j .1 _ _ _ _ _ ; iiiiii IotDroyia llinisdll. ' ( ron the Tr y , N. 'V. , Tlixics. ) It. W. Edwards , of LanIngburgh , was prostrated by sunstroke during the war and it ha entailed on him peculiar and. , erous Consequenecs. At esent writIng - Ing Ir. E. is a prominezit officer of Post Lyon , Q. A. fl. , Cohoes , and a past aid- t de-cam o the Etaff of the commander- lfl-Chlef of Albany Co. In an interview 'With : i. reporter , he said : t "I yas Wounded and sent to the hospital - . pital at Winchester. They sent me to.- Ietber with others to Washington-a ' ride of about ioo miles. Having no room . in the box cars we were placed face up on the bottom of flat cars. The sun beat 'down upon our unprotected heads. ( ' When I 'reached Washington I WS in CflSfb1e and was unconscious for' ten ' I days while in the hospital. An abscess Jr gathepe in my ear and broke ; It has been gathering and brakingever since. rhe su1t of this 100 mile ride and sun- Etroke , was , heartdfsease , nervous prostration - tration , Insomnia and rheumatism ; a t Completely shattered system which gave The no rest night or day. As a last re- ctt1 : I took some P PIjJq and they 1Teped me to a wonuerful degree. My theumatlsm ! s gone , my heart failure , ( b'spepsla , and constipation are about cone and the abscess in my ear has 3topped discharging and my head feels us clear as a bell when before it felt as though it auld burst and my once shattered - tered nervous system Is now nearly ' Sound. Loolc at those fingers , " Mr. Ed- 'wards said , "do they look as if there was any rtheumatlsm there ? " He moved his fingers rapidly and freely and strode about the room like a young boy. 'A year ago those fingers were gnarled at the joInts and so stiff that I could not hold a pen. My knees would swell up and I could not straighten my leg out. . ! y joints would squeak when I moved. "I cannot begin to tell you , " said Mr. Edwards , as he drew a long breath , "what my reeling is at pres- ent. I think if you lifted ten years right off my life and left me prime and vigorous at forty-seven I could feel no better. I W1S an old man anU could only drag myself painthily about the house. Now I can walk off without any trouble. That in Jtself , " COntinucd Mr. Edwards , "would besuffi- 'cleat to give me cause for rejolclng but when you come to consider that I am no longer what YOU might call nervous an1 : that my heart Is apparently ieazly healthy and that I can sleep rights you xnay realize why I may appear to speak e in extravagant praise of Pink Pills. These pills quiet my nerves , talce that awful pressure from my head and at the same time enrich my blood. 'There seemed to be no circulation In mylower limbs a year ago , my legs being cold ana clammy at times. Now the circulation 'there Is as full and as brisk as at any other part of my body. I used to 'be 'so : nght-headed and dizzy from mynervous disorder that I frequently fell while crossing the floor of my house. Spring Is coming and I never felt better in my life , and I am looking forw.arl .toa.busy season of work. " I'iscaturlal Item. "This is about the time of 1he'year , " said Mrs. Watts to her neighbor , 'tliat the fishing fever stri1es my 'husband. If he can get out on the banks of some creek and catch two or thee1itt1c mud cats in the course of an afternoon 'he lie perfectly happy. " "So he is fond of fishing , then ? " "Fond of fishing ? \Vhy , that man is t perfect anglomaniac.-Texas Sift. Educate Your Dnuhters. At this season of the year 'parents have to decide upon and selectthe educational - . cational Institution which their 'ilaugh- ters are to attend for the coming'years. In this connection we desire ; to call attention - tention to the educational announce- inent in our advertising columns of the Academy of the Sacred Heart , St. , Joseph - seph , Mo. Their buildings and -grounds are attractive , locality healthful , teach- ng in all branches thorough , andterms reasonable. Parents fortunate to select this school for the education and trainIng - Ing of their daughters will , weare'-sure , be fully satisfied. Next session opens Sept. 3 , 18i5. For further information .address Mother Superior , Academy of 'the Sacred Heart , St. Josepb , Mo. Uianswcr'd. " \Vhv. " asked the philosopher , 'vhy is-it that a man. the noblest created object-why is it that a man should have such doubts of hisabilitv to win.a -woiiian s affection when be considers the success in that line of a popeyed , putld ing-shaped , pretzel-tailed pug dor ? " But the assembkd listeners answer- .ed him iiot.-Toledo Blade. Y'iIow'tone Petit. Words cannot convey even tim faintest ronception ot the grnndeur snd magnifi. .cenco of the Yellowstone National Park. - 2owhere CISO are there such sn ert vievs ; such abundance of finn' ' au game ; such nivrinds of wild fowl ; such deiglitful canin- such perfect weather. Hero are overlastin. springs : terraco- bui.ding lountains of scalding water , un- 'canny pos of steaming ciay ; themendous geysers ; mi2hty cataracts ; profound canyons - yens , primeval forests ; and-surpassing .ali e o in quiet lovo1ines-a limpid moun- tam lakeo lroad oxase and picturesque- beauty-of which the vor d , perhaps , does : not contain the counterrart. - ' A suistantial reduction has recent- ! 'been made in the cost of reac1iinthe 1-ark : CS ceii as in the tour through it. Full in- iormaion in our pam1ilot. send for .a 'copy. 3. Francis , ( . P. & T. A. J3urlinton onte , Omaha , Neb. Fashionable scandal traves ! faster than the annon-I all exiresS. .Arunawaymatch always causes ms.uy to kuu itii iiidknatiou. Hoiucse.kers. ; w'e ; desire to.direct your attention to the 6ult Ciast of Alal ama. Our motto : ff .ou ant'ei ; ate a ' ljan.e in location or for investment , vhvnotgetthe [ est hare . it , ' .a.ud in ordcr .to verify our statement -we are makint cctremey low rates to bomeseokers and investors that they may inake.a penouai investuation. For tar- ; . ticuini's and .ow rai road rates address The Unioi Land Co. , Mo. ile. A.a. , or la or T. S. C arL-.on , Northwestern Agent , Omaha , NeLr. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ f Often coVeS written with an object are the most objectionable of all. - EiVicrd .tab e , s&-ond'hanj. for Eft6 cheap. .Applv to or address , H. C. Axix. ' Thu S. l.th : St. . Omaha , eb. ' - - Harper's Jlond Table for July lath contains an article on "Hawthorne and " the sex-ks entitled : Ilis Books. in - "Stories .of .Ameriean Literature" by - 3ienriettn Christian Wright. "How : . . 3ack Lockett s'on his Spurs , " in the . same itsue , is a story of adventure in Bevolutionarv days. by G. T. } erris. - _ - ' -Other noteworthy featuresof this num- i ; _ ' . ber of the Round Table are the serials . by Kirk Munroe and Ellen Donas r1 ; : ; Deland and the artiale by John Den- ' - dricL Bangs. . a - Too mnzy die witii the expctatiou o. - cQntinUiD tue stri'e m the next wor.d. i ' . . - - - - - - - ; : - - : - j TALMAGE'S SERMON. 'THE UNPARDONABLE SIN" - LAST SUNDAY'S SUBJECT. "Alt nnncr of Sin Shall Be Forgiven Unto Men ; but the Il1tpkewy of the Ho'y Ghost Shall Not Be Forglvex , Unto Men"-Matthew 12 : 31-32. EW YORK , July 14 , 1895. In his sermon for to-day , Rev. Dr. Talmage , who is still In the West on his annual summer 3 tour , chose a subject which has been a fruitful theme of theological disputation - tion for centuries "The Un- 0 pruunauiu o i ii. The texts selectad were : "All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men ; but the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost ! liaIl not be forgiven unto men. And whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of man , It shall be forgiven him : but whosoever speak- eth against the Holy Ghost , It shall not be forgiven him , neither in this world , neIther In the world to come. " ( Matthew 12 : 31-32. ) "He found no place of repentance , though he sought It carefully with tears , " ( Heb. 12 : 17. ) As sometimes you gather the whole family around the evening stand to hear some book read , so now we gather -a great Christian family group-to study this text ; and now may one and the same lamp cast its glow n all the circle ! You see from the first passage that I read that there is a sin against the Holy Ghost for which a man is never par- doned. Once having committed It , he Is bound hand and foot for the dungeons - geons of despair. Sermons may b preached to him , songs may be sung to him , prayers may be offered in his behalf - -half ; but all to no purpose. He Is a captive for this world , and a captive for the world that is to come. Do you suppose that there is any one here w.bo has committed that sin ? All sins are against the Holy Ghost ; but my text Bpeaks of one especially. It is very clear -to my own mind that the sin against the Holy Ghost was the ascribing of the works of the Spirit to the agency of the devil in the time of the apostles. Indeed , the Bible distinctly tells us that. In other words , if a man had sight given to him , or if another was raised , from the dead , and someone standing there should say , "This man got his sight by Satanic power ; the Holy Spirit did not do this ; Beelzebub accomplished It ; " or , "This man raised from the dead was raised by Satanic Influence , " the man who said that dropped down under the curse of the text , and had corn- mitted the fatal sin against the Holy Ghost. Now , I do not think it is possible In this day to commit that sin. I think it was possible only in apostolic times. But it is a-very terrible thing ever to say anything against the Holy Ghost , and it is a marked fact that our race has been marvelously kept back from that profanity. You hear a man swear by the name of the Eternal God , and by the name of Jesus Christ , but you never heard a man swear by the name of the Holy Ghost. There are those here today - day who fear they are guilty of the unpardonable - pardonable sin. Have you such anxiety - iety ? Then I have to tell you positively that you have not committed that sin. because the very anxiety is a result of the movement of the gracious Spirit , and your anxiety is proof positive , as certainly as anything that can be demonstrated - onstrated in mathematics , that you have not committed the sin that I have been speaking of. I can look off upon this audience and reel that there Is salvation for all. It is not like when they put out with those life-boats from the "Loch Earn" for the "Ville dii Havre. " They knew that there was not room for l1 the passengers , but they were going to do as well as they could. But to-day we man the lifeboat - boat of the Gospel , and we cry out over the sea , "Room for all ! " Oh , that the Lord Jesus Christ would , this hou' , bring you all out of the flood of sin , and plant you on the deck of the glorious old Gospel craft ! But while I have said I do not think it is possible for us to commit the particular - ticular sin spoken of in the first text , I have by reason of the second text to 'call your attention to the fact that there -are sins which , though they may be : pordoned , are in some respects irrevocable - -able ; and you can find no place for repentance - -pentance , though you seek it carefully with tears. Esau had a birthright given him. In olden times it meant not only temporal but spiritual blessing. One day Esau took this birthright and -traded it off for somethIng to eat. Oh , the foil1 ! But let us not be too severe upon him , for some of us have corn- rnitted the same folly. After he had made the trade. he wanted to get It back. Just as though you to-morrow morning should take all your notes and 'bonds and government securities. and should go into a restaurant , and In a -fit of recklessness and hunger throw all those securities on the counter and ask for a plate of food , making that ex- -change. This was the one Esau made. He sold his birthright for a mess of pbttage , and he was very sorry about it afterward ; but "he found ro place for repentance , though he sought it carefully - fully with tears. " There is an Impression in almost every - ery man's mind that somewhere in the future there will be a chance where he can correct all his mistakes. Live as we may , If we only repent In time , God will forgive us , and then all will be as well as though we had never committed 5in. My discourse shall come In colli- ion with that theory I shall show you , my friends , as God will help me , that there is such a thing as unsuccessful re- . .ttance ; that there are things done vrong that always stay wrong , and for them you may seek some place of re- entanc , and seek it carefully. but iever find It. Belonging to this class of Irrevocable ( nistakes Is the folly of misspent youth. Ve may look back to our coliee days , Lnd think how we neglected chemistry , , r geology , or botany , or mathematics. Ve may be sorry about It all our days. an we ever get the discipline or the dvantage that we would have had had -attended to those duties in early Ite ? A man wakes up at forty years of l ge and finds that hifi youth has been 'asted , and he ztrlvcs to get back his any advantages. Doez he get thea 3 _ _ _ _ . ; _ _ _ - . - - ' , - . , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - back-the days of boyho&d , the days In college , the days under his father's roof ? "Oh , " he says , "if I could only get those times back again , how I would Improve them ! " My brother , -you will never get them back. They are gone , gone. You may be very sorry about It , and God may forgive , so that you may at last reach heaven ; but you will never get over some of the mishaps that have come to your soul as a result of your neglect of early duty. You may try to undo it ; you cannot undo It. When you had a boy's arms , and a boy's eyes , and a boy's heart you ought to have attended - ed to those things. A man says , at fifty years of age , "I do wish I could get over these habits of Inaolence. " When did you get them ? At twenty or twenty- five years of age. You cannot shake them oi. They will hang to you to the very day of your death. If a young man through a long course of evil conduct undermines his physical health , and then repents of It In after life. the Lord may pardon him ; but that does not bring back good physical condition. I said to a minister of the Gospel , one Sabbath , at the close of the service , "Where are you preaching now ? " "Oh , " he says , "I am not preaching. I am suffering from the physical effects of early sin. I can't preach now ; I am sick. " A consecrated man he now is , and he mourns bitterly over early sins ; but that does not arrest their bodily ef- fects. The simple fact Is that men and we- men often take twenty years of their life to build up Influences that require all the rest of their life to break down. Talk about a man beginning life-when he is twenty-one years of age ; talk about a woman beginning life when she is eighteen years of age ! Ab , no ! In many respects that Is the time they close life. In nine cases out of ten , all the questions of eternity are decided before that. Talk about a majrity of men getting their fortunes between thirty and forty ! The get or lose fortunes between - tween ten and twenty. When you tell me that a man is just beginning life , I tell you he is just closing it. The next fifty years will not be of as much importance - portance to him as the first twenty. Now , why do I say this ? Is it for the annoyance of those who have only a baleful retrospection ? You know that is not my way. : i : say it for the benefit of young men and women. I want them to understand that eternity is wrapped up in this hour ; that the sins of youth we never get over ; that you are now fashioning the mold In which your great future is to run ; that a minute , instead of being sixty seconds long , Is made up of everlasting ages. You see what dignity and importance this gives to the life of all our young folks. Why , in the light of this subject , life Is not something to be frittered away , not something to be smirked about , not something to be danced out , but something - thing to be weighed In the balances of eternity. Oh , young man ! the sin of yesterday , the sin of to-morrow , will reach over ten thousand years , ay , over the great and unending eternity. You may , after awhile , say , "I am very sor- ry. Now I have got to be thirty or forty years of age , and I do wish I had never committed those sins. " What does that amount to ? God may pardon you ; but undo those things you never will , you never can , In this same category of irrevocable mistakes I put all parental neglect. We begin the education of our children too late. By the time they get to be ten or fifteen we wake up to our mistakes and try to eradicate this bad habit , and change that ; but it is too late. That parent who omits , In the first ten years of the child's life , to make an eternal Impression for Christ , never makes It. The child will probably go on with all the disadvantages , which might have been avoided by parental faithfulness. Now you see what a mistake that lather - er or mother makes who puts off to late life adherence to Christ. Here is a man who at fifty years of age says to you , -"I must be a Christian ; " and he yields his heart to God , and sits in the place of prayer to-day a Christian. None of us can doubt it. He goes home and he says Here at fifty years of age I have given my heart to the Savior. Now I must establish a family altar. " What ? Where are your children now ? One in Boston ; another in Cincinnati ; another in New Orleans and you , my brother , at your fiftieth year going to establish your family altar ? Very well ; better late than never ; but alas , alas that you did not do it twenty-five years ago ! When I was In Chamouni , Switzerland - land , I saw in the window of one of the shops a picture that impressed my mind very much. It was a picture of an accident - cident that occurred on the side of one of the Swiss mountains. A company of travelers , with guides , went up some very steep places-places which but few travelers attempted to go up. They were , as all travelers are there , fastened together with cords at the waist , so that if one slipped the rope would hold him- the rope fastened to the others. Passing - ing along the most dangerous point one of the guides slipped and they all started - ed down the precipice ; but after awhile one more muscular than the rest stuck his heels into the Ice and stopped ; but the rope broke , and down , hundreds and thousands of feet , the rest went. And so I see whole families bound together by ties of affection , and in many cases walking on slippery places of worldliness - ness and sin. The father knows it and the mother knows it , and they are bound all together. After a while they begin to slide down steeper and steeper , and the father becomes alarmed , and he stops , planting his feet on the "Rock of 1 Ages. " He stops , but the rope breaks , and those who were once tied fast to him by moral and spiritual influences go over the precipice. Oh , there is such a thing as coming to Christ soon enough to save ourselves , but not soon enough to save others ! How many parents wake up In the latter part of life to find out the mistake - take ! The parent says , "I have been Lee -lenient , " or "I have been too severe En the discipline of my children. If I had the little ones around me again , 1ow different I would do ! " You will ever have them around again. The vork is done , the bent to the character S given , the eternity is decided. I say : his to young parents-those who are ; wenty-five or thirty or thirty-five years ) f age-have the family altar to-night. In this category of irrevocable misi akes I place , also , the unkindness done he dep1ted. When I was a boy my nether used to say to me sometimes , 'De Wltt , you will be sorry for that rhen I am gcie. " And I remember just tow she looked , sitting there , with cap Lnd spectacles , and the old Bible in her C ap : and she never said a truer- thing han that , for I have been sorry since. Vbile we have our friends with us , we ay unguarded things that wound the t I - - - - - - - - - " feelings of th'ose to whom we ought to give nothing but kindness. Perhaps the parent , without Inquiring into the matter - ter , boxes the child's ears. The little one , who has fallen In the street , comes In covered with dust , and , as though the first disaster were not enough , she whips it. After a while the child is taken , or the parent is taken , or the companion is taken and those who are left say , "Oh , if we could only get back those unkind words , those unkind deeds ; if we could only recall them ! " But you can not get them back. You might bow down over the grave of that loved one , and cry and cry'and cry-the white lips would make no answer. The stars shall be plucked out of their sockets , but these influences shall not be torn away. The world shall dig , but there ar'e some wrongs humor- tal. The moral of which is. take care of your friends while you have them ; spare the scolding ; be economical of the satire ; shut up in a dark cave , from which they shall never swarm forth , all the words that have a sting in them. You will wish you had some day-very soon you will-perhaps to-morrow. Oh , yes. While with a firm hand you administer - minister .parental discipline , also administer - minister It very gently , lest some day there be a little slab in the cemetery , and on it chiseled "Our Willie , " or "Our Charlie ; " and though you bow down prone In the grave and seek a place of repentance , and seek It carefully with tears , you can not find it. There is another sin that I place in the class of irrevocable mistakes , and that is lost opportunities of getting good. I never come to a Saturday night but I can see during that week that I have missed opportunities of getting good , I never come to my birthday but I can see that I have wasted many chances of getting better , I never go home on Sabbath from the discussion of a religious - ligious theme without feeling that I might have done it in a more successful wac How is it with you ? If you lake a certain number of bushels of wheat and scatter them over a certain number of acres of land , you expect a harvest in proportion to the amount of seed scat- tered. And I ask you now , have the sheaves of moral and spiritual harvest corresponded with the advantages given - en ? How has It been with you ? You may make resolutions for the future , but past opportunities are gone. In the long procession of future years all those past moments will march ; but the archangel's trumpet that wakes the dead will not wake for you one of those privileges. Esau has sold his birthright and there is not wealth enough In the treasure houses of heaven to buy it back again. What does that mean ? It means that if you are going to get any advantage - tage out of this Sabbath day , you will have to get it before the hand wheels around the clock to twelve to-night. It means that every moment of our life has two wings , and that it does not fly like a hawk , in circles , but in a straight line from eternity to eternity. It means that though other chariots may break down , or drag heavily , this one never drops the brake and never ceases to run. It means that while at other feasts the cup may be passed to us and we may reject it , and yet after awhile take it , the cup-bearers to this feast never give us but one chance at the chalice , and , rejecting that , we shall "find no place for repentance , though we seek it carefully with tears. " I stand before those who have a gte- rious birthright. Esau's was not so rich as yours. Sell It once and you sell it forever. I remember the story of the lad on the "Arctic" some years ago-the lad Stewart Holland. A vessel crashed Into the "Arctic" in the time of a fog , and it was found that ti-ic ship must go down. Some of the passengers got off In the life boats , some got off in rafts ; but three hundred went to the bottom. During all those hours of calamity Stew'art Holland stood at the signal gun and it sounded across the sea , boom ! boom ! The helmsman forsook his place , the engineer was goneand some fainted and some prayed and some blasphemed , and the powder was gone and they could no more set of ! the signal gun. The lad broke In the magazine and brought out more powder. and again the gun boomed over the sea. Oh , my friends , tossed on the rough seas of life , some have taken the warning , have gone off in the lifeboat , and they are safe ; but others are not making any attempt to escape. So I stand at this signal gun of the gospel , sounding the alarm , Beware ! beware ! "Now is the accepted time ; now is the day of salva- tion. " Hear it that your soul may live ! HER FIRST TELEGRAM. Mamle Was Ready to Put on Crape Before - fore It Was Opened. "What Is it , Mamie ? " "It's a boy , mum , with a telegraft , " "A telegram ! Oh , asIc him if James is killed ! " "He says he don't know , 'mum. " "Ask him what he does know about it. " "He says all he knows about It is that. it's marked 'collect , ' and he wants his money. " "Oh , dear ! Oh , dear ! What shall I do ? Here , Mamie , here's the purse , Oh , my poor James ! I just knew something - thing would happen to hini before he went away this morning. Will they bring him home in an ambulance , Mamie ? " "I s'pose so , mum. Maybe you'd better - ter reid the telegraft , " "I can't ; I can't. ' Oh , it 'serves me right for not kissing him but three times when he left. And we've been narried such a short time , too ! " "Wlfy don't you open the telegraft. num ? " "Well , I suppose I must , but , oh , I mn't tell you how I dread it ! " Reads telegram : "Will bring friend iome to dinner. James. " "The heartless beast-New ! York 1orning Journal. ODD FACTS ARE THESE. It is estimated that the people of Eng- and spend $750,000 a day in moving. The number of draught dogs In Bel- ; ium Is probably not less than 50,000. About 500 acres have been planted to rapes in the vicinity of Mattewan. It is estimated that the United States ias fully 2,000 separate railway compa- lies. lies.A A whale , wnen struck by a harpoon , an not swim faster than nine miles an iour. The sting of the black scorpion is riuch more to be dreaded than that of he gray. ' I - - . . . . -4 { . I . J . - TTT \ . - - . - - - - - : = - Highest of all in Leavening Powcr.-Latest U. S. Gov't Report ya1 T 0 ABSOLUTELY PURE _ _ A. Feeling Felice's Sorrow. Cincinnati Tribune : A pathetic cat stbry comes from one of the down river suberbs. Little Pearlie Keich , the daughter of Mr. Enos Keich , has a large pet cat which has slept for many months in a basket by her. A weelc ago the child was taken by her mother to Nebraska. They left in the morn- inz' before the cat was up , and Pearl's little night gown was left in a white heap on the floor. When the cat first missed the child it. went to the little gown and laid itself down there and has refused to leave it , save at. short intervals , ever since. The other members - bers of the family have not had the heart to take the garment away from the disconsolate pet. Skinny Sufferers Saved. Tobacco useis as a rule are away telow nor- inal weight because tobacco destroys digestion and causes nerve irritation that saps brain pow. erandvitality. You can get a quick , guaraniced relief by the use of No'To-liuc , and then it don't like your freedom and improved physIcal condition 3 OU Can learn the use of tobacco over again , just like the first time No-To-Bac sold under guarantee to cure by Drugists every. where. Book tree. Audress Sterling Itenieay Co. , New York City or Chicago. A FrogrssIve Princess. Mrs. 'yeldon , the wife of Mr. Frank Weldon of the editorial staff of the Atlanta - lanta Constitution , is in correspondence with the princess Nazie of Cairo , Egypt , with a view to securing an exhibit of the work of the women of Egypt in the woman's exhibit at the Cotton States and International exposition. The Princess Nazie , though a Mo : em , has abandoned the veil and enjoys more freedom than most Mohammedan women. She is regarded as the most enlightened and progressive woman in Egypt and has many friends and cor' respondents in America. Wlicii Traveling , Whether on pleasure bent , or business , take on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs , as it acts most pleasantly and effectually on the kidneys , liver and bowels , preventing fevers , headaches and other forms of sickness. For sale in SOc and $1 bottles by all the leading druggists. Manufactured by the Call- fornia Fig Syrup Co. , only. Catherine II. was a handsome woman In early life , but dissipation and vice soon destroyed every trace of her good looks ; she became very fleshy and coarse in appearance. There is no hurde too high for the woman with fashionable aspirations. The day is always too short for the man who loves his work. CONDUCTOR E. D. LOOMIS , DetroitMich. , says : "The effect of Hall's Catarrh Cure is wonderful. " Write him about it. Sold by Druggists , 3c. The Soudan gives the world most of the ostrich feathers worn. We think l'iso's Cure for Consumption is the only medicine for Couehs.-Jsxxic PINcKAIw , Springfield , lii. , Oct. 1 , lStl-I. The Leeward islands are now exporting large quantities of preserved fruit juice. "Hanson's Magic Corn Salvo. " Warranted to cure or znoiiey retunded. Ask yo.ir drugght for It. i'i-ice 15 ceit. The more the church mixes with the world the less it can dote save sinners Educational. Attention of the reader Is called to the announcement of Notre Dame University - versity in another column of this paper. This noted institution of learning enters - ters upon its fifty-second year with the next session , commencing Sept. , 1S95. Parents and guardians contemplating sending their boys and young men away from home to school would do well to write for particulars to the Ini- versity of Notre Dame , Indiana , before making arrangements for their education - . tion elsewhere. Nowhere in this broad land are there to be found better facilIties - . Ities for cultivating the mind and heart than are offered at Notre Dame Uni- versity. Many a girl who takes "tho first man who offers" lives to repent the act. Old Rip \Tan Winkle went up into the Catskill mountains to take a little nap of twenty years or so , and when he wakened , he found that the "cruel war was over , " the monthly magazines had "fought it over" the second time and "blown up" all the officers that had participated in it. This much is history , and it is also an his. . toricalfact that , it took the same length of time , for Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery - covery to become the most celebrated , as it is the most effective , Liver , Blood and Lung Remedy ofthe age. In purifying the blood and in all manner of pimples , blotches , eruptions , and other skin and scalp diseases , scrofulous sores and swell- jugs , and kindred ailments , the "Golden Medical Discovery" manifests the most positive curative properties. It SVaii All lie Could Do. Washington Star : "Mr. Lively , " said the managing editor. "we'd like to have you draw something comic. " "Yes , sir. " "Without making reference to the new woman. " . ' ' \-yes , sir. " ± 1 "Or the bicycle. " The artist turned away in silent tie- jection. in a few minutes hereturned , and laid a sheet of paper on the desk. "Have you done it. so soon ? " , "It didn't take mc long to do all I could under the circumstances. " "What is it ? " "I've drawn up my resignation. " Make Your Own BLtter On receipt of 30 cents in U. S. tnm , I ' will send to any address one package 5te- ' ketee's Dry Bitters. One package makes :4 : one gallon be4 tonic known. Cures stoin- ach , kidney diseases , and is a great appetizer - tizer and blood purifier. Just the medicine needed for spring and summer. 23c. at your drug store. Address Oso. 0. Sm- EETEZ , Grand Rapids. Mich. The duchess of Marlborough had very marked features that indicated , In no small degree , that strength of character which madeher a power in English poll- tlos. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ JITS-AllFitsstopped rreely Pr.ElIne's Crei 5. L 2'.erve Restorer. 14o Fitsalter thu 1jrstlay's ue. 1arve1ous cures. Treatise an'I trIaI both. ' fre.'t , 1It caics. Send to Dr. KIIne,93i .rthSt.,1'b1Ia.,1a. ' Golden Days advises , If at the side ot a sloping road on a muddy day , pedal only with the foot on the gutter side. It prevents side slip. VINTER W'IIEAT- RUSIIELS I'EI ACRE ! Did you ever hear of that ? Well there are thousands of farmers 'vho think they will reach this yield with Salzer'H new hardy Red Cross Wheat. Rye 60 bushels per acre ! Crimson Clover at $3.60 per bushel. Lots and lots of grass - and clover for fall seeding. Cut this out and send to John A. Salzer Seed en. , La Crosse , Wis. , for fall catalogue anti sample of above wheat free. ( WT.N.U. ) The Bermudas export enormous quantities - ties of onions and 1113' bulbs. If the Baby Is Cutting Teeth. Re sure and that old and wcIi-trled remedy , MRS. % ViSsLow's 500r11150 STItUF for Chlldrcn Teething. When love has the power it wilt always - ways help. The ujore one uses I'rIer" Ginier 'mule the more Its god qualitIes re rvCaIed In ifis : eIliig colds , IndIgestLAI , pains and every ilid ot wciii s. Greece has 4iO,000 ) women over 2t. years. of age. SValklng vouId often be a jleniirn were It not for theco as. 'I'leso iets * ro t'ally ic- moved with liliulercorus. 15t.aLdruggbts. A new bonnet has been known to weaken , friendship letween : women. EDUCATIONAL. ) IGflDEIMY ontm Sf1GRED HEtIRT 'Ihe cour'e of Instruvtl.rn In tIi Acui1eny , conrIucteI by the IIeIlg1uu-ot the Sitc,041 heart , cxbraces the wI1e range ol bubjeets neces'ary t'tortItuetiii ail ieflned education. I'ropi-Iety of dcii. , : tien. per- sora1 rOiIneS and the pririeIpu ! of niurallty ate oh- jectot uiie-t-irig attenhfon. Exten-lvo grounL. at- bid t.Jie puIhi every facility or usetul bodl.y cer- die ; their health 1an ohJe't ct cor-.tant iollelt ido , . n I in 'lcknes they are atIciIe.I with inatcirial care. } .aiI terlfl opells Tuesday , 5eIt. 1d For gtirthicr par. tlctiars , athlres T11k SU1'E1tIOi , AC8dlll3' icretI heart , t. JoNrh , Mo. UNIVERSITY OF NOIRE DAMEI THE FIFTY-SECOND YEAR V/ILL OPEN TUESDAY. SEPT. 3d , 1895. Full conriesin Cla'oIcs Lct tpr"clccp. Cl-i'll at d McIitn1cnI Eiigl iu''rJ llg.T1iirorgii i'epr.ttory ard Cornnicrclal CourseSt. . Lla'i'i Ihull forboys Ufller 13 Is unique fntlieconipctcni'.sot : its equip iient. Cata1OClle , eIit ije 'iit aIp1I'lItl- to hEy. AMREW Moitsisav , ' . S. t. , Notru DalLc. nd. - , I EWS'98 % LYE - I POWDE2D l7D PEZiiD - ( PTENTsn ) The : tronest and puret Lye - made. UnIIIe other Lye , It being _ _ _ a Sno powder and packed in a can _ _ _ with removable Ild , the contents are nlway ready for use. WIU makothebestperfumed Hard Soap t in 20 mInutes vithout boUini. It Ia the besiforcicansing waste pipes , disinfecting sinks , closets. washn bottles , paints , trees , etc. . _ . _ . PENNA. SALT MPG CO. Ccii. Agents. , Phila. . Pa. IAKI.N I1TERNALLY I AND tbe.ris7o.\ : a E 0 p Cureyou. Send I l LOCA ! inator. Ca. SYE'S SURE CUiE CO. , IT CLXTGN CHC3. Eold by alt dugg.ts. HAIR BALSAM C1enc , and bentifle , the tuir. i'roziiote , a 1tzxxriir.t Never Falls to itestore Gray Hair to Its Youthful CcIor. Cure , scalp di.lae5 & hair I cliiag. si Wc.and $ L/iat Dniruu Patents1 Trade = Marks Examination and Adrce as to Patenuthihlty of Fnventi"ti. Send for ' 1nventor' ( Juide , or How to Get i'atent. " PLT2IZ 0'F.t3LL , 'LZIiTC1T , 1. C. 1' . - . IJ. , Oziialia--30 , \ hen answering advertisements klndiy mention tills paper. The P1 Lorillard Company has been for many years the largest manufacturer of tobacco in the World-Wby ? Chew and the reason why will be as clear to you as the noonday sun. IT'S MUCH THE BEST.