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SERMONS OF THE DAY. RELICIOUS TOPICS DISCUSSED BY PROMINENT AMERICAN MINISTERS. "Christian Cheerfulness" 1* the Title of the Eighth Sermon In the N. W Herald',, Competitive Series—By a llrooklyn Minister— l)r. Tnlmace on Home Life. TEXT- "Rejoice in the Lord always: and again I say, Rejoice.—Philippians, iv.. 4. What is so common among men as the disposition to see only the dark side of the events of life? Many of us h ave a tendency to exaggerate our ills which amounts al most to melancholia. If It is not always high tide in our course of fortune we sink Into a condition of morbid despair. We are too apt to forget that in nature the tide must fall as well as rise. We do not realize that it is the part of wisdom to make the best use of the opportunities we have. We compare our circumstances with tp o ® 0 °* others who are more fortunate and brood over "the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune." • The tendency to dwell upon our ills grows with time. In the beginning it can be checked easily, but in time it becomes like a torrent gaining impetus with its descent, until it is bevond control. Now and then we receive the sad news that one whom we esteemed as upright and godlv has allowed this morbid tendency to obtain such head way that it unseats the reason and with it the sense of moral responsibility. Then we learn of the self-destruction of such a one and we are not surprised. It was almost the inevitable consequence of a false, one sided view of life that is supported by neither common sense nor religion. With reference to the character of the mind men may be divided into the matter of fact and the exaggerative. While the former are liable to be unsettled and dis contented occasionally, the latter are apt to be so as a rule, because their minds, be ing imaginative, create for themselves ideals which they seldom, if ever, attain. Nevertheless, the normal condition of life is one of cheerfulness. God teaches us this in nature, which, as a rule, is bright with sunshine, gay with color and illled with joyous sounds. Laughter and song, harmonv and beauty are the radiant fig ures of that living picture whereby our Heavenly Father points out to each the road to happiness. It is the desire of every earnest mnn to please God. There is no better way to do so than by showing oursolves satisiled with what He gives us. A preacher once said: "We do not please God more t>y eating bitter aloes than by eating honey. A cloudy, foggy, rainy day is not more heavenly than a day of sun shine. A funeral march is not so much like the music of angels as the songs of birds on a May morning. There is no more religion in the guant, naked forest In winter than in the laughing blossoms of the spring and the ripe, rich fruits of au tumn." How few cultivate a sunny disposition! now few make an effort to bo cheerful when thev feel unhappy! There are some the hard lines of whose faces never break into a smile. There are others who know only that mirth which is provoked bv arti ficial means, such as a joke or a ridiculous incident. Some are cheerful only when they have driven a good bargain. You all know the business smile worn by those who are unxious to gala your good will or your money, l'erhaps you are acquainted with people who wear a mask of cheerfulness for the outer world and u mask of torror for their homes. Little do they who go through life dissat lslled and cheerless know how much they lose of that which is sweetest in human ex perience. Not only they but all with whom they come in contact are robbed of a por tion of the blessing of existence. We owe . it to our families, our friends, in fact to all our fellow men, as well as to ourselves, to make brighter, not gloomier, this human life. St. Taul's example shows that even in distressing circumstances cheerfulness is possible. His injunction, "Rejoice in the Lord," was literally obeyed by himself. The consistent Christian must be cheer ful. Even when the knowledge of his sin fulness weighs heaviest upon him he be lieves that God is forgiving and merciful. The bitterness of his sorrow is sweetened by the promises of God. The gloom of his soul is illumined by the light of God's love. However forbidding the darkness by which ho is surrounded, however great the suffer ing to which ho is subjected, however mer cilessly the hand of misfortune may tight en its grip, he knows he shall be higher iu the esteem of his God and more fit for his destiny if, with patience and a cheerful heart, he bears these things. The conso lations of his religion will never fail him if he appeals to them. Gloomy Christianity is a misrepresentation. However weil meaning those may be who dwell only on the sufferings of Christ, only on the wrath of God and the punishment of sin, they do God an injustice and teach only half the truth. There is nothing to gain from such a repulsive presentation of religion. It is not natural, necessary nor fair to our fellow men to minimize those features of our re ligion that God has made most prominent. There is a bright side which it is of the ut most importance to emphasize in order to win men to religion. The dawn of redemp tion and the Joy of spiritual triumph for ever obliterated the sorrows of Calvary. The justice, mercy and love of God irradi ate prismatic light on the sombre picture of sin and judgment. JAMES E. NIEH, Hector Church of the Epiphany, Brooklyn, N. Y. HOME LIFE. Dr. Talmace Preaches On the Cares of the Household. TEXT: "Lord, dost Thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone? Bid her. thereforo, that sho help me."—Luke x., 10. Yonder is a beautiful village homestead. The man of the house is dead, and his widow is taking charge of the premises. This is the widow, Martha of Bethuny. Yes, I will show you also the pet of the household. This is Mary, the the younger sister, with a book under her arm, and her face having no appearance of anxiety or care. Company has oome. Christ stands outside the door, and, of course, there Is a good deal of excitement Inside the door. The disarranged furniture Is hastily put aside, and the hair is brushed' back and the dresses are adjusted as well as, in so short a time, Mary and Martha can attend to these matters. They did not keep Christ standing at the door until they had elaborately arranged their tressfes, then coming out with their affected surprise, as though they had not heard the two orth'me previous knookings. saying: "Why, is that you?" No. They were ladles, and were always presentable, although they may not have always had on their best, for non of us always has on our best; if we beßt wou 'd not be worth having on. They throw open the door and greet Christ. They gay: "Good morning. Mas ter; come in and be seated." Christ did not come aloue; He had a group of friends with Him. and such an influx of city visi tors would t.irow any country home into perturbation. I suppose also the walk from the city had been a good appetizer. The kitchen department that dav was a very important department, and I suppose tluit Martha hud no sooner creoted tbe guests than she fled to that room Mary had no worriment about household'affairs She had full confidence that Martha oould get up the best dinner In Bethany She seems to say: "Now, let us have a division oi labor. MArtha, you cook, nn<i T'll ait down and be good.'' Bo you have often ters * Sreat difference between two sls- There is Martha, hard-working nalns taking, a good manager, ever inventive of some new pastry, or discovering something jjn the art of cookery and houskeeplnif There is Mary, also fond conversation' literary, so engaged In tfeep questions of sthics she has no time to attend to th« luestlons of household welfare. It Is noon. Mary Is In the parlor with Christ. Martha is lu the kltoheu. It would have been bet ter If they had divided the work, and then they could have divided the opportunity of listening to Jesus; but Mary monopolises Christ while Martha swelters at the Are. [t was a very important thing that they should have a Rood dinner that day. Christ was hungry, and He did not often have a luxurious entertainment. Alas, me! If the duty had devolved upon Mary, what a re past that would have been! But something went wrong in the kitchen. Perhaps the fire would not burn, or the bread would not bake, or Martha soalded her hand, or something was burned blaok that ought only to have been made brown; and Martha lost her patience, and forgetting the pro prieties of the occasion, with besweated brow, and, perhaps, with pltoher in one hand and tongs in the othor, she rushes out of the kitchen into the presence of Christ, saying, "Lord, dost Thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone?" Christ scolded not a word. If It were scold ing, I would rather have His scolding than anybody else's blessing. There was noth ing acerb. He knew that Martha had al most worked herself to death to got Him something to eat, and so He throws a world of tenderness into His intonation as He seems to say: "My dear woman, do not worry, let go; sit down on this ottoman besldo Mary, your younger sister. Martha, Martha, thou art careful and troubled about many things, but one thing is needful." As Martha throws open that kitchen door I look in and see a great many household perplexitlos and anxieties. First, there is the trial of non-apprecla tion. This is what made Martha so mad with Mary. The younger sister had no esti mate of her older sister's fatigues. As now, men bothered with the anxieties of the store, the olTlce and shop, or oomlng from tho Stock Exchange, they say whon they get home: "Oh, you ought to be in our factory a little while; you ought to have to manage eight, or ten, or twenty subordinates, and then you would know what trouble and anxiety are!" Oh, sir, the wife and the mother has to conduct at the samo time a university, a clothing es tablishment, a restaurant, a laundry, a li brary, while she is health officer, police and president of her realm! She must do a thousand things, and do them well, in order to keep things going smoothly; and so her brain and her nerves are taxed to tho utmost. I know there are housekeep ers who are so fortunate that they can sit in an arm chair in the library, or lie on the belated pillow and throw oil all the care upon subordinates who, having large wages and great experience, can attend to all of the affairs of the household. Those are the exceptions. I amspoaking now of the great mass of housekeepers—the wo men to whom lire is a struggle, and who, at thirty years of ago, look as though they were fortv. and at forty look as though they wc-ss'flfty, and at ilfty look as though they were sixty. You think, O, man of the world! that yon have all tho cares and anxieties. If the cares and anxieties of the household should come upon you for one week, you would bo lit for the Insano Asylum. The half-rested housolceeper arises in the morning. She must have tho morning re past prepared at an Irrevocable hour. What if the lire will not light; what if the marketing did not come; what if the clock has stopped—no matter, she must have the morning repast at an irrevocable hour. Then the children must be got off to school, What if their garments are torn; what II they do not know their lessons; what 11 they have lost a hat or sash—they must he ready. Then you have all the diet of the day, and perhaps of several days, to plan; but what if the butcher lias sent moat un mastical Ij, or tho grocer has sent articles of food adulterated, and what if some piece of silver be gone, or some favorito challoe bo cracked, or the roof leak, or the plumb ing fall, or any one of a thousand things occur—you must be ready. Spring weather comes, and there must be a revolution in the family wardrobe; or autumn comes, and you must shut out tho northern blast; but what if tho moth has preceded you tc the chost; what if, during tho year, tho children have outgrown the apparel of last year; what If the fashions have changed, Your bouse must bo an apothecary's shop; it must be a dispensary; there must be medicines for all sorts of ailments. You must be in half a dozen places at tho sama time, or you must attompt to be. If, under all this wear and tear of life, Martha makes an impatient rush upon the library or drawing-room, be patient, be lenient! Oh, woman, though I may fail to stir up an appreciation in the souls of others in regard to your household toils, let me as sure you, from the kindness with which Jesus Christ met Martha, that he appre ciates all vour work from garret to cellar and that the God of Deborah, and Hannah and Abigail, and Grandmother Lois, and Elizabeth Fry. and Hannah More is the God of tho housekeeper! Jesus was neyei married, that ho might be the especial friend and confident of a whole world ol troubled womanhood. I blunder; Chrisl was married. Tho Bible says that the Church is the Lamb's wife, and that makei me know that all Christian women have c right togo to Christ and tell Him of theli annoyance and troubles, since by His oatl of conjugal fidelity He is sworn to sym pathize. Again there is the trial of severe econ' omy. Nine hundred and ninety-nine households out of a thousand are subjected to it—some under more and some undei less stre«s of circumstances. Especially ii a man smoke very expensive cigars, an(° take very costly dinners at the restaurants he will be severe in demanding domestlt economies. This is what kills tens of thou< sands of women—attempting to make five dollars do tho work of sevon. A vounf woman about to enter the married state said to her mother: "H<jw long does the honeymoon last?" The mother answered "The honeymoon lasts until you ask youi husband for money." How great are the responsibilities ol housekeepers. Sometimes an indigestible article of food, by its effect upon a king, has overthrown an empire. A distinguished statistician says that of one thousand un married men there are thirty-eight orlm inals, and of one thousand married men only eighteen are criminals. What a sug gestion of home influence! Let tho mosl be made of them. Housekeepers, by the food they provide, by tho couches tbe\ spread, by the books they introduce, bj the influences they bring around theii homes, are deciding the physical. Intellec tual, moral, eternal destiny of the race. You say your life is one of sacrifice. I know it. But.'my sisters, this is tho only life worth living. That was Florence Night ingale's life; that was Payson's life; that Christ's life. FRANKFORT LOTTERY CLOSED. Legal Fight of Twenty.two Year* End* In Abolition. The forty-one offices of tho Frankfort Lottery scattered over Louisville, Ky. 112 were closed for tho first time in twenty-five years, and no drawings were made at the principal office at Third and Green Streets, Tho lottery is closed for good. The mandate of the Supreme Court hai not been received, but the owners of the lottery felt that nothing would be gained by keeping open, as Criminal Judge Barker announced that his first act would be to proceed against the lottery without waiting for official notice. Thus has ended a light that has been waged for twenty-twc years against the policy-shops of vllle. The company had two drawing! daily, and its profits averaged SIO,OOO a day. Quail a Pelt. McDonald County (Missouri) farmers re cently Issued a general invitation to hunt ers to come and kill quail, the birds having become so plentiful as to be a pest. Postage stamps In England are gummed with a starch made from potatoes. j THE REALM OF FASHION. 1| Feminine Footwear. These shoes are the latest novelties. The high shoe in the center is for those who feel uncomfortable in a low shoe. It is cut out in scallops on cither side, the lacing thereby revealing the stocking. The shoe at the top is an entirely novel cut, but is becoming to the foot, especially when worn with a colored stocking to match the dress. STYLES IN SHOES. A glittering embroidery of jet outlines all the openwork strappings of the glace kid, which radiate from a narrow central strap, also wrought with jet. The model at the left laces from the toe right up to the ankle in such a way that the charms of a pretty openwork stocking are displayed to exceptional advantage. At the left of the circle is a dainty shoe in glace kid embroidered with jet. Note the pretty arrangement of the strap at the side. Stylish Girls' Coat. Short, stylish jacket coats are al ways in vogue, and always stylish as A GIBL'S COAT OF TAN-COLOBED CLOTH. well as comfortable, writes May Man ton. The model illustrated in the large engraving is made of tan-colored cloth, and is finished in regulation tailor style. The broad backs are seamed at the centre, and are joined to the fronts by means of under-arms gores. The fronts are loose, and are extended to form pointed revers. The right laps well over the left, where the closing is effected by means of buttons and buttonholes. At the neck is a high roll-over collar, which closes with hooks and eyes. The sleeves are two-seamed and laids in pleats at the arm's-eye. Pockets are inserted at convenient distance from the lower edge of fronts, and ore finished with stitched over-laps. The garment is lined throughout with silk, the revers being [self-faced and interlined with tailor's canvas, as are the sleeves, for a depth of three inches at each wrist. With the coat is worn a hat of velvet, with a Tam crown and ostrich tips. To make this coat for a girl of ten years will require one and one-half yards of fifty-four-inch material. The pattern, No. 7264, is cut in sizes for girls of six, eight,ten, twelve and four teen years. Clilc Little Basques. The pleated round waist and the full Knssian blouse waist contest for favor with the numberless chic little coat basques, very short, very smart and very much trimmed. Sometimes we see the basque portion cut in one with the waist, and sometimes added on. In other instances, the coat or basque effect is confined to the back only, while the front is slightly pointed or quite round. The back is in one seamless piece, and is arranged in endless ways below the belt-line. Short jacket-fronts made by leading French coatmakers open on full vests of any soft material that gathers, pleats, tucks, or can be arranged in effective surplice folds inside square or tiny rounded jackets of some heavy textile. Dainty Ornaments For Dnn and Hair. Aigrettes, both black and white, with tiny ostrioh-tips or bowa of vel- vet, still hold their popular plaoe as hair ornaments for the evening. An other approved fashion is a black or white ostrich-feather rising from a bow of black velvet. Out-steel, too, is used for hair ornamentation in con junction with either velvet or feath ers. Dog-collars of jewels, or made of bands of velvet studded with pears, jewels or jets, are more in vogue this wintei than for many years past. This style is an approved one by the woman whose neck has lost its youthful primness just beneath the chin, and will undoubtedly have a long reign.— Woman's Home Companion. Ited is Again the Rage. A great Paris house shows a row of counters at which nothing is to be seen but red cloths. Every conceivable shade may be found, and the variety of material and range of width and quality are really marvelous. Red is having quite a following in Paris just at pres ent, the darker shades being the most popular. Black Velvet Costumes. All black velvet costumes trimmed with jet or embroidered bands of moire ribbon are much worn by both youthful and elderly matrons. Girl's Afternoon Costume. The model given herewith, and de scribed by May Manton, is at once youthful aud stylish. It is trimmed with narrow black velvet ribbon and made with a full front of soft tan-col ored silk. The foundation for the waist is a fitted lining that closes at the centre* back. On it are arranged the full frout and the revers, that extend down both back and front, and are widened to form epaulets over the shoulders. The sleeves are two seamed and moderately snug, those of the girls being somewhat larger than those worn by their elders. The neok i9 finished with a straight standing collar of the silk. The skirt is four gored, and has all the fulness laid in pleats at the back to give the fan ef fect. It is quite plain and is lined throughout. At the waist is a sash of black velvet ribbon that harmonizes with the trimming. To make this gown for a girl of ten years will require two and one-half Glßli's AFTERNOON COSTUJEX. yards of forty-four-inch material, with five-eighths of a yard of silk for the front. Owl Flew Through a Cab. Mike Murphy, engineer of the "Blue Flyer" on the Baltimore and ' Ohio, was badly cut in the face by , flying glass from his cab window early : yesterday morning. Mr. Murphy was coming down the big hill at Casey- : ville at a high rate of speed, and the i air being quite fresh, he kept his cab . window closed. All at once he heard 1 a crash and the next instant blood covered his face, the result of parti cles of glass from his cab window striking him. He hastily reversed | his engine, and, as soon as he washed the blood from his face, looked around for the cause of the accident. He ex pected to find that some miscreant had thrown a missile through the win dow, but in a corner of the cab lay a big owl, which had passed through the window. The owl was slightly disfigured, but would have been able to fly had Mr. Murphy permitted it to escape. He brought it to East St. Louis, and will keep it as a memento of the fast run at Caseyville. Rail road men contend that the electric headlight so blinded the owl that it could not see to escape, and that it plunged through the glass in its half dazed condition.—St. Louis Globe Democrat. To Dress Wo unrig. Three useful things to have in the house as a provision in case of wounds, are a spool of adhesive plaster, some iodoform gauze and a package of car bolated absorbent cotton. Cleanse and dry as nearly as may be the cut sur face with a wad of the cotton, using moderate pressure and elevating the part if necessary to check the flow of blood. Do not apply any water. Bring the cut surfaces together as accurately as possible and retain them there with as few and as narrow strips of the plaster as will suffice, cutting them of a good length. Then cover the wound with a dozen or so thicknesses of the iodoform gauze, which should extend an inch beyond the wound. Over the gauze apply a liberal layer of the ab sorbent cotton, allowing it to extend beyond the gauze. The cotton may be kept in place by a bandage of cheesecloth, or a part of a leg of a stocking may be drawn over it. Mod erate pressure, if evenly distributed, is helpful. The pressure of a string is hurtful. Cntarrli Cannot bo Curcil With local applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blooil or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall s Catarrh Cure is „nken internally, and acts di rectly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall s Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular pre scription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in cur ing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney & Co.. Props., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, price. 75c. Hall's Family I'ills are the best. During the last eighteen years diamonds to the value of *280,000.000 have been taken from the mines of South Africa. Half the Fun Of getting up in the morning is in washing or bathing with Dreydoppel's borax soap- Full pound bars at all kind of stores. Genuine Dreydoppel. Genuine fun. The eost of maintaining a cavalry soldier and horse in the British Arinv is about £IOO per annum. To Cure A Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 2So. Smokers are less liable than non-smokers to contract diphtheria and other throat disease in the ratio of 1 to 28. Fits permanently cured. No (Its or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free Dk. K. H. Kline. Ltd.. i<il Arch St-,Phlla.,Pa. In one consignment, recently, a feather dealer in London received 6000 birds of paradise. We think Piso's Cure for Consumption is the only medicine for Coughs.—Jennie Pinck- AIID, Sjvingtteld, Ills., Oct. 1, 18U4. The catacombs of St. Caiixtus in Borne now are lighted with electricity. A I sr. Jacobs oil 1 roK —————— s | Soreness »■" § I Stiffness. I I IT CURES IN TWO OR THREE | Jj VIGOROUS RUBS.-« | i Ann PAD ice ° r "the NEW and I UUU bllrlto true itei,iuion," 485 pages, handsomely bound, brimful of new Mens on social ethics, political economy, how to be happy, sent free to 1000 young men who send pareuts' cer tificate of obedience, industry, good habits, cour esy to others. C. M. STEHJiINS, Hartsdale, N.V. T HE ASSOCIATED TRADERS OF AMERICA St. Paul Building, 218-220 Broadway, New York. Collections Effected in all Parts of the World. Special Mercantile Reports. Litigated Matters Pro secuted in all the Courts. Competent Accountants ond Adjusters for all Lines of Trade. This Agency is Thoroughly Reliable and absolutely Safe. Business conducted on Banking Every Officer and Employe Handling Funds is Bonded. Not the Slightest Possibility for any Leakage or Shortage in Clients' Moneys. OSCAR FKOMMEL, President. EDWARD LOEB, Treasurer. WM. C. HARTMANN. Gen'l M'g'r. Pamphlet, " Aid and Protection to the Merchant," will be mailed free on application. " The best is, Aye, the Cheapest." Avoid Imitations of and Substitutes for SAPOLIO OC CTS. IN STAMPS § I Seat to BOOK PUBLISIIINtt HOUSE, 184 Leonard St., 5. T L U City, will MOW* for yon by mail, UOPSE BOOK W prepaid, a copy of a 100-page lIV/HOC OWIV filled with valuable information relatin* to the care ot Hmw. 01 CHICKEN BOOK, SttKSSi : nake their railing szofl table. Ch'oV«»*« can bo made moneT-earnera. If* U»s kmv'hsx that doe# it. Gained Forty-Eight Pound*. "I had a strong appetite for liquor, which was the beginning of the breaking down of my health. I was also a slave to tea and cofTee drinking. I took tho gold cure, but it did not help me." This is a portion of an interview clipped from the Daily Herald, of Clinton, lowa. It might well he taken for the subject of a temperance lecture, but that is not our ob ject in publishing it. It Is to show how a system, run down by drink and disease, may be restored. We cannot do better than quote further from tlin same "For years I was tfV. "i unable to do my | I ■—'t work. I could not jf ] J 1 4 sleep nights or rest • L 3 . 1 days on account of r" 1 continuous pains in rU\( A.\\ my stomach and 112 J j/J j\A . \S, back. I was unable 112 • ) N\ y.i■ to digest my food. —| 17, ,J? Headaches and ]\| -J V1 w painful urination /7\ \ I D were frequent, and //\ \ I If my heart's action II \\ 1 I became increased. / / ViA I I left my farm nnd U *<dJ\ I retired to city life, V for I was a con- """"T/V |\ ' firmed invalid, and | // yr—>. | \ the] doctors said I //! /1 \ ' would never be /fI jl K \ well again. I > II \ "Soon afterl hap- tsSSS? j V pened to use four [jfA boxes of Dr. Will lams' Pink Pills for 1 HETIHED TO CITY LIFE. Pnle People, and since then I have been freo from ull pain, headache and dyspepsia. I oat heartily und have no appetite for strong drink or tea or coffee, und feel twenty years younger. "My weight has increased 48 pounds. I cannot say too much for Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and claim that they have cured me. "JOHN B. COOK." Subscribed and sworn to before mo this sixteenth day of February, 1897. A. P. BARKER, Notary Public. To people run down in henlth, from what ever cause—drink or disease—the above in terview will be of interest, The truth of it is undoubted, as the statement is sworn to, and wo reproduce tlie oath here. For any further facts concerning tliis medicine write to Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y. The name and address of the subject of above interview Is John B. Cook, of 203 South sth Street, Lyon, lowa. It is computed that all the houses in Londou and New York could be built out of the lava thrown out Jby Vesuvius since the first recorded erup tion. ON® ENJOYS Both tho method ana results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50 cent bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIB SYRUP CO. BAM FRANCISCO, CAL. wumiuE. n. HEW tome, nr. • i^FARIInW Stlur'i Bwdj an Warranted to Product. Va E. Walter, Leßaysvllle. Pa., astonished the world bv growing 350 bushels Salter's corn; J. Hreider, Ml'shicott, Wis., ITS bush, barley, and P. Slnnot, Randalia, lowa, bv growing 19H bush. Salter's oats per acre. If you doubt, write them. We wish to gain ■■ I. PW 150,000 new customers, hence will send on trial HI : Q 10 DOLLARB WORTH FOR 10c. fifl 11 pkgs of rare farm seeds, Hog Pea, Sand Vetch, -40 c. Wheat.' Sheep Rape, Jerusalem Corn. etc.. in* m eluding our mammoth Seed Catalogue, telling all fKV about the S4OO (told prises for best for our J also sampla of same, all mailed you upon ' Wa reoeipt of but 10c. postage, positively MSfW worth $lO. to get a start. 100,000 bbls. JtSW Seed Potatoes at $1.50 a bhl. MEW pkgs. earliest jj'ge tabla^^Wyr ■end •d*. along, No. A C 1 ; wS2.'u' s 'e h Eye Water ADVERTISING