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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1895-09-25, Page 6Ar, R : k[et*rttb No Other Medicine SO THOROUGH AS AYE RS parilla Statement of a Well Known Doctor vuedlIaectiettlIes ever sd,anhave hemal, o thorough hi Us action, and effects so many ermanent cures as Ayer's Sarsaparilla."— Dr. II. F. Menefee, Augusta, Me. yer's . Sarsaparilla ?Adrnitted at the World's �a ' r .Leer's Piilsfor liver and bowels. The: H!fron News-Recora v $1.25 a Year—$i.(10iu Advance WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25th. 1805. Useful Hints. RASPBERRY. SHERBERT.—TWO quarts of raspberries, one cup of sugar, one pint and a half of water, the juice of a large lemon, one tablespoonful of gela- tin. Mush the berries and sugar to- gether and let them stand tivo hours. Soak the gelatin in cold water to coyer. Add one pint of water to the berries and strain. Dissolve the gelatin in half the water, add this to the strain- ed mixture, and freeze. Glycerine, with a few drops of car- bolic acid added, makes a good lotion for slight cuts and abrasions of the skin. If a fishbone becomes Lodged in the throat, it can generally be removed by swallowing a raw egg at once. One of the very best ways to treat a severe case of sunburn is to bathe the face constantly for fifteen or twenty minutes with soft water as hot as it can be borne. This treatment takes out the redness and reproves the sone-, and the skin returns to its normal state much sooner than if left alone. °After bathing in this way, apply a pure cold cream that contains nothing that will irritate the skin. In case of swallowing poisons acci- dently, the first step is to secure vom- iting. A mustard emetic is usually the most efficacious ; a heaping teaspoon- ful of the ordinary ground mustard mixed in half a cupful of lukewarm water is about the right quantity. If mustard fails to act, try a teaspoonful of powdered alum in a tablespoonful of water. PEACH SAUCE. -Beat a quarter of a pound of butter to a cream, and add gradually a half enp of dowered sugar ; beat until very, very light. Mash or press two large mellow peaches through a colander, add a little at a tirne to the butter and sugar, beating all the while. When very light turn into a dish and stand in the refrigerator to harden. Ayer's Sarsaparilla is not a secret preparation. Any physician may have the formula on application. The se- cret of its success as a medicine lies in its extraordinary power to cleanse the blood of impurities and cure the most deepseated cases of blood-idsease. 25 OENrS VS. KIDNEY TROUBDE For 2 years I was dosed, pilled, and plastered for weak -hack, scalding urine and constipation, without benefit. One bok of Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills relieved, 3 boxes cured. R. J. Smith, Toronto. The methods taken to obtain ad- yertising witiout paying for it are "too numerous to mention." One of the Latest is the giending out of a half -col- umn reader by theattorneys of the DeLaval Separator Company, announc- ing the successful termination of some infringement litigation, which they fondly hope to have published broad- cast. RALtEP IN Six Honns.—Distressing Kidney and Bladder diseases relieved in six hours by the •' NNw GaEAT SOUTH AMEAIOAN KIDNEY CURE." Tl118 Dew' remedy is a great emprise and delight to phyeleiana on account of its exceeding promptness in relieving pain in the bladder, Jcidneye, back and every part of the urinary passages in male or female, It relieves retention of water and pain In paseing 1t almost 1m - mediately. If yen want quick relief and cure this 1f our remedy. Sold by Watts dtCo. Druggists. Over 20,000 persons are killed ev; ry year by snake bites in India, so that the news of the discovery of an anti- dote for the poison of all stakes will prove very welcome to residents there. Professor Fraser, of Edinburgh, is the discoverer of the stuff which he calls antivenine. Tired women need to have their blood purified and enriched by Ilood',s Sarsaparilla. It will give them strength and health. 1 WITH INVALIDS. Yes 1 with invalids the appetite is capricious and needs coaxing, that is just the reason they improve so rapidly under Scott's Tltitilsion, which is as palatable as cream. MITA /RAM new: Pte IN 10 TO 60 'MrNVTEB.— One chert puff of the 'breath tbrengh the Dlowre supplied with esch bottle of Dr.Agnew's Catarrhal Pow- der, diffuses thio Powder aver the outface of the nasal. passages, Painless and delightful to nee, it re- lict/id ;nsCIntly, and pper1nwent y mires, Catarrh way rever,ttdide Iieadaahe, Sore Throat Tomlin' and Deafness. 60loents. At Watts & Co'.I A DAT WIT 81%40 REV.. Oft, TALM-AGE PRgSRNTS FIVE LIVING'..PlGT1,1R.t„$. Stephan baling Into Heaves -'Stephen #400ldrrtr at Chrrmt titephelt ,fltonedlr. Stephen is $14 laying 1Heue—Stephen Satt4pees. Picturesque ilerepon. New York, Sept. 15.—In his sermon Cor today Rev. Dr. Talmage has oho - sea a theme as picturesque ereit is splritµally • inspiring. lie groups his discourse into "Five Pictures." The text selected was, 'Behold, I see the heavens opened"—Acts vii, 66-60. Stephen had been preaching a rous- ing sermon, and the people could not steed it. They resolved to do as men sometimes would like to do in this day, if they dared, with some plain preacher of righteousnesse-kill him. The only way to silence this man was to knock the bre th out of him. So they rushed Stephen Out of the gates of the city, and with curse and whoop and bellow they brought him to the cliff, as was the custom when they wanted to take away the life"by ston- ing. Having brought. hlm to the edge of the cliff, they pushed him off. After he had fallen they Dame and looked down, and seeing that' he was not yet dead they began to drop atones upon him, stone after stone. Amid this hor- rible rain of missies Stephen clamberer up on his knees and folds 141s hands, while the blood drips from his tem- ples, and then, looking up, he makes two prayers, one for himself and one for his murderers. "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit," that wan for himself. "Lord, lay not this sin to their charge," that was for his murderers. Then, from pain and iose of blood he swooned away and fell asleep. I want to show you toe day five pic- tures—Stephen gazing •into heaven, Stephen looking at Christ, Stephen stoned, Stephen in his dying prayer, Stephen asleep, First look at Stephen gazing into heaven. Before you take a leap you want to know where you are going to land. Before you climb a ladder you want to know to what point the, lad- der reaches. And it was was right than, Stephen, within a few moments of+ heaven, should be gazing into it. We would all do well to be found in the same posture. There is enough in heaven to keep us gazing. A man of large wealth may have statuary in the hall, and paintings in the sitting room and works of art in all parts of the house, but he has the chief pictures in the art gallery, and there hour after hour -you walk with catalogue and glass and .ever increasing admiration. Well, heaven is the gallery where God has gathered the chief treasures of his realm. The whole universe is his pal- ace. In this lower room where we stop there are many adornments, tesselta- ted floor of amethyst, and on the wind- ing cloud stairs are stretched out can- vases on which commingle azure and purple and saffron and gold. But Leaven is the gallery in which the chief glories are gathered. There are the brightest robes. There are the richest crowns. There are the highest exhilarations. St. John says of it, "The kings of the earth shall br,%ng their honor and glory into it." And I see the processiona.forming, and in the line come all empires, and the stars spring up into an arch for the hosts to march under. They keep step to the sound of earthquake and the pitch of the avalanche from the moun- tains, and the flag they bear is the flame of a consuming world, and all heaven turns out with harps • and trumpets and myriad voiced acclama- tion of angelic dominions to welcome them in, and so the kings of the•earth bring their honor and gloily into it. Do you wonder that good people often stand, like Stephen, looking into heav- en? We have many -friends there. There 1s not a man here so Isolated in life but there 1s some one in heaven with whom he once shook hands. As a man gets older, the number of his celestial acquaintances very rapidly multiplies. We have not had one glimpse of them since the night we kissed them goodby and they went away, but still we stand gazing at heaven. As when some of our friends go across the sea we stand on the dock or on the steam tug and watch them, and after awhile the hulk of the vessel disappears, and then there is only a patch of sail on the sky, and soon that is gone, and they are all out of sight, and yet we stand looking in the same direction, so when our friends go away from us into the future world we keep looking down through the Narrows and gazing and gazing as though we expected that they would come out and stand on some cloud and give us one glimpse of their bliss- ful and transfigured faces. While you long to join their com- panionship, and the years and the days go with such tedium that they break your heart, and the vipers of pain and sorrow and bereavement keep knawing at your vitals, you will stand, like Stephen, gazing into heaven. You wonder if they have changed since you saw them last. You wonder if they would recognize your face, tow, so changed has It been with trouble. You wonder if, amid the myriad delights they have, they care as much for yoe as they used to when they gave you a helping hand and put their shoulders under your burdens. You \wonder if they look any older, and sometimes In the evening tide, when the house le all quiet, you wonder if you should call them by their first name if they 'would not answer, and perhaps some- times you do make the experiment, and when no one but God and your, self are there. you distinctly call their Pamela and listen and sit gazing into beaver'. Pass on now and see Stephen looking vpan Christ. My text says he saw the Son of Man at the right hand of God. aunt blots Christ looked in this world, Inti how he looks in heaven, we can; not say. The palntets of the different ages have tried to imagine the feat - urea of Christ and put them upon can- vas, ,but we will have to waft until with our own eyes we see him and with our own ears we can hear him. And ydt there le a Way Of seeing, him and hearing him new. I hieVe be tell you that unless ybu dee and hear Christ bn earth, you will never see and hdar him in heaven. Loki There he Rei Behold the Lamb of 0041 Can you not see hint Then pray to Glad to take the .sealer off 'veer ere,Leek," 003 'Vitr,•ttr' tc , leak that way. Iii#sI %'O fie Routes down to yob this day- ,,eonites do'Nntp the bllndeet, to the dearest mqu1, say„ in , ",l,eolt unto Ow, Ye :ends : Of the earth ami be ye hawed, for az24 Gad, and there Is none else," Preelarnation of universal eman,otpation fpr alt slavea. Tell me, Ye who know most of . the World's history, what other king ever asked the abandoned end the forlorn. and the wretched, and the fettel4st to come and sit beside him? Oh, Won- derful invitation! You can take it to- day and stand at the head of the dark- est alirty 1n all this eity and say: "Comet Clothes for your rage, salve for your sores, a throne for your eternal reign- ing," A Christ that talks like that and acts like that and pardons like that— do you wonder that Stephen stood look- ing at him? I hope to spend eternity doing the same thing. I must sec I must look upon that face once cloud- ed with my sin, but now radiant with my pardon. I want to touch that han.1 that knocked off my shackles. I want to hear the voice that pronounced my deliverance. Behold him, little chil- dren, for if you live to three score years and ten you will see none so fair. Behold him, ye aged ones, for he only can shine through the dimness of your failing eyesight. Behold him, earth. Behold hlm, heaven. What a moment when all the nations of the saved shall rather around Christ, all faces that way, all thrones that way, gazing on Jesus! His worth If all the nations knew Sure the whole earth would love him too 1 pass on now and look at Stephen stoned. The world has always wantea to get Tid of good men. Their very life is an assault upon wickedness. Out with Stephen through the gates of the city. Down with him over the precipices. Let every man come up and drop a stone upon his head: But these men did not so much kill Stephen al, they killed themselves. Every stone rebounded upon them. While these murderers are transfixed by the scorn of all good men Stephen lives in the admiration of al Christendom. Stephen stoned. but Stephen alive. So all good men must be pelted. "All who will live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer persecution." It Is no eulogy of a man to say that everybody likes him. Show me anyone who is doing all his duty to state or church, and I will show you scores of men who utterly abhor him. If all men speak well of you, it Is because you are either a Iaggard or a dolt. If a steamer makes rapid pro- gress through the waves, the water will boil and foam all around 1t. Brave soldiers of Jesus Christ will hear the carbines click. When I ,see a man with a voice and money and influence all on the right side, and some caricae ture him. and some sneer at him, and some denounce him, and men who pre- tend to be actuated by right motives conspire to cripple him, to cast him out, to destroy him, I say, "Stephen stoned." When I see a man in some great moral or religious reform battle against grogshops, exposing wic;cecness in high places, by active means trying to purify the church and better the world's estate, and I find that the newspapers anothematize him, and hien, even good men, oppose him and denounce him, because, though he does good, he does not do it in their way, I say, "Stephen stoned." But you no. tice, my friends, that while they as- saulted Stephen they did not succeed really in killing him. You may assault a good man, but you cannot kill him. On the day of his death, Stephen spoke before a few people in the sanhedrin; this Sabbath morning he addresses all Christendom. PauI the apostle stood on Mars hill addressing a handful of philosophers who knew not so much ab .ut science as a modern schoolgirl. To -day he talks to all the millions of Christendom about the wonders of jus- tification and the glories of resurrec- tion. John Wesley was howled down by the mob to whom he preached, and they threw bricks at him, and they denounced him, and they jostled him and they spat upon him, and yet to- day, in all lands, he 1s admitted to be the great father of Methodism. Booth's bullet vacated the presidential chair, but from that spot of coagulated blood on the floor in the box of Ford's theater there sprang up the new life of a na- tion. Stephen stoned, but Stephen alive. Pass on now and see Stephen in his dying prayer. His first thought was not how the stones hurt his head nor what would become of his body. His first thought was about his spirit. "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." The murgerer standing on the trapdoor, the ,black cap being drawn over lila head before the execution, may grim- ace about tiee future,but you and I have no shame in confessing some anxiety about where we are going to come out, You are not all body. There le within you a soul. I see it gleam from your eyes to -day and I see it Irradiat- ing your countenance. Sometimes I am abashed before an audience, not be- eause I come under your physical eye- sight, but because I realize the truth that I stand before so many Immortal spirits. a The probability is that your body will at last find a sepulcher in some of the cemeteries that surround this city. There is no. doubt but that your obsequies veil be decent and re- spectful, and you will be able to p11 - low your head under the maple, or the Norway spruce, or the cypress, or the blossoming fir, but this spirit about which Stephen prayed, what direction will that take? What guide will es- cort it? What gate will open to re- ceive it? What cloud will be cleft for its pathway? After it has got be- yond the light of our sun will there- ue torches lighted for it the rest of the way Will the soul have to travel through long deserts before It reaches the good land? If we should lose our pathway, will there be a castle at. whose gate we ruay ask the way to the city? Oh, this mysterious spirit within us? It has two wings, but it is in a cage now. tt is locked fast to keep it, but let the debt of this cagb open the least and that soul Is off. Eagle's wing could nos catch it. The lightnings are not swift enough to pine up with it. When the soul leaves the body, It takes 00 world: at a bound. And have I no anxiety #brjout it? nave ,areU s1q, x►xtety al?9til tt'? X44 net Perp 'w1 at yeti do Leith body when ,txw Sot41 le.gone Or whet*: Yea WW 1'S in oretnatio84 or inbuilt Oen,- I s alt sleep just" ae well le wrapping of sacieclot}t as in eattn line with eagle's° docent, .13113 >nty i ?ole be fore I close this silsenerse I wile An out where it will land. 'Vault •God re the intimation of my text, that. whe we. die Jeans takes us, That answe all questions for . me, , What thong11 there were massive bars between her and -the City oe Light, Jesus ceuld re move them. What though there wer great Sgharas of darkness, Jesus cold !Hume thein. What though I get wear en the way, Christ could lift me on hi omnipotent shoulder. What thoug there were chasms to cross, his han could transport me. Then let Stephen prayer be my dying litany, "Lord Jesu re$21ve my spirit." • It may be in tha hour we will be too feeble to say long prayer. It may be in that hoU we will not be able to say the Lord' Prayer, for it has seven petitions. Per kepis we may be too feeble even 't say the infant 'prayer our mother taught us, which John e)uincy Adams 70 years of age, said every night. when the put his head upon his pillow: Now I lay me down to sleep, I pray the Lord my soul to keep. Wo may be to feeble ' to employ either of these familiar forms, but this prayer of Stephen is so short, is so ooncise, is so earnest, is so compre- hensive, we surely will be able to say that. "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." Oh, if that prayer is • answered, how sweet will it be to die! Th1s world is clever enough to us. Perhaps It has treated us a great deal better than we deserved to be treated, but if on the flying pillow there Shall br>alc the Lght of that better world we shall have no more regret than about leaving a small, dark, •damp house for one large, beautiful and capactous. That dying minister en Philadelphia some years ago beautifully depicted it when in the !r'l;t moment hethrew up his hands teed cried out; "I move into the light!" P,hss on no*, and I will show you one more picture, and that is Stephen asleep. With a pathos and simplicity peculiar to the Scriptures the text says of Stephen, "He fell asleep." "Oh,"' you say, "what a place that was to sleep! A hard rock under him, stones tailing down upon him, the blood streaming, the mob howling, What a place it was to sleep!" And yet my text tallies that symbol of slumber to describe his departure, so sweet was It, so contented was !t,• So peaceful was it. Stephen had Iived a very laborious life. His chief work had been to care tor- the poor. How many loaves of bread he had distributed, how many bare feet he had sandaled, how many cots of sickness and distress he had blessed with ministries of kindness and love, I do not know. Yet from the way he lived, and the way he preache.i, and the way he died, I know he was a la - bur ieus Christian. But that is all over now. He',had pressed the cup to the last fainting lip. He has taken the last insult from his enemies. The last stone to whose crushing weight he is susceptible has been hurled. Ste- phen is dead! The disciples come! They take him up! They wash away the blood from the wounds, They straight- en out .the bruised limbs. They brush back the tangled hair from the Prow, and then they pass around to look ujs-1 on the calm countenance of him who had lived for the poor, and led for the truth. Stephen asleep! I have seen the sea driven with the hurricane till the tangled faom caught in the rigging, and wave rising above wave seemed as 1f about to storm the heavens, and then I have seen the tempest drop, and the waves crouch and everything become smooth and burnished as though a camping place for the glories of heaven. So have I seen a man, coming down at last to an Infinite calm, In which there was a hushasleep. of heaven's lullaby. Stephen I saw such a one. He fought all his days against poverty and against abuse. They traduced his name. They rattled at the door knob while he was dying with duns for debts he oould not pay; yet the peace of God brooded over his pillow and while the world faded, heaven dawned and the deep- ening twilight of earth's night was only the opening twilight of heaven's morn. Not a sigh. Not a tear. Not a strug- gle. Hush! Stephen asleep. I have not the faculty as many have to tell the weather. I can never tell by the setting sun whether there will be a drought or not. I cannot tell by the blowing of the wind whether it will be fair weather or foul on the morrow. But I can prophece, and I will prophecy, what weather 1t will be when you, the Christian, Dome to die. 'You may have it very rough now. It may be this week one annoyance, the next another annoyance. It may be this year one bereavement, the next another bereavement. But at the last Christ will come in and darkness will go out. And though there may be no hand to close your eyes and no breast on which to rest your dying head, and no candle to lift the night, the odors of God's hanging garden will regale your soul and at your bedside will halt the chariots of the king. No rhore rents to pay, no more agony because flour has Ione up, no more struggle with "the world. the flesh and the devil," but peace—long, deep, everlasting peace. Stephen asleep! Asleep in Jesus, blessed sleep, From which none ever wake to weep; A calm and undisturbed repose, Uninjured by the last of foes, Asleep in Jesus, far from thee Thy kindred and thy graves may be, But there is still a blessed sleep, Froth which none ever wake to weep, t rt1 lit 1Si ti. d A sty ea' l e Wean s u s a t a r s 0 s You have seen enough for one day. No one can successfully examine more than five pictures in a day. Therefore we stop, having seen this cluster of divine Raphaels—Stephen gazing into heaven, !Stephen looking at Christ, Ste- phen stoned, Stephen in his dying pray- er, Stephen agleep. It Doesn't Pay. The great Manchester canal, which makes Manchester a seaport, has not realized the expectations of its origina- tors. It cost ;76,000,000, and its net re- ceipts last year were only $125,000. In- t;tead of injuring it has benefitted Liv- erpool, that city having secured lower rates by railway, while Manchester is obliged to submit to a heavy Increase of taxation to meet the interest on the debt it has incurred in constructing the canal. 'or good t eaI IAQ.;>pdo „:Dure blood. made b $,cgft $ $403410).0111o' $1Uo, 4904E, PEOPLOE GiET FAGGED OUT Aerv9ufoovo lfi7i opx d, 12e0aoh4t p$14 qt b1luQ 1ip!t ener07 W 1940--lnet. AEClllll: HEALTH 1. ' IAT b4,4ldinR 1!1► Rorty gat osteo --lpwn )oosT cl9es it. SCOTT'S *Rs ABlUJ n!tgkea Pare. Mete , ewes nervous and wafting des. eaaosr • . • BINDER TWINE-+--+- 0-- We have a limited quantity' of the Old Reliable Brand of• Pure Manilla Binder Twine—only 61 cents. Secure some at this low price before -it is all sold. 0 HARLAND :. BROS. OLIIVTON. .wig BIG PROFITS Small investments. Returning prosperity will make many rich, bat nowhere can they make so much within a short time as by anocesslul Speculation in Grain, Provision and Stook. I00Q FOR EACH DOLLAR INVESTED can be made by our •— Systematic Plan of Speculation originated by us. All successful speculators operate on a regular system. it ha s well-known fact that there are thousands of men ie all parts of the United States who, by sye- temxtio trading through Chicago brokers, make large amonntsevery year, ranging from a few thousand dol- lars for the man wbo invests a hundred or two hundred dollars up to $50,00J to $100,000 or more by those who inveet-a few thousand. It is also a fact that those who make the largest profits from comparatively small Investments on this plan are persons aho live away from Chicago and invest through brokers wbo thoroughly understand eye- tematio trading. Our plan does not risk the whole amount invrated on any trade, but ooyers both sides, so that whether the martet rises or falls it brings a steady profit that ties up enormously 1n a short time. WRITE FOR CONVINCING PROOFS, also our Manual on eaccesstul speculation and our Daily Market Report. full of money -making pointers. ALL }REE. Our Manual explains margain trading fully. Highest references in regard to our stvnding and snceess. For farther information address THOMAS -& CO., Bankers and Brokers, 870-6m 241-242 Rialto Building, CHICAGO, ILL. rorAt 004 ea"/6.e'Fireo 5 cees, s.5..�'OL -zoilz -A CURES BALDNESS, STOPS FALLING HAIR, CURES DANDRUFF, RESTORES FADED AND GRAY HAfiR TO NATURAL COLOR AND VITALITY. PERFECTLY HARMLESS. WARRANTED. CLEAR AS WATER. NO SEDIMENT. NO LEAD, SULPHUR OR CHEMICALS. ONE HON EST MAN AND BUT ONE RELIABLE HAIR FOOD. NO DYE. We feed the Hair that which it lacks and nature restores the color. THEORY. ROYAL SCALP FOOD destroys the diseased germs of the scalp and a healthy action is set up. It contains the principal properties of the hair that areto life houtedot ¢toIertilizeshescalp the same yyhichoudoafield grow. corn and growth Is certain. It invigorates the slug- gish scalp, cleanses it and thoroughly eradicates all dandruff, which is the forerunner of baldness. Itis the ONLY remedy ever discovered that will re- store the Life, Beauty and Natural Color to the hair without harm. MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLY% BEND FOR FR= PAMPHLLTS. STATE AND LOCAL AGSNTS WANTED. ROYAL SCALP FOOD Go. B6x 3106, WINDSOR, ONT. Among the articles which Nrtsrulla Khan is taking home with him to Afghanistan are eleven bicycles, a Punch and Judy show, and a number of nursing bottles. FOR TOUR OUTDID GO TO PICTURESQUE MCKINRC ISLAND. ONE THOUSAND MILES OP LAKE RIDE AT SMALL EXPENSE. Visit this Historical Island, which is the grandest summer resort on the Great Lakes. It only costa about 13 from Detroit; $15 from Toledo; 18 from Cleveland, for the round trip, ncluding meals and berths. Avoid the heat and dust by traveling on the D. & C. floating palaces. The attractions of a trip to the Mackinac region aro unsurpassed. The island itself is a grand romantic spot, its climate most invigorating. Two new steel passenger steamers Have just been built for, the upper lake route, costing $800,000 each. They are equipped with every modern convenience, annunciators, bath rooms, etc., illuminated throughout by electricity, and are guaranteed to be the grandest, largest and safest steamers on fresh water. These steamers favorably compare with the great ocean liners in con- struction and speed. Four trips per week between Toledo, Detroit, Alpena, Macki- nac, Bt. Ignace, Petoskey, Chicago, "Boo," Marquette and Duluth. Daily betweee Cleveland and Detroit, and Clevelalid and Put -in -Bay. The palatial equipment slakes traveling on these steamers thor- oughly enjoyable. Send for illustrated 3eacripti a pamphlet. Address A. A. SCUANTm, G. P. A., D. & C., Detroit, Minh For Over Fluty Years leas. Wis sow's Sooreziso Smut. has been need by millions of mothers, for thrir children white teething. If dlatntbed at niehtand broken of your rest bya sick child suffering and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth send at once end get a 1lottle of "Mrs. Winslow's soot bine Syrup" fot0bildren Teething. It Mei relieve the ennr little nearer immediately. Depend upon it, mothers. there is no mistake about It. It cures Diar- rhota, regulates the Stoma* and Bowels, cures Wind Celle, wane the flume, reduces Infemmation, and gives toile and nrrerwy 10 the whole a'ftam. "Mes. Whisky's Soothing Byrne" tot children tect.dng ie pleasant to the tette and in the preteription of one of theoldost and beet female physicland end burette in the United States. Prise twenty five menta a bottle. Sold by all dnrgglate throughodt the world. Be sure and ask for "Mats. Wn,saow's 9ooT$tlfe Elsner." For Bicycle Riders. y• An English surgeon offers the follow- ing excellent rules for bicycle riding. 1. Never ride within half an hour of a meal, which Means either before or after. 2. Wheel the machine up any hill the mounting of which on the wheel causes any real effort. 3. See that the clothing round the stomach, neck and chest is loose. 4. Have the handle bar sufficiently raised to prevent stooping. 5, Be as sparing as possible of taking fluids during a long ride. Rinsing the mouth thoroughly, as well asargling with cold water, will quench the thirst as well as, if not better than, taking fluids into the stomach in lititge quanti- ties. 6. Unless the wind, roads, etc., be favorable, never ride mor. than ten miles an hour, except for very short distances. 7. Never smoke while riding. Heart Disease Relieved pr► 30 Minutes Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart gives perfect relief n all eases of Organic or Sympathetic Heart Disease In 80 minutes, and epeedily effects a cure. It le a gearless remedy for Palpitation, Shortness of Breath. Smothering Spells, Pain in Left Side and all symtoms of a Diseased Heart. One dose convinces. Sold by Watts & Co. kr Recompense. So many sorrows had beset my way I thanked God for the dying of the day. vid The shadows groomed above my hope- less path, And even life's roses veiled red thorns of wrath. So that I relied at Fortune nr Fate, When little feet came pattering to the gate. And lips that came to kiss me sweetly smiled, And life seemed lovelier for a child ! 0 tiniest lovelthatcomforts in our need 1 Is it not whit, "A. little child shall lead ?" • FRANK L. STANTON.