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The Sumter Republican,
TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION:
tirrATABLE PI ADTAXC*
-
Legal Adverumni*.
’ Notice, - - - - 5
tors of Administration,*
itpra of Du
plication f
e of Real Estate, - -
uardianship - - >C-
‘■-“iislon, - _ _ _\_V
Jeavetosell real
Debtors and(Jrcdltoi^^^g^^^
Professiona Jtferds.
■m, weekly
INDEPENDENT IN POLITICS, AND DEVOTED TO NEWS LITERATURE SCIENCE- AND GENERA! PROGRESS.
\v. a. iiaw kins. J r .. a. hawkish
HAWKINS & HAWKINS, :
Attorneys at Law*
AMER1CCR OA„
Oilire up stairs over John Windsor’sstor.
tn I-nmai street. octistf
JAMES PRU'KEK,
' Dakville, Va.
AMERICUS, GEORGIA; FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1882.
N. A. tMITH
ATTORNEY AT LAW
AMERICUS, GEOItOIA, *
Will prnctirn Inthe court, of Sumtf.
lin! l - : i n Statei" UeS ' atld CIfCUit b'ourt of]
;*r< >rtic»* on Jacksoi
Jas. Fricker & Bro. s
^JIWiLCT
febKtf
M.I.KN' FOItT, | E C..SIMMONS
FOET & SIMMON ,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
AmuricuN, Gn
Will practice in all the counties of this
* r .'; U -.L a1 ?!. i n ,.l><»l^ c oimtj\ in
• United States
bulldinu.
ice in 11; _
Julytitf
ll’ALTSa CLEVELAND SIMMONS
Mt'.KICl'S, GEORGIA.
. 3. BAWKIJNS,
:E at Dr. Eldridge Drug Stoi
ear the Methodist Chur *
e I again tender the goc
Dr. J. A. FORT,
i his professional s
. . — ricinlty.
o.li.ie over the Confectionery store of W.
h < Like. on Lamar street. Can lx- found
*!. hi- office day and night unless profession
* . .. .tdrugston
:. J. Eld ridge
July!
Dr. J. B. HINKLE.
FI! 7SIGIAN &. SURGEON
AMERICUS. - - GEORGIA
* alls left at the Drug Store of Dayexi
’s, on Taylor street. apri!l2tf
Dr. W. M. HARDWICK
II aviso resumed the Practice of Medicine
offers Ids services to ids old friends and pat-
rons and to the paying public generally
special attention will Is, given toall Chronu
eases, particularly tliosc of Females, "
will prescribe for and treat ordinary
at his office. Office at the drug store c
venport A Son. Itestdence-Starksvilles
opjhisite Co! T. M. Furlow. felaitf
Dr. B. J. HEAD,
Practicing Physician,
AMEIUCUS, OA„
er his prof*
Amcricus n
iving given t
r thirty years i
“ re, lie hope
nearly all the ill-
hy prompt attent
do so. My char;
n sens.'of justice.
>ttice is on I^tmar
I ha
W T. Davenport A Son’s will receive prompt
attention. febr.tf
Mrs. Dr. C. Durham
AMERICUS, GA„
experience i
d and success
« on Rock Hi
dul work. Offic,
Or. D. P. HOLLOWAY
DentisT,
Americas. ... Georgia
Treats successfully all di
h»I organs. Fills teeth 1
method, and inserts artificii
ts-st material ki
^OFFICE
•eth hy the impr
■cris artificial teeth or
•rial known to the profession.
WESTBROOK A JOINER
Physicians and Surgeons,
ANDERSONVILLE. GA.
Offer their professional
' rafly. * —
All calls will receive
mpt attention. Office at And-
L
GEORGE ANDREWS,
HySSt
s and repair all work a
-erand always on hand b
, Work guaranteed to 1
J. H. COVINGTON'S
barber shop,
(Under T. Wheatley’s store,)
AinericuH, - - - Georjjin
e J. R. Covlng-
-Jntinued under thenewnain
■anklng the public for Uio tibera) share
igu heretofore given,
expect, by
nerit a con-
MI COVINGTON.
New Cotton Warehouse!
1 HAVE RENTED THE
Sirrine Brick Building,
ON EAST SIDE OF PUBLIC SQUARE
AMERICUS, GA.,
" *'ich I will rejmir and have ready tc .
»n during the coming season. My
•Mends and the public are asked to patmn-
I'V All produce left in my care by
Jnends ami others, will receive prompt at-
mntmn and sold at best prices offered.
* PRICE.
A VKRIci'9, Ga.
1>ANIPX PRATT’S
At.d theirWonderful Improvements
Devolve beads. No friction, nochoking
[.?' , tr * a klng the rolls, rieans thoroughly,
;i'“'R Hnt cotton. Feeders and Con-
Copartnership. Notice
•' c< »I«rtnership has been formed 1
h»<ter»|gned in the Barber business.
* patronaeeofall wanUngjtood
W SENR? 1 ANDff
»n»m tf ARTHUR E. LUNFORD.
E£str*l
LUNFORD. |
New Firm, New Goods, Low Prices!
Within „ , WIU
That looks' uponISa Street,
M-ie nUng wimthe stifling heat,
jpH wants out her doom.
son; rou tvojiEX,
Half faintii
oarviag gh
Vet not the less in God’s sweet air
.The BtttobWa sing free of care.
And hawthorns blossom everywhere.
Swift ceaseless toil scarce winaeth bread:
| From early dawn tiU twilight falls.
■ n by four doll ugly walls,
-"*» crav* -
’I the\
intertwining boui
your life apon which the Bible does
seem to be sufficiently specific, go to
God in prayer and you will get <
direction. I have more faith,
nino times out of a hundred, ii
with the Biblo in your
i hours crawl round with murderous
tread;
And all the while, in some still place
n here intertwining boughs embrace.
The blackbirds build, time flies apace
lie folt who
.— last their leisure take,
W *! ose longed-for sleep none roughly wake.
Tired liands the restless needle ply.
Dutfar and wide, in meadows green,
file golden buttercups are seen
Aud reddening sorrel nods between.
pure and proud to soli her sou!
jtoop to basely gotten gain,
By days of changeless „„
I he eeamstress earns a prisoner’
The sUent cloud-wings stainlemsweep.lprove that the sonl
1 If she be alive or defiT"
hm w l? 117 J roraan scarcely knows,
But back and forth her needle
• *"nc with throbbing heart anu nead.
to’,' ,: il ', ere 11,0 “Mcrs part.
White-bosomed swallows blithe of lu
iters skim and dart.
Lo, where the leaning aide
White-boson— J •
Above still i
‘hall I, who share •
s womanhood,
summer’s bounteous good
lap and your thoughts uplifted iu prayer
to God, than in all the information you
will get unconscious on your pillow.
I can very easily understand why
the Babylonians and, the Egyptians,
A to Bible, should put so much
on dreams; and the Chinese in
their holy book, “Chow King,” should
think their emperor gets his directions
through dreams from God; and that
Uomcr should think that all dreami
came from dove, aud that in ancient
iraes dreams were classified into
cience; but why do you and I put ;
nueh stress upon dreams when we ha-
i supernal book of infinite wisdom <
all subjects? why should we harry
mrselves with dreams? Why should
demons from the pit. The scholar’)
dream is a philosophic echo. The
poet’s dream is a rhythmic echo. Cole
ridge composed his “Kabla Khan” . _
asleep in a narcotic dream, and waking Newton he would plunj
1U * uicaui, luu wuug Aewton no would plunge into the i
“P» wrote down three hundred lines ofjand bring that ring up if he desired
i-player.corapos
ed his most wonderful sonata whih
isleep in a dream so vivid, that waking
le easily transferred it to paper.
Waking thoughts have their echo
deeping thoughts. If a man spend)
his life in trying to make others happy
heavenly-minded, around his
pillow he will
Eddystone and Barnegat lighthouses over their crutch, aud procession* of
celestial imperials, and hear the grand
question a Summer firefly' „., |nr ,.... . . ^ Kuf>
II. Hemark the ;$ecoud: All dreams march roll down fromdrums of heaven
Oh, God ... a) Buwaut
That dying woman’s womanhood,
last* all the summer's bounl
U ubunlencd by her weight of
’-•* -, n daisies star the gra.»,
have an important meaning. They
irove that tho sonl is comparatively
ndependent of the body. The eyes
ire closed the scenes are dull, the entire
body goes into a lethargy which in all
languages is used as a type of death,
and then the soul spreads its wing and
sleeps. It leaps the Atlantic
lengthening shadows -
>w pool is smooth as glass.
s~cr.'avY
TABERNACLE SERMONS.
BY REV. T. UclVlTT TAUIAGE
DO DREAMS MEAN ANYTIIINGI
ill i>our out my spirit upoi
shall d
younj
In this photograph of the Mill*
1 is lilted into
You may say of a d/eam that
nocturnal fantasia, or that it is th«
il combination of waking thought)
d with a slur of information you
j: “It is only a dream”; but God
s honored the dream by making it
through which again and
again He has marched upon tho human
soul, decided the fate of nations, and
changed the course of the world’s hi
James pricker & brother.
pr ^ l J”* 1 J**y* l ** d Mtw, rlral
Myfr.
IMZOJSTEl'S" TO T .O A ~NT \
aM.„n o \v;j>i>.f.i*ai:ed to negotiate t.
Kit, LEE. TERRELL ANI
" H CHANCE
HE COUNTIES OF SU , r . lkI
ANDS ON FIVE YEARS TIME. NOW I
DEBTS AND HAVE PLENTY :
EBSTER, ON IMPROVED
VXCE TO PAY OFF OLI
K OUT THE NEW
TUTT'S HAIR DYE.
OfTice, OB Murray Street. New York.
VK ARE liKADV TO FITItNISII <
COOPER’
CELEBRATED
ON WHEELS OR SKIDS,
MILL ENGINES AND SAW MILLS
OF ANY DIMENSIONS TO OBDEB !
JP&JAZL ™*T" E bspbeskst SOME
OF -J'llK BEST A.N'I) MOST LIBERAL
Life and Fire Insurance Companies
• ‘SH.™ 1 - von! LIFE or. TOUR rK0r-
*srCall and see us, we will do you good.
iilyl-3tn E. T. BYR]) «& GO.
Save Your Fruit.
£T CAN BE DONE, AND HERE IS THE PROOF !
OPELIKA, LEE COUNTY, ALA., MAT' 1
W/tom it May Otneern:
Mr. W. B. CALLAHAN, of th
the ALTA FRUIT PRESERVATIVE^ is
“ ’ ' Weh
, 1882.
srs. Tatum, Sims
rable and reliable
all persons. ...awahlmforyeua,
F E BARXETT, Tax Assessor.
J. K. EDWARDS, Judge Probate
J. II. WILLIAMSON, Tax Collector
O- ALLBRIG11T. Sheriff.
W. C. ROBINSON, Clerk Circuit Court.
The following is from the Opelika Observer, May 18,1882:
*--* ■ *- 11 doubt tint the “Alta Preservatlv.
^ _ .ttotSiT'he pat ri nize a wo F th,esa
able, reliable gentlemen, and there is nothing fraudulent al>ont their^uslne^
Li t the doubting write 1n the Ohserver nr .nv „f *»w -K.?..!. -- P lIsln ^*
ONE DOLLAR 1
Let the doubting »Tite to the Observer of any of tlie above named <n>ntlei lu . n ,
ONE DOLLAR’S worth of Ingredients in miking the Preserve u for lornrer
han twelve months TEN BUSHELS of Fruit, Grapes, Green Corn Tomatoes and Those who ha
I'gn Cents worth of ingredients will permaneutiy prevent sonmess’, mould and fermenU- ? pri,,R I ? on ? ets
n twenty gallons of ayrups catsups, sauces, preserves, etc. Fruits ete are not to
:ut, peeled, beeted or canned by our method, and everything retains’its n-itnmi
we will refund Uie purchase money if a failure occurs when tued as directiM!
flROUBLE WHATEVER TO USE. M d,recte «. »“NO
selling recipes to make our prej
reoJptof pric. M«BK«?,*„'rr!L° R SED01 ' LAR -
Address. TATUM, SIMS & CO., Opelika, Ala.
-A.Q-E3STTS 'W"_A.3STTEID I
TO BENT. |
A comfortable dwelling oo College Street,*
osseaston given on the first U September.!
Apply to S. P. BOONE, f
CUM
Julyistf
Amcricus. <
A full assortment of Toilet Articles, Per 9
f ornery, Soaps, EU., Etc., a*
*'r. Eld ridge
Idridge’s Drug Store.
HOSTJETTE %
^itteb s
lands of our countrymen and
re experience*! its effects are
bucked up by irrefragable proofs.
s also give a healthful stimulus
y organs.
i by all Druggis
Mrs. M. I RAINES
NEW LINE OF
CONSISTING OF
Lace Straw Bonnets,
Leghorn Flats,
Round Hats.
LACES AND FLOWERS.
vet purchased their
id it to ‘
v goods. She has also
FRENCH CHIP HATS
JOHN A. MctlLROY,
NOTARY PUBLIC,
AMEBICUS, G&.
Having nothing else to do, 1 will devote
my time to the making out of annual returns
A Hooks, the Republic am
!;r r c I r ife'Ikss.{L°LT t ’ iicn -
j a. McELROY.
od appeared in a dream to Abim-
clech, warning him against an unlaw-
uI marriage; in a dream to Jacob, an-
touncing, by the ladder set against the
ky full of angels, tho commnni
•etween earth and heaven; in a dream
o Joseph, foretelling his coming power
m.ter the figure of all tho sheaves of
the harvest bowing down to his sheaf
the chief butler, foretelling his dis-
imprisonment; to the chief baker, an
nouncing his decapitation; to Pharaoh,
showing him first the sdven plenty
years, and then the seven famine-stuck
years, under the figures of the sev
fat cows devouring tho sevnn*leau cow
to Solomon, giving him the choice l
tween wisdom ami ricbes and hom.
or, under the figure of a bar
Ocean, and mingles in scenes three
thousand miles away. It travels great
reaches of time, flashes' back eighty
and the octogenarian is a hoy
again in his father’s house. If the
soul, before it has entirely broken
chain of flesh, can do all this, how farjecho of
n it leap, what circles can it cut wher
is fully liberated!
Every dream, whether agreeable oi
iixrrassing, whether sunshiny or tern
estous, means so much that rising from
your couch you ought to kneel down
and say: “O God! am I immortal?
Whence? Whence? Two natures.
My sonl caged now—what when the
door of the cage is opened? If my soul
san fly so far in the few hoars in which
my body i< asleep iu tho night, hoi
it fly when my body sleeps
sleep of the grave?” Oh! this
jr to dream, how startling, how
whelming! If prepared for the
after-death fly. what an eaehantmcnt'
If not prepared for the after-death fly,
what a crushing agony! Immortal!
If yotrare always over-suspicions of
assault; you will have at night halluci
nations of assassins with daggers
_ wonder thfi Richard III., the John Newton to throw overboard that
iniquitous, the night before the battle ring, and it sank into the
of Bosworth Field, dreamed that all the mountains
those whom he had murdered stared at and, th<
him, aud that he was torn to pieces by
, the
• » and brought it has felt jpat. as though these calls v
ilerful ^ sonata while «p, *nd said to John Newton, “Here * n argument that he waft getting old
is that gem, but I think I will keep it and he did not like it, though his goot
for you. lest you lose it again;” and has.tdld him he has got to expec
John Newton consented, and all the sucty things, and the; girl has asket
fire went out from the mountains, and Wm if hf was not young oncehimself
all the signs of lurid wrath disappear- aud finally ^ie has got so hie looks up
ed from the J 1 v—l.-i-_ — —
cripples who have got said that be
being who persuaded ‘ hi
over jasper parapet)
apt to hear in dreams what you
when yen are wideawake.
Now, having shown you that
having a Bible we ought to be satisfied
lot getting any further communication
Tom God, and having shown yon that
all dreams have an important mission,
they show the comparative inde
pendence of the soul from the body.and
aving sliowu you that the majority of
suit of disturbed physi
take
that out. Tertillii
believed in dream
John IIuss is immortal. Si
the Christian father, g:
that a Carthaginian phyi
Martin Lnther
Immortal'
III. Remark the third: The vast
majority of dreams are merely tho re
sult of disturbed physical condition,
supernatural message.
ley-cake smiting dow
a o* n o Gideon in his battle a;
Amalekites; to Xebuchailne;
iler tho figure of a brokeu image and
tree, foretelling his ovi
>ower; to Joseph, of tho N<
t, announcing the birth
Christ in his own household; to Mary,
bidding her fly from llerodic persecu-
1 * M ” * warning him
plicated with the
Job had carbuncles, and he was scared
the night. Ho says: “Thou scarest
; with dreams, and terrifiest me with
lions.” Solomon had an overwrought
brain, overwrought with public busi-
and he suffered from erratic slam-
ber, and he writes in Ecclesiastes: “iA
dream cometh through the multitude of
business.”
Doctor Gregory, in
with dreams found that a boctle of hot
r put to his feet while in slumber
) him think he wan going up tli
hot sides of Mount Etna. Another
morbid physician, experimenting with
dreams, his feet uncovered through
sleep, thought ho was riding in a
pine diligeut-c. But a great m any dreams
merely narcotic disturbance. Any-
uuiler the ’
■ly. o,
thing tli
tluence of chloral
eosh,” or laudanu
God.
ivelatioi
Testamei
lot to become
iidicial overthrow of Clint.
We all admit that God u
and under Bible dispensation ad-
Iressed the people through dreams
1 he question now is, does God appear
in our day and reveal Himself through
Ireatns? That is the question every
body asks, and that quo
You ask
k first: The -Scriptures a
velation from God, that
get no communication from Him
ight, neverthel*
n dreams,
isfied.
With twenty guide-books to tell y
how to get to Boston or Pittsburg,
London or Glasgow or Manchest er,
rou want a night vision to tell you: hour
o make the journey? We have in this
scripture full direction in regard
»y of this life, and hoi. „ „
ho celestial city, and with this graud
’nidc-book, this magnificent directory,
re ought to be satisfied. I have moi
aitli iu a decision to which I con
rheu I am wide-awake than when
m sound asleep.
I have noticed that those who givvi
;reat deal of their time to studying
reams get their brain addled. They
ery anxious to remember what they
the first night they
get to when the rest of your”body is
nolencc. The general rule is , eat noth
ing after six o’clock at night, retire
sleep on your right side, keep the
Ireamed aboi
dept in a new house. If in their dream
hey take the hand of a corpse, they arc
,'oing to die. If they dream of a gar-
it means a sepulchre. If somet hing
ight v'ision,
. . — —i surp rised.
f dreamed it.” If it turns out dif ferent
the night vision, they say, « Well
I reams go by contraries.” In their
ifforts to put their dreams intorh ythm,
hey put their waking. thoughts: ii
iiscord.
Now, the Bible i 1
<>n that we ought
> full of j evela-
further revelation. Sonnd asleep
received great honor when Adam a'ept
-• -aordinarily that the surgical *
which gave him Eve did
•vake him; but there is no such aeed for
xtraordinary slumber now. and he
'ho catches an Eve must needs be
vide-awake!
No need of sncli a dream as Jacob
bad with « ladder against the alcy,
when tin thousand times it has b.!en
lemonstrated that earth and Lon veil are
in communication. No such dreian
needed as that which was given to
Abimelech, warning him against an
unlawful marriage: when we have the
records of the county clerk’s office. No
needs of such a dream as was given to
'haraoh about the seven yean of fam-
the seasons match in regu
lar procession, and steamer and rail,
train carry breadstuff* to every famine-
struck-nation. No need of a dream
ike that which encouraged Gidson, for
all though Christendom it is announced
«te-. ete- Orders left at ihe store of and acknowledged and . demonstrated
r tor later, will
Tho learned De Quincy did not i
nv in sleep, opium saturated, dreami
bich he afterward described in tl
following words: “I was worshiped,
was sacrificed, I .fled from the wrath of
Brahmah, through all the forests of
Vishnu hated me. Seem laid
t for
Ic
3 suddenly upon
Isis and Osiris. I had done a deed,
said, that mado the crocodiles
tremble. I was buried for a thousand
in stone coffins, with mummies
and sphinxes in narrow chambers
the heart of eternal pyramids.
issed with the cancerous kiss of
idiles, and lay confounded with unut
terable slimy things among wreathy
d Nilotic mud
mistake narc otic disturbance
s revelation. But I have to
tell you that the majori ty of the dreams
are merely the peaalt y of outraged
Iige8iive organs,and you have no right
to mistake the uightmaire for heavenly
revelations. Late supp ers are a war-
antee deed for bad dreams. Highly-
spiced salads at eleven o ’clock at night,
ad blankets, and started outoi
tho expediti.ro, traveled one hundred
and fifty mile*, saw those very roclu ed,
which ije had described in his dream,
and iouud the suffering ones at the foot
instead of opening the door heaven
ward, open tho door in fernal aud dia-
bolicnl. You oatrag, n, tur.l l.-v, , n d tf io*i, ki . fcU°ok™
you insult the God who made laws.
_ It takes from three to fire hours to
ligest food, and yon havt» no right to
keep your digestive organs in struggle
window open five inches for ven tilati
nd other worlds will not disturb ;
much. By physical maltreat! oeat;
take the ladder that Jacob saw in
lream and you lower it to the neither
world, allowing the ascent of the de
moniacal. Dreams ar»j midnight dys
pepsia. An unregular desire for some
thing to eat ruined th<. race in Paradise,
unregulated d© sire for something
keeps it ruined . The world dnr-
c thousand year a has tried in
to digest that first aj .pie.
,pu " •vorld will r jot be evangelized
get rid of a dyspeptic Chru-
ianity. Healthy j *eopie do not want
-hi* cadaverous a: ad sleepless thing
’•-* - me people c.- ill religion. They
religion tha t lives regularly b*
day and sleeps sou ndly by night, i
through trouble or coming on of oldage,
be satisfied, if w« ‘>r exhaustion of O hristian s
sleep well, then you may
from God “songs in the night”; *bot
there are no blessa. 1 communications to
those who willing) y surrender to indi-
JTestibles. Na pole an’* army at Leipsic
being
Dresden and Boroc ___ 4
lestroyed^ through the disturbed gastic
: ices of its cornnu inder. That is the
ay you have lost some of your battles.
IV. Another ret lark I make is that
ir dreams aremj .t to be merely the
•cbo of our daj-tth oughts.
I will give ywa
Filly
thoughts andornd fish action, and yonr that dream
yonr dreams- y< -u will see gold
you cannot cltote h, and bargains in
which you wean, out-Shylocked. If
daring the daj jo a are irascrible, and
pagnicious, and gi mpowdery of dispo
sition, yon will at
with ©n
the best.
long
t the victory. while you caanotai ofreone inch toward beautiful nng nd best female phrsici
If there should cone aBoata.crira ( la h.*?oL ” lalg .5“ h“ ! ri»g ■**”
persuaded of the immortal of the rtoul
>y an argument which he heard
iream. The night before his as.
nation the wile of Julius Cicsar dream-
d that her husband fell dead aero**
her lap.
It is possible to prove that God does
-ppear iu dreaniR to warn, to convert,
md to save men. My friend, a retired
ea captain and a Christian, tells m
that one night while on the sea h
dreamed that a ship’s erew were ii
great suffering.
Waking from his dream, he pm
ibout the ship, tacked in different dr
ections, surprised every body on hi I
vessel—they thought he was goinj!
crazy—sailed on iu another directioui
hour after hour, aud for many hours,
luntil he came to the perishing crew and
rescued th*m, aud brought them to N<
Who conducted that d:
T he God of the sea.
.In 1605 a vessel went out from
head for West India, and ran against a
the ’edge of rocks called the Caskets.
lamliered up ou the Caskets, to die o!
thirst or starvation, as they supposed
But there was a ship bound for South
ampton that had the captain’s so*
m board. This lad twice in one night
Ireamed that there was a crew of sail-
u-rs dying on tho Caskets. He told hit
father of this dream. The vessel came
lowu by the Caskets fn time to find
rescue those poor dying
Who conducted that dream? The God
•f the rocks, the God of the
The Rev. Dr. Bushnell, i
relous book entitled “Nature aud the
Supernatural,” gives the following fact
that he got from Captain Yount, in
California, a fact confirmed by .many
amilies. Captain Yount dreamed twice
>ne night that one hundred and fffty dead, and
ay there was a company of
He i*
i the i
\ Terr^t ,$ZAYEAR IN Ai)7AMR
° *’*** ‘ 4 E*a*r *
you will be Drospered; l'f you lose'that
ring you Will be ruined.” -In the same
. — iWatibq
dream Another personage append, and
by - * strange infatuation persuaded
into the;:sea. /Than Mnrrla|
sight were full of firo There Ua ge»tlW»a|i living
qnd with consuming
th© last year or. two .that he T
S?iSKie«
wrath.
1 While John Newton was repenting coming old, and tDe patiicnlar c___.
of folly, in having thrown over- hit coming to 1 a realuing tense of hi
board the treasure, another personage "gw 1 WhdUion- is the fact that hii
through the dream, and told John daughter has grown hp until sho ii
lasgs snnngli ind i*- ^ ’
He plunged r
lit.
cal condition^ind having shown yon that
sleeping thoughts are apt to be an
* our waking thoughts, I come
my fifth and most important
emark, and that is .to say, that it i«
capable of proof that God does some
times in our day, and has often sine*
the close of the Bible dispensation, ap
peared to people in dreams.
All dreams that make you
from God. How do I know
God the source of all good
,0r y logical mind to argue lowing interviews, he becamo a Chris-
and John Newton on t,hj fact, of, the girl having company
hi* dream that that home from church or singing school at
ed hiui to throw it pf*- J -*'
overboard Was' Satan, and that the one b<
who plunged iu and restored that gem, «. __
keeping it for him, was Christ. And 6* r l »» » straight backed chair <
that dream uiakesonemf the most other side, he looks wise, winks
weaderfnl chapters in the life of that daughter*- yawns, and goes off to bed
wonderful man. Bat since last Saturday he bus turn
German was crossing the At- e d over a new leaf, and made a rule
lantio Ocean, and in his dream he saw that no man shall come there with a
with a handful of white flowers, dog, and leave the dogout on the front
- verandah to-wait for the younj
It seems that a young pan w
called aev6ral times owns a Newfound
land dog, and thinking it would b<
safer to go home late at night accom'
panied by a dog, he had allowed th<
old dog to go along, and he left him oi
the front step to wait. About ten
•’clock p. m. the father arrived in front
follow the
had that handful of white flowers,
The German arriving in New York,
andered into the Fulton Street Prayer
d Mr. Lamphier—whom
many of yon know—that great apostle
of prayer-meetings, that day had giv
to him a bunch of tube roses. Th
stood on his desk, and at the close- . .
his religious services, be took the tube- his house with a bandbox und<
roses and started homeward, and the ? ne •>*** containing a new bonnet,
German followed him, and through ap ' n Ihe other hand a market basket
interpreter told Mr. Lamphier that on taining meat for Sunday dinner—a tar-
he had dreamed of a man withgkey^if we are rightly informed.
handfnl
told to follow him.
ahat through that interview and fol-
r^ite flowers and
— Suffice it to say,
ig tlie Gospel l
God in a dream !
John Hanlonk. while on shipboard,
Incused one night that the day ol
judgment had come, and that the roll
of the ship’s crew was called, except
this
and that these people,
he is as afraid a* death of dogs, and,
dream he luid asked the reader why his
! was omitted,aand
give him more opportunity
irt, for repentance. He woke up a differ
ent man. He became illustrious foi
Christian attainment. If you do not
these things, then you must
•d all testimony, and refuse
crept any kind of authoritative wi
God in a dream 1
The Rev. Herbert Mendes wai
erted to God through a dream of the
last judgment; and I doubt if there
a man or woman in this honse to-day
that has not had some dream of that
.Treat day of judgment, which shall be
the winding up of the world's history.
If you have not dreamed of it, perhapi
the long continued snarl that seem-
to be coming nearer all the time,
that the dog was going to ehew him.
He knew he had got to act suddenly if
he acted at all, so he dropped the ban
ket and with one bound he grabbed th
top of the high board fence and stncl
in his toe nails to get.np. As soon a
he turned to jump the fence, the dog,
evidently taking him for a tramp,
tarted on a hop, skip and ji
-.night you may dream of that day.
There are enough materials to make
dieam- Enough voices, for there
-haf.i be the roaring of the elements,
but the crew and the great earthquake. Enough
light .for the dream, for the world shall
blaze. Enough excitement for the
mountains shall fall.' Enough water,
for the oct'iin shall roar. Enough astro-
-al phenomena, for the stars shall
iternal defeat.
The dream come*
s the lightnings from above answer-
ng the volcanic disturbances from be
neath, and I hear the i«g. reverberat
ing thunders that shall wake np the
me side I see the opening
gate into scenes gokiea and ame-
liystinc, and on the other esdle I hear
the dream rocks of peculiar for-ltlie clanging back of a gate into bas-
ruation, and telling his dream toau ohVHtiles of eternal bondage, and the
’ t ^ e ^ UD,er "aid: “Why, I re-lseas, lifting up their crystal v-oi
rocks; those rocks are Very, * Come to judgment!” and all _
hund-llvoices of the heaven cry, “Come tc <iu*et, but they did not —
’judgment!” and crumbling mansole- be took a bunch of keys
membered thi
u the Carson Valley Pasi
d and fifty miles
Captain Yount, impelled Ly
earn, ulthough laughed at by his
ighbors. gathered men together, took
confirm the story of Captain Yount.
Who conducted that dream? ThoGod
of the snow, the God of the Sierra Ne-
'adas.
God has often appeared
md comfort. You have kuowu people
-perhaps it is 'something I state in
mr own experience—you have seen
jeople go to sleep with bereavementi-
inconsolable, and they awakened ii
perfect resignation because of what
they had seen in slumber.
Dr. Crannage, one of the most
markable men I over met—remarkable
tor benevolence and great philanthrope*
—at \\ ellington, England,sho wing me
Two-Th ird* of a Battle Cures.
Dr. R. V.. Piebce, Buffalo, N. Y.:
Dear Sir—1 have been taking you
“Favorite Ptescrlption” for “femali
weakness.” < Before I had token it
two days I began to feel stronger. I ,_ r „
have token bat two-thirds of a bottle hart th© rirli'
inriludtovn T .m S
house where the Lord had appeared
i a wonderful dream to a poor fvoman
The woman >vas xheumatic, sick, pool
the last paint of destruction,
is waited on and cared for by anothei
poor woman, her only attendant. Word
day that this poor
had died, and. the invalid ot whom
speaking lay helpless upon tht
iouch, wondering what would becomi
*f her. In that .mood she fell asleep
In her dreams duo said the Angel ol
the Lord appeared, and took her into
the open air and pointed in on© direc
lion,and there were mountains of bread,
nd pointed in another direction, anc
there were mountains of butter; and ii
nother direction, and there weremoun-
of all kinds of worldly supply
The Angel of th© Lord said to l#r;
oman, all these mountains belong
your Father, and do you think H«
will let yon. His child hunger and die?’
Doctor Crannage told me by som*
vine impulse he went into that desti
- . . . . tute home, saw the ©offering there, aa>
» receipt for plMjsm ..tainutered unto it, caring for her »1
r daje with elcvated^the wty through. Do you tell me th.
Ireems will be-set to mn,ie. If all day >n odyne«? Was that tho phantasma 3
XEEZX rafftHKE tori, of a di.ease.1 brain? i,
n all-sympathetic (ftxl addressing;!
KM>r woman thromrh a ilruam.
poor woman through a dream.
Furthermore, I hart to say that then
' paopjejn this hou so who
‘Wax*
... — •. , ,w . verted to God throngl a dream. Thi
. yon will at night have battle Rev. John Newton, tl'e fame of wW
enemies m which they «U gM piety fill, alt Christo odom. profligat,
;sr. ofyoa. If you are all day 8ai ior on shipboard,* ; in his dream
g in a barry^t. night yon will dream thought that a-being approached bin
rail-trama thwa yoa want to catch , nJ b g „, him , CSnl ,ing
will send Dr. Dye’s Celebrated £
Voj.taic Belts and Electbic Apr;
•n trial for thirty days to men (youm
who are afflicted with Nervous I
Lost Vitality and Manhood, and klndi___
troubles, guaranteeing speedy and complete
ostoration of health and manly vigor. Ad-
lrew as above. N. B.—No risk is Incurred,
tlilfty days’ trial te ahowed.
, Mother! Mother!! Mother!!!
Art yon disturbed at night end broV tv
rear rest by a Sick child suffering and cry
ig with tho excruciating pain of
•elieve the poorilttle sofferer imme
lepend upon it; there is ae
-’here !• not a mother on eart!
■■it. who will not telly on 1
0 yopng gentlemen
old. enough to i
hon he got about ten feet from tht
erandah, and was going along quiet,
o as not to disturb the family, thedi
gave two sharp barks and a long
a
that fairly caused Mr. Borden’s hair tc!
lift his hat. He stopped suddenly,
turned pale, and said, “prfitty doggy,"
though it was so dark he could
tell whether he was lying about tht
appearance of the dog or not. Mr
Borden is a brave man generally, bat
felt
started on a hop, skip and jump,
barking as load as a fog wbistle,
Mr. Borden thinks the dog was
near him when he arrived at the top of
tho fence, because a piece of his
is gone.
Once seated on the fence,he straight
cncd out the dents in the bandbox
which ha had saved from tho wreck,
and thought the matter over. With
his leg on the other side of the fenco
where theyo was a cross piece, he fel
that hs could stay there tacomparatr
comfort until the young man came oi
to go home and called his dog off, bi
‘ was cold, and he was not cavalry
an enough to enjoy riding a '
lie heard a crackling noise, and
Ekiocgh populations, for all moon came out from behind a cloud lu
of all the ages shall fall into c °uid see tho outlines of the dog, ano
- sC two processions—the one the animal was eating the turkey
the other descending; the This was too much, and he called
--i Ur tho rider of the white dog names, and told him to get
horse of eternal victory, the other led but the dog looked up at Mr. Boi
by A poll you cn the black charger of and simply showed his teeth,
a much as to say, “You s
the fence, and yon’re
growled, a
tip there
right.”
We suppose there never was a wai
that said any more quiet cuss words i._
half an hour than Mr. Borden did. He
could hear the boys and girls in tlu
parlor, having a good time, laughing
and chatting, and he decided t-
their attention, but he did not v
yell, and make them think the hon«
fire, so he took his pocket-knift
against the door.
md threw
and Westminster Abbeys, and threw them against the window. A
pyramids * of the riead with marble ‘h* 8 point the door opened a little, an
cry, “Come to judgment!” And a young man’s voice, evidently fall c
rehangel seizes an instrument of *®Qtion and ice cream, said, “TaL
music which has never yet been sound- Tige!” Tige let up upon thi
instrument of music which was turkey, and proceeded to climb tL.
made only for one sound, and, thrust- ^ ence to obey instructions, when Mr
ing th.at mighty trumpet through the Borden dropped the bandbox on
the clouds, and turning it this way, he dog, and called to his daughter,
shall put it to his lip and blow the vei 7 *oon they all came to the dc
blast tht t shall make the solid «£arth and called the dog off, and the gen!
quiver, cr ying, “Come to judgment I” ,®** of th« honse picked up his tra]
man of the honse picked up hi
and went in, leaving the turkey
visiting dog to associate with.
“Did you make any fuss about it ?
asked, as he was tailing us about
Sunday morning after church.
''Fuse,” said he, as he looked mai
'what eoadd he say? I didn’t want U
i’ faliii
much of i
slings, and I ;
to b* discourte
WataekjLJQL °H 8 *■/ °°* in m y own house, tho
*** when I went through the room and th
Scandal, whex it has truth in it, 'i asked me if mjr coat tail had go
like a greased spat on new cloth, but c ? l n ? ht \ a * ■winging bridge; and the;
when there is no tenth in it, it is like a laughed* I couldn’t help givinj
iplash of mud, wfabeh will come off ea- opinions of fellows who go arom
aily when. dry. sparking with dogs concealed aboi
Nature seems to exist for tbe exellent. JC**??*’- » *_®** 1 Y°?
have seen that bonnet. It looked lit
flower bed that a cow had walke
through. I was going to raise tbe i
Th 9 world is upheld ky the veracity of
its good men; they make the earth
wholesome. Life is so eweet and toler- ,l ■ ^ •» ;——7- --
belief in each society- , b »* Y oa kni > w t »»
,, is, a girl can put her arms around
1 .yepr increase of knowledge may fellow-, neck and make hlmb.liev.it
fun to climb up a board fence with
ogth of virtue. It is iu itself only
jower, and its value depends “ '
plication.
Pat h
libly render depravity more deprar-
«1. a. well a. it may increase tke|. deg chewiag him; aad'ao I told he
was all right this time, but not to
»t" ap- toe ftoecur again; and do yon know; she
made me buy a dog chain. O, if I ha<
dozen girls it would kill
And what wonld you do for din
rto-day?” we asked thinking of tl*
dog and th© turkey ?
“Ob,dandelion greens,.!
“Ob, dandelion greens,.I suppone,’ 1
aud he went off whistling, “Snyder,
do yon want to buy a dog ?”
mifrfn.
I always feel good natured.’’
keep myself
lien I am well
See other col-
Messes. Hctchutsox & Bzo. :C