Bad Digestion, Rail Heart. Poor digestion often causes irregularity of the heart's action. This irregularity may be mistaken for real, organic heart disease. The symptoms are much the same. There is, however, a vist difference be tween the two; organic heart disease is often incurable; apparent heart disease is curable if good digestion be restored. A case in point is quoted from the New Era, of Greansburg, Ind. Mrs. Ellen Col som, Newpoint, Ind., a woman forty-three years old, bad suffered for four years with distressing stomach trouble. Tho gases generated by the indigestion pressed on the heart and caused an irregularity of its action. She had much pain in her stomach and heart, and was subject to frequent and severe choking spells, which were most severe at night. Doctors were tried in vain: the patient became worse, despondent, and feared impending death. i i v\\lTl^\l A CASE OF HEART FAILURE. She was much frightened, but noticed that in intervals in which her stomach did not annoy her, her heart's action became normal. Reasoning correctly that her di gestion was alone at fault, sho procured the proper medicine to treat that trouble, and with immediate good results. Her appetite came back, the choking spells be came less frequent and finally ceased. Her weight, which had been greatly reduced, was restored, and she now weighs more than for years. Her blood soon became pure and her cheeks rosy. The case is of general Interest because tho disease Is a very common one. That others may know the means of cure we give the name of tho medicino used—Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Tale People. These pills contain all the elements necessary to give now life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. | What Was Not in t7»7. Think of New York about one century ago! It did not contain one bathroom or a single furnace. In summer there was no ice. There were no public stages, 110 matches aud ; there was no such thing as a latchkey. ■ The streets were narrower than the Liberty or Wall street of to-day. They were widened. There was a > State law that commanded perlestnans t northward bound lo get out of the way of those going south. Pigs were i the city scavengers. There was scarcely any light from the miserable lamps at night, and not a man in the city limits wore a mustache. II Ck FOR 14 CENTS ( I ■ We wish to gain leO,ooo new cus tomere, ana hence offer lPkg. 13 Day Radish, 10c 1 HBHA 1 Pkg. Early Spring Turnip, 10c 1 I I 1 " Earliest Red Beet, 10c 1 I | RMuMBW 1 " Bismarck Cucumber, 10c i i I MVWICBV 1 " Queen Victoria Lettuce, 16c i i i 1 *' Klondyke Melon, 16c > , fMUA 1 " Jumbo Giant Onion, 100 1 ||||Hv 8 M Brilliant Flower Seeds, 16c j | pVVf Worth #I.OO, for 14 cents* I > win ■ Above 10 pkgs. worth SI.OO, we will < I I mUI HI mail you free, together with our , i H 1H Brent Plant and Seed Catalogue MS upon receipt of this notice and 14c. I 1 uM postage. We invite your trade and < I l U H ltnow when you once try Salzer's ( I I BBi eeeda yon will never get along wifh- ( I ' out them. i'ntatoeaatll.&Oi ( a Hbl. Catalog alone 6c. No. ; , | JOHN A. SALZKR 6BKD €O., LA CROSSK, WIS. J ' omwumiuai wwwwwwwo' KLONDIKE GOLD IF YOU ARE GOING TO THE ALASKA GOLD FIELDS MAKE NO MISTAKES, For your life depend* upon getting reliable Nupplu'x ami havinu Ihein parked properly. Keep away from Schemers and others who know nothing about your wants. We have sold thousands of Alaska outfits, know exactly what is wanted and everything is packed by experienced men. We ar» the oldest and among tlie most reliable linns in this business. We mail free of charge a good map show ing the best route and a supply list showing cost of articles for "one man for one year." Address COOPER & LEVY, 104 «fc 100 First Ave., South. Dept. N, Seattle, Washington. Reference#: Dexter, Morton tf- Co., Bankers, Seattle* ADVERTISING-