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r Best Position for Healthy Sleep. A doctor writing in a medical paper 873: "An immense number of people sleep on the left side, and this is the most common came of the unpleasant taste in the mouth in the morning, which is generally attributed to dyspepsia. If a meal has been taken within two or three hours of going to bed, to sleep on the left side is to give the stomach a task which is difficult in the extreme to perform. The student of anatomy knows that all food enters and leaves the stomach on the right side, and hence Bleeping on the left sido soon after eating involves a Bori 01 pumping operation wmcn is anything but conducive to sound repoBe. The action of the heart is also interfered with considerably, and the lungs are unduly compressed. It is probable that lying on the bade is the most natural position, but few men can rest easily so, and hence it is best to cultivate the habit of sleeping ou the right side.'" Several thousands of hairpins, in many styles, have been recovered from Pompeii. A car brake has been patented that operates not on the wheels but on the rails. Sufferers from Dyspepsia Here's Something for You to Read Distress in the Stomach CURED i* HOOD'S. Miss Jennie Cunningham ? South Newcastle, Me. " "When I besan taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, I could eat nothing but very light .food, without having terrible d'stress in my stomnch. I had tried other medicines, which did me no good. Before I had taken 1 bottle of Hood's I paw that it was doing me good. I continued to grow better while taking 5 bottles, and now I HOOD'S Sarsaparilla CURES can eat anything. I have had no distress for months, and I think there is no medicine for dyspepsia like Hood's Sarsaparilla. My appetite is excellent, and my health is very much better than for years." Miss Jenhie Cunningham, South Newcastle, Me. HOOD's pills cure Constipation by restoring the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal. 'August Flower" ^ I have been troubled with dyspepsia, but after a fair trial of August Flower, am freed from the vexatious trouble?J. B. Young, Daughters College, Harrodsburg, Ky. I had headache one year steady. One bottle oi August jf lower cured me. 11 was positively worth one hundred dollars tome?J. W. Smith, P.M. and Gen. Merchant, Townsend, Ont I have used it myself for constipation and dyspepsia and it cured me, It is the best seller I ever handled?C. Rugh, Druggist, Mechanicsburg, Pa. $ KY N U?13 I THE KIND I I- 9 Cohort, N. Y. A MARVEL IN COHOES! g Kidney and Liver Diseases FOR 15 7ZLAB8, m CUBED BY 3 BOTTLES! F Dana Sarsaparilla Co.: ? QXMTLZMEN .?Hiving been rcatoted to (ood E3 health by the utr of your SanaparlUa I feci ltM my duty to let other* kuow the great beoefS: IE h?re recelred. For 15 yean I hire been troubled wStbB| severe (Mtlnm In the Htomaeh, iIk Kid-88 ncv and Liver lMaeuae, *> badly that forflB weekiatatlraeXhadtoitarlubed. SC I hare tued three bottles of DANA'S I SARSAPARILLA 1 and I ftel like n new nan. I ncom-B mend It to any afflicted with dinaae of the Kid-H cert. Your* rc?pectfti!li\ Cohoet, N. Y. CUAXLE8 SIMMONS. B Hie truth of the aboreii certified to b? f JAMES S. CALKINS^ B Ntver parchue of a " SUBSTITUTER, 'S E(a person who tries to sell you something^ Hetse when you call for Dana's.) Our bot-lf Sties are being filled with a COUNTERFEITS ARTICLE by " Substitutes." Buy of theB HONEST DEALER who sells you what youg s ask for, and If you rcceive no benefit heg will return your money. eh Dana Sarsaparllla Co., Belfast, Maine. = "HOTHER'S \ FRIEND" . is a scientifically prepared Liniment and harmless; every ingredient is of recognized value and in constant use by the medical r?rofession. It short ens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes \ Danger to life of Mother and Child. Book '"To Mothers" mailed free, containing valuable information and voluntary testimonials. 8ent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of price, fl.60 per bottle. BHAOFIELO REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, 6a. Sold by all druggists. SABBATH SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL. LESSON FOI APRIL 16. Iiesson Text: "Job's Appeal," Jol xxiif., 1-10 ? Golden Text t John xiii.?Commentary. 1. 2. "Then Job answered and said, Eve: to-day is my complaint bitter; my stroke ii heavier than my groaning." This is the be ginning of Job's reply to the third addres of Eliphaz. Each of the three?Eliphaz BiJdnd and Zophar?had spoken twice, ant Job had replied to each in tarn. This is thi beginning of the third round. In an inter esting and instructive little pamphlet entitled "Job and His Friends," by C. H. M., the authcr thinks that these three stand foi experience, tradition and legality?all well meaning, but unwise in their dealings witb Job. The difficulties on each side are summed up in chapter xxxii., 1-3. They con demned Job instead of leading him to oon< demn himself, and he justified himself rathei than God. As to the beginning of this re ply of Job, we may often fee! that we, too. nave great cause of complaint, as did Israel under their discomfort?, but it is written, "When the people complained, it displeased the Lord" (Num. x?., ]). 3. "Ob, that I knew where I might find Him; that I might come even to His seat I" EiiDhaz had said. "Acauaint now thvself with Him and be at peace" (xxii., 21). Jot replies that his longing is to do so. According to the testimony of God Himself, Job was a perfect and upright man, fearing God and eschewing evil (i, 8; ii., 3), the word "perfect" meaning in this case simple or sincere. Before his friends came, even under overwhelming affliction, he was patient and did not sin nor charge God foolishly (?., 22; ii., 10), because he felt' himself face to face with God and that God was dealing with him. But these men seem to have come between him and God, and he, in replying to them and dealing with them, lose6 sight of God and gropes in the darkness of his own wisdom. 4. "1 would order my cause before Him and fill my mouth with arguments." So it seemed to Job in his blindness, but it is evident that he lacks the broken and contrite spirit which only is accaptable to God. In the story of the two men who went up to the temple to pray (Luke xviii., 10-14) it was the man who would not lift up so much as his eyes unto heaven, bat smote upon his breast, saying, "God be merciful to me, a sinner," who went down to his house justified rather than the other who thanked Goi that ho was better than other men. It is only when our mouths are stopped as to our own righteousness that we can enjoy the free justification of the grace of God through His righteousness (Rom. ili., 19). 5. "I would know the words which He 'would answer me and understand what He would s*y unto me." He cannot understand these frien<1?. and it is very clear they do not understand him. but he thinks he could understand God, and he would like to know what God would say to him. No doubt there are many who think they can sympathize with Job in his being so misunderstood. Wei), there is great comfort in looking unto Him who knows us thoroughly from the beginning and can never find out anything new about us. He never can or will misunderstand us. "Q, Lord, Thou hast searched me and known me" (Ps. cxrxix*, 1). 6. ''Will He plead against me with His great power? No, but He would pat strength in me." A very little thing will often bring the soul into such a place that everything will look distorted, as when one sees things in a fog or with blurred vision. Our eyes need constant anointing with heavenly eye salve 'Rev. iii., 18) that we may see clearly. The Holy Spirit can do this, and inasmuch as we have Him in a sense that Job had Him not we are more guilty than Job if we aUow our vision to become so dim. God pleads not against the sinner, bat against sin. which He hates. He who soaght Adam and Eve and redeemed them and restored them to a measure of fellowship with promise of f ntnre glory is ever the same and is pleading with the sinner to come to Him. however sinfal he may be, and with the erring to return to Him, however far off he may have wandered. See Isa. i., 18; lv., 6, ?: Jar. iii., 12-14: Hos. xiv., 1, 2. 7. "There the righteous might dispute with Him; so should I be delivered from my judge." Perhaps we cannot tell just what was in the mind of Job when he uttered these words, but this we do know?that there is only one righteous person whose righteousness can stand before Go J, and He also has been ordained to be the judge of quick and dead (II Cor. v., 21; Acts xvii., 81). However sintul we may be, if only we come with true penitence to Him who came inco the world to save sinner?, He will not only not cast us out (John vi., 87j, but He will become our righteousness, wisdom, sanctifiation and redemption, and we shall have great cause to glory in Him (I Cor. i., 30, 81). The Judge being our friend, our Redeemer, our Substitute, who died in our stead, what boldness we may have in the dav of judgment (I John iv., 17). 8. "behold, I go forward, but He is not there, and backward, but I cannot perceive Him." He reminds us of the bride in the Song of Bongs who, because she had been onlf A/V>Imlorl on^ hor) nnt koa^iwl the voice of her beloved, is compelled to seek Him very earnestly before she found Him again. She says, "I sought Him, but I could not find Him; I called Him, but He gave me no answer" (Song v., 0;. Many a Christian is walking in darkness, oat of fellowship with God, because of something or person which has been allowed to come nearer to them than the Lord Himself. He is not far off, nor hard to find, when we seek Him with the whole heart (Ram. x., 8, 9; Jer. xxix., 18), and if we would walk ooutinually with Him, esteeming His fellowship more tnan all else, we would never walk in darkness. 9. "On the left hand, where He doth work but I cannot behold Him. He hideth Himself on the right hand that I cannot see Him." The remarks on the last verse are also applicable here, and yet there is another ?ide of the truth. We may walk with Him in peace and quietness and yet not know why He doeth this or that. He may say to us as to Peter, "WoatI do thou knowest not now, but thou shalt know hereafter." And it will always be true until "the morning" that we know only in part, but then shall we know even as also we are known (I Cor. xiii., 9, 12). 10. "But He knowth the way that I take." Here is our comfort, "He knowetb." Jeremiah's comfort was. "Thou. O Lord, knowest mtf' (Jar. xii., 3). The Lord Jesus taught us to find comfort in these words, "Your Heavenly Father knoweth" (Math, vi., 32). Therefore we sing: Eo I go on not knowing, I would not if I might; Fd rather walk in the dark with Qod than walk alone in the light. "When He hath tried me, I shall come forth as gold." Therefore he could also say, "Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him" (Job xiii., 18, 15,) or with Isaiah, "Behold, God is my salvation" (Deliverer); "I willtrurtandnetbeafraid'' (xii., 2) ?Lesson Helper. How hollow are the royal pretensions of friendship among the ruling powers of Europe is well Illustrated in a cynically worded dispatch that comes from St. Petersburg. Owing to defects in the new supply of rifles turned out by the Government factories in Russia, half of them were reThn mirm i nor nf t.hft (Izjir'S JCULCU. _L uo infantry will thereby be delayed, It Is stated, three years. These details throw a new light on the recent visit of the Czar's oldest son to the court of Germany, where he was given an apparently most cordial welcome. And the situation is still more brightly illuminated by the closing words of the dispatch referring to /infopt.ivr arms and their result llig UV4VW. . w ? on the military forces of the Moscovite monarch. They were that a "knowledge of this state of affairs la believed to have influenced the Czar to assume a more friendly attitude toward Germany." Royal amenities in Europe to-day are things apart from ordinary human action* !m RELIGIOUS HEADING, l TRUST IN GOD. Leave God to order all thy ways, And hope in Him whate'er betide; Tbou'It find Him in the evil days An all-sufficient strength aud guide. Who trusts in God's unchanging love, Builds on a rock which naught can move. "What can these anxious cares avail, These never-ceasing moans and sighs? i What can it help us to bewail 9 Each painful moment as it flies? Our cross and trials do but press s The heavier for our bitterness. 1 Only your restless heart keep still, 3 And wait in cheerful hope content To take whate'er His gracious will, His all-deserving love, hath sent; . Nor doubt our inmost wants are known ( To Him who chose us for His own. I i He knows when joyful hours are best, [ He sends them as He sees it meet; When thou hast borne its fiery test, And now art freed from all "deceit, | He comes to thee all unaware, And makes thee own His loving care. Nor in the heat of pain and strife, Think God hath cast thee off unheard ; [ Nor that the man, whose prosperous Jife Thou enviest, id of Him preferred ; I Time passes ana much change doth bring, 1 And sets a bound to everything. i All are alike before His face; 'Tis easy for oar God Most High i To make the rich man poor and base, [ To give the poor man wealth and joy. 1 True wonders still of Him are wrought, Who se'^.th up and brings to naaght. Sing, pray, and swerve not from His way, But do thine own part faithfully; i Trust His rich promises of grace, So shall it be fulfilled in thee; God never yet forsook at need The soul that trusted Him indeed. I ?[George Nedmark. i aftxr fifty. It was said at the memorial meeting of the Willard Alumnas at Troy, N. Y., that the best of a woman's life is often after fifty, ' when the wail of humanity grows as pathetic in her ears as once did the cry of her ' own children. But cultivated intellect alone does not 1 make her last days her best. "Not harder with thy polish grow," says Whittier; and hardness is incompatible with loveliness of character or person. Cultivated mental powers heightened by moral excellence give a personal loveliness transcending that of ! youth, however great that man may have been. "She grows more beautiful every day," was said or Alice Carv after fifty, lire. 1 Emma Willard had a finer presence at sixty 1 than at twentv. She carried in her maiestic bearing and tlie lofty expression of ber intellectual face the record of her beneficcnt life. It was not possible to associate tbo usual ideas of female age with Miss Mary Lyon. 1 At fifty it was a pleasure to look upon ber. Tbe most undiscerning could perceive the supreme excellence of her spirit as it illummed ber beaming face like the light of a lamp shining through a delicately-tinted shade. ' And there are faces like the lamps of the foolish virgins whose light had gone out. Tbe oil needed replenishing. Their voices have a wail like Shakespeare's witches? "Double, double toil and trouble." Tbe inevitable tendency of cultivated mind, of high thougut, is to carry youth , through life making thr> enthusiasms of early years an impelling momentum to high achievements in advanced age. And when tbe trained mind and philanthropic heart are consecrated by tbe religion of Jesus, the face becomes like Stephen's?"As it had been the face of an angel."? [Selected. THE POWKR OF CUSTOM. I believe it is on tlje Island of Cuba that there are certain roaas down the mountain where the wheel tracks are worn so deeply in the limestone that when the wheels or a vehicle have entered tbem at the top there is no getting out until they have gone to the bottom. So there are many things which have come to be so customary that they are kept up, nobody knows whv, but simply because the wheels have got in such a rut that you cannot turn round without turning over. A newspaper tells of a queer custom which has prevailed on one of tbe, Danish Isles "for untold generations, whose origin until recently bad always remained a strange mystery. It was customary for the male members of tbe congregation, alter receiving tbe holy communion, to courtesy with profound reverence towards tbe side 'of the church where the women were seated in a body. Latelv, on repairing the wa'te. on that very side there was found encased a statue of the Virgin Mary, probably enclosed in Reformation times. Thus for nearly 400 years, successive generations unknowingly continued an act of obeisance, performed by their remote Roman Catholic ancestors.'' Tbe custom has been abolished, but it is very possible that there m<y be other customs equally senseless still In existence. Christiana should not be blindly led. They should know what thev do ana why they are doing it. Of course such questions if raised will produce more or Jess confusion, but confusion is better than stagnation! Questions nil) often be found to spring from ignorance, but asking tbem is the quickest way for this ignorance to be dispelled, and an understanding faith brought in to take tbe place of blind, unquestioning obcdience. PLEASING CHRIST. Test all things by Christ's approval of them. "Proving what is well pleasing unto tbe Lord." That, according to the natural construction of the Greek, is tbe main way by which the Apostle conceives that his general commandment of "walking as children of the light" is to be carried out. You do it if, step by step, and moment by moment, | and to every action of life, you apply this standard?Does Christ like it ? Does it please Him? When that test is rigidly ap- i Elied, then, and only then, will you walk as ecomes the children of the light. So, then, there is a standard?not what men approve, not what my conscience, partially illuminated, may say is permissible, not what is recognized as allowable by tbe common maxims of the world round about us, but Christ's approval. IIow different tbe bard, stern, and often unweicomea pre- i scriptions of law, and rigidity of some standards of right, become when they are changed into that which pleases the Divine Lord and Lover! Surely it is something blcnsed that the bard, cold, nnd to such a large extent powerless conceptions ol duty or obligation J shall he changed into pleasing Jesus Christ; and that 60 our hearts shall be enlisted in the service of our consciences, and love shall be glad to do the Beloved's will. There are many ways by which the burden of life's obligations is lightened to the Christian. I do not know that any of them is more precious thnu the fact ibat law is changed into His will, and that we seek to do what is right because it pleases the Master. There is the standard.?[Dr. Maclaren. The religion of Christ is a reasonable re? iWnn The Trfird Invited his Denote lo come and reason with him ; and if we are to reason we must know the reason of things, and act reasonably. We should not be hasty, rash, or cantankerous, but the Saviour himself tins net the example of answering the questioi s of his disciples, and be would have us search, and investigate, and know the truth, that we may be able to declare it and defend it. bearing intelligent witness lor Christ and his gospel, and giving to every one that asketh a reason for our faith and for our hope.?[The Christian. Sprinkle* of Spice. Jilit Luiiuitiuu ul me spuu^e uruiJ is of absorbing interest.?Troy Press. The poker-player does not use visiting cards when he is calling.?Pica1 yune. i A cheerful youth in Santa Ana is said to have undertaken the task of papering his room with canceled Co* i , lumbian stamps. The only thing that trouble him ia EXPECTATION. Between the sunset and the sun Night slumbers on the sleeping bars And through its curtain, one by one, Gleam tender glances of the stars Between the sunset and the sun. And so between my love's lips lies An untold message meant for me; "Whether 'twill bring me sweet surprise, Or dole, or doubt, or paradise Is known alone to destioy. Yet, as I wait, a dream of tears Between her eyelids and her eyes A mystery of mist appears That hints of hope and flatters fears; And on her lips a burst of sighs, And on her lids a red that dies To slumberous shadows that fall and rise, Till, as I seek some sign to see, Between her eyelids and her eyes Love lights his lamp and laughs at me. ?Francis Howard William* PITH AND_P0INT. Time locks?gray hair. A cowcatcher?The lasso. A chop-house?The woodshed. But one in a thousand?The figure one.?Harvard Lampoon. The bad practices of others give the lawyer his good one.?Truth. If the tongue could kill, not many would live to old age.?Ram's Horn. The play of imagination is a great help in the work of imagination.? Puck. Some persons are like the sky; tbey never are perfectly tranquil unless thej are blue.?Puck. "Now, this is what you call high art," said the man who wad frescoeing the ceiling.?Washington Star. "Is your neuralgia any better, dear?" "It's worse?I can't even think of mj new dress."?Forget-Me-Not. Jealousy is that which makes us insanely think we can secure the object of our regard by appearing hateful.?Puck. St. Louis has a girl phrenologist. Evidently woman is getting to the head in tne marcQ 01 progress.?dujiuu nauscript. No man can paint a sign on a fence iv such a way that a boy cannot change if to read something else.?Atchison Globe. She (yawning)?"I do like a young man with some get up and go about him." He gets up and goes.?Detroit Free Press. Fred?"How do you like the table at your new boarding house# Is there anything to object to!" Arthur?"Precious little, old fellow." First Stranger?"It seems to me J have seen your face before." Second Stranger?"Quite likely. That's where I carry it."?Tit-Bits. "I must collect my thoughts," he said, And she, sarcastic mlsa, A thimble gave him, witb the word, "Collect your thoughts in this." ?Washington Star. Teacher?"Who was the person who turned everything he touched to gold?" Scholar?"I guess it was the man that 1 . Tlaf TTrPP mattes cueap jcncuj. ?i/v??? Press. Influence will make itself felt in politics. Even the humble letter carriei when he comes to the door shows what it is to have a pull.?Philadelphii limes. Only one person in a thousand dies of old age. So it seems that old age is not so dangerous as the insurance tablet would have us believe.?Boston Transcript. The way in which little things count looms up impressively when you cpt? how far a slight change in the prevailing fashion can put your hat out of style. ?Washington Star. Manager?"What in the world is all that racket about out in the back room?" Helper?"It's time for the four-footed girl to come on and she can't find her other two feet."?Truth. "It's just like a fussy old maid, any way." Mamma?"What's wrong now, Johnnie?" "Well, teacher told me not to speak out loud, and then kept me in for whispering."?Inter-Ocean. Dolly?"Oh, mamma, I met a little girl to-day who had never beard of a cow." Dolly's Mother ? "That was Dtronrro Tcnan't it? Who was the little I girl, Dolly?" Dolly?"She said hei father was a milkman."?Life's Calendar. "So you say Professor Qnffins expressed a great deal of interest in me," said Miss Passeigh with a little flutter. "He seems like a very distinguished man." "Yes," replied Miss Cuttins, "he is a celebrated antiquarian."?Wash. ingtr i ON? ENJOYS Both the method and 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 system effectually, dispels cold3, headaches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial m 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 50c and 81 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may Dot have it on hand will pro- 1 cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. l)o not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. tOUISVniE, KT. NEW YORK, N.t. 4* . . ' . / y.-i'v / r, ^ ^ ^ i t Cut tbe Pennies in Two. How many collectors of coins know anything about tbe curious half-pence issued centuries ago by English authorities, half-pence in the truest sense of the words, since they were nothing more than minted pennies cut directly in half? Specimens of these coins have been discovered frequently among tbe buried treasures which from time to time have been unearthed in Great Britain. In Lancashire in 1810 were found a rare lot of coins, among which were several pennies of the time cf Alfred and Edward divided in this way. Similarly divided pence of the time of Edward the Confessor have been found. and in speaking of the discovery in 1838 of a number of these curious halfpence of the time of William the Conqueror, an unquestioned authority states that they were probably issued from the mints in that form, since the whole col* lection had evidently been in circulation. In the British Museum in London are specimens of these divided coins iesred under various monarchs from Alfred to Henry III., with the latter of whom the custom ceased. An eminent archaeologist accounts for the divided coins by saying that this doubtless arose from the scarcity of small change, which was in part remedied under the reign of Edward I. by the coinage of half-pcnce and farthings.?Chicago Tribune. Quail Easily Tamed. Peter Landin has been in the habit of throwing out feed near his house for a flock of quail during the winter. When the late Etorm commenced he put the iin/^ A* a V\aw 11 r? n/vninnf fli A ll Allan iccu uuuci a uua up a^aiuaw buc uuuoc;* The quail took shelter under the box, -when Mr. Landm took them into his house, where they enjoyed the warmth to the full. One remained in the house for several days, refusing to go out and join the others until the storm was over. These quail are special pets of Mr. Landin, and woe be unto the person that molests them. He pets th em so they will clean the thistles from hia farm.? Port Stanley ?Wash.) Graphic. WBBH [Do Not fie Deceived with Pastes, Enamels and Paint* which stain the hands. Injure the Iron and born red. The Rising San Stove Polish Is Brilliant, Odorless, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin or gl&JK package with every purchase. Unlike flie Dutch Process gfc No Alkalies Other Chemicals ?ra nied in the preparation of W. BAKER & CO/8 J mBreakfastCocoa m |u|m which <i absolutely Hf ' pure and soluble. ftffl j e't eH It has mora Mian three timee Bffl ?rr'b W t*a strength of Cocoa mixed 1ML1 with 8tareL', Arrowroot or 8agar, and 1b far more economic*!, co*?<rvtf Jess Mian om cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and XASILT digested. Sold by drown tyiywhere. W. BAKER ft CO., Dorchester, Mm, Cores Coranmptlon, Congni, Cronp, Sore Throat. Sold by ?U Druggist! on ? Guarantee. I **"' 1 i i'?I ' ^ I STEEL tfm^\ \ jHBB8bB I BOWL \ JUMBO, the Alexandra Improved Cream Sep arator; cupatuy ?w ujirai jjuuuub per uuur , t?u horse power will ran it. Also new model HAND SEPARATOR for the pale of which AGENT8 are WANTED in every section. Manulactnrera of everything in line of machinery and supplies for batter and cheese factories. Send for catalogue. DAVIS & KANKIN BUILDING AND MFG. CO., 240 to 264 W est Lake Street. Chicago, Illinois. J JS USELESS. HOMETACKS "7/ARE STRAIGHT TACKS for/i WHOLE TACKs/kVA sharp tacks /l! THE RIGHT SIZED TACKS FOR / ALU HOME USES^/^i^T T vr? CoDipanioia:? Used in all homes. HomeTacka, sold by all dealers Home Nails. MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS fWlTH THOMSON'S |M SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. No tools required. Only a hnramer needed to drive md cinch them easily and quickly, leaving the clinch absolutely smooth. Requiring no ho'e to be made In the leather nor hurr for the Rivets. They aro strong, longh and durable*. Millions now in use. All Ask tout dealer for them, or (end 40c. In itamps for a box of 100, assorted sizes. Man'fd by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO., WALTHAM, MASS. oniTDC Piiocn tuH citici'LAH. BUI I lit Ulin Elf J.N. Klein, Belleville, N.J. AlkHIUMorphine Habit Cared in lO IIVRIIIH to 80 days. No pay till cured, wl IVm DR.J. STEPHENS^ Lobanon,Ohio. (Smnan Soaps. Soups furnish a curious instance iu which Gormanj differs from other nations in the preparation of food. Milk soups, sweet and savory, chocolate soups, almond soup and wine soup, frothed lemon soup and beer soup, are among the number, while soups made of apples, pears, strawberries, currants and cherries are not uncommon. There are also a large number of fish soups, which bear a strong resemblance to the fish soups of the Russian kitchen.?Detroit Free Press. Royal Baki Is Absolui A 7HILE there are so i * " ders in the marke physicians decide rendei and liable to produce ailments, housekeepers most care to prevent an] from being brought into In the use of Roya certainty of pure and w The official State 1 Royal Baking Powder monia, alum, lime, noi dients. It is absolutely The Government r baking powders to contc In the use of any bal there is uncertainty if n It is unwise to tike life and health. IT WILL STAYS HIRTMAH'MINUFICTURINB C Worth 1 Mt. Sterling, I F. J. Cheney & CoM To! Gentlemen:?I de i statement for the bene had been afflicted wit! throat and nose, and pi fully twenty-five years remedies without suci advertisement in the +WTT TTnll'o P!afaw?li Hit w J 11 niii o uubcuiu \j u. ished my fourth bottle right when I say I am I don't believ,e there is left ' Respectfully, WM. BEIDGE! BOLD BY DRUG II III I I M Ml H| | Jfa The Beat Cough Byrnp. fTl W A | Tairtea Good. Use In time. H Bold by Druggists. El BSBBSGSmEBtill you a r< made medicine for Con Bronchitis and other eases of the Throat Lungs. Like other so ca Patent Medicines, it is 1 advertised, and having m it has attained a wide under the name of P Cure for Consumption. " To -Save Time is fo Le.ig Life? T Garfield Teas! Cures Conbtipatlon, Hfc?toreiiCoraplexioii. )Savtti Doctonr Bills. Sample free. Gaju ixldHlaCo.,31V w. 46th St., N. Y. Cures Sick Headache ! AflllCT 11 AVE ! mWW i urt h OflBUIWJW \* ??? ->~l hhn* . } for 2c. Stamp. Immense. Unrivalled. Only good i one ever invented. Beats weight*. Sales unparallele Bl%Z a day. Write quick. Bkohard, Phila,, Pa DENSION??i?^?^ / 3yr?inla?t war, 15 *ij udicaliiig claim., uttv tiuct. "'Bttdwam fa A* United v1888 imoaatad |? |970.000T000,> * against $100,000t?# Wanted.?8008 PtJ? giwal? to bar Be. B4> tleaof Forertlna B&oi HBters of ill Mm for Sc. ^Qlvee ^^llge^w.aAd Vigor Wll ache an<f every atten^iig iff'Sk an Smmk stomach can make yoa'fflfct. Iwj Ti Ml hi Belli it. S?c., 60c. and IV* Brown's Bronchial ftas an attack of my anthma cnti*BWHPWl*lV? ?V. Falcti, Miamivillt, ing Powder^ tely Pure nany alum baking pow-i :t, the use of which .all! : the food unwholesome ' dyspepsia and other, should exercise the ut- > y powder but the Royal! i their kitchens. 1 there is an absolute' holesome food, Chemists report: The; does not contain am-j any injurious ingrej pure and wholesome. eports show all other tin impurities. ring powder but Royal ot actual danger. chances in matters off - ' ,*m . 1 1 f ~?- * 9 yon put It and during your IIMIm will never replace the HARTMAM EL PICKET FENCE. For beauty * pearance It la unequalled. We sell more Lawn Fencing than an uM LDufacturera combined, because It la tfca ANDSQMEST AND BEST FENCE IUK CHEAPER THAN WOOD-*? "he new HABTMAN WISE PANEL FETC1 ;ts less than barbed wire, and la ffnuan^. oug, Visible and Ornamental. j Our Eteel Picket Gate*. Tree and Flower. ards, and Flexible Steel Wire Door Mate are equaled. A <0-page Illustrated catalogaaaf HARTMAN SPECIALTIES tiled free on application. Mention thti papsa. Works: Beaver Valla, Fa. Branehess 103 Chamber St., New T?k> ||| 508 State Street, Chicago, fi ^ |(|a South Forsyth St., Atlanta. _ J " | , ; ' * 'Ji 7 . -if . "y A heading. - J Zy., Feb. 13, 1889. iedo, 0. . jfevj sire to make a brief fit of the suffering. I l catarrh of the head, erhaps the bladder for i, Having tried other [jess, I was led by an Sentinel-Democrat to re. I hayejust finand I believe I am v thoroughly restored. a trace of the disease 3, Merchant Tailor. Uisic. so centa. f f I 'V' Offer It la now a "Nostrum," though at first it was com- / ; !fl(ly pounded after a prescription /" ^ by a regular physician, wltk ??! ?$ <r||g no idea that it would ever.; if' jfo on the market as a proprl*^ dis- tary medicine. But compounding that preacr jinfl tion over a thousand timee'tel / ' y (111 It onc yeari we named it "PmifW: . #/ 11 i Cure for Consumption,; ft 116U began advertising it :1ft ? / ' } email %a,y. A medietas : (Veil known all over the werM/S ; ' ;< --v terit Why is it not Jq^t u^ooii as though costing sale to a dollar for a pracrlpMoa | and an equal sum tokni - )' ISO'S put up at a drag 1 ;then Life."Jo?J|^iln hen Use ?3k)m:W BRQBKHHRBHBMBflH n#nyone<Soubt?ffc^ - euro themi^tofcI hi nna iMtn Imms c*m in??> """ nMWIItkfi. let him xrr tchr I 1 8KClfl TV particulars and tm < l'?*I A artel A LIT. I jate our rellab lity. Oat fiuncltl backing fa ph^^pupjjoo.ooo. When mc i ?jw .?. Iodide potMrfwn, arsapirtltoor HotSprlnga fall. aa (Tuirantae a ctw and our Ma trio Cyphllcno la tho aaly thin# that wtO ?are permanently. l\>?ltlvo proof ?bw ealad, ?? . COOK Bsmxst Co., Chlc*ff0, 111. Ptao's Itemcdy lor Catarrh la the |B Bat. Easiest to Use, and Cheapest B, Bold by druggists or sent by mail, fltc. K. X. Hozeltloc, Warren, Pe. 9B