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THE PULPIT, f AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. B. J. NEWMAN. Subject: Our Four Anchors. Brooklyn, N. Y.?III Unity Churl'i, Irving place and Gates avenue, Sunday morning, the Rev. B. J. Newman preached. The text was: "And fearing lest we should have fallen upon the rocks they cast four anchors out ?f the stern and wished for the day." He said: The text is taken frrjn Faul's story af the shipwreck. Pain was going to Rome to be tried for his life, but on the sea a storm r&ged for two weeks. In the darkness of the dead of night, not knowing where they were, the sailors on watch heard the sound of water breaking on the rocks and they took soundings. And again they took their soundings and finding that the water was shallower, they threw out four anchors "and wished for the day." We do not have to be sailors to know the value of these anchors to the storm assailed men on * that ship. They held them to their anchorage until light came and they could see their way. My purpose this morning is to consider briefly the anchors of righteousness that we need in our daily living. The simplest analysis of our present j day life, of one week's experience, j would show that there are a dozen | influences outside ourselves and two dozen temptations within us that are storming our righteousness. We are surrounded on all sides by difficulties. Our honor, our justice, our sympak thies. our religion, all are assailed, and we have got to protect ourselves and our fellow men. Take the first - * A 1 o + day 01 tI16 WOTKing wyes cum iuuiv av the experiences we meet with in that day. We go to business, and fundamentally the principle to-day upon ' which business seemed to be based Is that of dishonor. It is not "honor all men.' It is not trust all men, ( but it is distrust your fellow man; "put him under bonds." Only the ! other day in the Sunday school I said to the young men and women there: . "Be honest; tell the truth," and one . member came to me and said: "How ; can we be honest? We have to lie." There is a tendency in the life of men ; to-day to get ahead, no matter what ' happens to the other man. Or on , Tuesday we read in the paper that some bankers to whom the funds of the people had been entrusted, and on wnicn xne siauimj ui uusiu?= men depends, and to whom the mon- J ey of widows and children has been : entrusted, have been dishonest and speculated in the stock market to in- ' * crease their own incomes, and have . failed. Our confidence is assailed. , and we say: "Whom can we trust?" , On Wednesday, perhaps, we go to a magistrate's court and we watch the , man who is elected to dispense jus- . tice in your name, and we see case af- , ter case where the politician's influence is at work or where the petty bribe is at work, and men and boys that have broken our law, and whoj, should be put in our prisons until I they learn what it is to live among ( ' their fellow men in righteousness. are discharged and go free. Our sense of justice is shocked. Or perhaps it is some man in a higher rank i of life who takes the life of another, 1 who comes into our courts, and under the plea of insanity he is declared not , guilty of his crime; while some poor man, with the feelings of poverty and ; r,.on<- efonlc <1 lonf nf hrpad from tllC "?"< > oiw. corner grocery, and he is sent to jail J for three months. Our sense of jus- . tice is rightly shocked. Perhaps on : Thursday at 6 o'clock we are coming , home and we ai. at the New York end of the Brooklyn Bridge, and we | see a mad rush to get into the cars. , There is no sympathy shown. Each man tries to get himself in and pushes women and children aside, and we say: "What are men that . they will do this?" And so our sympathies with our fellow men are being shocked. And so it is through the rest of the week. And Sunday comes; Sunday, the day set aside when we try to commune with God and learn a little bit of what it means to be righteous, to do God's will. Sunday comes, and a few of us, here i and there, attend services; but there are the so called sacred concerts, poolrooms and saloons, all thrown open. Men say "liberty," but this is not liberty, but license to degrade themselves. And we permit it, and our religion is assailed, and our culture, and the development of our culture to worshiD God is assailed. Temptations and conditions outside ourselves and temptations arising within cause us to face danger daily. We hear of the cruelty of the factory that allows the little boy and girl of ten to work twelve hours a day until they get the "great white plague." We hear of the evils of the stockyard, of the great railroads, and so on. We hear of these things so often that we are growing hardened to them. Familiarity with evil dulls its power to affect us, and dulls our eyes to its ugliness, and we go on our way rejoicing in our prosperity; and we are unmindful when we do not work with all our hearts to overcome these things. These things are affecting our lives. We have to have good anchors to hold us to the right. The right, friends, is our life; nothing else in life. Right in everything ?not only in the personal sphere, but in the world around us. Those Israelitish prophets preached, not personal righteousness, but social righteousness; not pure by yourself, but pure by your state, and that is what we have to do. If we love our right we will fight for it, and for its best expression, even as Paul fought for the lives of the seamen and his companions when his ship was cast upon the rocks. And in order to fight for ourselves we have cast out our anchors and "wish for the day." Now, what are these anchors? Tho first is the anchor of faith. Here is the situation confronting us: Our confidence is assailed; our faith in our fellow men is assailed; our faith in our God is assailed. We have to cast out the anchor of faith. We know that the eternal righteousness will triumph. It is so. Through every difficulty, every experience, every trial; all through the past it has always sought the higher expression of itself. We have to have faith in this righteousness and the inspiration to give ourselves to the service o. the expression of righteousness. Not only have we to cast out the anchor of faith, but the anchor of hope also; cr\ thnt whon rhoco ctnrm rlnnHfi fli'A upon us, when darkness surrounds us, when it seems as though the light of day would not show itself to our vision we have to have the hope that is born of God, the hope that gives a happy outlook. It is so easy to be discouraged and to let these experiences that are surrounding us dampen our ardor. The next is the anchor of love for our fellow man: "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. This do." With that love God calls lis to service. It calls us out of ourselves with the love that makes us wa-nt. to go out into our city and p&erever w? see one wbo needs us i it niakea hp want (o give ourslves to that cut'; and I tell you never in God's world was there a city that needed more redeeming love than , does this city of New York and i I Brooklyn t;;-day. I have pone into j [ homes where the darkness of despair j was because no love was there. I ! have gone into hemes where mothers j I and fathers have said: "None cares for us: no one will help us." Don't tell nie the world love us, be- ' cause we know differently. I tell ! you we have to have that love in us j that the Russian proverb says "dwells in the house of labor." There is a reward for him who loves his fellow man. Then there is another anchor, ; and that is the anchor of prayer. I care not what a man's work or education is. whether he is college bred j or has no education at all, but this thing 1 am sure of, and that is, without a prayer in your heart you cannot i make life worth what God is expecting j of it. Prayer is our wanting to get i near to God. wanting to tell God of ; our difficulties, our troubles, our per- ; plexities, our successes, our ideas, our | tn n<sic for His strength and | guidance. We have to have tlfis an- ! clior when things are going wrong, ! when the world seems dark and life if: weary. We want to have this anchor in God to give us courage to go oil our way, and if we have not been doing right to help us to return and through our fellow men serve God. Let us cast out our four anchors: our anchor of faith in God and our fellow men; our anchor of hope in , eternal goodness; our anchor of love j in universal service; our anchor of J prayer to God; and in so doing may the blessing of God rest with you in all your labors. i A Meditation. "Ye shall receive power after that | the Holy Ghost is come unto you." "an ho nn aeeeDtable service | without this endowment. Even ! Jesus must first be baptized with the J Holy Ghost before He could enter j upon His great mission. The apostles, who had been in i Christ's school for three years, could | _ do nothing until they were endowed j with power from on high. Mr. Moody used to say that he ; would rather break stones on a turn- j hi pike than attempt to preach without ; n] the indwelling and power of the j Q Holy Spirit. The great reason why j some of our young people's meetings : are such a drag is because its mem- ! ta bers do not seek power from abore. b< To obtain this power we must fij Earnestly seek for it in prayer. "If ye being evil know how to give gooi- m Sifts unfo your children, how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him." j , To obtain more power, we must I < use the power already bestowed. | '< "Go in this thy might," the angel j said to Gideon?the might of the I | promised presence. "The Lord be j J with thee." As he went he realized j the p/eseuce and power of the Al- i mighty. We must use this power in witnessing: for Jesus. "I am no more in j the world. but these are in the world." We are His representatives, i Let us not misrepresent Him.? Christian Union-Herald. * Self-Conqnest a Necessity. Deeply, I fear, does this age need j Lo take to heart the stern, inexorable necessity of self-conquest?not in I self-torture, but yet in earnest watch- I j fulness; not in extreme fasting, but | in habitual careful moderation; nor I in morbid self-introspection, but in j thorough and vigorous occupation; not in enfeebling the body by macera- | a Lion, but by filling its hours of work ; with strenuous and cheerful activity j and its hours of leisure with bright j _ Lhoughtfulness and many a prayer; i Ijy these blessed means we, too, even . in in the midst of the world, may attain j w to the spirit which is dead to the fi; world; we may be keeping under ouv ! a! body and bringing it into subjection; | g. nay, in no mere formula, but a truth ful figure be crucified with Christ.? 1 .1 F. W. Farrar. ,D I tfc Follow Hiin. J Sufficient for the day is the evil . thereof. Do not derange the order ! D< of divine providence by adding to tne 0.1 cares of to-day the solicitudes of to- is morrow, which are ofttimcs either im- | b: aginary or magnified by the imagina- w* tion. Do but scatter your forces by | aj striving at the same time to give bat- 1 . tic to the enemy that confronts you j and also to the euemy afar off and ' ai who may never come near. Follow 1 H in all things the teachings of Him : tt which inculcate patience, forbear- 1 u ance, an even temper, in time of trial, j ]j and unfailing optimism. In other i y( words, don't worry. j Digging a Way to Heaven. Bless God for the wilderness; j thank God for the long nights; be 1 thankful that you have been in the j school of poverty, and have under- 1 gone the searching and testing of much discipline. Take the right view of your trials. You are nearer heaven for the graves you have dug, if you have accepted bereavements ill the right spirit; you are wiser for the losses you have bravely borne, you are nobler for all the sacrifices you have willingly completed. Sanctified aflliction is an angel that never j misses the gate of heaven.?Parker, j Stepping Stones to Glory. When God saves us lie does it not I alone for our good, but for His. 1-Ie ; cxpects us to work for Him and to ; see that not one of His children is i turned away hungry or thirsty. Sac- | rilice and unselfishness are tlie step- ! ping stones to glory and in my mind the least of the work of. saving a soul j is done when we have gotten the pen- ! itent to open his heart to God. It is . the after-work that counts the dis- i play of the friendly Christian spirit j that shows the new convert that he i has friends on earth and in heaven. | _ Human Sympathy May Mislead. The cross separate.',, not only from j sin but from friends and human ; P good. God's children are sometimes j b tripped by human sympathy when ! h what they need is divine sympathy, j ii When we nee God's children going i through trial let us be c?.reful to up- | u hold and eneouragc them. L<H ui r.ot ! endeavor to lift the cross before God's j time.?Missionary Worker. God Will Help. There are many things that we j snuuiu UU, UUl WclU L UV.I III IJUI Ullll ! strength, but there Is nothing that we should do that cannot be accomplished by the help of God. "I can do all things in Him that strengtheneth me," Paul said, and he had tested the matter fully. God's Order. "Sanctify them * ?- ? that the world may believe that Thou has sent ~ Me." This is Jesus' method of con- " vineing and saving the world. First, n a sanctificd church: second, a con- 'J verted world. This is God's order; la b it ours??PitUtang Christian Advc* e cate. ' jj A TRAGICAL EVENT - ' V * . : * i'" ' ' ' i \ : i . ^ x? ' . - 1 . . - f - V'v' ' * ' ! ' . Ill T :' v%'. &: < ':' A"':; -CV\ "V;<c;^v V- vVviwV I ..: , - .0 ' . ' ' ' "V | vv - ' y;ir> ] ^7.- ' . > I ; - v.;1;, i . - . ' i . ., ,'v v'tv -v I: ;.... :;" >" ;.' -: Vv'- vk\ '. - "' .> ,. 10NUMENT LATELY ERECTED AT I SIXTY-SEVEN SAILORS WHO LC ELE EXPLOSION ON THE GUNE ?H, R. Fitch Stud A Famous Cheyenne Chief. Success in military operations has rought fame to many a civilized ian, and so it is not surprising that le who has succeeded as a slayer : his fellow-men should gain a cerlin distinction in a tribe of baririans. One of the most conspicuous 5iircs among the Cheyenne Indians ^ III ll SPOTTED HAWK, Cheyenne brave who has killed more white men than any other member of his tribe. Montana is Spotted Hawk, a brave Vi /\ Sr? en t/1 /n V? o if a 1* ? "i 1 /s/l /I n r 1 n rr Kip iiu jo oaiu iu uavc nuicu, uunug, mo ;hting days, more white men than ly other member of his tribe, potted Hawk is a man of striking ppearance. especially when arrayed i his war costume, as he appears in le accompanying photograph. Well irmed and athletic, he is an excelnt marksman and a hunter of re)wn. His face is full of character id his intelligence is marked. He looked up to with especial regard ir the young men of the tribe, to hom his career appears romantic id inspiring. But the bad old times ! hostility between the two races e now only a memory. Spotted awk, as well as the remainder of le tribe, is now at peace with the nited States, and therefore it is not kely that he will during the coming jars of his life add to his list of paleClearing Ship 4liiiiiiiiiiiii?^i' P? ji!* l ***- Ji^s NITED STATES STEAMSHIP DEN FOR BATTLE, WITH SAND-BA HER MAC ?W. E. N. Devers, Philipp Summer Drinks. Rnfh drinks as soda water, singer | op or root beer are very likely to low out when carted over the road 1 hot weather unless securely corkei 3. Picnicers and haymakers are of;n bothered to fasten the top in a ay that will not become loose. The Bottle Fastening. rawing shows a quickly strong tie iade with two bits cf strong cord, 'he ends of the second cord are rought together and tied at the othr side of the l-ottle After a little ractice the fasttnine can Le made / COMMEMORATED. ' ' v Bb^ . ---? ^ sir - - ? ;'' gP' ^rh2n4ljS?T(; ti trrft't i \lt /, 3AN DIEGO, CAL., IN MEMORY OF iST THEIR LIVES BY A TERRIlOAT BENNINGTON IN 1905. io, California, in Leslie's Weekly. faced victims. Civrlizing influences have taken hold upon him, and he no longer desires to wreak vengeance upon the dominating race.?Leslie's Weekly. Brusli Holds the Blacking. An entire shoe-blacking outfit contained in a single article forms tha subject of a recent patent grant. Heretofore it has been necessary to supply oneself with several brushes( one for cleaning the dust from the surfaces of the shoe and a dauber for applying the blacking or polish, a third one for rubbing, and sometimes a fourth for giving the final polish. All of these functions are filled in article shown in the accompanying cut. The daubing apparatus consists of a kind of fountain arrangement by which it is not necessary to touch it with the danger of soiling the hands. It is only essential to rub it on the Shoe-Cleaning Outfit in One Piece. leather and sufficient quantity is supplied for the purpose. A simple reversal movement brings into action the rubbing and polishing surface. A small bunch of stiff bristles at one end provides the means of cleansing the shoe when necessary. A Ticklish Question. Now, own up, won't you, as a rather conceited man, be bitterly dis- ! appointed if you fail to receive one proposal during 190S??Mexican Herald. i For Action. VER BEING BUT IN READINESS OS PILED UP TO PROTECT HINERY. ine Islands, in Leslie's Weekly. in a moment and will never com off.?I. A. M., in the American Cultivator. Tlicn Polly Spoke. Young Hankinson (making a call) ?"You have had that parrot a long time. Miss Laura." Miss Laura?"Yes, we have had him several years." Young Hankinson?"Quite intelligent, is he not?" Miss Laura?"Very. He can imitate almost anything." Young Hankinson?"They have a remarkably clever parrot over at the Casterlins', Miss Laura. It can imitate the sound of a kiss to perfection Is that among the accomplishments of our feathered friend here in the corner?" Miss Laura (indignantly)?"No, sir. He does not attempt an imitation of a sound he is not accustomed to hear, Mr. Hankinson. Of thf.t 1 can assure you." The Parrot?"Wait, George dear, till I take this bird out of the room/' ?Tatler. Portugal's Valuable Crown. * When King Manuel of Portugal will he crowned the ceremony will include his assumption of the most valuable J crown in Europe. Taken at a jewel- j ier's estimate, the Portuguese crowc Is recorded as being worth ?l,o00,000. In shape and size it is almost a /fce-simile of the Spanish and the old Fo!ish crowns, though in the value of its jewels its nearest rival is the | Czar's diadem, which is supposed to i have cost ?1,300,000. The crown ; placed upon the English King's head j is valued at a mere ?360,000.Thc Airship in War. The dirigible balloon, or airship, | as it is usually called, is now an es- i tabl.ished success, and is sure to plaj an important part in future wars, j The French Government is taking the : lead in the matter and will soon have i a whole fleet of aerial cruisers, cap- j able of sailing over the enemy's defenses and dropping hundreds of pounds of dynamite into their fortifications; or of gliding quietly out at night over a battleship and dropping down on her enough dynamite to J aend her, a shattered wreck, with all I tn board, to the bottom of the sea. j Germany is also making rapid | strides in this work. Count Zeppelin, ; working under the patronage of tha i government, has built the largest and ! probably the most scientifically planned airship ever constructed.? From Henry B. Hersey's "Experiences in the Sky," in the Century. Blessings of the Blind. The calamity of the blind is immense, irreparable. But it does not take away our share of the thingp j that count?service, friendship, hu- i mor, imagination, wisdom. It is the secret inner will that controls one's fate. We are capable of willing to be good, of loving and being loved, of thinking to the end that we may ba wiser. We possess these spirit-born forces equally with all God's children. Therefore we, too, see the lightnings and hear the thunders of Sinai. Wo; too, march through the wilderness and the solitary place that shall ba glad for us, and as we pass, God maketh the desert to blossom like the rose. We, too, go in unto the PromT qtiH frv nnceocc tVio trpncuroc nf the spirit, the unseen permanence ol life and nature.?From Helen Keller's "Sense and Sensibility," in the Century. A Fiji Rainfall. The astonishing effects sometimes produced by cloudbursts are well known, but not many trustworthy records of the depth of the rainfall during such occurrences exist. The ' following instance, therefore, pos- j sesses much interest. On August G, | 1906, during a thunderstorm in the j Fiji Islands, the measured depth of the rainfall in a gauge elevated twen- j ty-five feet above the ground was | three feet and one inch. The rain \ continued thirteen hours, and owing ! to unmeasured overflow, the total ! amount remains unknown, but It is j estimated to have been not less than . forty-one inches.?Youth's Compan- | Ion. What Causes Headache. From October to May, Colds are the most j frequent cause of Headaches. Laxative ! Bromo Quinine removes cause. E. W. 1 Grove on box. 25c. The Chinese pony is like a sheep, I his nose rounding off similarly and j not unlike a camel, but in disposition | he resembles a pig and in many ways I is like a mule. $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will bepleasedto I learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all i its states, and tha't is Catarrh. Hall'sCatarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to j. the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con- I stitutional disease, requires a constitutional I treatment. Hall'sCatarrhCureistakeninter- j ndly, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature m doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney & C<5., Toledo, 0. Sold bv all Druegists. 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Our National Flower. Everything drooped except those j stalwart American Beauty roses, so costly, so splendid, so hard and so unromantic. O,^ national flower of Americans!?Mrs. John Lane. Piles Cured in 0 to 14 Days. 1'irco Ointment is guaranteed to cure any ca-jeof Itching,Blind,lileedingor Protruding ! Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. j The ant's brain is larger than any other i living thing in proportion to the size. Jtcli cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's I Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists, j Motor Boats in Holland. It is stated that there are over 5000 j motor boats on the canals of Hoi- j land, mostly driven by kerosene mo- ; tors. TEN YEARS OF BACKACHE. Thousands of Women Sufl'cr in the ! Same Way. Mrs. Thos. Dunn, 153 Vim St., j Columbus, Ohio, says: "For more j tthan ten years I was ! in misery with backache. The simplest J housework completely \ exhausted me. 1 had no strength or ambition, was nervous and suffered headache and dizzy spells. After these years of pain I was despairing of ever being cured when Doan's Kidney Pills came to my notice and their use brought quick relief and a permanent cure. 1 am very grateful." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Owner of Historical Mantel. William Hemsireef, of Brooklyn. N. Y., is the owner of the mantel before which Edgar Allan Poe sat when he wrote his masterpiece. "The Raven.*' He will shortly, it is said, present il to the Columbia University, where >/ will have a conspicuous plat-tin the library. Motliodist Episcopal Property. The Methodist Episcopal Church property in this country is now worth about $167,000,000. on which there! if an indebtedness of $12,127,248. j PERUNA EDITO Dr. Hartman has claimed for many yeaj CATARRH REMEDY. Some of the doctor* olaim as to the efficacy of Peruna. Since the ingredients of Peruna are no cal authorities say concerning the remedies Take, for instance, the ingredient I GOLDEN SEAL. The United States Dispell that it is largely employed in the treatmei chronic rhinitis (nasal catarrh), atonic dyi chronic intestinal catarrh, catarrhal jaund diseased mucous membranes of the pehfio o: the treatment of various forms of diseases \ Another ingredient of Peruna, CORYDj United States Dispensatory as a tonic. ) CEDB.ON SEEDS is another ingredient has been very largely overlooked by the me years. THE SEEDS ARE TO BE FOUND The United States Dispensatory says of the a bitter tonic and in the treatment of dysen as a SUBSTITUTE FOR QUININE. OIL OF COPAIBA, another ingredient c States Dispensatory as a mild stimulant am and intestinal tract. It acts as a stimulant Use ent< Our Peruna Tablet disc Is Peruna With Fluid Removed. 0 " SA' (catarrh of the mucous surfaces of the mou of the pharynx), chronic coryza (catarrh < hydrastis as a stomachic tonic, useful in catarrh), catarrh of the duodenum, catarrl intestines, catarrh of the kidneys (chronic bladder, and catarrh of other pelvic organs BABTHOLOW REGARDS COPAIBA i catarrh of the bladder, chronic bronchitis (< BABTHOLOW STATES THAT CUBE motes the appetite and digestion, increases fal in chronic nasal catarrh, follicular pha increasing the tonicity of the mncons men lieves hoarseness. Useful in atonic dyspept chronic catarrh of the colon and rectum, cat and chronic bronchial affections. MILLSPAUGH, MEDICINAL PLAN! works on medicinal herbs in the Englis COLLINSONIA CANADENSIS, says that vaso motor nerves. It increases the secret general. In the mountains of Virginia, E collinsonia canadensis is considered a pam headache, colic, cramp, dropsy and indigei highly as a remedy in chronic diseases of tl These citations ought to be sufficient to runa is a catarrh remedy. Surely, such hi A ^ Tl 1* r?Vl ftof OTI+Tin Clil/ULHOlQrOtiV/ bUliUUCUtWi buo iuguvov muuuv in proper combination, ought to make a cati This is our claim, and we are able to quotations from the HIGHEST MEDICAL. NO MORE MUSTARD PLA THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTE1 CCapsicutn-Vaseii EXTRACT OF THE CA i PEPPER PLANT T. ! DIRECTLY IN VASEL II-vnimnmwi >?nnDON'T "WAIT TIL COMES?KEEP A 1 A QUICK SURE, SAFE AND ALWAYS REAI -IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES MADE OF PURI DEALERS. OR BY MA'JL ON RECEIPT C A substitute for and superior to mustard < blister the most delicate skin. The pain-all; ! article are wonderful. It will stop the too. ache and Sciatica. We recommend it as th Irritant known also as an external remedy! and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty co we claim for it, and it will be found to te in children,. Once used no family will be wii the best of all your preparations." Accept the same carries our label, as otherwise it is Send your address and we will malt ou our preparations which v 17statest. CHESEBROUGH PRICES, FOR EVERY^SPl ^MEMBER OFTHE FAMILY, MEN, BOYS. WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDRI W. L Douglaa makes and aella moi man'a $2.BO, S3.00 and S3.BO sho* Man a ay other manufacturer In fl world, becauao they hold the ahape. fit batter, wear longer, ar, tt?2n> are of greater value than any othi ***? ahoea m the world to-day? W. L. Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be E a^OAUTION. W. L. Doniflas name and price H it Sold by the best shoe deahrs everywhere. Shoe* mailed trated Catalog free to any address. V The Postal Department of England employs 200,00U people, one-fourth of which . are women. X. Y. ?12 " prir FITS, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervous Diseases per- co manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. "e Dr.II. R. KJine, Ld.,931 Arch St.,Phila.,l'a. gooi $7,000,000 a Year for Consumptives. an* According to a statement made by _ the Pennsylvania Society for the Pre- bb vention of Tuberculosis,' consumption K costs the people of Philadelphia more B| than $20,000 a day, or more than B $7,000,000 a year. At present there S are 10,000 consumptives in that city, j H .Smallest Electric Motor. A German mechanic has built the j|S smallest motor in the world. It is Jg used as a scarf pin and is run by a battery in his pocket. He keeps it in ] j?j{n, constant operation. eyea CHICKENS EARN MO Whether you raise Chickcns for fun or pre I: cot the best results. The way to do this is to We offer a book telling all 25 years in raising Poultry. [ had to experiment and spend h&i Beg wa^v tocoiuiuct the business? ?& an i??iuSs and Cure Disease, how t:> Market, which Fowls to Safe indeed about everything you must know on :he POSTPAID OX 'RECEIPT OF 23 CENTS IX Book Publishing House, 134 L Th&re is Only One "Bromo Q That fa Laxative Broi USED THE WORLD OVER TO OUfi Always remember the ful] name. Look for this signature on every box. 26c, RIAL NO. 2. *8 that Peruna is an EXCELLENT s critics have disputed the doctor's longer a secret, what do the mediof which Peruna is composed? IYDRASTIS CANADENSIS, OR satory says of this herbal remedy, it of depraved mucous membranes, jpepsia (catarrh of the stomach), ice (catarrh of the liver), and in rgans. It is also recommended for leculiar to women. MIS FORMOSA, is classed in tha of Peruna, an excellent drug that idical profession for the past fifty IN VERY FEW DRUG STORES, action of cedron that it is used as tery, and in intermittent diseases if Peruna, is classed by the United 1 diuretic. It acts on the stomach on the genito-urinary membranes, fal in chronic cystitis, chronic dys;ry and diarrhea, and some chronic tases of the liver and kidneys. hese opinions as to the ingredients Peruna are held by all writers on subject, including1 Bartholow and dder. F HYDRASTIS, BABTHOLOW ZS it is applicable to stomatitis * th), follicular pharyngitis (catarrh )f the head). This writer classes atonic dyspepsia (chronic gastric i of the gall duct, catarrh of the Bright^ disease), catarrh of the &8 an excellent remedy for chronie catarrh of the bronchial tubes). B, an ingredient of Peruna, prothe circulation of the blood. TJseryngitis (catarrh of the pharynx), ibranes of the throat It also relia (catarrh of the stomach), and in arrh of the bladder, prostatorrhea, 3 'S, one of the most authoritative h language, in commenting upon it acts on the pneumogastric and ions of the mucous membranes in Kentucky, Tennessee and Carolina, icea for-many disorders, including stion. DE. SCTJDDEE regards it le lungs, heart disease and asthma. show to any candid mind that Peerbal remedies, that command the rities obtainable, brought together irrh remedy of the highest efficacy. substantiate this claim by ample AUTHORITIES IK THE WOELD. - '1 * ' HANDY 3Y CURE FOR PAIN.-PRICE 15c. TIN?AT ALL DRUCGISTS AND )F 15c. IN POSTACE STAMPS. >r any other plaster and will not lying and curative qualities of the hache at once, and relieve Heade best and safest external counter[or pains in the chest and stomach mplaints. A trial will prove what ivaluable in the household and for Ihout it. Many people say "it is no preparation of vaseline unless i not genuine. r Vaseline Booklet describing vill Interest you. MFG. CO. New York City , uS Ant T. L. Brocktou, Maw* Husband's Testimonial. . BunnaD witness, looking .n the oe of condition, deposed quite iplacently in a criminal case that had no occupation. "My wife, a ri /.ot-ofiii and hard working worn supports me," hp added.?Cala Statesman. BITS MB If yon suffer from Epileptic Fits orFalling ^SSSickuef? or buve Children tliat do no, ray New Discovery and Trestment Rlvetbem Immediate rellof, and J8 i ?l 3|h! i you area.-ked to do is to lend for UHg Free Bottle of Eplleptlcide Cur* 9 and Test it. Cciplote directions flH with Free Treatment, also testimonial* 8BB .infl f>4 tinea bock. "Epilepsy Kiplnined," HB free by mail. G:?e AGE and jlladdrest. BW W. H. MAY. M. 0.. 548 Pear! Strait, New Tori Thompsou'sEye Water airV| If You Know How to llCT . Handle Them Properly r, you want to do it intelligently'and profit by the experience of others. you need to know on the sub ?-flg man who made his living for ' 81 and in that time necessarily much money to learn the best H for the small sum of 25 A It tells you bow to Dctect (AB Feed for Eggs, and alio for 1 for Breeding Purposes, and subject to make a success. SENT STAMPS. .eonard St., N. Y. City, isSnSne " no Quinine \E A COLD IM OHE OAT.