Cape May Herald, 10 December 1903 IIIF issue link — Page 7

• tv-rff W»IK 14 LIFi. A. A. Bojc», a fannrr. living tfare* and a half milaa from Trcaloo, Uo. •nja: “A »*- rare cold actUad In raj kidocti and dvvrloprd to Qnlcklj that. Ivraa obliged* to lay off s-, work on ac-lJI count of tbc tcblngln raj back and' aldaa. For a time 1 waa enable to walk at -II. and every tnnke. aMft 1 tried and all tbe.tpediclne I took bad not tbe aligbteit effect. Mj back continued to grow weaker nnlll I began taking Doan'a Kidney Pilla. and I mu*t aay I waa more tljan anrprlaed and gratlQed to notice tna back ache disappearing gradually until It Anally Stopped" Doan's KJdnej l*IIIa sold by all dealers or mailed on receipt of prlca, 6-> cents per box. Foster Miiburn Co., Bnffslo. N. T. -

HEART’S EASE last Sarfay DUcnorse By Dr. reward, Dnldeld.

S'*F Yoaic Cirr —"Heart'» Raae** was tbe sabjert of tbe sermon Sunday morning in tbe Old First I'mbyUrian ITiureb. Fifth avenue and Twelfth >lr»et. ty tbe Hee-. Dr. Howard DufCeid. oaator. "1" ~ text wae from .lohn, xiv: 1 (Revised V_ aionl: "Let not your heart be troub'ed.

< Cod

i alao in Me.

roubled? How

J-r Duffield

Let not thei. could they help it! Tb«- » __ who knew tbe uorld well Itnd they »ne sorag nut to face the world alone. They were not men versed in the wisdom o. the achoola. and they were to he the teachera of novel, profound and rwo'ulin ary trutiu T)k v were impuLive. undi riplined and *i“' ‘ ^ 1 ’ “

Hitherto in every

vide friend bad . blunt upon the -held of His low every dart which waa Lunched at them. Now they moat addnas themselves unfriended to a nniwion such a« men never attempted, and they muat Miter upon their adventure broken with hem lament and crushed with a mn«ciou>ucea of he'.plwnneaa. How could they Kc otherwiee Ilian "troubled!” It is aitnnle mockery fo aay to tbe heart which m harried with the mystery of pain and haunted with the bitterness o' loneliness and along with the keen sense of its inability to rone with the mnonii bill ties of oiiatenee. "Don't be troub'ed." The oppressed ami! u ready to reply. "Pour arid

Two-Handled Stone Slsdges. Thirteen hundred atone sledgn-baa

raera have been taken out of tusneli made by prehistoric men In thd* Iroi mines at Leslie, Arlx. They are madi of black hamatlte and baye no othei ____

finish than a groove about tha mlddlg I uoon alki of aoch. rhowtng where formerly they | when wisher sre thwarted and hopes !«■»«»*iu.~ u. wooa« s”

handles. Greenstone and jasper usef by the aborigines for war axes wen not bard ^enough to chip away tha hematite and expose the pockets of red oxide of Iron which the savagt used aa a paint. The form of some ol these hammers shows that they wen fitted with two handles, so that the operator could bold one In each hand.

disappointment, and the light of life i gone into eclipse, do oot aav pi me, t nor your heart be troubled.’ Ri'her

Electricity is fast ousting hydraulic r ywer in the equipment ol continental j urope. and slowly superseding it in

Great Britain.

FfTW"er*ea-i»m-vetire i. no nt» or nervous- i peas after first d it's nee of Dr. Kline's Treat ' Karra flastorer.gStnal bottle and tre stlsefree Dr.R.E. Kuan. Ltd.. Mi flntti’Ni.. Pjfla..Pa. 1 The number of lunatics under control in ' Ireland is 21.003. an increase of 1030 in-two

Mrs Winslow'- Roo'lsIncSyrui fo- r'llldrsi

tootblnv,soften the rums, eedneea lufiau-na-Uoe.allays oaia.-ures wind soil t. IS-, a bottle

The death's head moth it tbe on ish moth which can etter a aounl.

ha» never entered yonr soul."

But he who vookr >hui sr4.ei

taken the exact measure of the _. those to whom He spoke, and He knew the wormwood -tapg ol sorrows hLekrs' draurht. Hsa acqnainUnre with grief

was life-long. He knew grief , i-asaal paeaerby cpbo the sirs knew grief not as we koo-r a

1 K..r V - - • •

r by oN-ss renal sate sad inu-|arabl

•eht. He »

is n-j'eome. that when whh h P He* H iw'^h”

jg

I h25?; Mr^ri^nd’"-”-<~uac Present to HL

id. "l^t rot your hearts be -J tboocht He was lookinc far

*r>l from that unknown house in Jensbenecth whose roof flie' then were

it made with a the eity of

. ^ s rearm to n'« gaw was ret »o

If yon want rrea-nery prires do as tha *>»ei, ( he t>'ow and t'-e . aro-'w end the rmmeriea do, use Jt.*XE TlXT BcTTXB dark /nrrowa of the i '.-dtime. as 'h* COLO a. | cladsome ror-ranv of th- reapers. Lde- _ , ——;—; | with golden shca-ea and sh-mting the seeFrance has about 40n0 daela a year, and of the hareest. H* was l&okinxx-rma th July 2800, on an arcrage. ! stnrm-swrnt aeg of toe safe and aheherei , , ' :— . . I-harbor where'the f—nl»Vd wave* wen 1 •S I ^I' Ptoo ' Car * ,or^ ^ n ’ HTnp,,1D “” ,1 He was Hi irking not only o my Ufa three years *go.-M«s.Tnowaa tloa- the wrench of parlinx h„t -• ■ mas. Maple 8t., Korwleh, K.Y., Fob. 17.1900. | grern-c Preterit t» His i

n accommodaL '

London sever bospi

•000 patietua. , Catarrh cured at home. Three preparations ! i ,t ' In one package. Aakyour dealer for "Dr. hot,! Hartlay'a Great Ee.-ncdy." Detnre you get It. 1 V7 ' Agta.. Stanley A Brown Drug Co..balto..Md. ■

lirh was

Everybody knowa the great value ol that remedy in the household, but everybody doca not know that the imitations of it, which some second ciaas drug- ■ diahonnrably palm off on their cna—have little or no value What ‘e undentood by the pub ic is, that « is not a mere question of comparative value between "Vaseline" and tha imitation*, bet that the imitations do not effect the wonderful healing result* of tbe worldrenowned “Vaaaiine." and that they are

not the some thing nor made in the same .. ,, „„ „ way. Besides this, many of tbe imitationa . which flmu •re harmful 'irritant and not safe to use. ' ...-.i-.j —,

While Vaseline ia-perfectly harm leas. Perfect safety, therefore, lies in buying only original bottlea and other packages pot np by the Cheecbrough Mancfaer'g Co. Attention ie called to their Capeieum Vaseline advertised in another column.

if it wei

He s'id.

rot your nr art he troubled, neither tie afraid. I»i/io- tbe strinee. san and the hard and wean- die. that mmr belie-v l-s GodT; he’ieVe- also .*ie: and br and bv the <.nora of vo Fa'her's house shall cp»-i wiHe for yo enlran-e une-< * Lraer. holier, t'ere- r-

s.frv for wb-qh fha->fi ' shall lue- evotnd 'he >a not so. 1 wonllV htr. 4„

"Believe ' is Christ'» la.isena-l for charmrag away the spe-ter of Iroab’e fmi.i th. haunted heart. Ee'ieve in the Father's pan for His ebrld Belieer in the Falber’s rare of Hia child Thcrents no wsero'.atic. pi-ocva* by which the mind miv unrave' the acre '.-nelea of mortal foero-n-w S ronderoned hear; rannot find relief in e lone boo*;, 'ihe ro'.A b'oodlesa hand of 1 reason never wined awa - a tear. The inlelleet has re'et diamvere' .-.ur Ki’m Jo--

When.one is dvitp; of hunfer

i th- t

Kaw Submarlnea Tmr Frwnee. France has just ordered tbe conatrao tlon of six submarines of a new type— that devised by Naval Engineer Mnngn*. They will be tbe largest yet built as when submerged they will have a displacement of 450 torn. The contract calls for twelre knots an boar under water.

T>*mr.r— C.naot V.. CnraV bv loealappUrations *s they emi>! reach the dleeaea dportloa of the otr. Tbnr-H on'y ous way to ears d«aIo«a. and tbit Hbyeouetl-tutloulre-no-llas. Dae/oats ,s raasod by an lallaraed eondltlon o! tha muno-tt lialarof the BostaebLn Tub*. tVhen tbl- tuba la loflarnad you have arumbUn-sound orlmoerfeet bearing, and whan p is antlraly closed Deafnaea L the result.sad uniaasthelnfismmatlon can be taken ru» ami thistabe r»Hored to Ita normal condition, hearing will be dastroved forevae. Mbs raee* out of tan on eaneed by eat nnfe.whicb L nothtnv bat an tlflamed eondltloa af tha rrrrons surtaces. Wa artll rive One Hundred Dollar, tor any ease of Dasfncm'cause Jbr eatarrh'ithat cannot be earad by nail's Cagorrh Care. Reed for drxalaa frer F. J. Casrcrr A Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Drurgistv. 76c. Unll'e ranily Pills era tha bef. The cm af Making friends. Bleared la tbe man wbo baa tbe gift h. making friend*, for It Is one of God’s bext gift*. It Inrolre* many thing*, but above all Is tbe power of going oot of one's *elf and seeing and appreciating whatever U noble and lovable In another

Hogbes.

powrty. it i* -ct the boar

i L, broach the tesfeU of no iliral eronomv The fatmne-rtrirkrn soul rrie* for bread, the bankrupt debtor demands coin. Th- . troub.ed heart yearn, for Cod Himaelf. .nd not for *nv tbeom ral H-st/ursion of | the nature rf deity. When the pmb'.m of the cross hero-nr. too .ore aed the weirht of th. burden becomes too b-tvr. f "o' sl-nrc.r to oxpren voqr exorrirnra >° • tl.co’ocieal formula: do not atriv. to rndur. the .tram in your una'-Ld I .'rength. on God. "Cuddle down" in | Hi. arm.. P- pot afraid. IVliere. Thai is tnc way Chrial would take the sting

from mortal sorrow.

T° fo analyxe sash an act of beli« as tnc Jlaster here pmenbea woo'd be l-ke cndi a voting to learn to amg by atudyrag a picture of the larynx. One mav master toe anatomy of the throat and l!i'E el L U, i tCT * no } e 0, • on *- Think yourself beck into the tituetiou. Jeeue wee - C ot . a profeaaor eittme et Hi. : de.« and lecturing to a cLaa with referF"”, • »“ tJ r articulated sy.tcm of Tfc* ehadow of life's rn yet err wee ch:i.ing to the hearts of thorn- Hr loved, and He svm striving to kindle in tneir oreaa.s a vivid, luminous, unquencheh.e eonepocanrae of >he divine sympathy Hie word to them is "Rea'ixe God inrtcad of thgonxing about God." Aa tbimgh He **id: Peter, .tames. John and all the rest, you bare lisped sentence* con crn-ine God .race you were IiU> children. Pssio e ho _y hymn, were your cradle entge. To- sacred roles of the ernagocu. hare •ookep to you their fshhethMi^tneerag from the Infinite Obe. Your heart, we 1®° participated in the ac rmnitica of Peasovrr end Pentecost, which

“vereigntiee with

whiel. God had shaped your nation's life. M it" an iiTepreasible srutfiilnrse von hare poudered tbe grandeur of Jehovah aa you

in *he grandeura of

Hw quiet watches of fhr

nizht »{o^ over you as you lay in your T‘! , n *rC? U o~!ecping alar.. That God a roar God. He thinks. He i'lIUi - ii Torjou, He marks your

i-eigh, , D Hi. heart every eroae'brfora He lay, it upon roar shou'der. Jbc march of the tribes tarough the desert the prorrese of humanity through ih? ^

■H

as

Umim^rao«ss.e~s-mwwsyw.»hieh befall you. There m *

***^^*^T g I lo the heart of God than yo* aJiSSsiSwsaumrsww.aaraKusaaslfc—, , n Hub.

„ - - —- . rrsarai trouUe is gc troubli PP n PQY put .God in the

mom- a-m s< l SW i. I i s lO aaye'umsm^a

pit rata car aa .

pa-t and dwell upon the wonder* -ftnsht rat he day. of the father*. Iran*now Hua into —

our. when ,T the vrlla whirfa Him aba.’, be lifted- Christ's cure tor U b « »■ «o lire With God beside us in

every day ex erlenee*; u take Gof . petsurra; to be ra the fomnamonship o Cod when throngs rarroupd ,aa or when E* *„ W * J where no one el« hut He can walk or enter the shadra of a jtt.uit** whereby all bat He art forgot

I

tbe sabbath school

of peace and of newer is mastered by Iran ' IS tel j l*~U««l U..« Cra.«u Id hereafter, i* aetoal now, itie nain. the December IJ.

oirifc. the wrong that bum this truth I

into the tablets of onrT

ar» ditcuised.angela

"Believe also in Me.' of God that brings help to human

can never he grasped a* a pre'tirsl , in any other way. A peren-.*! .r-iiaint-anc* with Christ carries wi'h it a kn-'srl-edrr of the peraonahtv of Cod. All fq--mulas are .sorry makeshifu. Whoever is argued into faith may he «~K --d out of it. If the foandatio. of vonr be'ief is a form of word*, it wifi be orertur -rd whenever a neuter and more — aster> phra«than yonra 4s framed. "Vo man nometh to the Father but bv M*." /Iv the war of philosophical aratr.ia one tna-- srriee at some eoneent of God a* "a oower hot onree've* that make* for gieii'eoua“-s* " Throueh the labyrinth of apern'ative thought one may reach the roae'uron that God is tbe unknown ooantil# la the conation of the univerari A Ion- Ihe rath of a loyical ayBogiam one may dedii" the •de* of God aa "*" absentee God sitilng b and watching the unirrra' *o." B-rt ■ hrough final alone ran one 'earn to define God in term* of fathe-hood It- Christ a’on» can one learn that the'earth life is a diaciplirsry proee*.—a rurririrnm of n*rental lore—its defect., its catastrophes. ita pains, ita myaterv. it. pemetnal »*—■• See. all, enrrries under the oootrr.l of in. fipi'e bencficenees and ro">o*!led to achieve its purposes, for He. the Iwet hrloved of the Father, had a Path of tear* which ended at the cross. but from the ernes He sh-d a light upo" a nath by which men find their war to the heart ot God, From Him we lerm tb»t God bolds this noor ttrickra world -n the embrace of au inexhenstible aymosth- end that ft- pnrooee* to crown the fr:-meatarv life of men with a divine enmnletenraj and armmetry. Phriat is dai'v tran-'ated into t !, e tern-* of our moral life and cxpre*s*d in the forma of our hnovn e*Derience. There •• no seminary of theology like that on

Ca'vary.

"let not rour heart he troubled." Your mind may be. but yonr tnipd will never hrina roll into topch with Uh3. If see feel after God we will find Him. If we think after God see will joa* Him, Tbe relat'onahin between God and ourae'.ves is a tie of love, end true Inre fs no* th* nff*pr'og of logic. Thc-liok betsreen God end ourselves is thaf belwren father and child, and lb* mystVrv of parrntship and sonabin evades apeerh and measured op'v by CTpcnerthe. "let not your /heart be troub'ed.” It be ofttimes saddened. It may be epent with arraiD. weaned aith toil, broken srith grief—but let it not I* palsied with melencbo.y. Let your life be as the stormvexed ocean, whose surface the tempest lathes into fury, while ralm eternal and untiiffled abides in th* unfathomable dcp'ha. “Let nnt.your heart be trouhlod." Oth-e-s tn»v be the heir* of unreal, who with their beck to the aoarce of light look out only upon the ever lengthening track nf. their nwn shadow. They travel the way of life unattended. They carry the burden of life unbe'nrd. Tbev toil at • n* work of life unaided Thev stand on •he brink unfr-euded A brood of trouhes nest# within such hearts. . But for rou. believing in God aa rm-r “athar. and in Hirut as roar Savfonr. life IS as a 'ourjur home A few more day* of mi need cloud and annahlnc; a few mow wendrm.* passmen of winter into spring: h It-*- more hard hn-’ravors in tb*r ».-ed. n.ot of mo-ta' sill: a fey more ho*, a fruit ra the fiehl of earfh'v ballV—then tha of all shadow*, a a d the blessed vision

Kallg'.on .t nows.

. T' e religion of Christ L inlenae'r praetieal. It is intended to he manifested in our home )-fe; just as faithfully as at rnurtb. Tins is why we - ran generaliv obtain a true conceptioti oT .the aoundnca* nf a man « fsith by spending a few' •lava in hn own home Maw a man has a reputation for niety. when his hom* life wi.l not near c ow insnertion. It it in • ■ - ham-drum duties of home tbft sre are tried. The wsy we meet the errm-d** eornr* im a better t—• -• ——

eomparativv.v easy to he sweet-tenpaved "hen wc Have pnthing to wx us. but tc

faces br-eht *“d our h«*rL li-ht ipapirina labors nf we-> ts" to hare th* «p : rit of God

' -"id ihe t

'* w, t dwflhpg in o-ji

•ibis. Not o

wa’hV. b|>t it is xu'd hr* nu-tn

ra. Our lord expects

rraponaihi'i'

to b» true ta Him in our home*.

ra choreh. and we see not fulfilling roramand* -when w* fail to live every hn-r nf e-erv day in ae-o-dsijee with th*

hieh standard JTe has act befoe* u*.

H i« an iesnirin* thooglit that We •—i

n with oa into the humblest daily The hn*y housewife, aa ab- row er task, making a hotr- h-'-ht f dear to her. srrrinr tks Ms>.

. *• trply and ju«t as f-ithfully at the preacher in the nulnit. I^t us -n-

hearta with th* thn-sh’ that

, . . , . 7 oeraota ever* nlTerin, of fa'th'y] v-mee cf home as srcll as at

ehurrff.—George D. Qeh Icka.

Duty Above Ule.

Life is a matter of very small •e'o-rat to aayooe in comparison with duty doing, whether a roan rtalixea this troth_or not. " hatever ■■ worth living for is worth dying for, if dyrog be an incident to it* pursuing When th- Botnan Genera!. V?'*!’- »«* warned a-ainst ^je danger of hb returning from -vpt to Italy r* trouble in hb own I '

te^tgk Th* Dedicating of tha Ttaylt, I Kbit »*-. Ml. hLAI-OaUan Tail, Pan. U2,

r, Vcraai.4-ll-Cammcal.rr

« the Day'* Uaaoa

Introduction.—Th* bui'ding of the tern t c marks one of th* most impotlaat cr*i th* history of leraql- It jnlroduml i E force in the malting of the nation influence was religious and political building and furniture were vert gorgeous, but the dedication of it exceed ed in glory as much a* prayer and exceed th# < " ' ' ‘ -

of atones.

rti up tbi , . a III* people. In this chapter

aecqnnt of the tolemnity of their first eting'lherv. Those were larael'a golden days. The bringing in of the ark waa the

crowning wuek

Commentary.—I. Bringing in the ark fra. Mil- 1-5. "Then 8olomon asaem hied." The dedication wa* the grandeal ceremony ever performed under (be Jlo aaic dianenaaiion, and one of the bmghlesl days of Jewish history. Not only were tha “eidtr* of Israel, the heads of tht tnben. and the chief of the father*" sum moned. but "all the men of Israel aasera bled themselves” (1 King* S:l. 21. It is an enormous morours* that it gathered'm and about the holy city. From "the entering in of Hamath to the river of Egypt ' (v. fli). every town and namlet had svnl up ita tale of men. No Israelite who could be present—gnd in the seventh month the labors of the field were srell-nigb overwould be absent. We raus'. not think of the beads of the tribes alone; it L a nation that kc*)a festival to-day. And such a nation, with aoeh a -.latory! And its glory culminate* to day ra tbe dedication of iu temple. What child ot Israel, then, but would be there! "Brought np the ark." The act of dedication began br carrying tbe ark of the covenant in ao emn proccaaion. with the king at the bead, in'® ihe temp'*, and puiting-it into “if. place," th* holy of ho'iea. The ark waa the root and kernel of the whole sanctuary. It contained the moral law. Jehorah’’i covenant, to dwell ii) the midst of Hi* chosen people. While everything rise was new, the same ark of Hie covenant we* kept, and only ekangrd iu place. The procession as dearribtd in ra. 1-0 aad k Chrera. 6:4-13. * ' —

MrfwW i.;fiUA3 WAS IlL'i.CnV.

HI* Unigun Method of Calling Attnm tlon to th# Fact. Rudyard Kipling once vliltnd tha (ate Cecil Rhode* at Lekkerwljn. one >f hi* frail forms at Roar I. South Africa. One morning fUodei went ireund bis firm before breakfast, caving hi* guest, who woe not ao en •rgetlc, behind. Time went on and Rhodes did net appear Hunger toon 'oueed Kipling to action and In a short vhlle be was very busy on hi* own iceouut- Aa Rhodes returned be bund his tree* bearing k new kind of tult In the ahape of placards Intcrlbed n huge black letters with "Famine!" ‘We are starving!" "Feed us!" etc 3n reaching the front door be was con Touted with me following. In still arger type: "kor the human race— Breakfast tones the mind. Invigorates he body. It has sustained thousands; t will sustain you. , See that you get t." Then. In the house, on every ivallable wall, he came across other xiysterlous placards In mors and more ralbctie appeal "Why die when s iltle breakfast prolongs life?" Larger tnd larger fcrew the type: 'Tl lalate; It Is etill later." leading at last fntc :be little breakfast room, where he found Kipling reading bis paper in peaceful Innocence but very hungry It did not need much Ingenuity tc -ness tbe author of these broadside*

Straighten Up Backache StiacobsOil! Erica a5c. and 60*. •▼TFTrrTMIUMTTTfigfFnrffr

Batter Than a Machine. Recently a machine for countlni I money was brought to the treasu: j department In Washington, but r ; test being mode as between the m* chine and the bright girl wbo wa. | used to counting money for the de ! partment, the girl won and ooantet 10.000 pennies In forty-eight minute

Aceompsnird oy •'th* VtO •inrcra and muair an. David had orga'ilied, arrayed ia white Mnen and vhantiny 1 some of those anlrudid ode». th* Gth Wth, flfftb and lUTih psalm*, the Le»it** brought the old tabcrnac!*, the brazen altar. the table of rheyrbrrad. the randieatick. the braren a-mert from Gibruii and th* ark from Zioo, aud put them in the

temple."

fi-0. 'The orafle." Ty this i« meant the holy cf holir*. "I'odrr the winga.” The outapresd winy* of tlw rnerubim extended across the who'* width of tbe orarle (chao. C:27). and their winr* touched oue •notbvr .o tbe middle of the house lbnrath the** wing* that touched, tbe arts was art down. "Drew out the stave*.” The stare* were us-d for the purpose of canyipx the ark. After the ark wa*-ael conn in the most holy place thev.drew toe staves ao far forward that their end* could be aeeu from the sanctuary. Th* ooject of tbi* cannot.be determined with certainty. Others suggest that the drawing out of the starts 1 — **--•

at las! the ark had x its rest, and waa a

Heb. 0 «

i stated that t

: al*o

Aaron"* rod that probably been loot while the ark was I

with the Philiatinrs.

K*. 11* “Cloud filled the home." Now ! took n'are the moat imnortanl event in .' the dedication—the manifestation of Je- ] horah in tbe new temple bv the same arm- l bol by which He had marked the ancient | tabernacle a* His tarthlr dwelling place. - A .brains cloud, outdaziiing the morning sun. act ted upon the house. “ao that the priest* could not stand to minister by. reason of the cloud, for the glory of the lord had filled the house of God” (IChrou, 5:13. 14) Tho# God accepts the temple as

Hi* own.

II. Solomons bleating (v*. 12-21. 6441). Both before and after the dedicatory prayer Solomon blcaaed tbe Lord and Uio people. He gave God glory, not by wealth, honor, power or victoT- to I*r»el. but for "real." Not one word of God'a nroaiar* had f.- od fv. Ml. ,Thi. is. a distinct refere nee to «Deut. 12^. 13. where we read that when the Lord should hive given real to Israel, then a pace far ascrificr. etc., should be appointed. That place waa now' being dedicated. But So’omon saw the proof that the rest waa at last fu'Jv attained The permanent aanrtnary war pledge of settlement in tbe land of Ca- -»*». to which Israel had been brouxht from EgTP'-ian bondage. The rest hiilnrto enjoyed had been bet part'a', but now at Jaat the PhiJotinej had been brought into III. The dedicatory prayer (v*. 23-S). In the act of dedication Solomon stood at the head of the who'e ceremony. He w»* the author of everything from be^in-

/ Coughed

“ I bad a moat stubborn cough tor many yean. It deprived me of sleep and I grew very thin. I then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and was quickly cured.’* K. N. Mann, Fall Mills, Tenn.

Sixty years of cures and such testimony as the above have taught us what Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral will do. We know it’s the greatest cough remedy ever made. And you will say so, too,' after you try it. There’s cureineverydrop.

A crop that pay* may not pay as well os it should. Potash i> a plant paid which al I crop, must have Without sufficient Potash to feed upu* LO crop can reach that 0 point where it pay* in/. F.*pertinents have de monatratrd the value of Potash.

rc»jxsr ■f'O'ja'S-i stvwre j-j.'s: :us J.C. ATCKUJ. Lowall. Kaaa. I

WORMS

“It iii

latter

that I should move forward and die. It ia too great a matter that T should take one

atm ; irk ward and live." * '*

3 ua-d when it i* bel_ ^,, I1 ‘7: K .« who would t*3 a h* in order live ia willing to pev a * • ■

larger price for hi* life than worth to himself—or to oth

Trumbull.

lot our temper be under tbe rule of the lore of Jesus. He cannot alone curb rt-He can make us gentle and patient. L*1 the vow. that not an unkind word to ethers shall ever be heard from oar line. | Asm. lot the spn* • — — take offense, that M alwaya rasdy to excuse, to think and hope the neat, mark our intercoarat with alt. Let oor life be one of serf-agenflea. - always atudriog tbe welfare of others, finding our highest joy in blessing others. By Hia grace-the most rommonnlaea life in oe transfigured with the brightness of heavenly beauty, as tbe infinite love of _ divine nature shine* oot throueh our frail hnmaaity. A Cura Far Trouble. There i* no belter wav of forgattiug trouKaa than by attempting to re--a- -I- who b {« tronb'e H hu own troahle*. —r —v- --.—— few thoo* trooKm gain. When he m turned a war for n time - himself in th* effort to help another, nal trnsbra may perbh from lack ol However herd

tranaoMr Hip into the rerant» futore tering lo him, nr in trying to give him eotaand dream of the gtorirl whieh aha!) be fort, we are likely to Ucbten hia bonlco *»r. -t— -i •' i-i-i- ■ ■ ■ > — awn.—gqi|dar-SAool

ning to end—speech, prayer and blessing. l»c did not take the place of Jehovah, hot «»F.re servant He had erected a brazen scaffold, of five cubits (seven aad a half “ long, fire cubit* broad, and three -* high (2 Cbron. 6:13), and ou this b* stood, raided above the people, to bless and in*tract them, then kneeled to offer prayer,

_pf three part*: 1. Adoration 'for the fulfils rant of pest promiae* (2S, 24). 2- Prayer that the temple might be a — tral place of worship, and that God w

— worship, aad that God would especially bieaa those who "preyed toward this _nlace ' (25-39). 3. Supplication far

•-*-

suffer famine,- peatUence,

(ra. 31-63].

IV. The aacrifice* offered (re. 8286).

O. 63. "Offered oaerifioe.” ThL we. 'a burnt-oBcnng. with it* aceompaniment*. and being tbe first laid on the altar of th# temple, wa*. oa ia .tbe similar case of the tabernacle, consumed by miraculous fire from.heaven (2 Cbron. 7:12). Tho Urge proportion of the aacrificea were peacaoffcr ;nf> »nd were mostly eaten by the

people. Tbe rest numbers of people ent required a large amount of food, great number of offering* mentior were not offered all in on* dav. bu th# fourteen days (v. 85). Solum the leapt of Ubanmda*. after the

Tbe

e feast of Ubernaeb e diSoMic; tath t. cn days.. Tha braren

Set Webeter Down. Th* story Is told of Dr. Bacon, s New England divine of an *aril*r cun Bur. who was reproached with a pro aundatlon that waa not "according to Webster." Webster lived In hlr parish, therwfore Dr. Bacon thus da Uvered himself: “What right has Webstar to mistake my pro nun eta tlon! He 1* one of my pariah Ion ere and be ought to get bis pronuncial' * oth me, not T-from him.”

&ea!l M ThtDowsta ^ coMorcamumc

l. PMinr Tuan Pc SooC.

r hs.

uSSi^uiamSSMi Eokls

FOR WOMEN A Boston physician'* di covery which cleanses and heals all inflammation of the mucous membrane wherever located. In local treatment of female ills {“ratine is invaluable. Used aa a douche R is a revelation in cleansing and tc.ling; power; it kill* all disease germ* which ca-j'e inflammation and discharges. Thousands of letters from women prove tliist It la the grcatc-.t cure fur leucorrhtrea es-er discovered. Paxtine never fails to cure pelvic catarrh, nasal catarrh, tore throat, tore mouth and sore eye*, because these diseases ore all caused by inflammation of the mucout membrane. For cleansing, whitening and proaerviog the teeth we rbnUeoge th* world to produce Ita eqnaL Physicians and specialists every* hare prescribe and en dorse Paxtine. andlhoosandaaftextimotaial let Improve ita value. At druggist*, or sent postpaid 50 cto.

Instruct Iona absolute

f trot. Writ*

25.1

SILOS •SysgMBi'is

LUMBER, sS.^-

BOXES, CRATES.

ELIAS A ER0„ Buffalo, ff. T„

Smokeless Powder NURD GLOB | iARROW . SHOT SHEUSl ore winning I

Loaded with I ANY standard | amok cleat povdar, and for tale I

The Uflkm Mrtonic CartrMce Co. I

III pant Tabulteerw the best dyspepoU medicine ever made. A hundred ralll Iona of tham have be-w sold In lb* Cntted States U a ilugW year. Every tllnena arising from a dlsqrdrced stomach In relieved or cured *y their use So common la It that diseases originate from tbe stomach It may be safely o»serted there la no condltiou of ID health th-.t will not be benefited or cured by the occcsionel use of Rlpaoa Tabules. Physicians know thorn and speak highly of them. All druggist* sell then'. The five-cent package I* enoegb for an ordinary occasion, and the Family Bottle, alxty cento, contains a household supply for a year. On* generally give* relief within twenty minute*.

GAPSICUff VASELINE

trorpvxa obi,1 sreim ^ Aaubstltot* forsnu rupriiortounmaadae nd •ill net bUeear tha

Tbe paln-aUaytagaad

t will stop th* toothaeh#atynee. en* . ra bosdscfio acU sclstlos. W a 1 tires id It oa tb* baat and. aafaet anoaol ■tcr4rritentknowc.alao •tan axtareaJ edvferratnaiatb* cheat aalr* —

aSgsiasg

P STUNTS, mnKWB sT daUan a*** base ■***■•*•( IWI m .va lra-ls.Jlsntt. ttunaus v4 asilsr. sru spprwpn. -Iteia s«r gi si lias arrears eru Us*.

Gathered Lot* Crop. J. H. Brawn of Coudlo. K. ro euntly gathered on this premise* ripe raapbtuTiss, strawberry and apple blossoms and pond Illy bud..

flVCHESTER

RIFLE A PISTOL CARTRIDGES. “ It’n the nhotn that hit that counL ” Winchester Rifle and Pistol Cartridges in nil calibers hit, that ia, they ohoot accorntely and strike a good, hard, penetrating blow. This la the kind of cartridges you will get. If you insist on having the time-tried ALL DBAgaaS SELL WINCH ESTER

• .j . m -- B.

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