Newspaper Page Text
I!i:V. DR.
nrL BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN¬
DAY SERMON.
s ulijects “Disabled Hunters Iiringfn«
Down the Most Game.”
-i T —''The lame take the prey."— Isaiah
he uttr-r f?c itioi f the Ass
r 1, it only man •bust host
h 1 r< men
■ polls of
n nppied con
ml I oi
fi
t Tin ure
l rr him ■real
t il; lit; rent
*h t p, t
tr
n utoor under Be mtngly „ ,
v hi} amid the n
es, yet making Ull
; gloat bie-s grand
t bit Hiing for ng for
I he church, tha world,
and 8 o “tiie
t i- th© thive great poet* of
i J >mer, Os
n Do vou Y th it .Mr
T role tlmt « n mg book,
( 0\ i •<», never saw Mi
u the x
»'<• paper ou which ho
It \ li’!iin«-.vork a; "J s the sheet,
.
W f> ami aou'ii, ths*
i o ij©n
t < .am: ;• io, the
1 lie marb c before him
•1 win- h he'cub into shapes
Do u now tin Alexander
I: poems w hot a; long a, the
X I, 1, a-i s ) mnch of an invalid
111 '« dui)v i ry morning in
iiivan iii order to land on his feet
»t nil
Ho nu know that Kfuart. tho celebrated
punt r ’, did much o, his wonderful work
Ul tii - s.iadow of the dungeon, whore lie
bad ''(Oil llli lust, V imni'ieifif. ] f ot . Do
ou tv tint I omo*ithonos By almost
first hid to conquer
l own pooch before he
i with his con
< o > ;U;“!|vi'? J lo
k I ‘V that, acou sti !Kle l nil
tl nu merabl© sickness uni that
1 Byi n and Sir Wuitep (<iit went
')it cl = l> f i't thro-.i ;!i al. their life,
I I of till cat pods and paint*
tr and orian.t an I hero s of
had • met lung to keep them buck,
id 1 nil tl down, and impede thoir way.
and Hi ■ i [ill v sit-u <>r (Iteir iiifcllur-iu ti
= th I yet they that | u-.lt -d on mid
~ dll'll U j tiiit.il they rend ted the ijtoils of
; ret, and amid tho huzza of
tin i ntui'K ■h ‘‘the lame took the
pr
know tl t a vast multitude of t io.se
urt muter the disadvantage of ob¬
ir u il :■> is, the son of the
1 son, th" astronom r, tho on
till It* idUM-d. America, the prey of the
(■il vor <ls tin pn y o the oilier,
T>t what i true i o 'umr directions is more
( in spiritual aud religiou* direction iu l
1 i ) pr it
I In o tiro 1 comrnuuitiei muiyinva
lie Is. Tin - r know a well day. They
nrlharu t r occupation(, but they go
pan alt): c str ets with exiuui tion
= I at ( nil thov lie down on the lounge
l eyoml all nindicium.at. They
tried nil pres riptioni, they
lmvii go through all tho cures
which r 4 proclaimed infallible,
mid thov yo com now to surrender
to T| nl incuts. 'J'iioy ■ons iter t! ov
tt ti I D m mg tl: mu'ij- who disadvantages and whoa
see > ie nro l oyarit in e.'iitb
pa 1 th y a’mo t envy their rbust
m»nc 1 o i -y respiration.
liui 1 lovw noticed among that invalid
cl :: who have the greatest knowledge
o Do Bible, w In > are in lieare t intimacy
with .icMis (fit who have the most glow
>f the truth, uho have
b 1 1 lie most remarkable answer s tc
jiraycf, find who mve mo-t exhiiar
ant mil ii*'* 1 101 is of heaven. The tempt a
tons t weary us who aro in
robust health they have conquered They
liato divided among t em tho >i!s of the
conqu.'st. M y wlto aro a lot t and athletic
nml swarthy loiter in the way. These
nr the lain that take tho prey. Rob
li — te Hull, an invalid; Edward Parson,
r c inva id; Itichanl lln.t-r, an invalid:
>1 = mud Hul l erf, i d tin ins ;i id. This morn
^ ~ wli-m y ut want to tail to mind thoso
V \ to urn me t t'hristlike, you think of some
U“r(c( v net{ v l'iu n your fathm 's house from
win h I hci o wont forth nn iniluencj potent
iov et nil
step farther; Throughrai-’e 1 letters thi
fir if printing Ins been brough t to t eat
iuu of tho b!in 1
You take up the Bible for tho blind an 1
ou close you - s, and you run your iin-
1- ersover the ~ I b it i ", (Uid you sty;
‘Why, I don Wh or on Id get any information iu
this wav. n sluM SI uibrous u ay of
ivaum God li dr tho
And vet. 1 I'll 1 n on, V c ass of persons
the - among the.bliiul, the deaf and the dumb
most llioi'i.ngli acquaintance with God's
riot' i tout from all idlin' soar o; of
inform tion. n sooner do s Ih dr h ind ( 'K'b
thorn s d tell r than they goth r a prayer
!v 11 hum CYC they lo >k off upon treUm on
of God’s love. Witte Iteariiif' they i ate'i
tho mins rtdsv of the >, yet with
pencil, declare or i th irrodi 1 count, 3 luce, th »y
11 - pory c t
\ Ir - 1 1 ene a nblocl in Now York
at tho finmvcr-a of the Deaf an 1 Dumb
asyl and one of the visitors w t.'.i oh v OD
the birr U lo.ml wrote this question to the
pup?:*; ’ > o you not \n find 1 it of very tho pupils hard to took be
tie on 1
the k aud u rot l ~ blackboard this
•ubiinv e i)i ;msvv a “When tin- s >ng
imnl angels shad burst upon our eurapt
nr, wo will scarce regret that our ears
ro never marred with earth)v sounds,’’
Ohl the bri hies- oven in heaven will be
Utes> that rte.c -nv on w ti. 1 h > ears
lUO.'t lert in heaven will be those that in
this world heard neither voice of friend, nor
thrum o: harp, nor carol of bird, nor doxol
ogv «>!' H’ii 'it” Ini ii Dili
A ta t who l been blind from infancy
was cured. The oculist operated upon the
lad, and tlten put a very heavy bandage over
the eves, and after a few weeks had gone by,
the hau lage \m\ ; removed, ami the mother
•aid to her eh Id: “Will e, can you see?” He
said: “uh! mamma, is this heaven!” Tha
contrast betsvivn the darkness before and the
brightness afterward was overwhelming.
And 1 tell vou the glories of heaven will be
a thousandfold brighter for those who n-ver
saw ativtliing on earth. While many with
good vision closed their eyes at night, and
luanv who had a good artistic and ou.tured
ear went, down into discord, these afflicted
oncs and he crad unto the Lord m their trouble,
made their sorrow -their advantage,
and so “ilu ante took the prey.”
In tho Ss) nth century there was a legend
of St Modobert. It was said that his mother
v as 1 !)d a id one, 11 \ white lookin'' at h>s
mother hotel so-vmpathet-ic for her kiLd blind
blmd new that he rushed lorward and her
eyes, and, the legend savs l.or vision
came nnnediatelv Thu was onlv a 1-trend Vi
lut i - a t " rut h ‘ j n 1 '. p-loriims 1 'J* n n iifii U W t ! teit iat a •> >! '■ - -
of G I s etc am nJKSShrS 6 * 3
blind eye et
A sten fui her: There are those in all com
munit a who toil wa-el niio-hfin- f.n. B !G-olih,w 4
They diseast V > s-ant ] r ^ ’ Perhans a P thev tuej. are are
„• m. *■ s o'on.?, ■ c 1 oVnon" . '
niei • '
nro 1 from doii PnX lav's “he
dark work. A eitv it m ssionarT clothing! them up
a’d,y,u h no tire, with than with
street ^bey never ride in the
Tht*v °^not afford the tive cento.
novflp b‘. cture s save tiiose in
the shivv often*ionteV th e strret, ' froni which
they arc ^’bed at by some
one wlios '’J’belook: “Moveon!
what Yct'mVnvoV are von it U ' 5 pictures? ’
th\. a»' ti"' r 011 nu ' untai p s °f
transfiguration wfiof-ilthitivc r0l, f b.t'ble he
the Mi <t of the r dt »Vl^ nt ’. and
on mVhr T- l>-.V win t Ule d °°*
oneiv him to ’et them in w,i i the 7 ol - « °f
who «i,l - ‘ i , U1 '^'^ a ‘ ld T 0
me” No cohort of h nv .
to transport them. Bv
dn 'lh 3 ^ ’ '
t V the mev
took took hi him. >11 He lie was verv o’d “•"•going He was L n »
very liavo t kelV him laVuniilnt two hnn« L ,'tei ^
, J.S von 1 wly 1
b‘ Ho Ho aid. 1 . —Tbuiik “Thant >ou, vdn T I wou.ff
•
he ne sail, You xou see i l am am very >trj lame miue ana
very old. but the I. rd Bas oe n■ tej
t“ in-. 1 ha) e baite d a in i ni b . ‘
Lor 1 g:ue them and tho !,ord lia> a rig •
take was very them wek.and nway. 1 Bte-^ed had no ho money, his ‘ and >
rtS'S? but °I suffer than ° m %
ileal with pain,
f|Y L-4 MONHOE ADVERTISER:
IQ rn GA TUESDAY. JUNE R 1888.—EIGHT PAGES.
VC , • 1
:
SO many mercies
has bi ^ 1 left. The Lord
fore w T f r<i Tne ’' And be
I was ivin-V, far * ' Va * in doubt whether
ride! .... ,f p,eas0 me
c-'S Ut here J„g t beln “$?/“£ down y °“ ’ 10
5'ou plea*. i bless °*» ut Thank cratches,
R r - Goo 1 rn^mii you. you,
have b.oen n n ~’ I rK>d morning. You
' r/ f U the mme. sir, ha\
r>d thrUr!.? mornino-’’ Earthy had you
‘ roa j f r men go n * tha
am our hw ,L! not know where thev
••rntcS wai towarrI h? h V t7 bobble of t,,at nld man
; !,hur ‘ n a g*te. With his oh 1
1 topAZn , c-iitSS ,
J5SSK.2 wS
rmtnPteT '^ her: opph ans During in all cm- last
we. l - our
bow ai.nv manj children t r ars we lmri) . hoard e<liately follow! “Oh! ng
no/vf say. my
not ced-I fear war.” Have yon ever
chib you have nut-how well those
r ■ li ive turned out? Starting under the
*» rea sadva 2 tige, no orphan asylum
,. 0 ,[ = w hat th -ir father would
hnv< Tim skirmssh“r sat
one -
n by the , light of fagots, in the
.
strain a ' ef ter home, when asharp
shfif n»v«Vf » ,U J let en,le 1 thf letter which
never folded, , , > was
never posted an 1 never read.
nnildren cam ■ up under great disad
No father to fight their way for
V' l i ' ^ yellow there h-tt-r was in the old family
paste 1 fast, which
f”, „,Vt i " ' V he >r,v suffered °J that in the father's hospital; long but march, they
further on in tha Bible, an l they
! / ! * ? s ^*a*y ( >t how (*od is the father of
^ an l ih * widow's portion, and
i '• re J|)M| d. to I |k Imv the.r batt'ed father’s place in that
tete.lTT thewavfor their
' have the P* 1 ™ 8 0,1 «P- and many of
,l ‘ r0 m years since the war taken
Pr /• re‘ n, °’” un ’ vvi| l ? d church «utiered and nothing state. during While many
II T le had those
' i nave sons go out into lives of in
, jJ'-nce and
i vagabondage, those who started
under o nia oy disadvantages because they
took 'v-. o the so early b reft, these are the larno who
A prey.
Moo further; There are those who
would like to bo good. They say: “Oh!
R I only had wealth, or, if I had elo
quence, or if I had high social pontion.
now much J would accomplish lor God
and tho church!” I stand here to-day to
tea you th it you have great opportunities
for usefulness.
Who buiit the Pyramids? The King who
ordered thorn built? No; the plain workmen
Wi.-o added stone after stone an 1 stone after
stori?. Who built the dikes of Holland! The
government that ordore l tha enterprise? No
the plain workmen who carriel the earth
and rung their trowel on the wall. Who are
I nos i Who have built these va-t cities?
The capitalists? No; the carpenters, the
masons, I ho plumbers, the plasterers, the
Dime s, the roofers, dependent on a day’s
wages tor a livelihood. An 1 so in the great
wor.c or as ringing human suffering and en
ligiit on:ng human ignorance and Jiaitin 0- hu
m part an iniquity. is bo In that great work, the chief
to done by ordinary men, with
ordinary speech, in nil ordinary man
ner, and by ordinary means. Tin
I ronhio is that iu the army of Christ
wo all wanted to be captains and
colon willing *Ia to and march brigjier with generals We are not
the rank and file and
to do duty with the private soldier. We
about w.-tiit to the belong battle tofli • reserve corps, and read
while warming ourselves at
tlw campfires, or on furlough at home, our
1 cl upon nn ottoman, we sagging i>a *k into
an arm chair.
As you go down the street you see an
excavation, and four or five men are work¬
ing. an 1 perhaps I wenty or thirty teaning on
the rail and looking over at them. That is
the way it is i i the church of God to-day:
where you find one Christian hard at work,
there are fif ty men wat hing the job.
Oh! my trends, why do you not go to
work and proicii this G )-pel' You say: “I
haven i pu pit.” Yon have. It mav he tho
carpenter’s wall. Tho ben robe Mi, it may ho tho 'mason’s
in which you aro to
proclaim this Gospel may bo a shoemaker’s
apron. But wo unto you if you
preach how! If not this Gospd somewhere brought , some
this world is ever
to Christ,, it will bo through the unanimous
nml long continued efforts of men who,
waiting for 1 no special endowment, conse¬
crate to < lo what they hare. Among the
mo- t us -less people in the world aro men with
i n ta'erits, while many a one with only two
talents, or no talent at all, is doing a great
wor.c, and so "the lame take the prey.”
There aro t,holis m Is of ministers of whom
YOU have never l eir.l—in log cabins at the
West, in mission chapels at the East—who
are warring again?t the !egioas of darkness,
.sure s al y warring. Tra t distributors,
month by month undermining the citadels
of sin. You do not know their going or their
coming; hut tho footfalls of their ministry
are heard in tin palaces of heaven. lUho
are t ’10 workers in our Sabbath schools
throughout this Ian 1 to-day? Men cele
hr,ted. men brilliant, men of vast es¬
tate' for the most part, not that at all.
1 have noticed that the chief eharacteris
ti s of the most of these who are success¬
ful in the work is that they know their
ihb 'S. are emest in prayer, are anxious
for the salvation of the young, and Sabbath
by Sabbath aro w 1 ing to sit down im
o'.(serve 1 and tell of Christ an 1 the resurrec¬
tion. The ( are th* humble workers who
are recruiting th* great army of Christian
by youth no' by m ght. not not’ by power, not
profound but argument, by brilliant
ant fiics:-;, and by humble the blessing of God on
po o talk, story, anl silent
icar, and anxious look. “The lame take the
pro (fli! this work of saving the youth
of our
country—how few appreciate what it is!
This generation tramping on to the grave —
wo wdl coon nl! be go ra What next?
An engineer on a locomotive going across
the western prairies day after day cabin saw a
liMln child come out in front of a and
ware to him; so he got in the habit of wav
* n S back to the little child, and it was the
da joy to him to s-e the little one come out
m front of the cabin door and wave to him,
while he answered back,
Y, no y th ® tram ' vftS belated it came on
to „ tne tliisiv , , ot the evening. As the engineer
ftaod “ ttle at jj 11 his 0:1 post pm he saw track, by the wondering headlight why that
J. Ga *. In did
?. ie ^ knowing not come, nothing looking
or of
P 0 F“* A great horror seized upon
the engineer. He reversed the engine. He
gave 1 tl:en it m charge climb of the other man on board,
! :n ho j; d over * h ? en ?*" e - a P d
. down , the cow-catcher. He said. J
< a me on
th< l^ h bad reversed the engine, it seemed
f f ast and f ast w ; ro £ tbough ou, 8. bghfnmg speed,
f r .«« it was really slow
f, l’? i"7 \^ by Y?” ^ ie V t' h rn 'V r a, U! ‘ d ’, a | fted '*
1 a ,l V U ',° lr: ' - !n and the P as
, T t0 * e i 1
Jw ’ Wl ' xvVx- "^ , te 6 ° °"f! hlld - n aUve T bay. and famted ia hl3
»*rtv” -, hv
v™ •. 1 sor 'f-L i that t , , was well ,, done. , „
but r „ t I , want you to exercise some kindness
au 4 appreciation toward those in the
^ omnmn ' t v " ho are snatching the lit
'tnn're, wheels ° f tell ;b Ta '
t ‘°‘? a ld sin—snatching - them from
l!Illlor thundering , rail trains and eternal
disaster,bringing «*™**'«l them up into fortlS respectability Z
into glory world
^ appreciate 1 ° e ,? the gineer did;
w “5 iaa > 011 not grander
' vors done l ’>‘ every Sabbath-school teacher
this afternoon?
b)h! niv friends, I want to impress upon
my;elf an 1 lIpon yoUrse!lres ifc is n °t tba
JJ ai ^ °[Jf* ntS W ° P 038 ^ but the use we
God has a royal family in the world.
Now, if 1 should ask: “Who are the
royal families of history?” you would
say: “House of Hapsburg, house of
Stuarts, house of Bourbons.” They lived in
palaces Lord's and had royad great equipage. But of them who
are the familv? Some
may serve you' in the household, some of
the m are in unlighted garrets, some
some burled of us back who fared sumptuously every day
are tuto dis.’omtiture, there are
the lame that, will take the prey,
One steo further: There are'a great many
P?°P !e d ^uraged about getting to heaven.
tel1 I'aToifi.-te-'pnrSfd'iPbS'. thousand miles
rae you are a away
preach to this morning. T 1 j have been ..
looking aTtray. for vou. I will tell vou how you
got 'it was not maliciousness on
! >'°ur part. It was perhaps through the
geniality and fell sociality of Y’ou your wandered nature
that vou into sin.
f f ^ m your diity, you unconsciously
j 0 f t t \ )e i loase of God; you admit the Gospel
to U> true, and yet you have so grievously
i and impossible. so prolongeily wandered, you say " rescue
j s
It would take a week to count up the names
i r f those in heaven who were on earth worse
* vou tel11119 y° u are ' The - V wnt the whole
round of iniquity, thevdisgraced themselves
they di-grace 1 th«ir bousehold.they desoaired
°f return because their reputation was* gone,
their property wa- gone.every thing was gone:
but in some hour like this theY'heard the voice
or God. nni threw themselves on the divine
conifiass on, and ro-e up more than con¬
querors. And I tell you there is the same
chance for you. That is one reason why I
like to preach tb s Gospel, so free a Gosoa’,
so tremendous a Gosp l. It takes h> man ail
wrong, and makes him afl right.
In a former settlement where I preached, a
member of my congregation quit the house of
God. quit rispectable <-jrele-i, went into ail
day styles of sin, and was slain of bis iniquity. Tile
for his burial came, an i his body was
brought to the house of God. Seme of his c-/nv
rades who had destroyed him were overhear 1
along the street, on the way to the burial,
damn saying: this “Come, let us go and hear Talmage
old sinner! ’ Oh! I had nothing
but tears for the dead, and I had nothing
but invitations for the liv ing. You s -e I
could not do otherwise, "Christ Jesus
ca ne to seek and save that which was lost”
f'hri-t in his dying prayer said: “Father,
forgive them, and that was a prayer for vou
and f >r me. Oh! start on th-* roid to heaven
to day. will \ ou are not happy. The thir.-t of your
soul never be slaked by the fountains of
sin. You turn everywhere but to Go 1 for
help. knows Right where you are, call oti Him. He
you, He knows all about you, He
knows all the odds again-t which you have
been contending in life. Do not go to Him
with a long rigmarole of a prayer, but just
look up and say: “Help! H»ip!”
But you say: “My band trembles so from
my hymn dissipations I can't even take lio!d of a
book to sing, ” Do not worry about
that, my brother; I will give out a
hymn at the close so familiar you
can sing have it without a book But you
say: “1 such terribio habits ou ma
I can’t get rid of them.” My answer is:
Almighty grace can break up that habit, and
will break it up. But yo i ay: “The wrong
1 did was to one dead and in heaven now,and
I can’t correct that wrong.” You can correct
it. Ey the grace of God,go into the presence
of that one, an i the apologies you ought to
have made on earth make in heaven.
“Oh!” says some man, “if I should
try to do right, if I should turn away
from my evil doing unto the Lord, l
would be jostled, 1 would be driven
back; nobody would have any sympathy
for me.” You are mistaken. Here, in
the presence of the church on earth and
in heaven, 1 give you to-day the right hand
of Christian fellowship. Go l sent me here
to-day to preach this, and he sent you hero
to hear this: “Let the wicked forsake his
way, and the unrighteous man his thought,
and let him return unto the Lord, who
will have mercy, .and unto our God,
who will abundantly pardon.” Though
you may have been tho worst sinner,
you may become the best saint, and in
the great day of judgement it wilj
be found that “where sin abounded,
grace does much more abound, and while
tiie spoils of an everlasting kingdom aro
being awarded for your pursuit, it will be
found that the lame took the prey. Blessed
be Go l that wo are, this Sabbath, one week
nearer the obliteration of ali the inequalities
of this life and all its disquietudes.
Years ago, on a boat on the North
river, tho pilot gave a very sharp ring to
the bell for the boat to slow up. Tiie
engineer then he attended to the machinery, and
came up with some alarm on
deck to see what was the matter. Ho
saw it was a moonlight night, and there
were no obstacles in the way. Ho went
to the pilot and said: “Why did you
ring the bell in that way! Why do
you want to stop? there's nothing
the matter.” and the pilot said to
him “There is a mist gathering
on the river; don’t you see that? and there is
night gathering darker and darker, and I
can’t see tho way.” Then the engineer, look¬
ing around and seeing it was a bright moon¬
light, looked into the face of the pilot and
saw that he was dying, and then that he was
dead.
God grant that when our last moment
comes we may be found at our post doing
our whole duty; and when the mists of the
river of death gather on our eyelids, may the
good Idiot take the wheel from our hands
and guide us into the calm harbor of eternal
rest!
Prop I the anchor, furl the sail;
am safe within the vale.
One Beautiful China Woman.
borne Ng Yeo Nam is the Chinese name
the by a beautiful girl who arrived on
steamer Belgio nearly a month ago.
U hen the steamer was released from
quarantine and pretty Ng Yee was taken
to tiie Circuit Court to arrange for
proper bonds for her release on a writ
of habeas corpus, she created no little
sensation among the officials, attorneys
and reporters present, Instead of hav
ing a Cltiuese caste of eountenanee, Ng
Yeo possessed uu oval face, a nose
slightly Roman, large round, dark eyes,
pearly teeth, and a figure that many an
American beauty would give worlds to
possess. Such was Ng Yee's appear¬
ance, and her actions in court were
decidedly anti-Chinese. The ordinary
Chinese girl s demeanor when among
those not of her own race is proper to a
preciseness. She holds a handkerchief
to her face, never smiles, and under no
circumstances expresses surprise — in
fact a prim maiden aunt would go into
ecstacies over such a ward. But Ng
Y’ee had no one to shake a warning
finger at her; she had all the latitude
possible and took advantage of it. She
peered out of the corner of her eyes at a
reporter in a most bewildering way,
then pouted because he was too modest
to saunter over where she sat and say
nice things to her. She was well up in
all the artifices known by the girls of
the present day, and by those thought¬
less airs she wrecked her own happi¬
ness, for she will be sent back to China.
Consul Bee heard about the waif, and
as she lacked proper credentials lie pro¬
ceeded to investigate her case, as it
is quite probable she was shipped to
America for immoral purposes. The
Consul said yesterday: “Her case is a
remarkable one, so far as I have gone.
Both of her parents were not Chinese—
of that I am certain. She has Portu¬
guese blood iu her veins, and her very
appearance disproves the statement of
Lee Kong You that the girl is liis wife’s
sister. He says that she was born iu
America, and that she returned to
China in 1S78. Who purchased her
ticket to this country, and by whom she
was sent, I have not learned as yet, but
I will bring lier to the consulate on
Friday and hear her story. She will
probably be remanded .—San Francisco
Chronicle.
One-Sided Business.
illfel 4^5
Y
A
ONtJTYV*'- D.i*’l u
USiDE
r £ BtisiKESS 4C!kEAT'
-
aT
m. n* =**c •A
c frf
5 ¥ ir
I!
<
Bill—“Can you reach, them?”
Jack—“Yes, of course, ’ I’m eating °
T »>
“ ! Y
— , Throw r some down. .
Jack—‘ Can’t! I'm afraid I'll lose my
balance.”— Tid-Bits.
Things always look rather blew aftei
a cyclone.
VERY GENTLEMANLY BURGLARS.
They Chatted Genially While Boring
a Safe and Refused a Gold Watch.
Professional robbers have armoared UP at
> anaaic, -oik. a r u ori( auci i Hie 'icili.ty . is
,
aroused to a high pitch of excitement.
John Malone with a frieml w sleep
mg, as is Ins custom, in the drug store
yf May & Malone. About 1 o’clock
standing Malone suddenly lum, awoke two masked to perceive,
over men,
with gleaming pistols in their hands.
1 WOUiun l jell ll revere you, SUg
gested one of the men in soothing tones
w as l.p he lir.imrld brought lii, lus niatnl pistol l'ntn into Close prox
unity with the scared fellows face,
while the other smilingly produced a
knife from his belt. Malone didn't cry
otit. He didn’t even breathe any often
er than was absolutely necessary. His
companion was treated in the same
courteous manner as he. One of the
burglars was then left to keep the occu¬
pants of the bed in good spirits while
his partner began boring a hole in the
safe. They talked good-noturediy all
the time to each other and to tlieir pris¬
oners, who after a time began to feel
as much at ease as the situation would
justify.
Malone said: “You won’t find much
in the safe.” “No, nothing but the
county's showing that money,” the visitors was had the reply,
reason to
believe that the safe contained the pub¬
lic funds. They spoke of making a raid
on the Sheriff’s office, but ouly to dis
discover that it contained no safe. The
young men gave a solemn assurance
that the county money was all in bank,
and the driller having discovered that
he couldn’t open the safe without dyna¬
mite, the robbers turned their attention
to other parts of the store. They didn’t
take anything, however, Malone except a few ci¬
gars to smoke. had a fino gold
watch, which they returned to his
pocket together with a ten-dollar bill,
saying they wanted money in larger
doses.
“Now, young men, said one of the
marauders, “we are going to leave.
Which strikes your fancy as best, to be
tied and gagged or to accompany us for
and, a mile or two?” The walk was "chosen,
after dressing, the two prisoners
accompanied their captors out of town.
Having gone about four miles on the
railroad track the gentlemanly burglars
darted down a ravine aud were seen no
more. Then the captives retraced their
steps, and, arriving in Yandale about
4 o’clock in the morning,gave the alarm.
The sheriff and posse were soon in theii
saddles. Several men were arrested, but
there was no proof against them. A
search is still being made.
Going to Fight.
The attack on the British garrison at
Grntong by a large force of Thibetans
indicates that the latter are seriously bent
on hostilities. For a long time armed
partus have crossed into Nepaul and
created disturbances there, and several
skirmishes have occurred. The Bengal
government has been obliged to send
troops to the frontier, and now it looks
as if open war was to go on. Thibet has
been o ie of the most vigorously exclu¬
sive of even Asiatic countries. A few
years ago the famous traveller, Preje
valsky, was prevented from reaching its
capital, Lassa, but a few months hence,
it appears, he is going to make another
effort to get there, with au escort of two
officers and a few men, he himself being
in the Russian military service. Whether
the present turbulence in ISfepnul is en¬
couraged either at Pekiu or Lassa, does
not appear, but it is clear enough that
the recent amicable overtures of the
Viceroy of India have thus far proved of
little avail. Y'et out of the hostilities
may come important results toward the
opening of Thibet, and a market for
American goods.
The Atlanta, Ga., Evening Journal, the
only daily and weekly paper in that city
that advocates tariff reform, under the
skillful management of Hon. Hoke
Smith and II. H. Cabiniss, is making
wonderful strides in the direction of in’
fluence and circulation.
“Tli en let the moon usurp the rule of day,
An d winking tapers show the sun his way;
For what my senses can perceive,
I need no reve’at on to believe.”
Ladies suffering from any of tne weaknesses
or ailments peculiar to their sex, and who will
use Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription accord¬
ing to directions, will experience a genuine
revelation in the benefit they will receive. It
is a positive cure for the most complicated and
obstinate cases of leucorrhea. excessive flow¬
ing, painful menstruation, unnatural sup¬
pressions, back, prolapsus, or falling of the womb,
weak ‘female weakness,’’anteversion,
retroversion,bearinc down sensations,chronic
con; estion. inflammation and ulcerat ion of the
womb, inflammation, Dain and tenderness in
ovaries, accompanied with “internal heat.”
Bishop J. H. Vincent, a native of Ala., is no¬
ted for promoting religion among young people
Conventional “ llonon ” Resolutions.
Ry Whereas, The M -non Route (L. N. A. & r.
Co.) desires to make it known to the world
at link large Pullman that it forms the double connecting
of tourist travel between the
winter cities of Florida a- d the summer re
sorts of the Northwest; and
TITi a cos. Its “rapid transit” svstem is un
surpa- sed, its elegant Pullman Buffet Sleeper
and Chair car service between ( hieago and
Louisville, Indianapolis and Cincinnati un¬
equal Whereas, :ed; and Its rates
are as low as the lowest
then he it
jiGyatut, mat in incctuui UL SI art III g 0X1 <1
Cormickfcen?Pass. ^ Routefl85
Dearborn St.. Chicago, AgentMonon for
full particulars (In
any event send for a Tourist Guide, enclose 4c.
postage.)
_
Sypher & Co. of New York.the antiquarians,
are purchasers, at all times, of Colonial and
other relics, such as Declaration portraits and letters of
the signers of the Generals and all of celebrities Indepen¬
dence. Presidents, Revolution.
of the period of the Also old silver,
china, furniture an t curious articles general
ly. Parties desiring to do dispose of anything in
the above line would well to corrtsp -nd
with that firm. Their address is *130 Broadway,
and they were established in 1831.
The “Bureau of justice” is Chicago’s latest
and it affords legal assistance to poor people.
A Good Name
At home Is a tower of strength abroad—says the fa¬
il i iar proverb and it is fully verified by ihe history
of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. The first words of com¬
mendat:on and praise for this medi ma were re
eeivej from our friends and neighbors, and from
the time it was fairly introduced up to the present
there has been, and is now, more of
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold in Lower, 34ass,>here it is made, than of ali
other sarsapanllas and blood purifiers combined.
This ‘good name’’among people who have known
Hood's Sarsaparilla and its proprietors for rears
should certainly be strong evidence to people in
other cities and towns of the excellence and merits
of this medicine. Send for book containing state¬
ment of cures.
Salt Rheum
"After the failure of three skillful physicians to
cure my boy of salt rheum, I tried Hood’s Sarsapa¬
rilla and Olive Ointment. I have now used four
boxes of Ointment ani one and a half bottles of
Sarsaparilla, and the boy is to all appearances com¬
pletely cured. He is now four years old and has
been afflicted sin’e he weg six months of age.’ —
SIks. B. SandeRsox, 56Sewhaii St, Lowell, Mass.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for is. Prepared only
by C. L HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
PISCS CURE FOR CONSUMPTION
catarrh.
\ Nr w II om e Treatment for the f are of
a t a r rh. Catarrh:.1 H Deafness j
an i ay Fever.
The microscope has proved that these dis- I
eases are of contagions, living parasites and they in the are lining due ta the j
presence brane mem
of the upper air passages and ettstachian
tnbes. The eminent scientists. Tyndall, these Hui
ley and Beale, end->rse this, and anthori- !
ties cannot be disputed. The regular me'hod
keeping delicate ^S’SSiSlhS
the membrane in a constant
state o{ irrita ion, allowing it no chance to
Sment^not o^^mXnt^re has ever
l eeu r. corded. It is an absolute fact that
the membrane must pet a chance to h al
before an application is repeat* h It is now
seven years since Mr. Dixon discovered the
parasite in catarrh and formulated his new
treatment,and household since then his in remedy has be
tome a word every country
"here the English language is spoken. Cures still,
eff cled by him seven years ago are cures
there ha - , ing bee no return of the disease.
So highly are these remedies valued that ig¬
norant imitators have started up every where,
know pretendir nothing, g to destroy by remedies, a parasite, the of results which of t the ey
application of which they are equally ignor
ant. Mr. weeks, Dixon's remedy is applied three only appli oi nee
in two and from one to ca
tions effect a permanent cure iu the most ag¬
gravated Mr. Dixon case-. sends pamphlet describing his
a
new treatment on the receipt of stamp to pay
$04 postage. The address is A H. Dixon & Son,
King street west, Toronto, Canada.—Scien¬
tific American.
Frcsident Cleveland lias received official no¬
tice from Brazil of the abolition of slavery.
Thousands of cures follow the use of Dr.
fcage s Catarrh Remedy. 50 cents.
In Denver, Col., five of the richest saloon
men ask that the license be increased to SI .000.
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
The Aged.
Medical ar.d scientific skill has at last solved the
problem of the long- needed medicine for the ner.
voas, debilitated, and the aged, by combining: the
best nerve tonics, Celery and Coca, with other effec
tive remedies, which, acting gently but efficiently
on tho kidneys, liver and bowels, remove disease,
restore strength and renew vitality. This medicine is
to. (gmbound
ItefiUs a place heretofore unoccupied, and marks
a new era in the treatment of nervous troubles.
Overwork, anxiety, disease, lay the foundation oi
nervous prostration and weakness, and experience
has shown that the usual remedies do not mend the
strain aud paralysis of the nervous system.
Recommended by professional and business men
Send for circulars.
Price SI.00. Sold by druggists.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Proprietors
BURLINGTON, VT.
Do want il
>
;
Ife 1$
laeanth
S, iS|
tooBJi WASIfi
5 ra {
ROANOKE
Cotton and Hay
Ul Tlio Hundreds 3E=»3F*.3E3SES. fiest and in cheapest actual, made. use.
Bales cotton fa tier than any
Jr ,// gin ROANOKE can pick. Address
SM, \ WOOD WORKS IRON for ANI) Cot
* our
L &ton and Hay Press Tenn. circulars.
Chattanooga, Boxl6l
m Live at home and make more money workin g for us than
I at anythingeise in the vvt orld E it her sex. Costly outfit <
FKEE. Terms free. Address, '1 'HUE & CO., Augusta, M aine.
.'Jfi ^MBHiur " ■
; - 5 ' J
wh t M B l s m P R OPm £) DiteWs o r Catarrh /| ----—^A ~n J /AC>O.Q < Aj'<b
Mi i
&
WE If
0 ^ For a case of Catarrh in the Head which they cannot cure, i 1
A }
m v 50 CEMT 5 s
.
m
C^TARHH IU THE HEAD.
SYMPTOMS OF THE I>ISEASE.-Dull, heavy headache,
obstruction of the nasal passages, discharges falling from the
head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at
others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid;
the eyes are weak; there is ringing in the ears, deafness, hacking
ter, or coughing together to with clear the from throat, expectoration of offensive mat¬
scabs ulcers; the voice is changed and
has a “nasal twang”; the breath is offensive; smell and taste
impaired; there is a sensation of dizziness, with mental depres¬
sion, a hacking cough and general debility. Only a few of the
above-named symptoms are likely to be present in any one case.
Thousands of cases annually, without manifesting half of the
above symptoms, result in consumption, and end in the grave.
No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, less
understood , or more unsuccessfully treated by physicians.
" If would evil,
LuiniilQn SENSE B | r0rjt you As the predisposing remove an real strike at its of
w 1 - or cause
_ catarrh is, in the majority of cases, some
TRFATM”HT a fiLdi rgr.n I« I | condition weakness, of impurity, the system, or otherwise in attempting faulty to
1 ““ cure the disease our chief aim must be
directed odious disease, to tha and removal treat of that cause. The more we see of this
nually the Invalids’ we Hotel successfully thousands of cases an¬
at and Surgical Institute, the more do
we realize the importance of combining with the use of a local,
soothing of and blood-cleansing healing application, a thorough and persistent inter¬
nal use and tonic medicines.
""V--; IlHiEF " | 8 which In curing it is catarrh so frequently and all the complicated, various diseases throat, with
I as
Op: ’ I bronchial, and lung diseases, weak stomach, ea
llUftF tarrhal deafness, weak or inflamed eyes, impure
HULlftnuL. 1 blood, scrofulous and syphilitic taints, the wonder
.......... ful powers and -virtues of Dr, Pierce’s Golden Med¬
ical Discovery cannot be too strongly extolled. It has a specific
V -© o o
<■. m gjfGAWE o
m 7/m I
m ff%SAKk3^f^ TTLE r T H£ liver original pills. ^ <
y |
W& m
V7
Sold by Druggists.
25 Cents a Vial.
BEING purely vegetable,
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets operate without disturbance to
the system, diet, or occupation. Put up in glass
ble. vials, hermetically seated. Aiwava fresh and relia¬
As a gentle laxative, alterative, or active
purgative, they give the most perfect satisfaction.
Happiness.
The foundation of all happiness is heallh. A
man with an imperfect digestion may be a
millionaire, may be the husband of an a gel
and the father of half a dozen cherubs. and
yet be miserable if he lie roubled w.th dysjjep
sia,or of any of the disorders arising from im
perfect digestion or a sluggish liver. Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pe lets are the
siifest and sure s’ remedy for these morbid
conditions. Be ng purely vegetable, they are
perfectly harmless.
Most o, n»«t t«. much.I sleep too little'
we read too much and think too little,
For Rickets, Marnututs nnil Wasting Dis
orders ol Children.
Scott’s Emulsion i‘s of Pure Cod Liver Oil with
Hypophosphites unequalled. The rapidity
with which children pain flesh and strength
upon it is very wonderful. Read the follow
mg: “I have used Scott’s Emulsion in case- of
Rickets and Marasmus of long standing, and
have been more than pleased wish the resui is.
as ; n every M. case the improvement was mark
ed. —J. Main. M. D.. Now York.
m 0
-sac tor Fains
-SB®®St Stomachache Diarrhiea
v-J /\Ub (fje s^arTiact] well wifi
S^Jacobs DU: Apply ftefjne/sfsspzd
in f]n{ wafer and wruqg clip.
BOLD BY DRUGGISTS ArlD DEALERS,
““CHA? A.VOGELER C? Balto. Mo.
ftMKVELOUS
DISCOVERY a
Wholly of unlike mint! xvamleritiu. artificial systems. s;
Flirt*
Any book icarnnl in one rending.
1500 500 Classes Philadelphia. Philadelphia, of 10S7 at Baltimore, 1 R B Wit K >05 shiufit.on. at Detroit,
Boston, at at 1 1 I Columbia I I at i. 12US
at at Boston, large larse classes classes of of Coll Law Law students, studi at
Yale, University, 'Wellesley, Oberlin, Chautauqua. University Ac., Ac. of Penn.. Endorsed Mich¬
Richard igan by
Proctor, the Scientist, Ifons. W. W. Astor,
Judah P. Bknjamin, Juduc Gibson, Dr. brown, E.
H. Cook, Principal N, Y. State Normal College, Ac.
Taught by TPttOF. correspondence. I.OfSl.TTK. Prospectus Fifth POST DREE Y.
from 2.17 Avo.. N.
o The ETJYEBB’ QUIDS Is
issued March and Sept.,
each year. It is an ency¬
clopedia of useful infor¬
mation for all who pur¬
chase the luxuries or tho
necessities of life. Wo
can clothe you and furnish you with
all the necessary and unnecessary
appliances to ride, walk, dance, sleep,
eat, fish, hunt, work, go to church,
or stay at homo, and in various sizes,
styles and quantities. Just figure out
what is required to do all these things
COMFORTABLY, and you can make a fair
estimate of the value of the BUYERS’
GUIDE, which will bo sent upon
receipt of 10 cents to pay postage,
MONTGOMERY WARD & 00.
1.11-114 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Ill.
2 < 5 o a
r- si si Ss§
: f a Iron =§ anufacturers BKO\V>r write
Efl Pi and
> i I 2 ? Gen- d Dealers A- Kl,\(;
2 S in
►
DALLAS Centre TEXAS. of tiie richest holt
of cheap farming lands in ihe word. Population
1880, 100.000 10,338? 3 in 18VS. 4 <?,?<>;{. Will havo
in years. 85V houses now building.
Largest and most progressive city in Texas, -Ex¬
lightful traordinary inducements for nuimifactuier.s ; de¬
climate. Make DALLAS, the great Rail¬
way Centre, your objective point to visit uil por
tions of the State, Address
sec’y iM^iGRATisifs h§mmvm.
LVHAH’S Patent Genthlnation f<UH SIGHT.
MffiiSM m 1
V-..
40 Per Cent. Send for
EEIHJCTION Catalogue of
in Price. Sights, Rifles, Ac.
Ad.iross WM. LYMAN, Midtllefield, Conn.
SI 00 to $300 who madcU'wor'ctU!? furnish fin¬
ite. horses Agents and rive preferred their whole can time to the their business. own
Spare moments may r.e profitably emnloyed also.
A few vacancies in towns and cities. B. F. JOHN¬
SON & CO., 1013 Main st., Richmond, Va.
fpyite I C«#40 IntiU I AMn 3 Uiral , 000,000 acres best forsnle. agricuT
:md a-razinpr land
Address.GODLH Y & FOR T I>: R. Da Ilas.Tex.
HEHBRAI 40 FIFTH WHEEL. SSST^SSR
improvemeiit. UERRRAND CO., Fremont, 0.
f CO'.'YItlGIIT, IW7. ]
effect upon the lining mucous membranes of the nasal and other
glands, air-passages, promoting tho natural secretion of their follicles and
thereby softening the diseased and thickened membrane,
and dition. restoring As blood-purifier, it to it3 natural, is thin, unsurpassed. delicate, moist, those healthy diseases con¬
a it As
which complicate catarrh are diseases ot the lining mucous mem¬
branes, or of tho Wood, it will readily be seen why this medicine
is so well calculated to cure them.
f 3 LQSil Asaloeal application for healing the diseased condi
tion in the head, Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy is beyond
. alt comparison the best preparation ever invented.
S4ut,n ufiFHT I. ^ )S m ild and pleasant to use, producing no smarting
■Ht'iidam or p a in, and containing no strong, irritating, or caus
!■ hi tj G drug, or other poison. This Remedy is a power¬
ful antiseptic, and speedily destroys all bad smell which accom¬
panies so many cases of catarrh, thus affording great comfort to
those who suffer from this disease.
Perurkent The Golden Medical Discovery is the natural
"helpmate ” of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. It
Cures. not the oniy cleanses, purities, regulates, and builds
up system to a healthy standard, and con¬
when quers throat, bronchial, and lung complications,
— — ——— any such exist, but, from its specific
effects upon the lining membrane of the nasal passages, it aids
materially in restoring the diseased, thickened, or ulcerated mem¬
When brane to a healthy is effected condition, and thus eradicates the disease.
a cure in this manner it is permanent.
Both Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and Dr. Sage’s
Catarrh Remedy are sold by druggists the world over. Discovery
£1-W, Rix bottles for^&5.00. Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy 50 cents;
clothing, A complete diet, and Treatise other on Catarrh, giving valuable hints as tc
matters of importance, will be mailed,
post-paid to any address, on receipt of a 2-cent postage stamp.
Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association,
No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
PURELY VEGETABLE! PERFECTLY HARMLESS l
As a LIVER PILL, they are Unequaled I
SMALLEST, CHEAPEST, EASIEST TO TAKE.
Beware of Imitations, which contain Poisonous Minera/a. Always ask for
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, which are little Sugar-coated Pills,
or Anti-bilious Granules. ONE PELLET A DOSE.
SICK HEADACHE,
Bilious Headache, Dizziness, Constipation,
Indigestion, of Bilious Attacks bowels, and promptly all derange¬ re¬
ments the stomach and are of Dr.
lieved and permanently cured by the use
Pierce’s Pellets. In explanation of their remedial
power over so great a variety of diseases, it may
truthfully be said that their action upon the system is universal, not a
gland or tissue escaping their sanative influence.
Manufactured by WOELIl’S DISPEKSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION,
BtTFFAEO, 3JT. "S'.
Lecture on
"ROUGH ON RATS.”
\v
tl
iUG!
"ToTtearreuTiteuHu^lmixTtoumroNTt^Ta in i
with grease and smear about their haunts, and
put s a 15c. box of it in a pint of beuzine and
JtjJUaJ O'E , ir\ YSITr 1 62 d.-uche cracks mixture and
crevice Bugs, s where Beetles, grease Roaches, es annot be applied. For
Water > 11
Ac. For two or three nights m tf*
sprinkle Rot-on on Bats dry. '
sink.draiapipe. powder, in, about QCCYl and down the^S* /' m m
First thing inDbC I LCo /ri :
the morning wash it nil away / tet ggs
down the drain pipe, when all'* v 7
the will insects disappear. from The garret secret to cellar is in J w *
III A A TCE 1 Ell CIIAO DUUd fact that wherever
ff drink during insects the are night. in For the
house they- must
Potato in/kfe Bugs. Insects on Viui es, etc., a table
E™ Sf S&.ISl! ROACHES
applied with sprinkling well pot. spray stirred syringe, 15c., or
whisk broom. Keep it up.
i.V. and $1 Boxes.—Agr size. Pee full direc¬
tions with boxes. CROUWD Gophers, SQUIRRELS, Chipmunks,
RABBITS, Sparrows, Rough Rais. See directions.
Cleared out by on
ROUGH OH MALARIA »SS
Fever and Ague, Chilis, higher than a kite.
S' N) at Druggists, or prepaid by Ex. for S1.60.
£. S.wells, Jersey City, E. J.
Mason SLHamii I'
ORCAWS.
Highest Honors at all Great World’s Exhibitions sinee
1SN7. 100 styles, to t'JOO. For Cash, Easy Payments,
or Kented. Catalogue, 10 pp„ 4to, free.
PIANOS.
Mason A Hamlin do not hesitate to make the ext nor nl in
arv claim that th-.-ir Pianos are pupi-rior to all ethers.
introduced This they attribute solely to the remarkable the improvement MASON
HAMLIN by them in 1SS.', now known »s particulars "
A- PIANO STRINGER." Full by
mail
iSBiro
BOSTON, l.lt Tremont St. CHICAGO. 149 Wabash Ave.
NEW YORK, 46 East 14th St. (Union Square).
GC
M
TO £
SUCCESSORS a
M
Q
PQ
©
T. LEWIS & BHOS.,
WARRANTED I’ll RE
White Lead, Red Load, Litharge, Orange
Mineral, Painters’ Colors and Linseed Oil.
CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED.
e%» U WELL
\~ DRILL
All cuttings of the drill in clay, sand, gravel, rock, Ac ,
I discharged at m irface witliont removln* Drill
tools. Noted for sue ocess where others fail. large.
drops 70 to OO tin iich ii minute. Protits
Catalogue Free. LOO.UIS A- NY .MAN,
TiFFBW, OHSO.
ibrifel . “OSGOOD”
U. S. Staadard Ccalei.
Sent on trial. Freight
smawttToi paid. Fully Warranted.
3 TON $35.
Other size:, propor tion
ately low. Agents well paid. Illustrated Catal oguo
free. Mention this Paper.
OSGOOD Sc THOMPSON, Binghamton, U. Y.
Blair’s Pills. Great English Gout and
i Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval Box, 31; round. 14 Fills.
S fl FREB
Off imdcr
Brewster Safety Rein I Folder Co.. Holly, Mich.
Ifti'ti Wourlarfre frets yuiir address in our Agent's Directory and
• ttoeachono. Mit^azins Address 4 montlisfreo Cony of Direct-ory
-no: Record Co., Buchanan, Ga.
f \ OLD is worth $i()0 per lb. Fettit’s Eye Salvo is
YX worth *1.(IUU. but is sold at 2oc. a b >X by daalsrs.
A. N. U...... .. .Twenty-three, ’88.
l
4 £^ ^ PURE V o
Q WHITE <0
,
Z*iuS>%
TRADE MARK.
?!
rh
I P
•CA4 o'
H*
P*
0
Pt