11EV. DJ. TAULAGK. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN DAY SEI13IOX. Subject: "The Sundial of Ataaz.n Text: "And Isaiah the prophet crisd unto the Lord' and lie brought the shad ow ten degrees backward by which it had gone down in the dial of Ahaz." II Kin? xx, 11. Here is the first cloc or watch or chro nometer or timepiece of which the worl i has any knowledge. But it was a watch that did not tick and a clock thit did not strike. It was a sundial. Ahaz, the kin, invented it. Between the hours given to statecraft and the cares of office he invented sornethicg by which he could tell the time of day. This sundial may have been a great column, and when the shadow of that col umn reached one point it waa nine o'cloclc A. M.. and when it reac.iei another point it was three o'clock p. m., and all the hours and half hours were so measured. Or it may have been a flight o" stairs such as may now be found in Hindostanand other old coun tries, and when the shadow reached one step it was ten o'clock a. m., or another step it was four o'clock p. m., and likewise other hours may have been indicated. The clepsydra or water clock followed the sundial, and the sandglass follows! the clepsydra. Then came the candle clock of Alrred the Great and the caudle was marked into three parts, and while the first part was burning he gave nimself to religion.and while the second part was burning ha gave himself to politics, and while the third pant was burning he gave himself to rest. After awhile came the wheel and weight clock, and Pope Sylvester the Second, was its most important inventor. And the skill of cen turies of exquisite mechanism toiled at the timepieces until the world had the Vick's clock of the Fourteenth century and Huy ghens, the Inventor, swung the first pendu lum and Dr. Hooke contrived the re coil escapement. And the "endless chain" followed and the "ratchet and pinion lever" took its p'ace, and the compensation balance and the stemwinder followed, and now we have the buzz and clang of the great clock and watch factories of Switzerland and Germany and England and America turning out what seems to be the perfection of timepieces. It took the world six thousand years to make the present chronometer. So with the measurement of longer spaces than minutes and hours. Time was calculated from new moon to new moon: then from harvest to harvest. Then the year was pronounced to be three hundred and fifty-four days and then three hundred and sixty days, and not until a long while after three hundred and sixty-five days. Then events were calcu lated from the foundation of Rome, after ward from the Olympic games. Then the Babylonians had t .eir" measurement of the year and the Romans theirs and the Armenians theirs and the Hin doos theirs. Chronology was busy for centuries studying monuments, ( inscriptions, coins, mummies and astron omy, trying to lay a plan by which all question of dates might be settled and events put in their right place in the pro cession of the ages. But the (jhronologists only heaped up a mountain of confusion and bewilderment until in the sixth century Dionysius Exiguus, a Roman abbot, said, "Let everything date from the birth at Bethlehem of the Lord Jesus Christ, the Saviour of the world." The abbot proposed to have things dated backward and forward from that great event. What a splendid thought for the world! What a mighty thing for Christianity ! It would have been most natural to date everything from the creation of the world. But I am glad the chronologists could not too easily guess how old the world was in order to get the nations in the habit of dating from that occurrence in its documents and his tories. Forever fixed is it that all history is to be dated with reference to the birth of Christ, and, this matter settled, Hales, the chief chronoiogist, declared that the world was made five thousand four hundred and eleven years before Christ, and the deluge came three thousand one hundred and fifty five years before Christ, and all the illus trious events of the nineteen centuries and all the great events of all time to come have been or shall be dated from the birth of Christ. These things I say that you may know what a watch is, what a clock is, what an almanac is, and iearn to appreciate through what toils and hardships and per plexities the world came to its present con veniences and comforts, and to help you to more res ectful consideration of that sun Jial of Ahaz planted in my text. We are told that Hezekiah, the king, wag dying of a boil. It must have been one of the wort kind of carbuncles, a boil without my central core and sometimes deathfal. A fig was put upon it as a poultice. Hezekiah lid not want to die then. His son, who was to take the kingdom, had not yet been born, and Kezekiah's deatn would have been the death of the nation. So he prays for re covery and is told he will get well. But he wants some miraculous sign to make him sure of it. He has the choice of having the shadow on the sundial of Ahaz advance or retreat. He replied it would not be so won der iui to ha ve the sun go down, for it al ways docs go down sooner or later. He asks that it go backward. In ot;:er words, let the day instead of going on toward sundown, turn and go toward sunns?. I see the invalid king bolsters! up and wrapped in blankets looking out of the winnow upon the sundial in the courtyard. While he wateiies the shadow on the dial the shadow begins to retreat. Instead of going on toward six o'clock in the evening it goes back toward six o'clock in the morn ing. The big poultice had been drawing for some time, and vme enough the boil broke and Hezekiah got well. Now I expect you will come on with your higher criticism and try to explain this away and say it was an optical delusion of Hezekiah, and the 6hadow only seemed to go back or a cloud came over and it wa-j uncertain which way the shadow did go, and as Hezekiah expected it to go back he took the action of bis own mind for the retrograde move ment, Iso; the shadow went back on all the dials of that land and other lands. Turn to II Chronicles xxxii., 81, and find that away off in Babylon the mighty men of the palace noticed the same phenomenon. And if you do not like the Bible authority turn over your copy of Herodotus and find that away off in Egypt the people noticed that there was something the matter with the sun. The fact is that the whole universe waits upon God, and suns and moons and stars are not very big things to Him, and He can with His little finger turn back an en tire world as easily as you can set back the hour hand or minute hand of your clock or watch. At the opening of the new year psoole are moralizing on tne flight of time. You all feel that you are moving on toward sun down and many of you are under a conse quent depression. I propose this morning to set the hands of your watches and clocks to going the other way. I propose to show you how you make the shadow of your dial like the shadow on the dial of Ahaz to stop going forward and make it go back ward. You think 1 have a big undertaking on hatd, but it can be done if theamo lora who reversed the shadow in Hezkiah s court yard moves upon us . While looking at the sundial of Heziiah and we find the shai?w retreating we onfht to learn that God controls the shadows. Ve are all ready to acknowledge His manage ment or the sunshine. Vo stand m the clow of a bright morning and we say m our feelings if not with so many words. "This lifets from God, this warmth is from God." Or, we have a rush of prosperity and we say, "These suscssses are jronUod. What a providential thing it was I bougnt that lot just before the rise of real estate. How grateful to God I am that I made that investment ! Why, they have declared ten i-er cent, dividend! What a mercy it was i hat I out uy shares before that col lapse r un, yes; we acknowledge God :' the sunshine of a bright day or the sun shine of a great prosperity. Bat suppose the day is dark? You have to light the eas at noon. The sun does not show him self all day long. There is nothing but shadow. How slow we are to realize that the storm is from God and the darkness from God and the chill from God. Or we buy the day before the market retreats, or we make an investment that never pays, or we purchase goods that we cannot dispose of, or a crop of grain we sowed is ruined ny drought or freshet, or when ve took ao count of stock on the first of J anuary we found ourselves thousands pf dollars worse off than we expected . Who under such cir cumstances says, "This loss is from God. I must have been allowed to go into that un fortunate enterprise for some good reason; God controls the east wind as well as the west vvind.w My Iriends, I cannot look for one moment on that retrograde shadow of Ahaz's dial without learning that God controls the shad ows and that lesson we need all to learn. That He controls the sunshine is not so nec essary a lesson, for anybody can be happy when things go right. When you sleep eight hours a night and rise with an appetite that cannot easily wait for breakfast and you go over to the store and open your mail to read more orders than you can fill, and in the next letter you find a dividend far larger than you have been promised, and your neighbor comes in to tell you some flatter ing thing he has just heard ai& about you, and you find that all the styles of goods in which you deal have advanced fifteen per cent, in value, and on your wav home you meet your children in full romp and there are roses on the center of the tea Table and roses of he3ith in cheeks all round the table, what more do you want of consolation? I don't pity you a bit. You feel as if you could bosa the world. Bat for those in ju3t opposite circumstances my text coaies in with an omnipotence of meaning. Tne shadow! Oh, the shadow! Shadow of bereavement! Shadow of sickness I Shadow of bankruptcy! Shadow of mental de pression! Shadow of persecution! Shadow of death! Speak out, oh sundial of Ahaz, and tell the people that God manages the shadow! As Hezekiah sat In his palace wrapped in invalidism and surrounded by anodynes and cataplasms and looked out upon the black hand of the only clock known at that time and saw it move back ten degrees, he learned a lesson t hat a majority of the human race need this hour to learn that the best friend a man ever had controls the shadow. The setbacks are sometimes the best things that can happen. The great German author, Schiller, could not work unless he had in his room the scent of rotten apples. and the de cay of the fruits of earthly prosperity may become an inspiration instead of a depres sion. Robert Chambers's lame feet shut him up Irom other work, and he became the world renowned publisher, and helped fash ion the best literature of the ages. The painful disorder like that of Hezekiah called a carbuncle i3 spelled exactly the same as the precious stone called the car buncle, and the pang of suffering may become the jewel of immortal value. Your setback, like that of Ahaz's sundial, may be recovery and triumph. I never had a setback but it turned out to be a set for ward. You never would have become a Christian if you had not had a setback. The highest thrones in heaven are for the set backs. In 1S61 the shadow of the sundial of this nation was set back, and all tilings seemed going to rum, and it was set back further in 1862, and further in 1853, and still further in 1865, but there is not an intel ligent and well balanced man north or soutb, east or west but fesls it was set back toward the sunrise. But I promise to show you how the shaw ows might be turned back. First, by going much among the young people. In most family circles there are grandchildren. By this divine arrangement most of the people who have passed the meridian of life can compass themselves by juvenility. It is a bad thing for an old man or old woman to sit looking at the vivacity of their grand children shouting, "3top that racket!" Better join in the f un. Let the eighty-year-old grandfather join the eight-year-old grandson or granddaughter. My father and mother lived to see over eighty children and grandchildren and great grandchildren, and a more boisterous crew were never turned out on this sublunary sphere, and they all ' seemed to cry to the old folks, "Keep young," and they did keep young. Don't walk with a cane unless you have to or only as a defence in a city afflicted with too many canines. Don't wear glasses stronger than necessary, putting on num ber tens when eighteens will do as well. Don't go into the company of those who are always talking about rheumatism and lum bago and shortness of breath and the brevity of human life. It is too much for my gravity to hear an octogenarian talking about th-9 shortness of human life. From all I can find out he has always been here and from present prospects he is always going to stay. Remain young. Hang up your stockings in Christmas time. Help the boys fly the kite. Teach the girls how to dress their dolls. Better than arnica for your stiff joints and catnip tea for your sleepless nights will be a large dose of youthful companionship. Set back the clock of human life. Make the shadow of the sundial of Ahaz retreat ten degrees. People make themselves old by always talking about being old and wishing tor the good old days, which were never as good as these days. From all I can hear the grandchildren are not half as bad as the grandparents were. Matters have been hushed up. But if you have ever been in a room adjoining a room where some very old people, a little deaf, were talking over oid times, you will rind that this age does not monopolize all the young rascals. It may now be hard to get ycung people up early enough in the morning, but their grandpa rents always had to be pulled out of bed. It is wrong now to play mischeviou3 tricks on the unsuspecting, but eighty years ago at school that now venerable man sat down on a crooked pin not accidently placed there, and purposely drove the sleigh riding party too near the edge of the embankment that he might see how they would look when tumbled into the sno.v. And that man who has so little patience with childish exuber ance was in olden times ud to pranks, one half of which if practiced by the eight-year-old of to-day would set grandfather and grandmother crazy. Revive your remem brance of what you were between five and ten years of age, and with patience capable of everything join with the young. Put back the shadow of the dial not ten degrees, but fifty and sixty and seventy degrees. Set back your clocks also by entering on new and absorbing Christian work. In oar desire to ins aire the yoang we have in our essays had much to say about what haa been accomplished by the young; of Ro mulus. who founded Rome when he was twenty years of age; of Cortes, who had con quered Mexico at thirty years: of Pitt, who was Prime Minister of England at twenty-four years; of Raphael, who died at thirty -seven vears; of Calvin, who wrote his "Institutes"" at twenty-six; of Melanc thon, who took a learned professor's chair at twenty-one years; of Luther, who had conquered Germany ?or the Reformation by tne time he was thirty-five years. And it is all very well for us to show how early in life one can do very great things for God and the welfare of the world, but some of the mightiest work for God has been don? by septuagenarians and octogenarians anc nonagenarians. Indeed, there i3 work which none but sach can do. , They pre serve the equipoise of senates, of religious denominations, of reformatory movements. Young men for action, old men for coun sel. Instead of any of you beginning to fold up your energies, arouse anew your energies. With the experience you have obtained and the opportunities of observa tion you have had during a long life, you ought to be able to do in one year now more than you did in ten years right after you have pasaed out of your teens. Physical power less, your spiritual power ought to be more. CJp to the last hour of their lives what powers for good old Dr. Archibald Alexander, old Dr. Woods, old Dr. Hawes, old Dr. MHnor, old Dr. Mcllvane, old Dr. Tyng, old Dr. Candlish, old Dr. Chalmers! What have been Bismarck to Germany, and Gladstone to England, and Oliver Wendell Holmes to America1 in the time of an ad vanced age? Let me say to those in the after noon of life: Don't be putting off the har ness; when God wants iz off he will take it off. Don't be frightened out of life by the grip as many are. At the first sneeze of an influenza many give up all as lost. No new terror has come on the earth. The microbes as the cause of disease were described in the Talmu d seventeen hundred years ago as "in visible legions of dangerous ones." Don't be scared out of life by all thi3 talk about heart failure. That trouble has always been in the world. That is what all the people that ever passed out of this life have died of heart failure. Adam had it and all of his descend ants have had it or will have it. Do not be watching for symptoms or you will have symptoms of everything. Some of you will yet die of symptoms. Symptoms are often only what we sometimes see in the country a dead owi nailed on a born door to scare living owls. Put your trust in God, go to bed at ten o'clock,bave the window open six inches to let in the fresh air, sleep on your right side, and fear nothing. The old maxim was right, "Get thy spindle and distaff ready, and God will send the flax." But while looking at this sundial of Ahaz and I see the shadow of it move, I notice that it went back toward the sunrise instead of forward toward the sunset toward the morning instead of toward the night. That thing the world in willing now to do, and in many cases has done. There have a great many things been -written and spoken about the sunset of life. I have said some of them myseu. But my text suggests a better idea. The Lord who turned back that day from going toward sundown and started it toward sunrise is willing to do the same thing for all of us. The theologians who stick to oid re ligious technicalities until th 37 become sopo rifics would not call it anything but conver sion. I call it a change from gc lag toward sun down to going toward sunrise. That man who never tries to unbuckle tie clasp of evil habit and who keeps all the sins of the past and the present freighting him and who ignores the one redemption made by the only one who could redeem, if that man will examine the sundial ha will find that the shadow is going forward and he is on the way to sundown. His day is on the road to night. All the watches that tick, all the clocks that strike, all the sand glasses that empty themselves, all the shadows that move on all the sundials indicate the approach of darkness. But now, in answer to prayer, as in my text the change was iu answer to prayer, the pardoning Lord reverses things and the man starts toward sunrise instead of sunset. He turns the other way. The Captain of salvation give3 him the military command, "Attention! Right about facel" He was marching toward indifference, marching toward hardness of heart, marching toward prayerlessness, marching toward sin, march ing toward gloom, marching toward death. Now he turns and marches toward peace, marches toward light and marches toward comfort and marches toward high hope and marches toward a triumph stupendous ami everlasting, toward hosannasthat ever hoist and hallelujahs that ever roll . Now if that is not the turning of the shadow on the dial of Ahaz from going toward sundown to go ing toward sunrise, what is it? I have seen day break over Mount Blano and the Matterhorn, over the heights of Lebanon, over Mount Washington, over the Sierra Nevadaa, and mid-Atlantic, the morning after a departed storm when the billows were liquid Alps and liquid aierra Nevadas. but the sunrise of the soul Is more effulgent and more transporting. IC bathes all the heights of the soul, and illumines all the depths of the soul, and whelms all the faculties, all the aspirations, all the ambi tions, all the hopas with a light that sick ness cannot eclipse, or aeaxn excmguisn, or eternity do anything but augment and magnify. I preach the sunrise. As I look at that retrograde movement of the shadow on Ahaz's dial, I remember that it was a sign that Hezekiah was going to get well and he got well. So I have to tell all you who are by the grace of God having your day turned from decline toward night to assent toward morning, that you are going to get well, well of all your sins, well of all your sorrows, well of all your earthly dis tresses. Sunrise! But savs one. all that vou say may ba true but that doe3 not hinder the horrors of dissolution. Why, you who are the Lord's are not going to die. All that the grave gets of you as compared with your chief, your immortal nature, is as the clippings of your finger nails as compared with your whole body. As you run the scissors along the edge of your thumb nail and cut off that which is no use but rather a hindrance, you do not mourn over the departure of that fragment which flies away. Death will be only the scissoring off of that which coxild be of no use, and the soul ha? no funeral over that which would be an awful nuisance if we could not get rid of it. This body as it now i3, what a failure it would make of heaven ii our departing soul had to be burdened with it in the next world. While others there go ten thousand miles a minute we would take about an aour to yalk four miles, and while our neighbor immortals could see a hundred miles we could see only ten tiiles, and the fleetest and the healthiest of our bodies if seen there would ma ice it necessiry to open in heaven an asylum for cripples. No, no; one of the best possible things that will hap pen to us will be the sloughing off of this body when we have no more use for it in its presant state. Whan it shall come up in its resurrected form we will be very glad to get it back again, but not as it is now with its limitations and bedwarf ments innumerable. Sunrise! There rball I bathe my weary asol In seas of heavenly ret. And not a wave of trouble rod Across my peaceful breast. Sunrise! Bat not like one of those morn ings after you had gone to bed late or did not sleep well, and you get up chilled and vawning and the morainz bath is a repul sion and you feel like Baying to the morniug un shining into your window, "I do not see what you find to smile about; your bright ness is to me a mockery." But the inrush of the next world will be a morning after, a sound sleep, a sleep that nothing can dis turb, and you will rise, the sunshine in your faces' and in your first morning in heaven you will wade down into the sea of glass, mingled with fire, the foam on fire with a splendor you never saw on earth, and the rolling waves are doxoiogies, and the rocks of that shore are golden and the pebbles of that beach are pearl, and the skies that arch the scene are a commingling of all the colors that St. Jeha saw on the wall or heaven the crimson and the b lue, and the saffron, and the orange, and the purple, and the gold, and the green wrought on those skies in shape of garlands, o .banners, of ladders, of chariots, of crowns, of thrones. What a sunrise! Do you not feel ita warmth on your faces? ScoviUe McC ullum.the dying boy of our Sunday -schooLuttered what hhaU be the peroration of this sermon, 'Throw back the shatter and let the sun in !" And so the shadow of Ahaz's sundial turns from sunset to sunrise. A NEWSBOY-GOVERNOE. North Dakota's Chief Executive Orig inally a New York Waif. GOVERNOR ANDREW H. BURKE. Andrew H. Burke, the present Governor of North Dakota, is one of the 75,000 waifs of New York for whom the Children's Aid Society of that city has provided homes in the West, Young Andrew Burke was sent West many years ago and was adopted by a gentleman named Butler. For two years he was employed in a wholesale house in Min neapolis and was married there. From Min neapolis he went to a small station named New York Mills, on the Northern Pacific Railroad, and took charge of a general store and sawmills. Afterward he removed to Casselton, N. D., and after six months' resi dence became Cashier of the First National Bank there. Three years later he was elected Treasurer of the county and held the position for six years. At the last elec tion he was elected Governor on the Repub lican ticket. There were 4093 miles of new railway constructed between January 1, 1891, and January 1, 1S92, which brings the total mileage of the United States up to 171,106. This is a decrease of 1574 miles from last year's figures, and the smallest mileage built during any year since 1885, during which only 1331 miles of track were laid. THE MARKETS. 2 NEW YORK. Beeves 3 Milch Cows, com. to good. . .30 Calves, common to prime. . . 2 Sheep. 4 Lambs! 5 Hogs Live. ....7 4 Flour City Mill Extra.7.7. 5 Patents 5 Wheav-No. 2 Red 1 Rye State Barley Two-rowed State. . . Corn Ungraded Mixed. .... Oats No. 1 White Mixed Western....... Hay Good to Choice Straw Long Rye Lard City Steam Butter State Creamery.... Dairy, fair to good. West. lm. Creamery Factory Cheese State Factory Skims Light ...... Western Eggs State and Penn BUFFALO. 00 O 5 50 00 45 00 85 8 50 00 5 50 25 7 00 50 4 80 5 7 00 5 25 25 5 50 05 1 06 98 (a 1 00 40 36 70 65 53 40 33 75 70 75 6 C6.000 20 a 25 is 16 25 23 20 UK 9 25K 5 50 4 75 6 40 4 60 5 10 1 01 44 06 6 14 9 3 4 & Steers Western Sheep Medium to Good. . . . Lambs Fair to Good Hogs Good to Choice Yorks Flour Best Winter Wheat No. 1 Northern. .... Corn No. 4, Yellow Oats No '3, White Barley No. 2 Western 2 00 4 25 6 00 4 50 5 00 an BOSTON. Egg Near-by 33 Potatoes Native Rose 45 50 Cheese Northern, Choice. .-. 11 Hay Eastern 16 00 16 o J Straw Good to Prime 14 0J Butter Firsts 23 26 WATERTOWN (MASS.) CATTLE MARKET. Beef Dressed weight 3J 6 Sheep Live weight 3K& h Lambs 5 5 Hogs Northern 5 PHILADELPHIA. Flour Choice Perm 3 00 5 05 Wheat No. 2 Red. Jan 99i 1 00 Corn Jan 50 5! Oat3 Ungraded White 39 41 Potatoes Early Rose Penn. 40 48 Butter Creamery Extra. .. . 2S Cheese Part skims S & 9 FURS AND SKINS. Eastern dk Ttorthtceatern Southurettern. Black bear $25 0035 00 $3 00$15 01 Cubs and y'rlings 5 00(315 00 4 (Kri 10 00 Otter, each 7 0010 00 5 005 7 0 Beaver, large.... 7 00 8 CO 6 00( 7 01 iJeaver, medium. 4 50& 5 00 3 505z, 4 50 Ueaver.small .... Mink, dark, fine. Mink, brown... Red fox..., Gray fox.... . . Raccoon, each.. Skunk, black.... Skunk, half strpd Skunk, striped Skunk, white. Opossum, large. Ooossum, med . Muskrat, winter. Muskrat,fall . . 2 00 2 50 1 50( 2 00 1 .W 2 50 75z 1 25 50(flg 7", 1 5G0; 1 70 1 Sofa 1 4;j SO 1 00 50 (f 7i 60 30 35a 1 20 1 30 906c' 1 In 7( 80 50( m 35 45 25 :') 15ft 20 13 17 255 30 20( 2". 11 13 8(3 li 16 18 15fi V, 12 14 9& 11 Remarkable Bowlders. Accepting reported measurements, the largest erratic block, or bowlder, as yet recognized in the United States, and probablj in the world, is in the town of Madison, X. II., and, according to Pro fessor Crosby, of the Boston Institute of Technology, ha3 the following maximum dimensions: Length, 83 feet; width, in excess oi 45 feet; height, 30 to 37 feet; contents, 90,000 cubic feet; .and prob able weight, 15,300,000 pounds, or 7, 650 tons. Next to this ;n sire is undoubtedly the great rock in the town of Montville,Xew London County, Connecticut, generally known by its Indian designation as 4i6heegan," and also as "Mohcgan." la the opinion of some, this rock is an isolated granite protuberance, and not a true "erratic" or bowlder ; but recent ex aminations have seemed to completely negative the first supposition. Its ap proximate maximum dimensions are: Length, 75 feet; width, 5S feet; height, 00 feet; contents, 70,000 cubic feet; weight, G000 tons. If allowance be made for an immense fragment which has fallen from its northeast side, the di mensions and cubic contents of t4Shee jan" would approximate more closely to those of the Madison bowlder. One point that goes far toward substantiating th claim" on behalf of the "Sheegan" rock that it is a true bowlder, is the number of undoubted bowlders of an immense size and of the same granite which exist in comparative proximity. Popular Scitnce Monthly. Rough Diamonds in a Chicken' s Crop. A few days ago C. Jacobson, of Hast ings, Neb., received word from a firm in Butte City, Montana, that one of their customers, a Mrs. White, hail found three rough diamonds in the craw of a chicken sold by them a few days before Christmas. Mr. Jacobson is a largo poultry shipper,and supplies his hennery with gravel from the bed of the Blue River, seven miles south of Hastings. The curiosity of several miners in Butte City was aroused by the discovery, and Jacobson has received many letters in quiring as to where he secured the sand. Mrs. White submitted the three rough stones to a jeweler in Butte for inspec tion, and he pronounced them diamonds and offered her a good price for them, but she refused and has sent them East to be cut. Describes a feeling peculiar to persons of dyspeptlj tendency, or caused by change of climate, seaxon or life. The stomach is out of order, the head aches of does not feel right, The Nerves 6eemed strained to their utmost, the mind Is con fused and irritable. This condition finds an excel lent corrective In Hood's Sarsaparilla, which, by itj regulating and toning powers soon Cures Indigestion restores harmony to the system, gives strength of mind, nerves and body. Be sure to get Hood's Sarsaparilla which In curative power is Peculiar to Itself. OOOOOOO OOO THE SMALLEST PILL IN THE WORLD x TTTTTT'Q TINY LIVER PIIXSO Ohave all the virtues of the larger om-; equally effective; purely Testable. Exact size shown in this border. OQOOOQOOOO N Y N u a "All 71 A WQTP Mr. Lorenzo F. 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