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REV. DR.TAT M \GE.
THE BROOKLYN DtVINE’6 SUN¬
DAY SERMON.
Nnbjcet: -The Surprise* of Religion '
Prenebed la Vienna. Austria!
TEXT: ' Behoi i, thrhn
—I Kings x., 7.
Appearing tiefore you to-day. nit mind yet
agitated with the scenery of the Holy Land.
from which we tiave just arrived, yon will
expect m« t<> revert to some of I he scene
ooce enscte-l there. Mark a circle around
l*ak« Galilee, and another circle around Jer
u.salem. an(t you desci died two re 1,1
which cluster nieniori of h event* than
in any other two cir rS. .Jem it- ii i v. as «
spell of fascinai will huKi me the n 7
of my life, flol n J resolved that th 5
city should l*e the center t*i al d. res *
andcoimner* iai magui/i'-eiu’e *et him
self to work, and monopolized
mg desert as a high w a for his caravans, lie I
built the city of ralnt; ra around one ot tie*
long principal t.aiAH weifo of of merrhan. the fr that the ail the
mi
were obliged to stop if \ pay toll aml
leave part of their wealti m the ban •U of
Solomon's inertHhaut*. I!, naimed f lit or
tress Thapsacus at tie hief f«>r«l of the Eu
phrates, that passed and j L.*ua d evt
there. The three great prodtt
of Palestine—wine press^i fr«wn the richest
clusters and celebrated al! the work! over:
oil. which in that hot umtry is the eatinj
substitute for butter and laid, and was pressed
from tbe olive branches until everv tre*' in
the country became an od well; and hone v,
which was the entire substitut tor -agar—
these three great produ of untry
Solomon exported, i md received iu return
fruits arid precious w ootf** and thi* animal- of
every «lime.
He went do am to Enou-gobcr ami ordered
a the fleet workmen. of ahipa an<i to ta instructed, oversaw
watched the launching of
the flotilla which was to go out on more
than a years voyage, in l»ri ng home the
wealth of Egyptian the then known world He heal'd
that the horses were large and
swift, he resolved and long maned and round limbed,and
tive dollars to purchase them, giving eightv
of these horses apiece for them, putting the best
in his own stall and selling
the surplus t*o foreign potentates at great
profit. He heard
that there was the best of timber
on Mount Lehanou, and he sent out one hun¬
dred and eighty thousand men to hew down
the forest and drag the timlier through the
mountain gorges, to construct it into rafts to
lie floated to Joppa, and from thence to l*i
drawn by ox teams twenty-five miles across
tbo laud to Jtii u«aiem B beard that there
were beautiful flowers in other lands. He
sent for them, planted them in his own gar¬
dens, and to this very day there art* flowers
round in the ruins of that city such as nr«* to
be found in no other pan <»t Palestine, the
lineal descendants of the very flowers that
Solomon planted. He heard that in foreign
groves there were birds of richest voice and
most luxuriant wing. He sent <»ut people to
catch them, ami bring them there, and he
put them into his cage
Stand hat‘k now and ihis long (rain of
camels corning up to th.* King's gate, and
the ox frains from Egypt, gold and silver
and precious stones, auJ Ix-ast.s of everv
hoof, and birds of every wing, and fish of
every scale' .Seethe peacocks strut under
tne cedars, and the horsemen run, and the
chariots wheel! Hark to the orchestra’
Gaze upon the dance! Not stopping to look
into the wonders of the temple, step right on
to the causeway, and pass up to Solomon's
Here we find ourselves amid a collection of
buildings on which the King had lavished
toe wealth of many empires. The genm* of
Htram. the •rchtect, and of the other artist
Where seen in the long line of corridors and
the suspended gallery and t he approach to
the throne. Traroried window' opposite tra
yeno,! window. IoTais ItmoMl ornaments burst¬
ing mto and lily aud pomegranate,
uiapitcrs which surrounded by network of leaves
m imitation fruit, seemed suspended
** Josephus m hanging toll, !<askcts. Three branohes-so
us—three branches srult,fared
on the marl,le. so thin and subtle thai even
the leaves seemed to quiver. A er capable
Of holding live hundred barrels of water
on SIX hundred bra-.eu os heads, which
gushed with water ami filled tile whole plac
with coolness and crystalline brightness and
musical plash. Ten tables eiiasesl with
chariot wheel and lion and cherubim. Solo
mon sat on a throueof ivory At the seating
place Ol the throne, on each end of th" step*,
a brazen lion Why, my friends, iu that
place they trimmed their candles w ith snuffer*
of gold, and they cut their fruits with knive.
of gold, and they washed their hands in ha-irs
Ot gold, and they scooped out the aslie, with
shovels ol gold and they stirred the altar
fires with tongs of gold Hold i-ofiected in
the water Gold (lashing from the apparel!
Hold maxing in tho crown; Gold; gold!
gold'
Of course the news ot the affluence of tha)
piacG went out every whore by even caravan
anil by win* of every *hi|.,' until soon the
street-ot Jerusalem are crowded with curi¬
osity seeker* What is that long »,r>s-e-si.«.
approaching of it Jerusalem? 1 think from the
pomp train 1 there must l e royalty in the
smell the breath of tiro spire*
winch are brought as pre.-euto, and 1 hear
the shout of the drivers, and 1 see thedu-t
covered caravan showing that they come
from far away. Cry the new* up to the
a ‘.T Th, ‘ Queen of Sheba advances. Let
an n the people out 1-etthe
mighty come t*' see.
men of the land come out on the
palace corridors. l.et Solomon come down
the stairs of fhe palace before the (Jneen has
ighted. Shake out the cinnamon and
tne saffron, and the calamus, and the Irani
incense and pass it into the treasure house.
Take up the diamonds until they glitter in
the sun.
'Hie Queen of Sheba alights. She enters t he
palace. She washes at the bath. She sit*
fiowu at the banquet. The cup liearurs bow.
The meat smokes. The music t rembJes in the
dash ot thu waters from the molten sea. Then
she rises from the banquet, and walks through
the conservatories, and ga z.es imtUearcbitoi'
lure, ami she asks Solomon manv strange
questions, and she learns about the religion
oj the Hebrews, and she then and there b>
comes a servant of the Lord God.
She is overwhelmed. She begins to think
that all the»sptces she brought, and .ill the
precious woods which are intended to be
turned into harps and psalteries and into raff
mgs for the causeway between the temple and
tue palace, and the oug hundred and eighty
thousand dollars in money—she begins to
think that aii these presents amount to noth¬
ing in such a place, and she is almost ashamed
that she has brought them, amt she says
within herself - “I heard a great deal about
this place, and alxmt this wonderful religion
of the Hebrews, but I find it far beyond my
hfty highest anticipations. I must add more than
per cent, to what lias been related It
exceels •verytbing that l emild have ex
pected. The half—the halt* was not told
the."
beam from this subject what a IwAutiful
tiling it is when social position and wealth
surrender themselves to tiod. Whenreligi ion
comes to a neighlxirhoo.l, the first to receive
- . ~.
it are the women. Some men say itisbecauHa
they they are weak minded. I say it is because
have quicker perception of what is
ngne, Bubiimer more ardent affection aud capacity for
emotion. After the women have
received the Gospel then nil the distressed
and the poor of both saxes, those who have
no friends, accept Jesus. Last of al! come
the greatly prospered. Alas, that it is so!
If there are those who have been favored
of fortune, or, a*sl might better put it.favored
of God, surrender all you have and all you ex
pect to be to the Lord, who blessed this Qn ■ ■■■u
of Sheba. Certainly you are uot ashamed to
»>e found in this Queen’s coippany. I am "la<l
that Christ has liafl His imperial friends
m all ages—Elizabeth Christina, Queen ol
Prussia; Maria Teodorovna, Queen of Rus¬
sia; Marie, Empress of France; Helena, th*>
imperial mother of Constantine; Arca¬
dia. from her great fortunes, buildup
public, baths in Constantinople and toiliug
Lor the alleviation of tho masses; Queen
Clotilda. leading her husband and three
thousand of his armed warriors to Christian
baptism; jeweled glove Elizabeth.of Burgundy, giving her
fereat fortunes to a bog gav distressed; and seatteriiig
among thc Prince
-Albert, singing “Rock of Ages' iuWiudsoi
Castle, and Queen Victoria, incognita, re.itj
ing the Scriptures to a dying pauper.
I bless God that the day Ls coming when
royalty will bring all its thrones, and mush*
all its harmonies, and painting all its pk j
nres, and sculpture all its statuary, aud
architecture ait its pillars, and conquest aii
its scepters, and the Queens of the earth, in
hmg air liue and of advance, fraoklucense lillin” shaTt
the the camels laden with gold.
approach hoisted, Jerusalem, and the gates shall U*
and the great burden of splendor
shall be lifted into the palace of this greater
th«ir Kolotnon.
Again,mv subject teaches me what is earn
ostne&s in rhe search of truth. Do you kim*
where Shelm wa<; It wav in Abyssinia or
*ome say hi the ^outheru fart of Arabia
frelix. In either castt it was a great way off
from JeruRaleui. To get from there to O & 11
salem she had to ero&- a country infested
with bandit**, uud go across blistering
slay &• home aud tend a committed to in
H n tte about this new religion, and have the
.leteeato* and repon in HMjani Siloinoa? to that reUgiou
"f v» yaith iw heraeU, King and hear to, herself St:# wautau
sh,
raraoi’i and kin,,toms 011 ® t PkeBhSCiMlSnSdu
1 ', l au au >" wov «n byOiienta:
shuttles anu .„io wanted a crown set with
Ibe jewel* of eternity. Bring oat the c«rae!s
i
;
w
k an
flUti 1
wn. at 1
va; rti etL th*
van rrtth
tfa ey KOI W«*l it. ■?vl
are pe *pic i ft»M if. ir and
am reftriv t- a Christian at
1 ' d I 1
if am
am to h Luxli lie
will net *; you must rl to J« ru-
4"„,, " *f the l^ord,
WU1 not 5CP ii must » an«i
rt lllv-U Oil
tb tr sure th
heart *i the thr. »n** uo •
Tii and hear the waters of salvation cia-hfng ]
in t<>r.utains all aroun * 1».tit the throne.
Sit down a* the hanqi Wily'KhiTthe
• crap •f tbe
>f Goa the cup U vs. 4 f >ad on the
The Bible Th.
yi-s.ii •hi* j I
er Woman speaking -f •the
3Ut ii shall rij
m judgment against generation and con- 1
damn it: for -he came from the utter most |
parts of the <-arth i.i hear the wisdom of
>lom->n an< 4d! a gn than
non in here B'hat infatuation theniff mg
down in idl ting to sav
eiitei at the strait gate
B f it hall ». l- u you. .seek, and y<
dial kn and it snail 1 m* < >{*en^i to
ke the nn of Heaven bv a
i*e camel-!
a t subject impresses ni** with tbe
fact that i ■digion is a surprise of the to anv religion t»no j
that gets i t. Thi- story new ,
in Jani^tleat and of the glory of King Holo
iiiou, who was a r i < bi ist —that itcxj
rolled on and on. ai . was told bv every tra v- j
coming hack from Jerusalem The news
srees on the w mg of ev
naira van. an*l you know a story en- I
S' ;es a* it re*r >1.1. au.l by the time that [
■
ii. it must l*e a tremendous story. Aud yet
she thi-Queen Im-t heard dw lares .o niueh in regard and had to it, her although anti.-i- j
nation*raised so high, the half -tin-half was I j
not told bar.
S.i religion is always a surprise ra old anyone *Wy. j !
that get* it. The story of graoe-an
tt^Ut'Vuharn?^ have-affirmed j
licils it with visions of glory, ; j
and ministers of religion have sounded it
through the lane* and the highway and
“uMnSwufcSM'-J^ro.iZ
canvas with pencil; audit has »>eou recited .
in the when doxology of first, greet congregations. l«mk And the
yet palace God's a man comes and to the royalty on
of merev. to see j
of ( 'hrist, and the wealth of this banquet, and
the luxuriance of His attendants, and the
l.ivelimw ,.f His faoa and the joy of Hi* *er- ;
"wiSrigClriTtrTumpK^"^* told ‘uiN4& j
half was not me!” ;
I appeal to those who are Christian*. Gom- I
life nFhristion
with the appreciation of that joy you have
now sine*;’ v<»n have laconic a Christian, and
Iiondage, had You any Appreciation' ready of to what was
to come. arc to day answer
an.l say in regard to the dteooverles you
have made of the mercy and the groco and
the goodness of Goil: “The half—tho half
was not told me T’
t XSnUV;r’4.v^.' w «lj, we hear a great deal V about l! L^ tho , r: , J good t t^
,
,
of the horse*. The lionV mano patted j
the hand of a babe. Ships of Torshish
cargoes for Je*us, and the hard,
liarren. winter bleached, storm scarred,
split rock breaking into floods of
water. Deserts into which dromeda
thrust !heir nostrils, Ixy-ausc they were
of the simoon—uesortt* blooming into
roses and silver tipped lilies
fi is the old story. Everybody tells it.
told it, John told it, Paul told it,
told it, Lnther told it, Calvin told it.
Milton told it-cverybo<ly inidniebt tolls il; and
—and yet when the shall fly the
Christ shall marshal His groat army,
rUina .lashing her Mote into the .lust,
hoar the vou*e «t^orl and wheel into
and India, destroying her Juggernaut
Ganges, snatching shall up her hear little children from
tho voice of God
wheel into line; an<! vine covered
and w heat crowned Russia, and ail tho
of the earth shall hear the voice of
and fall into line; then tho Church,
hus been robed toiling and struggling through
centuries, and garkiucd like a bride
for her husband, shall put aside her
veil and look up into the face or her Lord the
King and say ; “The half—the half was not
told me!’
Weil, there it: coming a greater surprise to
Christian—-a greater surprise than
I have depicted. Heaven is an old
Everybody hymn the talks about it. There is
a in hymn book that does
refer to it. Children read about it )
their Sabbath-school books. Aged nieu
say “f 1^!^° & t
We call it liO*no. Wo sav it i
I ho liousf* of many mansions We
togetJ'vr all sweet, 1 exutiful, delicate, j
words; we weave them mto let- I
rs, and then we spell it out in rose and lily
amaranth And yet that place is going
Ihi a surprise to the most intelligent Chris-j
usram'th.> S fa^oantry°
of havo wal
us started. It is a desert march,
I u! we urge on the camels. What though
ilasteSn^to'the^aTa^ and hopjs ’ W^akc M® oi?
and Ckristian ambitions,
frankincense aud myrrh and , asda. to the
noni'.u'" ti,.'! herein f,M US theVbwrt’ * " ot . re? ‘- 'vVtreon AVe must tl“
not safe out
camels. 1 stye the tlonubs against the sky,
and the houses° 1 Lebanon ami the temples !
let the in sun the and poor the pilgrims. pat e* tlaVas’Sey' open to |
Send the word up to the palace that we
niarrlfof'tlie^l^i'ri 1 '” Tht-'KViIg'w'iTWxmiemit
and say “Welcome to the palace; K»th<*
in tliesu water- recline on these banks
fra ” kinco ! ,so an ' 1 1
it before the altar.' ° Aiul yeLmy'fi'■h»ndi!' I
when heaven bursts upon us it will b?
» greater surprise than that—Jesus on
Christian friend* surrounding us i„ glory) I
All our sorrows and tears and sins gone by
fo.evor! the thousands of thousands, the j
1
l>er, will < ry. world without eiul The hah •
—tho half was not told me!"
j
i
He Wanted to Know \tiout Angels.
- ;
" AuntT, did ti e angels cany Mrs.
.Jones up to heaven.” i
Joms “Why, Charlie, I think so. Ms.
was a goo 1 womon.’’
“She was an awfully fat woman. Tlio
angels must bo strong."
1’iosm g -r* the train from Word
l n\iitimml to look ;it the sixoeir-oM
b,,v Who was bent on getting iuforn a- i
lion. H« was a manly iitth* fellow, with '
- bright, piet y fa ... tha showed in e
hg.n,-,. beyond his years. His y, nog !
aunt not m d to o aux o.is to stop the
flow o. qiit s ions, but bo \\; si Ih uml to
know somolh ug mole ;.b>ut angels then
And there.
"How do you know there are ar.ge's,
nr ; it 1 :'
. .
s:^£H£" ,h
' T,; s;
"Hush: Don’t talk so loud, tha-iie.
Of con-so we don't s-e them, but u, «...
their p etnre*. Don’t you icmemb t-the
an.-elsin that ptvttv b ok that t'u-h
John* '
”>• ntyotl.-”
. lmt but white lit- t! c ante's
l'iclure- token, arr.’ior I*
t( e-* g dler’ Mho.- th. y t ,ke .. o ,m s
ot a-.g.te-o B lyjnsto angels t ”
erliaps o I .tou t know.
turestakin?” ' 1
‘•Oh. Chiii-Ee ! Please lie quiet. You
will make auntie's head ache.”
Charlie me lit del in ail. nee for a fe.i
luimilet, a ,1 lemuded : “ 1 don’t kn -w
why Mr. Bruwu sa d a}n>nted vo.i were his ”
“Williams) n g. 1 ’ tb< Iv.ikc*
man, : ltd : > the train c.um to a s an 1
still the small boy got a shaking a da
uluspwisl wiu-mrig that stopja-d all :n
cii.-r talk ab .lit angi 1-. VI. Tul ue
'jci.ius and insanity ate *omeiitue;
< ombined in the same person or in close¬
ly connected members of the same
family; but it js not easy to trace the
connection between those mental con
(nitons .... aud ... th< sinful or criminal art*
tiiat are apt to be committed by persons
so orgaaized.
A GRAVE MATTER.
i:ii H iliil ii Is* '"1 Otih \ tsr
I’KMHTFKV.
itti OI«i I'tiffir i'ancy Uia|»Tui.s|
hy Figares Tl»a* ,4re 4tiou|M*tl
Tojfei her in •* 4 tear an«t
l*i( tllT»‘.s<|Hi Manner.
That the world is st cemetery
d«n laid with hurr nies is evhl
the following * ticJe by William < .
Prime, LL.IL, in fii \Vw York
I ^
2 itin in old jMietif fancy
of * 3 «* - emetery biiritsl
rifie * deej iih men an<l
W<J inti i hildr* lia* lx‘(*o refuted by
tigur But grea error aud will pre
vail, links*, th* he well and atead
Id,
The jHijiul.ition c rhe earth is no'x
nt*r»ut one thousand five hundred millions.
‘he humaii raee to have existed
ind to lay a en always
it as now In t* * 1 years you have
centurie In each century yon
aunt three u rations of mankind.
ho generation-i i all. each being n
at ion of one thousand five hundred
Xmv lav •* >:: K 7':Z i
one g< aeration. 1 , ) a uge . l •
to give to cVt-i man by ’ w,,mfln an
a jjnve five feet two, or teu J
feet, You want for vour grave- ;
then 15,001) million square feet of
A s<iu. r«* mue contains some- | .
j,; n , j css t |,«n t- 0(1“ <>•>«) square feet.
Vouw.nl then a gMv.yard not fifty-five |
mile* long by ten wide tor your whole j
” Now multiply .this bv 1H0 ! i
j .' u “ , “ burial MOtind for
, years of mankind! That is, a flrip 1
hind 18P0 imps long bv fifty-five miles
w jd e will lie ample. In other words, a i
be sufficient for I“'M100square the entire human miles | j
to lie feide by side.
at ^hich j j iave given von 1
continuous population is obviously
eu or mously large. The estimate of the
size of each grave is very large. A strictly
correct estimate would reduce the size of i
the required cemetery more than one
half. *But enormous as it Is, YOU could | -
, ut r i )Ur j a l- 2 Voun(l for all men
who have lived on earth, ao that they
could lie side bv side, iu Arizona or iu
California or you could lav it out in
Texas larpe enough to accommodate tbe
race of bOOO years past, aud also the luce
for 6000 vear^ vet to come all sleeping in
the soil of that one State of this Union
But some one says the race of man has
been on earth 100,000 years. That is a
imagination, h and there is not, so
i** *. . know, . fact . which , . . to rest . it. ..
r * a on
But suppose it is true, and suppose the
population ahvavs what it now is. You
hav,* provided ior«0<myearaofit. Non
want nearly seventeen times as la ge a
cemetery for the generations of a thou
<*.„,! ‘ oontimes 1,1 * Tint 1 U von y >u want an 1- l.
riKI,000 square miles m it. Lay it out
wherever you please, 1700 miles long by
10()0 , v j (l ;. U is lmt a 1 [wi t of Ihc Uni
. , States. And , so enormously , , large
have been the rough estimates thus far
used, it is. saf e to sav that if the human
rac, ‘ i haB , '"' p ^ " rx,s, f u f c 100 i/u» . non 0 ^ J««.
:l separate grave could he provided for
every individual of the race within a
, 1 Klrt o{ thp United Stales east of the Mis
. . . Kivcr. . .
The fact is, my friend, you need but si
very small piece of the earth’s surface to
lie down in. And you occupy but a very
small space while you live. Stand in a
corner, with your back to the wall and
your shoulder against the side wall. Put
a book against the wall outside your
other shoulder, close to it. Let some¬
one hold a stick across in front of your
lioily. So you will measure how much
room you occupy when standing up in a
crowded assembly. You are a large man
if you require two square feet. The
requirement of a generation of
women and children is not one
persons can stand on a square
of surface. Now, sec Jiow small a
after all would bo au assembly of
•
n men out ol , ,, *S { ‘ H } * ,ui . kindreds , . . , and ,
were they gathered together.
Can y your arithmetic still further,
lai ‘ l out a ‘-'emeterv for the one
five hundred millions of man
now living. Build a city for them
f,wt ' 11 iD * Avew K e fainilies #> ««•
, " s,ma # 11 nnd^ive each family
house and lot twenty feet by a hundred
Your cemetery gave five persons fifty
Sl forty l unre times f eet of grave*. large. Their Your city city lot is
:»s must
therefore be forty times as large as vour
n ‘ m,!U ‘ r *'' Mi } twc,,t ? P el ' for Rom!
streets. I will not save you Or your
school-going child the trouble of “doing
the % lre * '’ Impress the truth on your
Imn<l v three minutes work with pencil
-
and paper, that the whole living human
wee could Ih* gathered in a city so small
* n comparison with what you have im
agined. #
And now remember that all tin* esti
' '' ha T c “ ou<1 to '>
, ‘‘irgt*. » his city . lot might as well be
twenty by fifty. People live in flats
7 th ° Ut a ‘«« *» stories one
a v< * an,)th ‘ » ' *ur city, modeled
after . the latest fashions in cities, need not
be a quarter the size our estimates have
made it. When von have built your
city, inquire and he surprised to find the
vast space tor gardens, fields and forests
vou d:m ’ left accessible to it, whence
-
could come all the necessities and
luxuries of civilized life.
"""■ “ —
Photographing the Stars *
Thft ... ' T ^ mp tU°d 0 f ]>ho- ,
"
t ‘fffi'apk'ng stars: When the photog
ra l*J ier placesin ^ivc the'focus photographic of the telescope
vibrations of the plate, the
themselves rays of light throw
assiduously on the plato and
steadily apply to the tusk of
asunder the molecules of silver salts
the gelatine film. Just as the wave*
thc ocean, by incessantly beating a-minst
» shore, will gradually wear awav
; ,r:
net^sary the de.-ompositioii.
engraves image of the star.
will l« observed that this process will
*’ ,u ' more complete the longer the Z
l-urc is permitted, and thjwe
of thu reasons why photography
s,t.-h :ra admirable '.nethotlM
th,- -ra,, vVc .-an give exposm
mauv minutes, or of one two three o
four hours, cud all th- time the die-t
Hence
lh ,lla ' a ?,al "meh is altogether
f ' L ' ,do 1,1 produce an impression upon
•
mogt ,wute c l e - fortified by a telesco])?
power, yet be
" n a sufficient exposure ha*
'dlowed. to leave its record on thc
Hrn* it i* that photographs of
iteaveus discios. to us the existence
stars which could never have been
tot i- i oveepl for thi- cumulative
of ob- nation that photography is
|>eteat to ^ive. Xo telescope is
m tbe photo^-ruphi •jparatus takes
• exact iraprt**'iitja.
Qu Ui 101 the
tralian ■‘"titi. . it isio times a*
i as Fra He " 0i,r :- ¥ * is limes a* iat-gt
. Kingu.m-.;
•* • yet it
* population of less than 400,000
| fcirrm ®r fail ore of Married Lift
rum mex fat:
tVhen a wife thinks mo t of her r>
| tires than of her husband.
When a wife believe* that berbwilaiii!
love her whether 4ie (Wrvei it ot
not
When a wife sloups to her husband's
ci ;ioi 1 trie* to equal him in brine
uj»-an.
When a wile tail* realize that yu
j ! lienee j an»i thau gratleBMi with are more natura!
ifir a man.
When a woman marries for convenieuee
and J>! Is that she marries for love. j
When a wife pays too much attention
! : i/> her husband's old vows, and not j
I : enough to the nature of the man she has j
j married.
When a wife iusi&tft that her husband
j shall be as good as his mother, instead of ! i
as i*ood a* his father. I
When a wife says that it her husband
earns three dollars a day he ought to put (
a dollar and a half of it ir. her lap every
“her share.”
when a wife who is not expected to I
( / {) a such work iu the presence of the ,
neighbors that she was not “raised” that i
WaV ftu ,| w jn no t ,. K - the woo*l. j
When husband, the wife instead blames all the trouble j
on her of accepting her 1
9harC t - I
Wlitu a wife expctls the faet that she j
i# moilif-i- to eompenxate for all her I
failures. I
THE WOMEN #AT: >
VViicu a man says he cannot contro 1
his temper when with his wife aud chil- ,
(Iren, although they know , he controls , it ..
wb«-,i provoked by a large, tn^cuhr man j
1
- •
.
YVhen . liar and his . i<
a man is a vti
Ano™ «■
When a man is liberal, and fair, and
cheerful with every otic- except his
wife.
‘n JJ*. 31 an angel . would many Inin. to «l* cl
When a man is patient and cringing
with men who <lo not care if they dis
please him, and impatient with his sick
cnildreu.
When a man expects that his wife
ought to buy as much with one dollar as
he himself can buy with two.
When a man frets because bis wife did
not love him before she knew him.
When a man expects the fountain to
tie higher than the head; when he cx*
peels a better home than he provides.
When a man smack* his lips in recol
lfction of his mother s cooking, and for
gets that he had a better appetite as a
*>oy than he has as a man.
'Mien a man believes that a wife
should give ail her time to their home,
and then wonders that she never has «uy
money of her own .—Atchison Globe.
A Country Boy Comes Out Ahead.
A young countryman, fall and awk
ward looking, secured a clerkship this
week in the office of an insurance coni
pany on Wall street. He came from up
th .State. He wore stcrc clothes and
rough cowhide boots. Tiny tufts ol
hair, the Color of New Jersey mud, ap¬
peared in little patches on his chin and
upper lip. He is a college graduate, and
can run up a column of figures with thc
rapidity of a lightning calculator. As a
precaution against thc temptations of the
big city, his father advised him to be
economical, and told him to confine his
expenses to -j*l A day. At noon on Tues¬
day, being on speaking terms with the
rest of the clerks, he asked one of them
w here he could lunch at a moderate tig
me. Here was a chance to give thc
countryman a razzle dazzle,
“Go around into William street,” said
he, ‘ and on the corner of Beaver street
you will liuil n good restaurant and the
charges most reasonable.” lle referred
to Oelmnnico's. Thanking his informant,
the young countryman went where
directed. As soon as he hail left the
office the other fellow told all thc clerks.
Four of them, a* many as could get off at
one time, followed, the new clerk around
to Delmonieo’s to “see him drop dead
when he got his check,” as they expressed
it.
! They • sat at a table where (hey J could
j watch , him - unobserved. . . I he new clerk , ,
! had roast beef and vegetables. It b
j probable he expected the waiter would
hand him a check amounting to about 25
j cent*. It was more than that. The
i young fellow stopped the action of his in
} Hsors the little a* lie pasteboard, read the figures, “7fie.,” on
!
lie gave his chair a little jerk forward
j | and finished the meal, The four clerk*
j were gloating over the prospect. After
brushing the down on his upper lip with
bis napkin he strode up to the cashier's
desk. The four gay young jokers were
, his heels. He planked down his check
! flt
; and his silver dollar with a bang. The
J j cashiew him. He slid slid the it quarter back again change and toward adid
;
j j “Give me a twenty-five cent cigar/’ He
lit his cigar and walked out with the air
of a man who might have a mortgage on
! the Cotton Exchange. His nonchalance
! nearly paralyzed the other four youtl IS.
A * ,ht v *»•»« " n <•>« sidewalk.
, all . wearing .* innocent looking faces, he
i I
| gave au extri puff to his cigar and said:
“Boys there’s a mirror in that place, I
j saw you all the time .'—New York Sun.
Newspapers as Life Preservers.
,, 'eneial ..i,> Bussey tho Assistant . Seen- ,
,
** ie “denot', has a novel use for
”! ' T H* a P e,v - ••><* othei day when the
was sharp htravas preparing to go
, ou. of the department budding for lunch,
: A reporter who happened to be iu the
| room at the time was surprised to sec
him unbutton the lower buttons on his
vert, fold up a newspaper and, placing it
ovev his abdomen, ’ button the vest over
it .
| “I alwavs do that ” he said in reolv to
| a surprised S inquiry going frem the reporter cold'
;. wUe I am to be out iu tbe
Thl . oewspaper J is a non-conductor of
i, 1“ . ,, w i . 1’ ‘” :e ' , overthestomach . ,
Tib ’ '. . “P p, ‘I i“ TT iTT
i u '«d the reservoir ’ of heat of the body.
! •oaT'and'h' 1 su 1 " ut V te ’, fo ^ an
over
j
| man -J f rien d in more senses than ^
when chilled bv rnt.l , „„„ ' *
■ i, nlaced It.. over tl„> -t, o ®“
1 '
. . , T'TT T
\ j... ™ to T ° pneu
, f recom«nende,l
: to Zn f I <1 tha
i n “ ‘
■' »Tr - v ' erv f ‘appro- - „
! ’u . -gashmgtm Afar.
How a Town (lot Its Name
j Bncoda i- the name of a town in Wash
. The origin its
| m g tou - of name is of j,
j somewhat curious nature, However, it
j anses lrom civilized sources. It may
1 )»uz*le some of the commentators when
| endeavor to search for its origin,
i 11 ra 'k'ht search all the foreign
. '“S 08 * 1 ** * n ,,M ' world, and still not be
;,Wp to disf '<»'rr it. Thi; is how it was
; tl >ri«tened: There were three great nil
* road min 111 t,lat portion of the country
where the town is now, and their uames
were Buckley. Coulter and Davi-. Each
of them wished tbe town to lie named
after himselt. Bur they could not come
;loan agreement, and finally, as a coni
, promise, the two first letteis from each
mu,to were taken and placed together
and thereby originated Bu-co-da - <»7.
(Ore ) Statesman.
WOMAN'S IVOlil.l).
PI, FAS A NT I.ITKKATI BK K>R
FFMIMSK RKtllf'.lls
UK A** MAX DKEp
In Missouri there is a worn: an w
ties with her a written perm iir fr >m the
Governor to wear man’s dres anvwhc
in the State outside of tin- cities an Bi
large town*. Left an orphan vnen ic
baby f she grew up used to all kind- of
shifts, and findjng at the age of fifteen
what many another woman Hods out
later, that petticoats are Mnetirues a
barrier t< progress, she assumed men s
attire as a simple matter of convenience,
nh#* has done all kinds of manual labor
that men on a farm are istomed to.
xml her spes ial delight is in lircakiug
horses, in whii-h she has wonderful skill.
Her name is KmiI t Paxton, and she i
now about forty vears old.—J Ve>r Y">
>’ten.
A NOVEL TBIMXIK6.
There have been many odd anu effec
tive wavs of ornamenting dresses this
season, but a New York bride seems to
have taken the lead in suggesting 00 a unique
St , Tle * of ,nmmlu ,hc of the fair
- "
maids who atteiiiled her at the ceremouy.
The material of the dresses was soft white
goods. .411 about the skirt in n deeper
bonier was a Grecian pattern done with
< ommou pins. The effect was quite preMy
Zn\*ZTouo^ Z'
'lance to follow the ceremony it is quite j
reasonable to suppose that these young
women must of necessity have declined !
to participate, not wishing to inflict tor¬ |
ture on their innocent partners by punct- 1 j
uring them with the pins, and destroy- . j |
ing all the poetry of the waltz.— Hartford I
■
Timr*.
.
OIBI.S RUN FOR BEAUTY.
Kumiinif is as natural to a healthy wit.
as breathing, but it is carefully trained ;
out of her at as early an age ns possible,
and who ever saw a grown woman xvho
[iossessed that supreme grace of motion:
To see a woman run is to look at -a goose
waddling. Did you ever look at a frieze
of Greek girls running in any classic col¬
lection? Did it not impress you with its
beauty, heaith aud sweetness, its joy in
ning? Could you look at the round,
supple limbs, instinct with grace and free
dorn, the short tunics, the lightness and
poise of the figures without feeling that
these large eyed sound lunged creatures
were what woman was meant to be?
Many disorders of the complexion come
Irom functional difficulties, and to be
able to run is to possess strum* limbs
which bear life's burden easily. —Mrt.
'
Heaton
the latest FEMININE fraud.
Two young and pretty women entered
a Broadway car, each carrying in her
arms a little parcel in the most tender
and motherly fashion, fio solicitous
they over their respective parcels that a
lullaby seemed almost bursting from their
lip*. They were not nurse girls, so they
must be mothers, although it was itppar
ent they were young mothers, aud very
handsome ones withal. Half a dozen
men jumped up to offer them seats. The
girls giggled as they sat down—aud no
wonder, for thc bundles they carried in
such a motherly tashion had been deftly
improvised, under a sudden inspiration,
to represent babies. There was little ot
them except a crook of the arm and a
lace handkerchief to cover a suppositious
babe, but enough to deceive a poor, trust*
fill man. The jjijrgle was general, for
the ^irls ^ had obtained seats on anew and
original plan .-—New Yorh llerlf.
GRECIAN FILLETS FOR PHETTY GIRLS.
Grecian fillets for pretty* yirls to bind
over a high coiffure when wearing classic
gowns are three bands of gold fastened
together, either quite plain or embossed
in Greek key design, Silver and tor
toise shell fillets arc also made, some in
single bands, others three together, and
there arc ribbons of silver, as flexible as
silk, to bc twined about the head us the
wearer chooses. Spiral pieces of shell or
of gold are to be screwed into low, soft
coils of hair, to keep them from falling.
Shell combs, with high, ddicatc carving,
pointed to one side or else qmte straight
cost, m light and in dark
shades, from*:! to 130. Shell hairpins
arc as single popular gifts as they were last
year, or in pairs, merely carved,
SSS, h J 1 r:, 1 r.T\Z *
a Rled flowers „ are also , on such pins .
totls , of WhV light hair { TT to show plamly r- and :
cost only twenty-five cents apiece; gold
pins arc for gulden hair and silver pins
for gray hair.— Harper's Bazar.
FASHION NOTES.
Tartan is much used in' combination
with plain serge.
Kiddy colored head trimmings in leal
patterns find favor.
Skirls of ordinary dresses seem to lie
increasing in length.
I tc skirts of home toilets are almost
invariably made with trains.
Yandyked fur borders are used in very
handsome and rich materials.
Small crochet ball-buttons are first
choice for smooth cloths. Hut button;
are covered with velvet.
,,, lu . k' s au , loops , of , black ,, ,
' g narrow
. k cord furnish
f a neat, inexpensive
lnmm,n . for oo!eu dress
« "
Warm jackets . for coachini;*, driving,
etc., are made of leopard-skht, sealskin,
,ho axis deer, mink or black Russian
lamb.
» i» rumored that the short walking
skirt is to bc superseded by the incon
desir'd t, „ , ‘ i. ,t ' ! " ,y U 1 a . 1,1,11 . .
0 ’ '
A !/ new material for rough much
wear
usc ' in Loudon is Harris cloth, which
F{ :i.jk w Hs
Wh;.*l " 1 ! luckskm l-V- ls coa » ID - g lnt0 • , K"
tbe , waistcoats of doth gowns, and col
' ars and cuffs of the same material are
skin ***’£«*ii*h bc .nil*. The buck
may restored, when soiled, to its
pristine whiteness with removing pipe cUv with
< >ut the necessity of it from the
garment,
Encouraging Example.
A contributor to Xaftre recounts tbe
following instance of animal svmi.athv
and instructive example; Some year* ago
we had two cats, it tabby and a powerful
Tom, perfectly white all over. One dav
I happened to be iu the attic, aud noticed
them go out on the slates, when Toni
jumped across the yard to thc next roof.
H lieu Tabby cam, to the edge of the
-lutes her courage failed, and -he uttered
a cry of distress, whereupon Tom turned
round and leaped back, and. giving a fear
ful mow. as much as to say : “Look how
«.isdy l iM lif done. jumped across
again, this time followed hy Tabby, to
my great delight.
Actually 41K privates and ioa-com¬
missioned officers and twenty.three oftj—
cer»of tht Austro-Hungarian eimy de,
stroyed themselves in the year ended
AGRKTLTIBAL !
TOPICSOl IVTI KKST KCLUIVl
TO | \i!M l\li (.\i:i»TV
to.
Tnat torn alone i« not good teed fot •
growing pigs, tn.et practicalfarmers bare j
1 learned, but manv do not give The true
explanation of the digestion faet. -It of is too heartv aui- j j
for the winker young
mate, is the rea-oo assigned most fre- ■
QUClltlv. But is it true that young aui- !
mals have less power r to digest than <i
those of mature age; We doubt much it
.
this be the fact. Young animals, prop
j erly fed. make more growth ami tat from
the same amount c»i feed than those ani
mats which have attaiued their growth.
This 1 . ould seem to indicate that theit
digetis power- w'ere stronger, and th'v
w«* ladieve to lie nue. But growth im
peratively require* * fully balanced ra¬
tion, which cotru not. It does not
contain in sufficient proportions the di ¬
luents for making bone and muscle that
are indispensable in the feed of growing
animals. It will take fat. but in a small
animal there is not .sufficient room tc
. - . , . . e H
P l< ' 1 . i t c a pig •' t n ‘ *
“podet and tat. without ••.
com vrows J in
^ ^ o{ ^ In tfaf
this does spoil the digestion, The un
balanced ration cannot Ik; properly dis¬
posed of, because as it produces only fat
there is no longer any ro4>nt for it. Nr.
other domestic animal suffers as does thr
V**™' this *"'**'*' •^auaenoothe,
is given so concentrated and poorly hai
a need a ration. Calves, colts and lamb*
have hay, corn stalks or straw in addition
to corn, but where straw or corn fodder
are given largely to growiug stock, some
other food, if only wheat bran, should
be added to corn meal, to supplement it*
deficiencies as a food ration for young
animals. Linseed meal and cotton seed
meal are better than corn for mixing w ith
such coarse feeds .—American Cvhir.ator .
WINTER FEEDING OF COWS AND CALVES
Feeding iu winter is costly because ol
the expense of harvesting the crops used
for the feeding, and the larger consump¬
tion of food to sustain the animal heat,
so largely spent to overcome the cold ol
the season. It is often made more costly
by neglect to feed liberally at the begin¬
ningHhe ftockquieklyrunningdown for
w f f °‘ ud e, ! uat c and gaming
' vhat fias 1 l,ec “ 1 * ,th n,uch “ ,fhcult .V
?» feef,ln ; ‘!' , 0,,nt 111 n thu \ ,b, " ‘ V ,uter okl wea,h re< l ulreK . er - f(,r Hpdc ,ht ®’ '
” ’
best results, a generous supply at the
dart, and a wise selection of food through
the season. Moreover, for the sake of
ht . th<! sh,,uld , , , bc *“!*
» >ri ’ - c0 " s m a P r0 '
<1uctl y c condltlon a11 throu « h thc 8eason -
aild ‘“ e Young stock should bc kept grow¬
ing’. By judicious feeding, the yield of
the cows can bc sustained, and quite as
good a quality of butter can be made:
, aud this is a most important point in
dairy management, hi using this term,
: it is meant to include every farm where
j cows are kept, if it is only one for
the domestic supply. It is a great lots
to feed dry cows on hay and grain,
merely to carry them through the winter
for the sake of making twenty-five ov
thirty dollars per head through the suit*
mer. This used to be thc custom, lmt
circumstances have changed ot late, ami
j it is now necessary, in the close eompe
| tition in all kinds of business, to make
i everything 1 count, and to make the farm
and stock pay their way every day in thi
year. At least twenty-five dollars is now
j j required that profit to feed a he cow made through in thc the wintei
-.<> can summer:
! mid, as the winter feeding is thc most ex
j pensive, cows should be possible; made profitable
j then as far as may be or, at any
rate, a certain number of cows should he
j in profit through the winter to pay for
j the feeding of the others, which are de¬
| pended upon for keeping up the supply
through the summer.
It has been proved beyond question
j that cows can be kept thiough the wintei
most cheaply on ensilage: but those far
liters who have been wise enough foailo|>l
the silo do not need advice in regard to
i 1 ceding their stock. “Bv their work*
! we know them” to lie sufficiently in
| formed a* to their business jn this respect,
I but the great majority ol formers have
not reached this point yet, anil need ad¬
| vice and instruction. Cows can be kept
lul l v ./ prodnetive on drv fodder, with «
suffi( ent sll)(|)lv foo<l . Mfl J
t P r ->‘;' ... a n "intor dames have been kept
; "P™ feeding, and profit may yet bc
Tto ^1 g °° l “Tf‘
loss !“" which might be difficult to -t
overcome,
, ul d now that the out-door feeding i« not
| MirtiHt-nt. the winter feeding should be
b at onct ,
j Full daily feed for an average cow
should consist of twenty to thirty pounds
of cut corn-fodder, nr clover hay, with
( at least four or five pouTSds of mixed corn
!.anil bran together; nr fifteen po tnds ol
j j fodder feed. An with addition ten pounds of of the pounds mixed
two ol
cotton-seed m.-til for milking cows may
be made with benefit. This food may be
[ divided into three ration*; a heaped
bu<hel basketful of mixed feed—niadt
, up of corn-fodder or hay , ov both, cut
and wet with hot water, and sprinkled
over in the feed-box with one-half the
grain feed—should be given night and
morning, and a feed of dry hay will serve
! at noon. The slight warmth of the feed
: tHtti mixed will be grateful to the cows,
and will secure a full yield of milk. With
each feed a sufficient ouantitv ,,i salt
; should be ^ given • ' one ounce with e-ichra
\Z At noon, be
the cows are fed thev should be
I watered from T h well o th ^nary r,r tern
| !! ‘ A tgb f™’ no morv
suffl ™ « - e ?‘ . St T f ° r healtMl " , V, ’ ntl -
! iTmll * warn be enough, more
j bealthful uud t mvigoratio«■ ■ • r than an at
! mosphere artiticiaily warmed. To keer
the air pure bv cleanliness in the stable
! is more conducive to comfort and health
j than to make it warm bv artificial heat,
! ^ : n i sr. ttiSyS
jg iqg is indispensable to make '?£**<'£ good COWS.
—Am,- iv-u- AgncuUvrut.
FARM AND DARDEN NOTES.
Saving is a* profitable as producing.
Let nothing on tbo iarm go to waste if it
can be put to some use.
To simply sustain life is uot the aim ol
feeding. Production of meat or dairy
P ro<lucts is tlje end aimed at -
| StUd V U ” w to dt * >’ our work in J ke
-
cas,B> ‘ “ W ' Tim
{ - b ° th tro,e aud lab ' jr foic “
Barbed wire makes a good fence for a
b<Jg yard. It does uot need to be high,
rbut must dose. Swine soon learn tc
i “ 3 P ' ir -
In the treatment of woodland two ob
should be kept in view—-the growth
"f valuable pasture and the growth or
j valuable timber,
A man who cannot be on friendly
j term* hamll, with Ids in horses is uot tit to own
or ..ov manner manage the
, faithful rreatm>
! renant.- may not lawfully remove th,
manure made on u farm during the tirm
i <ff theii occupancy; the (aw recognize*
the fact that good husbandry require?
j dia '- ^ should be returned to the soil
j whence it came,
Some Bridal C’ustnme*.
Nearly all wedding RiperstitioL* refer
*> tb« bride. For instanc e, she will be
unlucky if she weds on a Saturday, or
happy If the sun shines on her wedding:
t> r win she will he unlucky if she look*
»f herself in the gla>r after being fully
dressed, or if she receives a present of
p. #n j ^ j* threatened with a sul
j‘. n violent end if she teats her wed
,jing veil. If the bridegroom in his
nervousness should drop the wedding
ring, or not put it directly tin the right
i G ge r his mistake threatens future tin
. for his
happiness, not for himself but
bride. But these omens are innumerable.
and at least equal importance is attached
to the appearance of the lady as to her
•eta. She must -earn herself with he
Coming grace, vet with shy maiden mod
estV; iier eves should he downcast and
her cheeks cither very jade or liiautlcd
with a hlusli;” a few tears also are both
proper and natural. The us. of the ring
is almost as ancient as marriage itself, but
the origin of the veil, usually ascribed to
tbe Orientals, is not at all so clear. Om
explanation ascribes it to solemnized Anglo-Saxon in
times, when porch. marriages We were read that “it
the church was
a nisloni for four tall men—tbe tallest
obtainable—to hold a square of cloth over
the heads of the couple during •care-cloth' the cere
monv. It is inferred that the
was so used to shadow the bride’s blush
ing face from the too close sent!toy of the
surrounding onlookers, and that, there
fore, it is -°---- the origin of the bridal veil. ”
“I’D rather he a w ild turkey and live
on the prarie,” said a small boy, “than
be a tame turkey, and be killed every
dav.
When the summer's rose has fatlAl
What shall make it fair again?
When the fats with pain is shaded
What shall drive away brighten the pain ?
Never shall a blo<som
After blighted by the frost.
But the load of pain may lighten.
And we need not fount as lost
xl\ the pleasure of life when the wife and
mother, upon whom tue happiness of home so
largely depends, is afflicted with the deiicalo
diseases peculiar to women. It is terrible to
contemplate the miser> exist ng in our midM
because of the prevalence of these diseases.
It is high time that all women should know
that there it» one sure remedy for all female
complaints, and that is Dr. Pierce's Favorite
Prescription. Do not allow ill-health to fas¬
ten Iteelf upon you. Ward It off hy the use
of this standard remedy. But if it has al¬
ready crept in, put it to rout. You ran do it.
by tho use of the “Favorite satisfaction Prescription.” it
is guaranteed to give in every
case, or money paid tor it will be returned.
For blllouftness, sick headache, indigestion,
and constipation, take Dr. Pierce’a Re.Jets,
“What struck you most, in the equatorial
regionsV” asked the a gentleman reply. of a traveler.
‘The sun,” was
'•V.
t t«r
h O'
a
ms lit
A ----?
1
( Of 1
a -Mi t
/, 3 ! t If
vZ7j wNPl wm
' 's' a
7, 1 ii i ■ ''A w zz
tl ' %
■
3 //
.
Copyright, 1889.
' THE KISO’S TOUCH ” SUPEHSTITI0N.
In England, two centuries ago. popular superstition credited the “Ro;
Touch "with curing scrofula; and although for scoffing at the idea in 1(191 1
King was declared to be an “ infidel,” even his “ faithless ” touch was credil
with a cure. These superstitious practices have now become obsolete, and
their place we. have a scientific remedy in Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discove
cleansing which eliminates the system the Impurities of all taints from and the impurities blood by tlie from natural whatever channels, cause there arisil a
It is truly a royal remedy, world-famed and guaranteed to benefit or cure
every case, or money paid for it wiil be refunded. The only blood-purifier c
so guaranteed and sold by druggists. As a regulator of the Stomach. Liver s
Bowels, “Golden Medical Discovery” cures all bilious attacks. Indigestions .f
Dyspepsia, Chronic Diarrhea and kindred ailments. For all deraneemel
caused hy malaria, as Fever and Ague, Chills aud Fever, and Bilious lever,
is specific. As au alterative or blood-purifier, it manifests its marvelous pri
erties in tho cure of the worst Skin and Scalp Diseases, Salt-rheum, fed
Eczema, and Scrofulous Sores and Swellings, as well as Lung-scrofula, co
monly known as Pulmonary Consumption, if taken in time and given s
trial. World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Proprietors, No.
Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
$500 £3 g" Uf MQn'ij offered by the manufacturers of OR. SAG
ni£.WMnU CATARRH REMEDY, for a ease of Catarrh 3rl
the Head which they cannot cure,
Sage's Remedy the worst matter mild, of soothing, how long and standing. Mealing 50c.. properties, by drugga J
cures cases, no
t he <0^ oBy
eft j j.
HAY- 6 ? FiVER $ 8 |
FEVER
50 CtSa
COLD ELY BROTHEL'S, M lw Warren HEAD Sf„ Xf-vr York.
Mu ▼mc wonbcrtul © RIfegg i r VO*. P&Six
R?3C0hBIIMIs5ARTIcai2 L CHA!
(O ^ A
Of FURNITURE. , Mp''if ■]
f I IMVAi S\X V Y ID VVLSl-' rSgfflagi
\ ?fefra#ttZfePP»l , PTteflClari
“WHEEL II? \Ujl~
CHAIRS,
We r»Uil at tha ItfaKBkM Brtki
sasftra&r wkn'ttah farlorp p T xe+aJf\ >
Riwei
LOBUSO are. <«., Hi jfSh g ,. ?t!iULra
DETECTIVES
'n nrwi CsQfity. §hr#wfi raffu M atoter itkxrrwcriffixj
iaotsr Secret Svttim. Skf»€-ri«BC« n«t LM*a*arr. &we.
(fraaiaa IlfUetlte BareaaUa. HAiall.Cjitirutl.i
OPIUM
■II CC J ! bv Dr. TRASK s magnetic Ointment.
known over 50 yrart. I>rugRt»t« keep l(,
CURED p f jou^a * llottle vo.. niitr*io. for 25 cent*. n v.
BRYANT Beak Keeping, fhort & Hand, STRATTON Telegraphy, dec. LOUISVILLE- Busins,, CD „
Write far Catalogue and fUU information.
oli
Best Cough Mc-dicine. Recommended by Physicia • 5
Cures whore all eleo fails. Pleasant and agree* 1to . ,„
tasto. CO Children N take S it U without M objection. PT I By ON < I
W
ArtileUl
* -
. jsu skillfully are pear’s imiur*,;
i» iiar.l to tell the real fro •#
inejpaas article used m th- ts ■i
ipnnoua »ue glass pearl w th.- 1,. e< ti
or
V «J «*•«? a«.luliun. ,,
•'““V s ot tones, h..
°> irregular sizes :in ,| •rrii
made to imitate pearls of hL, k.
other t-olors. When bv’tW. t »
genuine pearls, placed
even spread '
ranged in the same stringlike t>
, U ‘ J * Js v 10 tletect them, except
.
too regular. •» jhe small It is also imitations, assent 4]
| «■« I* ■MMaafnllf made u
«ihc the of the*
gravity-an real orticl. ^
j'•'m r proof of genuineness j
>*le except the file. Thi
means, siuee u i: would
"me l, ( applied ,
to real
which re.jmres the utmost caro in the '
j *»» country whose industries hav
j < d such a pi.ch of development, frra J ,
80 much wealth and i a v
| the love of i„„
j pn-'aite, ami to which the whole
.■ •‘"Iks by preference to supply the den»
j luxury, many articles are briimji,
perfection ami attain importance iff.
would be profitless elsewhere,
I
Pm*re,..
It is very important in this age o 't
ria , prxtgnm , hat , T p -J*** a '‘ r **toti
J to the stomach , . and 5 e healthy ’ easdy in taken, accejJ ,J
its BMm
• effects. Possessing these Qualities, p yp
,
Figs is the one perfect laxative and
tle dluretic known .
The childish miss
4 aiarrli f au*| b r < „ r «.«i
Wilh COCA I. APPX.1CATIONS, a-; th PV
reach blw»l ur tlie constitutional ** at ut the di*ca.-af. rtisease. ( atirrh r.r.i.'r* ,3
It have to lake and in
cure you internal IntertfS ren-wlL
Hair* Catarrh Cure is taken
nc*s direct** on the Wood and mucomfi
faces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is no quack
cine. It was prescribed by one of the .
physti-iaiia resular prescription In this country for years .7! i
It is compos ,i
best tonic* known, combined will, ,
blood puriflnrs. The pert acting directly on themnl *1
surface*. < t comUnatimi of ,ce
ingredients is what produces uch wonde-l
results in curing catarrh. Send tor testimJ
ais free. j
Sol’d by fe
Oregon, the Paradise of Farmer*. nniUhiui'lj
Mild,equable climate,certain eo]
crops. IScst fruit, grain, gras* a ad stock
it dit-ssOieg. yin the world. lm’igra’tnBoard, Fall information Portland,(ji free j
Oldest and best. ‘'TansilPsPunch”cj
s*. Double
^ssjA»a ^/-ws % m if m •r
IRIFFITH '"i SiMPlE.'M2 w!Main,Louisville.»
after all others LOBE fail COJSj
'
j the .-ton treatment of rami. Bloo.’- Poisons, rt.ll-rtrtr''”*! Slcm “ j
Nervous Complaints, lirlght’s Disease,, •.^
Impotence and kindred dises.ses, iif» ir»atte
1 long standing or from what cans.* ar\pn
HTTen days medicines furnished •’>'' fn
Pend for Book on SPEC IA L I
CATCH xih% FOX'S *' 1
It an. perso; •i will sea 1 .it * Rii
j rl«k) I will s mi l ii n n ■ t i i oM I
ter making Fox Knit, Itoll of W.L '• ^,'tj
« lox lou£ distiUJC”. l iliroct'.o i’ 1
a iVLBR, ’•'•' 1 1
thr* trap. Vddrots C V. FO '
Cal SU —* baveso^ Ant-s.**;;,-. t;
ts&toll Ml a only by IE* We ;;:
Ctadod 0«. m ;r/.„- r ri° f beV. >1
: TrJ?^teW^.rklSI.OO. sr.nrt';
i A. N. U..............