TALjIAGE'S seraiok MA?) OVERBOARD" THE SUB JECT OF THE LATEST ONE. Ar'.iin Calt Upon Thr God. If So Be That Cod Will Think Upoa Va That We Perish Not Jonah 1 I 6 -For Summer Pleasure Seeker. mm OD TOLD JONAH to go to Nineveh on an unpleasant er rand. He would not go. He thought to get away from his duty by putting to sea. With pack un der his arm, I find him on his way to Joppa, a sea-port. He goes down among the shipping, and says to the men lying around the docks, "Which of these vessels sails to day?" The sailors answer, "Yonder is a vessel going to Tarshish. I think. If you hurry, you may get on board her." Jonah steps on board the rough craft, asks how much the fare is, and pays It. Anchor is weighed, sails are hoist ed, and the rigging begins to rattle in the strong breeze of the Mediterranean. Joppa is an exposed harbor, and it does not take long for the vessel to get out on the broad sea. The sailors like what they call a "spanking breeze," and the plunge of the vessel from the crest of a tall wave is exhilarating to those at home on the deep. But the strong breeze becomes a gale, the gale a hur ricane. The affrighted passsengers ask the captain if he ever saw anything like this before. "Oh. yes," he says; "this Is nothing." Mariners are slow to admit danger to landsmen. But, after a while, crash goes the mast, and the vessel pitches so far "a-beam's-end" there is a fear she will not be righted. The captain answers few questions, and or ders the throwing out of boxes and bundles, and of so much of the cargo as they can get at. The captain at last confesses there is but little hope, and tells the passengers they had better go to praying. It Is seldom that a sea captain is an Athiest. He knows that there is a God, for he has seen him at every point of latitude between Sandy Hook and Queenstown. Captain Moody, commanding the "Cuba" of the Cunard line, at Sunday service led the music and sang like a Methodist. The cap tain of this Mediterranean craft, hav ing set the passengers to praying, goes around examining the vessel at every point. He descends Into the cabin to see whether In the strong wrestling of the waves, the vessel had sprung a leak, and he finds Jonah asleep. Jonah had had a wearisome tramp, and had spent many sleepless nights about questions of duty, and he is so sound asleep that all the thunder of the storm and the screaming of the passengers does not disturb him. The captain lays hold of him. and begins to shake him out of his unconsciousness with the cry. "Don't you see that we are all going to the bottom? Wake up and go to praying, if you have any God to go to. What meanest thou, O sleeper? Arise, call upon thy God. if so be that God will think upon us, that we perish not." The rest of the story I will not re hearse, for you know It well. To ap pease the sea they threw Jonah over board. Learn that the devtl takes a man's jioney and then sets him down In a poor landing-place. The Bible says he paid his fare to Tarshish. But see him get out. The sailors bring him to the side of the ship, lift him over "the guards." and let him drop with a loud splash in -the waves. He paid his fare all the way to Tarshish, but did not get the worth of his money. Neither does any one who turns his back on his duty, and 'does that which is not right. There Is a young man who, during the past year, has spent a large part -of his salary In carousal. "What has he gained by It? A soiled reputation, a half-starved purse, a dissipated look, a peiuiant temper, a aisturDea conscience. The manacles of one or two bad habits that are pressing tighter will keep on until they wear to the bone. You paid your fare to Tarshish, but you have been set down In the midst of a sea of disquietude and perplexity. One hundred dollars for Sunday horse-hire. One hundred dollars for wine-suppers. One hundred dollars for frolics that -shall be nameless! Making four hundred dollars for his damnation! Instead of being In Tarshish now, he Is in the middle of the Mediterranean. Here is a literary man, tired of the faith of his fathers, who resolves to launch out Into what Is called Free Thinking. He buys Theodore Parker's works for twelve dollars; Renan's Life of Christ for one dollar and fifty cents; Andrew Jackson Davis's works for t:?nty dollars. Goes to hear Infidels talk at the cltfts, and to see spiritual ism at the table-rapping. Talks glibly of David, the Psalmist, as an old liber tine; of Paul as a wild enthusiast; and of Christ as a decent kind of a man a little weak In some respects, but al most as good as himself. Talks smil ingly of Sunday as a good day to put a little extra blacking on one's boots; and of Christians as, for the most part, hypocrites; and of eternity as "the great to be." "the everlasting now," or "the Infinite what is it." Some day he gets his feet very wet, and finds himself that night chilly. The next morning has a hot mouth and Is headachy. Sends word to the store that he will not be there today. Bathes his feet; has mus tard plasters; calls the doctor. The medical man says aside, "This is going to be a bad case of congestion of , the lungs." Voice fails. Children must be sent downstairs, or sent to the neigh bors, to keep the house quiet. You say. "Send for the minister." But no he does 'not believe In ministers. You say, "Read the Bible to him." No; he does not believe in the Bible. A law yer comes in, and, sitting by his bed aide, writes a document that begins. "In the name of God, Amen. I, being of sound mind, do make this my last will and ' testament." It Is certain where the sick man's body will be in less than a week; It is quite certain who will get .his . property. . But what will be come of his soul? It will go into "the great to be," or "the everlasting now," or "the infinite what Is It." His soul is In . deep waters, and the wind is "blowing great guns." Death cries, "Overboard with the unbeliever!" A splash! He goes to the bottom. He pL'.iJ five dollars for his ticket to Tarshish when he bought the Infidel books. He landed in perdition! Every farthing you spend In sin Satan will swindle you out of. He promises you shall have thirty per cent or a great dividend. He lies. He will sink all the capital. You may pay full faro to some sinful success, but you will never get to Tarshish. Learn how soundly men will sleep In the midst of danger. The worst sin ner on shipboard, considering the light tie had, was Jonah. He was a member of the Church, while they were heathen. The sailors were engaged in their law ful calling, following the sea. The mer chants on board, I suppose, were going down to Tarshish to barter; but Jonah. notwithstanding his Christian protes- slon, was flying from duty. He was sound asleep In the cabin. He has been motionless for hours his arms and feet In the same posture as when he lay down his breast heaving with deep respiration. Oh! how could he sleep! What If the ship struck a rock! what if it sprang a leak! what if the clumsy Oriental craft should capsize! What would become of Jonah? So men sleep soundly now amid perils Infinite. In almost every place, I sup pose, the Mediterranean might be sounded, but no line is long enough to fathom the profound beneath every im penitent man. Plunging a thousand fathoms down, you cannot touch bot tom. Eternity beneath him. around him! Rocks close by, and whirlpools. and hot-breathed Levanters; yet sound sleep! We try to wake him up, but fail. The great surges of warning break over the hurricane-deck the gong of warn ing sounds through the cabin the bell Perhaps twenty years before you were TrTTT SUNDAY SHTTOOTi born, vour father made sweet acaualnt- : illLi uv7Ai.vxii rings. "Awake!" cry a hundred voices; yet sound asleep in the cabin. . In the year 1775, the captain of a Greenland whaling vessel found himself at night surrounded by Icebergs, and "lay-to" until morning, expecting every moment to be ground to pieces. In the morning he looked about, and saw a ship near by. He hailed it. No answer. Getting into a boat with some of the crew, he pushed out for the mysterious craft. Getting near by, he saw through the port-hole a man at a stand, as though keeping a log-book. He hailed him. No answer. He went on board the vessel, and found the man sitting at the log-book frozen to death. The log-book was dated 1762, showing that the vessel had been wandering for thirteen years among the Ice. The sailors were found frozen among the hammocks, and others In the cabin. For thirteen years this ship had been carrying Its burden of corpses. So from this Gospel craft today, I descry voyagers for eternity. I cry, "Ship ahoy! ship ahoy:" No answer. They float about, tossed and ground by the icebergs of sin. hoisting no sail for heaven. I go on board. I find all asleep. It is a frozen sleep. O that my Lord Jesus would come aboard and lay hold of the wheel, and steer the craft down Into the warm Gulf Stream of his mercy! Awake, thou that sleepest! Arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee life. Again: Notice that men are aroused by the most unexpected means. If Jonah had been told one year before that a heathen sea-captain would ever awaken him to a sense of danger, he would have scoffed at the Idea; but here it Is done. So now, men In strangest ways are aroused from spiritual stupor. A profane man Is brougnt to conviction by the shocking blasphemy of a com rade. A man attending church, and hearing a sermon from the text. "The ox knoweth his owner," etc., goes home unimpressed; but, crossing his barn yard, an ox comes up and licks his hand, and he says. "There it is now 'the ox knoweth his owner, and the ass his master's crib,' but I do not know God." The careless remark of a teamster has led a man to thoughtful ness and heaven. The child's remark, "Father, they have prayers at Uncle's house why don't we have them?" has brought salvation to the dwelling. By strangest way and In the most un expected manner men are awakened. The gardener of the Countess of Hunt ingdon was convicted of sin by hearing the Countess on the opposite side of the walk talk about Jesus. John Hard oak was aroused by a dream In which he saw the last day, and the judge sit ting, and heard his own name called with terrible emphasis: "John Hard- oak, come to Judgment!" The Lord has a thousand ways of waking up Jonah. Would that the messengers of mercy might now find their way down into the sides of the ship, and that many who are unconsciously rocking in the awful tempest of their sin might hear the warning, "What meanest thou, O sleeper? Arise, and call upon thy God!" Again: Learn that a man may wake up too late. If, instead of sleeping. Jonah had been on his knees confessing his sins from the time he went on board the craft, I think God would have saved him from being thrown overboard. But he woke up too late. The tempest is in full blast, and the sea, in convulsion, is lashing itself, and nothing will stop it now but the overthrow of Jonah. So men sometimes wake up too late. The last hour has come. The man has no more idea of dying than I have of dropping down this moment. The rig ging Is all white with the foam of death. How chilJ the night is! "I must die." he says, "yet not ready. I must push out upon this awful sea, but have noth ing with which to pay my fare. The white caps! The darkness! The hurri cane! How lone have I been sleenlnsr? Whole days, and months, and years. I am quite awake now. I see every thing, but It is too late." Invisible hands take him up. He struggles to get loose. In vain. They bring his soul to th-verge. They let It down over the side. The winds howl. The sea opens Its frothing jaws to swallow. He has gone forever. And while the can vas cracked and the yards rattled and the ropes thumped, the sea took up the funeral dirge, playing with open diapason of midnight storm. "Because I have called, and ye refused; I have stretched out my hand and no man re garded; but ye have set at naught all my counsel, and would none of my re proof; I also will laugh at your calam ity; I will mock when your fear com eth." Now, lest any of you should make this mistake, I address you In the words of the Mediterranean sea-cantain: "What meanest thou, O sleeper? Arise, call upon thy God. if so be that God will think upon us. that we perish not:" If you have a God. you had better call upon him. Do you say. "I have no God?" Then you had better call upon your father's God. When your father was In trouble, who did he fly to? You heard him, in his old days, tell about rime terrible exposure in a snow-storm, at sea, or in battle, or among mid rjJr'nt garroters, and how he escaped. ance with God. There Is something In the worn pages of the Bible he used to read which makes you think your father had a God. In the old religious books lying around the house, there are passages marked with a lead pencil passages which make you thing your father "was not a godless man, but that, on that dark day when he lay In the back room dying, he was ready all ready. But perhaps your father was a bad man prayerless, and a blasphem er, and you never think"1 of - him. now without a shudder. He worshiped the world or his own appetites. Do not then, I beg of you, call upon your fath er's God. but call on your mother's God. I think she was good. You re member when your father came home drunk late on a cold night, how patient your mother was. You often heard her pray. She used to sit by the hour med itating, as though she were thinking of some good, warm place, where it never gets cold., ajid where the bread does not fail, and staggering steps never come. You remember her now, as she sat, in cap arid spectacles, reading her Bible Sunday afternoons. What good advice she used to give you! How black and terrible the hole In the ground looked to you when, with two ropes, they let her down to rest in the graveyard! Ah! I think from your looks that I am on the right track. Awake. O sleeper, and call upon thy mother's God. But tierhaos both your father and mother were depraved. Perhaps your cradle was rocked by sin and shame, and it is a wonder that from such a starting you have come to respectabil ity. Then don't tall upon the God of either of your parents. I beg of you. But you have children. You know God kindled those bright eyes, and rounded those healthy limbs, and set beating within their breast an immor tality. Perhaps in the belief that some how, it would be for the best, you have taught them to say an evening prayer, and when they kneel beside you, and fold their little hands, and look up, their faces all Innocence and love, you know xhat there is a God somewhere about In the room. I think I am on the right track at last. Awake, O sleeper, and call upon the God of thy children. May he set these little ones to pulling at thy heart until they charm thee to the same God to whom to-night they will say their little prayers! Many years ago, a man, leaving his family in Massachusetts, sailed from Boston to China, to trade there. On the coast of China, in the midst of a night of storm, was shipwrecked The adventurer .was washed up on the beach senseless all his money gone. He had to beg in the streets of Canton to keep from starving. For two years there was no communication between himself and family. They supposed him dead. He knew not but that his family was dead. He had gone out as a captain. He was too proud to come back as a private sailor. But after a while he choked down his pride and sailed for Boston. Arriving there, he took an evening train for the center of the state, where he had left his fam ily. Taking the stage from the depot, and riding a score of miles, he got home. He says that, going up In front of the cottage in the bright moonlight, the place looked to him like heaven. He rapped on the window and the af frighted servant let him in. He went to the room where his wife and child were sleeping. He did not dare to wake them for fear of the shoke. Bend ing over to kiss his child's cheek, a tear fell upon the wife's face, and she wakened, and he said, "Mary!" and she knew his voice, and there was an inde scribable scene of welcome, and Joy, and thanksgiving to God. To-day I know that many of you are sea-tossed, and driven by sin In a worse storm than that which cams down on the coast of China, and yet I pray God that you may, like the sailor, live to go home. In the house of many mansions your friends are waiting to meet you. They are wondering why you do not come. Escaped from the shipwrecks of. earth, may you at last go in! It will be a bright night a very bright night as you put your thumb on the latch of that door. Once In. you will find the old family faces sweeter than when you last saw them, and there It will be found that he who was your father's God, and your mother's God, and your children's God, Is your own most blessed Redeemer, to whom be glory and dominion throughout all ages, world without end. Amen. Scarcity of Medical Yilliana. Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, who one made some remarks in reference to a charge that in his writing's he drew all his villains from the clerical and legal professions, said: "I am afraid I shall have to square accounts by writing one more story, with a physician figuring in it. I have long been looking in vain for such a one to serve as a model. I thought I had found a very excellent villain at one time, but it turned out he was no physician at all, only a I mean not what we consider a practitioner of medicine. I will venture to propose a sentiment which, as I am not a work ing physician, need not include the proposer in its eulogy: The medical profession so full of good people that its own story tellers have to go outside of it to find their villains." LESSON VII.. AUGUST 18-TH8 NEW HOME DEUT. 6:3-15. Golden Text: "Thou Shalt Bless the Lord Thr God for the Good Land Which He Hath Given Thee" Dent. 8 : lO In Canaan. jjip Good M Ilk. So carefully are germs avoided in the dairies of Denmark that the celebrated butter of the country, much of which is sent to England, is washed when necessary in water that has been boiled. The butter is, however, rarely washed, but is first worked over by hand by girls who are scrupulously clean, and afterward filtered through clean gravel, is white in color when finished, and is artificially colored. It is very little salted when used at home, but more or less salt is added when it is sent as far as England. It is said to retain its fine quality when shipped better than any butter known. As an incentive to furnish only pure milk, the owners of the cows are under contract to notify the buyers at once if there is any sick ness in their herd. The milk is then bought from them and paid for at the usual price, but is thrown away. Phil adelphia Ledger. The progress of reform In New Torlc Is shown by the refusal of a man to accept a $7,500 office. Under the old regime it would not have been offered to a man who would refuse. Whoever lives a lie does it with a sworfl over his head. The first work a woman did for the devil she did with her" tongue. NTRODUCTORY: This section In cludes the history In Numbers, 21 to 26, and the whole of Deuteronomy. The events here record ed occurred in the year 1451 B. C. and near the close of the fortieth year of the exodus and a short time before the death of Moses. The Israelites were now encamped between Mount Moab and the River Jordan. The book of Dueteronomy consists chiefly of three discourses with Moses, with certain ap pendices. 3 "Hear therefore O Israel, and ob serve to do It; that It may be well with thee and that ye may Increase might ily (Genesis, 15:5; 22:17), as the Lord God of thy fathers hath promised thee in the land that floweth with milk and honey." 4 "Hear O Isreal: The Lord our God Is one Lord." Note the emphasis one God, only one. It would be a ter rible thing to live under the impres sion that there existed a plurality of deities, some having one dominion and others another. Jehovah fills the whole universe. His word is the highest. The One God has been revealed more truly through the teachings of His Son, Jesus Christ. The more we know of Him the better we can love an1 wor ship and trust Him." 5 "And thou (Deuteronomy, 10:12; Matthew, 22:C7) shalt love the Lord thy God (II. Kings, 23:23) with all thine heart and with all thy soul, and with all thy might." The specification Is in tended for every faculty that can pos sibly come into question heart, soul, might. 6 And these words which I com mand thee this day shall be in thine heart." This Is an invocation to learn the Scriptures and to commit the words to memory as well as their meaning. 6 "And thou shalt teach them dill. gently unto thy children and shall talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou llest down, and when thou risest up." The atmosphere of the home should be full of these truths. In every department of life the law of God should be the law of the soul. s "And thou shalt bind them for a sign upon thine hand (It was a literal and formal Interpretation of this com mand which led to the use of phylac teries upon the arm and upon the fore head); and they shall be as frontlets between thine eyes." See our lllustra tlons. 9 "And thou (Deuteronomy, 11:20) shalt write them upon the posts of thy house and on thy gates." 10 "And it shall be when the Lord God shall have (bring) brought thee Into the land which he sware (prom ised) unto thy fathers, to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob to give thee great and goodly cities (Joshua. 24:13; Psalms, 105:44) which thou buildest not." The Israelites were now about to change their mode of living, from tents to cities built of stone and wood. 11 "And houses full of all good things, which thou fllledst not, and wells digged, which thou dlggest not, vineyards and olive trees, which thou plantedst not; when thou shalt have eaten and be full." (Equivalent to "and thou shalt eat.") See Deuteronomy, 8:10-18. 12 "Then beware lest thou forget the Lord, which brought thee out of the land of Egypt, from the house of bond age." Note the word "beware" as used. BANKING IN ILLINOIS. Operations of the Torreni System of Guaranteeing ICeal Kstate Titles. Illinois Is a commonwealth of many small towns, In which, numerically, the private banking institutions pre dominate. Nor does the supposition that business men prefer to deal with incorporated banks seem to check the progress of private banking enterprise in that state. In 1890 there were 485 such institutions in operation; in 1894 there were no less than 500, exhibiting a ratio of increase which is not equaled by the growth of the nation al or the state banks. The following table gives the numerical position of the three classes of banks at two periods: 1890. 1895. &V-- No. of No. of xr.fc,v Bank3. Banks. National banks 196 218 State banks 90 131 Private banks 485 590 The field for the national banking system Is comparatively limited, owing to certain well known restrictions im posed upon the associations organizing under it. In the country districts the bankable collateral is largely composed of land securities, an asset discoun tenanced by the federal banking act. Here a cautious banker operating at his discretion, and comparatively un limited as to the nature of the securi ties in which he may deal, secures an opportunity for rendering an efficient service to the community. As affect ing the availability of such invest ments in Illinois, it is of interest to note that real estate security is about to be relieved of many of the disabling legal burdens which interfere with its easy transference. The legislature of Illinois recently passed an act provid ing for the introduction of what is gen erally known as the Torrens system Under this system titles to real estate are guaranteed bv the state, so that once the title is established the instil ment of proprietorship many be trans ferred with the facility of a negotiable note. Thus titles to real estate become bankable assets of greater effectiveness than that class of securities has ever enjoyed. The American Banker years ago urged the general introduction of the Torrens system for the particular reason that it turned a cumberstone security into a quick asset of unques tioned validity, and the results of the experiment now to be tried in Illinois will receive the closest attention of all who are Interested in freeing the material of credit from obsolete legal complexities. Makes the Weak Stek Hood's Sarsaparilla tones and stre. the digestive organs, creates an a, and lives a refreshing sleep. IrOood s Sarsaparir Is the one True Blood Purifier, i ,1 OJIIta the after-dinner r tlOOd S K1II9 family cathartic. . 1 ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FO THE BEST; 0JE FOR DyspeptIc,Delicate,Infirm AGED PERSQk JOHN CARLE & SONS, New Y Mnlartford Jificyc) Eeg-ant la Design Snprlor La "Workmanship Strong: and Easy Humdng I Hartfords arc the sort of b cycles most makers ask $100 fr Columblas are far super . to so-called " specials," for whit $125 or even $150 is asked. It is well to be posted upon th bicycle price situation. The great Columbia plant is wor. ing for the rider's leneljt, as usua Columbias,$10t BOSTON NIW YORK CHICAQO SAM PRANOISt . miovioimoi , BUFFALO i THm Columbia Ctaloa, a work J hiahaat art, toiling of and picturm' . All am naw iuiumuiHi ibu hhviv tt from any ColambiA Af ant, or U 1 POPE MFG. CO. Cncral Office ad Factories, . HARTFORD, Conn. W for two 2-cant atamps. The President m Traget. One of the most disgraceful features In our modern style of journalism is that the President of the United States, whose very station should command respect for him. is made a constant target for disrespect, writes Edward W. Bok in the Ladies' Home Journal. It makes not the slightest difference whether we admire or do not admire the man who occupies the Presidential chair. He is placed there by the ex pressed suffrage of the people, and when he is so placed and is the occu pant of the high office, he has a right to the respect of the people of the coun try over which he presides. But this is denied our President. The decent respect which we mete out to ordinary men is refused him. We excuse this by saying that he was not our choice, or that he holds the position by acci dent. No man elected to the office of President of the United States can be an accident. He is placed there because of his fitness for that office. And al though we may not agree always that he is as able as some other man. it is only pure justice that we give him the benefit of the doubt. EDUCATIONAL ACADEMY OF THE SflGRED HEf Tba cearaa of lnjtroi tion in t&ls Academy, eond by tba Religion of the Sacred Heart, embrac whole rantnt of cubjacta necea-Ary torocitttmer and roflned education. Propriety of deportmen aonai neatnee and the principles of morality a Ject of un. e-intf Attention. Extensile grroun ford tbe put U every facility for useful bodi j cie; their health ia an object c f oonatAnt fo.l. anl in flckne.n they are atienJed with matenut Tail term opens Tuesday, Sept. Si. For furth tlcular, adJre THE MPEKIt Aradrmj sarred Heart, nt. Joseph UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DA THE FIFTY-SECOND YEAR WILL C TUFSOAY. SEPT. 3d. 1895. full courier in 1'Iaialrs. abetter. Velenee.l Civil At: d Mechanical EiiartneerlnaT.Tno Preparatory and Commercial Cour. St. d Hall for boys under IS la unique in tie completer lta equipment. Catalog-ties tnt free on appllcat' Hit. Axn&cw Houusskt, c. s. O., Kotre Paine CICLtJT- LARCfcy.' CATALOCOt rCtC PHYLACTERIES ON THE FOREHEAD. The great era of prosperity in store for the Jews might cause them to forget God, so they are Invoked to beware. The history of the Jewish nation, its fall, and the scattering of the tribes will prove very instructive reading to young Christians. 13Thou shalt fear the Lord, thy God, and serve (Deuteronomy, 11:20) him and shalt (Psalms, 63:11; Isaiah, 65:16; Jeremiah, 5:27, 12:16) swear by His name." 14 "Ye shall not go after other gods (Deuteronomy, 8:9, 11:28; Jeremiah, 25:16) of the gods of the people (Deute ronomy, 13:7) which are round about you." 15 -For the Lord thy God Is a Jeal ous God among you' " (Deuteronomy, 7:4, 11:17). lest the anger of thy Lord thy God be kindled against thee, and destroy thee from ofC the face of the earth." Future lessons will more fully explain this text. A Cariosltr In Colds. "The general prevalence of slight colds," said a well-known lawyer at the Continental Hotel last evening, "re minds me of the sad case of an Inti mate friend of mine who suffers very much from annoying colds. His first wife was a robust woman, who had a wealth of fiery red hair, which, accord ing to his notion, must have kept him comfortably warm at nights. Be that as it may, when she died my friend married a dark-haired woman, and, strange to relate, from the very first night of the honeymoon he was afflicted with a pestering cold. He had a sus picion that the lack of that red hair accounted for his affliction, so, by way of a test, he sent his new wife to the seashore and, strange to say, he enjoyed immunity from the cold during her ab sence. The test nerve regulator known. ) cures nervous prostration, restor nervo-vital and sexual powers. Ii Vita IHne (Mercer's.) Sold by RL ardson Drug Co. and E. E. Bruce Co., Omaha, Neb., and all druggists. The best known combination to bu; no weak people. IMII Anrrmk 11 nk (Mercer's.) Sold bv Richar 6on Drug Co. and E. E. Bruce & C Omaha, Neb., and all druggists. PROFITABLE DAIRY WORK Can only be accomplished with the very of tools and . . applla WuhaDavU Cream I rator on the JJSj msmaam farmy01 sure of more I and bet butter, while !,X thesklmi milk Is aval- f v i5 uat)le fe( Farmers will make nor take to get a V Davis. N Illustrated J catalof mailed free Agents wa; DAVIS & BANZIN BLDQ. & HFQ. Cor. Randolph A Dctrborn Sts Chicago CHRISTIANITY. the Wherever the cross is. Christ Is. A little religion Is hard to keep. Whoever loves God, loves light, sin nlwavs feels the safest In dark. When God measures men the standard Is Christ. No life can be a failure when God directs it. Humility dies the moment It looks In the glass. Nothing pulls toward heaven like a. good example. The man who hates light, will run from a shadow. Goldsmith Wai Full of Chivalry. Poor "Goldy," as he was fondly nick named later in life, did not look much like a knight. Short or stature, with a homely face deeply scarred by the smallpox, awkward in his manners and movements, he would have made but a sorry figure in the lordly tourna ment or at a royal banquet. And yet he had within him not a little of the knightly spirit. Generous to a fault, daring even to foolhardiness, tender hearted, impulsive he was just the kind of a man to ride through the world seeking adventures, and risking his life in defense of the helpless and In nocent. Had he lived in the days of chivalry he would doubtless have been, In spite of hi ugliness and ungainll ness, s famous knight errant. Found Fetrlfld Flah. A prisoner on the stone-pile broke open a big limestone and rolled out a perfectly petrified fish at Portsmouth, Ohio, the other day. The specimen is complete, and is now at the mayor's office. It 13 said by experts to be a salmon. DR. i McGRE IS TUB ONLY SPKCIALISV WHO TREATS All PRIYATE DISEcl Weakness and , llorders ,- MEN ON i Erary cure guaran O years' aiperienc 8 yaars In i iu iti .. Hook Kre ) 14 th A Faraan A Oil HA, NEBj WEIL MWMi IllnrtratacJ catalog showing WEX ATJQEKS. BOCKfRILLS, HYDkIULIO AVHU JETTINU MACHINES Y, CM. 8kht Fku. liars been tested and mu mrrutM, Sioux City Engine & Iron Works, Successors to Pech Utg. Co., Manx City, Iowa. TBS Rawer.. nmu kii,.w,..nA 11 U Wast Eleventh Straee, KanaasC.tyJfi 7? T r 1 Cl I O P 1 Jon nr wjnonus i). Jl I U I KJ i J wathl nffton, J. C Successfully Prosecutes CI a ins. i LavtaPrlnclpal KWmla.r U.S.aba1oo Bum Li J jra a Uat war, 13 Adjudicating oIaIiaa. ally lac V, mm mi. tTiirioi If rc I'ai a1ucu?. Geo, Box 3146, rloc&eatar, The purest treasure mortal times afford Is spotless reputation; that away. Men are but glided loam or painted clay. i art -54 1 rl ll uesi KXA OctwhBrruD. Tawu tkxxi. tTa In time. Sold by druggists. "V