Crawfordville democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1881-1893, August 06, 1886, Image 7
CR, TALMAGE’S SERMON. THE CHEAP SPARROW. Text: _ , *\re not. —--... tive sparrows ^o*d for twu . . I • farthings, ail i not 1 lie the.:) is forgottas j before Gudr—l.u e xii., (>. belimite 1 in the | You see the Bible will not j | choice of symbol There is l ardly a beast, or bird or i'us ctwhi h has not been . ailed to ; illustrate some divine truth—the ox's j>a tien e, the ant's industry, the spider's skill, j ’ the bind s sure oo:;due<s. the eagle’s s e.-d, the dove's gentleness, and even the sparrow's meanness and insignia ance. In Oriental countries none but the poorest people buy the , sparrow and eat it. so very little meat is : there on lhe banes, aud so very poor is it. ' what there is of it. The comfortable popula tion would not think of touching it auy more than you would think o. eating a bat or a lamprel. Now, says Jesus, if God takes ■ such good care of a poor bird that is not ■ worth a cent, won’t he care for you, an im- : mortal? We We associate God with revolutions. can see a divine purpose m the discovery of America, the in the invent'on of Gunpowder the art of print ing. in exposure of the Plot, in the contrie an: o of the needle-gun. in the ruin of an Austrian or Na ooleonie God the despotism; minute 'but how hard it is to see in personal affairs of our lives! We think of God as making a rerord of the starry host, but cannot reali-.e the Bible truth that Ha knows how ... ny hairs are on our head. It seems a grand thing that God provided food for hundreds of thousandi of Israelites m the desert; but wq cannot: appreciate the truth that, when a sparrow mouth is hungry, God stoops seed down and opens its and puts the in. We are struck with the idea that Goa fills the universe with His presence; but can not understand how Ho encamps in the crystal palace of the dewdrop, or finds room to stand, without being crowded, be tween the alabaster pillars of a pond lily. We can see God in the clouds. Can we see God in these flower: at our leet ’ We are apt to place Got! on some great stage—or try to do it—expecting Him there to act out His stupendous projects; but we forget that the life of a Cromwell, an Alexander, ora Wash ington. or an archangel, is not more under divine inspection than your life or mine. Pompey thought there must be a mist favored over the Caesar eyes of But qod there because is such He so mist much .He sees no everything, Me 1 say Gods path but is in tae great waters. rue enough! no mo:e certanly than He is in the water in the glass -on the table. U e say God guides the stars in their courses. truth Magnificent truth: He but no more certain than that decides which road or street you shall take m coming to church. Understand that 1 tod does not sit upon an lndiilerent or unsympithetic throne; but that He sits down beside yon to-day, and •stands be-;ide me to-day, and no affair of our lives is so insignificant but that it is of im¬ portance to God. In the first place, God chooses for us our people Cccupation. there I a::i dissatisfied amazed to with see how the many are work they have to do. I think other threefourths wish they uhey spend were in some d'al of .occupation; aud a great time in regretting •that they got in the wrong fca e or profes sion. I want to tell you that God put into operation all the influen -es which led you to that particular choice. Many of you are not in the business that you expected to be in. You started for the ministry, aud learned merchandise; you started for the law, and you are a physician; you preferred agricul¬ ture, and you are a mechanic. You thought one way; God thought another. But you ought not to sit down and mourn over the past, ton are to remember that God—a beneficent God, a kind God. a loving God— arranged all these circumstances by which you were made what you are. Hugh Miller says: ' 1 will be a stone mason. Davtd Godsaysu “You will bo a geologist. sheep. goes out to tend his lathers God calls him to govern a nation. Saul goes out to hunt his father s asses, and before he gets back finds the crown of mighty domin ion. How touch happier would we be if we were content with the p laces God gave us! an<iaU til9<il - TrufiTSTances by which you were surrounded, and I believe nine-tenths of you are in tho ■work you are best fitted for. I bear a great racket in my wat h, and I find that the hands and the wheels and the springs down are getting out of their places. I send it to the jewelers and say: “Over haul that watch, and teach the wheels and the spring aud the hands to mind their own business,’ You know a man having a large estate. He gathers his working hands in the morn ing, and says to one: “You go aud trim that vine;” to another: “You go and weed those flowers;” to another: “You plow that tough glebe; ’ and The each one of goes the to his particular work. owner e-tato points the man to what he knows he can do best, and so it is with the Lord. He calls usupand points us to that field for vh oh we are best fitted. So that the lesson for to-day, coming from this subject, you.” is: “Stay cheerfully where God puts I remark further: That God has arranged the place of our dwelling. What particular city or town, be street or house of you shall ii . e iu, seems to a mere matter accidcn'. You go out to hunt for a ho 'se, and you happen to pass up a certain street, and happen to see a sign, and you select that house. Was it till happening so? He foresaw O, no! tho God guided you in every step. circumstances, future. He know all your and he selected just thit one house as better for you than any ■one of the ten thousand habitations in tho city. Our house, however humble the roof .and however lowly the portals, is as near God's heart as an Alhambra or a Kremlin. Prove it, you say? Proverbs iii., 3d: “Ho blessed the habitation of the just.” I remark further, that God arranges all our friendships. You were driven to the •wall. You found a man just at that crisis who sympathised wit i you aud helped you. You say: “How lucky I wagi” There was no luck about it. God sent that f iend just as certain as He sent the angel to strengthen busi Christ. Your domestic fr.euds, your friends, vour Christian friends, God . sent them to bless you. and if anv of them have proved traitorous it is only to bring die, out the value of those who rema n. If som • it is onlv that they may stand at tho out postof Heaven to greet you at friends—warm- your coming, You always will have hearted friends, magnanimous friends; anl when sickness "omen to your dwelling there will be watchers: wh n trouble eomestoyour hea t there will be sympathizers; gentle fingers when •death comes there will be to close the eyes and fold the h inds, and gentle lips to tell of a resurrection. Oh, we are com pa-sed by a body-guard of friends! Every man, if he has 1 ehaved faimsel. well, is sur ro;i nded by three circles of friends—those of the outer circle wishing him well; t.iose in the next circle willing to help him; while close up to his heart are a few who would die for him. God pitv the wret h who has not any friends! He ba no behaved well. I remark, again, that God puts down the lim t of our te nporal prosper tv. The world of finance seems to have no Go 1 in it. You ran not tell where a man will land. The af fluent fall: the poor ri e: the ingenious fail. the ignorant succeed. An enterpri-e open ing grandly huts in bankruptcy, while out of the peat dug up from some New England marsh the millionaire budds his fortune, Tne poor man thinks it is chance that keeps hint down: the ri h mm thinks it is chance which hoists him: and they are both wrong, It is so hard to realize that God rules the money market, and has a honk in the nose of the stock gambler, and that all the cominer ■cial revolutions of the world shall re-ult in the very best for God’s dear children. My brethren, do not kick against the divine ai lotments. God knows just how much money itisbe;t for you to lo e. You nwer gain unless it is b-st for you to gain. You go up when WLSeU it it XV it be-t Ov Z W for you to rs'"' go up, and go down when ....... it is best f r ......‘ you to go — down. ’ wn. Prove it, vou sav? I will: Romans viii., 2S: “All tilings' work"t gether for good to them and that love God.” Yo i go to a factory, you see twe-.tv or thirtv whe -Is as they are is going in different dire tion3. This hand rolling off this way. and an ther hand an other way: one down, another up. You say. ‘■What confusion in a factory?’Oh, no! all 1 t ie e difTeren' hands ar.‘ only different parts of the ma-'lino v. So I go into yoar life and see stmnge thin rs. Here is one providence polling y m one wav, a id another in another w v. duf these nrj Li Torent paits of one eveiiast-ing ma'-hiuerv, bv which He will well-being. advance vour Now an 1 present second mortgage, nnd you know that a a third an.I fourth mortgage, is oft.m worth nothing. It is the first mortgage that is a g 00l j investment. I have ti tell you that 9Vor y Chrisfcsan man ha^ a first mortgage on every trial and on every ilirvt- r. a ul it ..uisr mik-L a payment ‘ f eternal advantage to h'.s ; ' soul. How many worriments it woul l take out of your heart if vou believed that fully, You buy goo Is and hope the pri -e will go up; but you are in a fret and a frown for fear the price will go down. You do not buy the go ins. usi g vour Pas: d serene i in the mutter, aud thou say "Oil. Lord! I have don - the l cst I co-i’d■ l commit tbit whole transaction into The hinds ’’ That is what religion is good for. or it is gool for nothing, There are two things, says an old proverb, things you ought not to fret a’out: First, that you can help: and, se -oud, things which you caa not help. If you '.an help them, why do you not ap ly the remedy i If , ' you can no? helo them, you might as well surrender first as las'. 11 v dear brethren, do no sit any longer moping about y u .r ledger. Do not sit looking so desponding upon vour stock of uusalab’e goods. Do you think that God is goingto allow vou, a Chris tian man, to do business alone? God is the controlling partner debtors in every firm: and although vour may abscond, although your securities miy fail, although your store may burn, God will, out of an infinity of ra su its, choose for you the very best remits p,, 1K ,t have any idea, that you cau overstep the limit that God has laid down for your prosperity. *. You will never get one inch be oud it . God has decided how much pros peril v you can stand honorably, and employ v.acfulh . and control righteously; and at the elK i 0 f 1S8G you will have lust so many dollars lind oen t Si j us t so much wardrobe, ju-t, so much furniture, iusfc so more." many bonds and ,nor;gages, and nothing beyond 1 that. will give God vou ¥1” for every j enny j, a , looked over vour ’nd life. He knows what is best for V01K a He is going to bless you m ti ro and bless you for eternity; and Ho w ju do it in the best way. Your little child says: -‘Papa, I wish you , voultl j et me have that knife <” “No,” you say -it is a sharp knife, and vou will cut yourself.” He says: it,” “I must have it.” “But you can not have you reply. Ho gels “/ and re d in the face, and' says he wffl ha it; but you say he shall not have it. Are you not kind in keeping it from him? So G od treats His children. I say: God "I wish, Heavenly Father, to get that.” says: “No, my J child.” I say: “I must have it.” ’ "You not have it.” I get Go(l sa ’ s . can God ^ , y a ad say . ..j wi n have it.” says: ■ ' have it. ” And 1 do not get .. shall no t fathenrt 6 D?you'tdl'm^thereds'nonfie things ? Tell that to and the regulation in those Tell it not to me. A man of large business concludes to go out Of his store, leaving much of his invest ments iu tlie business; and he says this to busi- his sons . " Now j am going to leave ness j n y0 ' ur bauds. while, Perhaps and lierhaps I may come not. ba k iu a little AVhile j am „ olle you will please to look after affairs. ” After awhilo the father comes back aud finds everything at loose ends, and the whole business seems to be goiug wrong no says: “1 am going; to lake posse won ol this business—you know I never fully sur¬ rendered it; aud henceforth consider your¬ selves subordinates.” Is he uot right The in doing Lord j(- ( Ho save; the business. seems to let us go d on iii make life guided miserable by our own sk m an we work of it. God comes down to our shop or our store and says: “Things lain are go ing wrong; I come to take change, mas ter, and I know what is best, and I proclaim my authority.” like We boy are merely school subordi- with nates. it is a at a long sum that ho cannot do. He has been working at it for hours, making figures aud hero all and rubbing out figures there, it is mixed up; and the teacher, looking over tho I boy’s shoulder, i knows that he cannot get out j 0 f p an( clean ing the slate, u's. savs: “Begin again.” .Turt so God does to Our aflhirs gfet into an inextricable entanglement, “Begin and Ha rubs eyervthing is Re out wise and and says: loving in again I” not so Join"? adifferenoebetweentheDivineandthelmman J think the trouble is that there is so large estimate as to what is enough. I have heard c f people striving for that which is enough, but I never heard of anyone who ha 1 enough, What God calls enough for man, man calls too little. What man calls enough, God says is too much. The difference between a poor man and a rich mm is only the differed e in bunks. The rich man puts his money in the Nassau Bank, or the Park Bank, or Milton Bank, or some other bank of that eh imotor, while the poor man comes up aud makes his investments in the bank of Him who runs a i the quarries, all the mines, all the gol J, all the earth, all heaven. Do you think a man can fail when he is backed up like that; 1 want to bring this truth close up to the heart of those people in this audience who have to calculate rigid economy, who are perplexed how they will make tho old gar ment hold out a little longer, with whom the groat question is not which is the best inve t ment or the most lucrative security, but h >w shall I made tho two ends meet; To such people I bring the con lolenee of this Chris tian truth, You may have seen a map on which Is de scribed, with red ink, the travels of the chil dren of Israel through the desert to the Promised Land. You see how they tool; this au l that dire tion, i ro.-s d the river and went through tho sea. Do you know God ha; ma le a map of your life, with paths lead jug up to this bitterness aud that success, through this river and aeros that .sea? But, blessed be Goi! tho path always conies out at tho Promise J Laud. Mark that! Murk that! I remark, again, that ail those things that se mii to be but accidents n our life are under the Divine supervision, \Ve sometimes seem to be going helmli ss and am horless. You say: “If If I I hai h" 1 some " other trade; if I had not gone there this summer: if I had lived in some other house.” You have no right to say that. Every tear burden you wept, every have step you have taken, every you rar riel, i.s under Divine inspection, and that event which startled your whole household with horror, God met with perfe -t pla -idity, because he knew it was for your good. It was part of a great plan projected long ago. In eternity, when you will come point to r> kon up your mercies, you to thal affliction as one of your greatest blo-s tags. Go l has a strange wav W’itii us. Joseph found his way to the Prime Minister’s chair nv being pusned into a pit: and to many a Christian down is up. The wheat must be flailed; the quary must be blasted; the dia mond must be ground; the Christian must lie afflicted; and that single event, which you viprs>- e 1 stood entirely alone, was a connect fng link between two great chains, one and chain reaching through all eternity past tin jther other chain reaching through all eter- 3 ff y future, so small an event fastening two eternities together. the A missionary, coining from India to United States, stopped at St. Helena while the vessel was taking water. H^jtad his little child with him. They walked along by an embankm-nt. and a rock at that moment be loosened, and fabi g instantly killed child. Was it an accident; Was it n surprise to Ged? Had He allowed His servant, after a life of eonse ra’ion, to come to such a trial? Not such is my Go L Th re are no a .■ idents in the divine mind, though and they by seem single so incident to us. God of is life, good, whe her it our he adverse or otherwise, before ear .hand Heaven God w.ll demon-trate His iner v. “I hear a man sa c: "That idea belittles God. You bring Him down to -uch little things” Oh: I have a mor- thorough have ap pre }n iat ion of God in little things than 1 great things. The mother does uot wa t ... mashed its foot broken until the child has or its arm before she administers bruise, sympathy and child comes in with the least mother kisses it. Gol does net wait for tremendous crisis in our life, but comes to as iu our most insignificant trials, anl throws over us the arms of His mer y. Going tip the Whits Mountains so me years I thought God of that pas-m re in mountains the Bible that speaks of as weighing in a balance. As 1 looked at th sc great mountains l thought, can it be possible that Go l < an put th s * great mountains in scales; It was an idea ton great for me to grasp: but when 1 saw a blue-b 11 dow n bv the mule’s foot, on mv war up Mount Washington, thdn 1 muler-'tood the kindness aud goodnO'S of God. I: is not so much of God in great things I can understand, but of God in little th ugs. There is a man who says: “That doctrine cannot be true, because things do go so very wrong.” 1 renly, it is no inconsistency on the part of God, but a lack of understanding on our part. 1 hear that men are making very fine shawls in some fa -tory. I go in on the first floor and see only the raw materials, an! I r.sk: “Are these the shawls 1 have heard about:” the “No,’’says floor,” the manufacturer: l and "go pp to next aud go up, then I "Do begin to see the hire: design. But the the man says: nit stop go up to top flour of the factory, an l you will see the idee fully carried out.” l do so, amt having conn: exquisite to thy top. shawl. see the^complete So in our pattern lite, standing of an down on a low level of Christian experience, we do not understand God’s dealings. He tells us to go up higher, until we begin to understand the divine meaning with respect to us and we advance until we stand at the very gate of Heaven, aud there see God's id a all wroughtout—a perfect idea of mercy, of love, of kindne-s. Aud we say: ‘‘Just and true are all Thy ways.” It is all right at the bottom. Kemeuiber there is no inconsistency on the part of God, but it is only out lnenl*. an So:he 1 spiritual incapacity. have been diappointed _ this of you summer-va ations are apt to be disappoint ments,but whatever have been your perplex- “Man’s ities and worriments, know that heart devissth his way. but the Lord di recteth his steps.” Ask these aged men in tb s church if this is not so. It has been I so started in my for own the life. Adiron- .One, summer changed darks, but my plans were so that I landed in Liverpool. I studied law, and I got into the ministry. I ro olved to go as a missionary to China, and I stayed in the United States. I thought I would liko to be in tho East, and I went to the West—all the circumstances of life, all my work, different from that which I expected. “A man’s heart deviseth his way, but tho Lord direetoth his steps.” dear friends, this day take , home So, subject my Bo content with such things this at you have. From every grass blade under your feet learn the lesson of Divine care, and never let tho smallest bird flit Across your path without thinking of the truth that “five sparrows are sold for two farthings, and not one of them is forgotten before God.” Blessed bo His glorious name forever. Amen. The Troublesome Fly and vie Slum Ucrous bill e . / j ) X \ I /TVwJ^ e/i \ ggfe; *L‘V< ell '/Ma % m m VPS Drat that fly I % {HM- -PM y ;illi t. The pesky critter! ■% * v,'Cv^ ( m m & I’ll fix him. V‘0 J0P as m //'[,’/* t mhW ft m f 71 Ready! Aim! Fire! id rs A , ♦ J 1 ■ g^3r :r i >. ‘ w Ml YVlXi •sj Ah I Now I am comfortable. French Fun. Paris at night. Two rogues while waiting on a dark corner for a belated pedestrian pass the time in conveisa tion. “The newspapers are right,” remarks one, “when they say there is no longer any security that?” in the streets at night.” •‘How is “Why, o last evening two police¬ men were after me and I barely escaped being captured.” At the dentist’s: “Well, doctor, what do you think of my teeth?” “.My dear sir, they are simply magnifi¬ cent. ” “Well, then, what do you propose to do about them?” “Ob, very little. It will only be nec es-ary to extract about ten of them, and the rest I can fill.”— Graphic TrrnuU tion. THE WILY MUSKRAT. How the Little Animal is Trapped by Night. - Jhe Muskrat/s TT'mnts nnd Habits, and Use to Which His Skin is Put __ Many a young lady who moves around hi tho proiind possession of a presumed sealskin cap or muff is very grievously mistaken. Tho articles in question, in nine cases out of ten, never saw Alaska in any form. New Jersey or ’Maryland furnished the material to make them, for the hide of the despised and humble mttsktat, when dressed by skillful hands, nKVktfc the best imitation of sealskins, an iffutafton so close, that the true is only separated from the false after the most careful examination. It is an equally egregious error to imagine that the New Jersey fisherman becomes dormant in winter time. On the contrary, ho is wideawake and occupies his timetvap I ’» mskrats. 1 he salt mai sites on lino of the Jersey coast are full of musk , . , to i, rjcs > ,lna 1110 SU P1”7 sc - m3 to lie e mi x haustilhle. Muskrats are naturally herb morons, • ri.i l licy p Icctl i on , lanU , anatt.iui i . . plants alike, in some instances using j roott . ana , Hunt. , 1 hoy arc noted , >, enemies of the “bottom "round" farmer, ‘ fo - it .. . . lus , . fields .» ,, that , most - > is in corn grows x plentiful, and on that cereal muskrats . iovu to leul. 1 hey eat com at any time after it is planted, ! tukiii" ° tile seed from tile ground or the young plant , from the , furrow. Tho greatest damage ”, is done alter the well formod. - . 1 heir . looil , . car is } s , 10 t entirely J vegetable forinwintcr ° and eaily spring they subsist .. to a great . extent on the flesh of river mussels. The muskrat does not out ....... of his lair come in the daytime, ’ save on rare occasions, Sometimes on very dark cloudy days lie may be seen swimming across the pond or down the stream with his hood just above water. It is an ugly vicious look ln ff animal with white claws and long white teeth. lie is a fair swimmer and his capacity for staying under water is extraordinary, llis homo, if the stream or pond has a high bank, is a little hol¬ low place under ground, five or six feet from the water’s edge, and the entrance is under water. The hallway, after it has penetrated the bank, curves gradual¬ ly upward, and at its end, in his snug little subterranean chamber, the muskrat spends his day sleeping or in storing away food for winter. It makes the trapper happy when he finds tho entrances to these houses. When ho finds one lie places his trap just in the entrance. If the rat is caught he will probably drown, as tho weight of the trap and his efforts to escape will tiro him, and ho will sink water, A favorite method of catching the n_ at in his own house is fco cut off the top of his domicile and bury the trap in tho centre of his mossy bod. The box trap is the favorite one' for streams, as it is easily made, and sev¬ eral rats are often captured in a single night. It consists of a long straight box, made with entrances at both ends large enough to admit a muskrat easily. In tho ends are fixed gates made of stout wire, slanting toward tho inside of tho box which can bo lifted up easily by tho rat going in but cannot be opened out¬ wardly. The box is sunk in the middle of a stream and securely anchored by big stones being placed on its top. Then stakes are driven from the box to each side of the stream. The muskrat finds his way barred by the stakes, swims into the trap, discovers lie cannot get out, and drowns. The muskrat is no coward. 1T he is taken on dry ground and tho jaws of the trap have caught his log pret t.y well flown near the toe, the rat not being able to pull away will gnaw oil his leg just above where the trap holds it. When found alive he lights desperately and requires many a blow on the head to silence him. When there is no other wav of escape, he makes a dash at the trapper’s leg, and if he once catches hold, his sharp white teeth sink into tins hone and his strong jaws cling to tho unfortu¬ nate hunter with the tenacity of a bull¬ dog. The great trapping grounds for the muskrat, however, are along the lovv lands of Dorchester county, Maryland, bordering Fishing Bay and its numerous tributaries, especially the Black water and Nausqunkin rivers. These marshes em¬ brace portions of Lakes, Strait-, Draw¬ bridge and Bucktown districts, and in area cover thousands of acres. The fur of the muskrat, which is of two kinds, brown and black, the black being the most valuable, is sold to traveling deal¬ ers for twelve to eighteen cents per skin. About 75,000 skins have been sold in Dorchester county this season, and the trappers are still busy. But no stripling can hope to embark in the muskrat-trap¬ ping business for it is one of hardship and exposure, and the returns are small indeed. —New York Mail aul Erpre.nn. ■ lie Wauled a Remnant. “I understand you are offering some remnants for sale,” said an Arkansaw man to a dry goods clerk. “Yes, sir, wc have some choice rent r.ants, which we ars offering very cheap.” for dog.” “Wal, I want a remnant my “For your dog?” “Y:is, you see, some feller’s cut my dog’s tail off, an’ I thought eff yer had a rem nantof a yaller bull dog I mout find ap 1 j ecc ’ a t’d fit ."—GoodaWn Han. * Cattle Stampedes. “It la surprising,” says Mr. John T\. Sullivan, “what a trilling thing will start a stampede that may cost many lives and the loss of hundreds of cattle before it can bo controlled. 1 was com¬ ing up the Texas trail once with a party of other cowboys. We had 4,000 cattle in the, bunch. One of the boys opened his tobacco-pouch to get a chew. The wind blew a shred or two of the line cut out of his fingers. The tobacco floated away and lodged in a steer’s eye. In a moment the eye began to smart, and the steer got wild. Its antics started others, and in ten seconds the whole herd was surging and dashing about, out of all control. It was two days before we got the herd working quietly again. Two of our best boys were trampled to death, and 4,000 cattle were lost. “Hail-storms are greatly dreaded by cowboys on the trail, especially if they come at night when the cattle are sleep¬ ing. If a hailstone happens to strike a steer in the eye a stampede is sure to follow, lie springs to his feet, and in thrashing around tramps on the tails of others. They jump in paiu. The herd is alarmed, and before anything can be done the whole herd are oil like a flash. The bark of a coyote, when everything is still at night, is sufficient to stampede a herd. A blade of grass, blown along by the wind, frequently strikes u steer in the eye. The pain that follows will set him wild, and he can soon have the herd on the run across country at a twenty mile an hour gate. “it is during stampedes the cowboy lias work to do. llis one great object is to keep the flying herd together. He urges iiis mustang dead against the ad¬ vancing column of frantic cattle at the constant risk of his life, and works the cattle gradually in a circle. The cow¬ boys all vide to the right around a stam¬ peding herd. If they can get the cattle to running in a circle, the flrst impor¬ tant step in controlling them is accom¬ plished. I have been with a party in a stampede when we were obliged to l ido around a herd for a distance of over 200 miles before we got it under control,and then it was only twenty-live miles from where the stampede started. In all that time not one of us took a moment’s rest or a bite to eat. Such things can’t be thought of during a stampede.” Ear-tore. Cutting off the ears was among the Homans the common punishment of thieves, pillagers of temples, fugitives and slaves, a survival of which was to be traced in the English mode of lopping off the cars of public offenders whilst standing in the pillory down to compara¬ tively recent times. Another Homan practice was the pulling of witnesses’ ears in a court of law as a reminder of the gravity of their situation when vacil¬ lating or hesitating in their evidence. Children’s ears were likewise wont to bo pulled or soundly “boxed” by their mas¬ ters. Another custom was the wholesale stuffing up of the ears of offending gen¬ tlewomen in time of war. This was es¬ sentially of Homan origin, first brought under British notice by the followers of Julius Cicser; and thenceforth frequently perpetrated by the soldiery, particularly during the English subjugation of Wales, until it in line time gave way to less sportive and infinitely more barbaric practices. Time-honored though these several observances may appear, they must nevertheless be regarded as modern side by side with one that carries us back to the primitive periods of Jewish history. This was the boring of the car of every slave who, his term of servitude having expired (six years), yet declined to claim his freedom, preferring * ^ to re main with ids lord and family for an indefinite . , ,, .. period. -ii In such i a case his i • master was bound to take him to the door-post, and there bore his ear with an awl, as a sign of his voluntary at¬ tachment to that house.-— Ronton Budget. A llcsperule More. “John,” she said to the young man who had been courting her for five long years; “John, I sat for my photograph to-day. I suppose yon want one?” "On, yes, indeed. “Iiy the way, John, I had them taken espeeial'y for some friend* in California, and they want my authograph on Hie cards. , Now, , John, , , I , don’t , ,, know , wheth- ... cr to sign my maiden name, or wait a few months until after I am mar ried. I suppose you do intend to get married in a few months; don’t you John.” It was a desperate move, but she won, and in two months both will be made one.— Philadelphia Herald. Mot High Enough for That. “Oh, papa,” exclaimed a little boy pas¬ senger with bis face to the window, “what a great high hill that is!” “Yes, my son, said the man, with a weary look in his face and crape on his hat, “it is very high. That is a moun¬ tain, Arthur.” “Shall we get off the cars and go and climb up the high mountain, papa?” “Oh. no; why should we do that, Ar¬ thur.” “’Cause, pa, I didn’t know but maybe we might climb to the top and then look up and see mamma. Do you think we could ?”—Chicago LluaUL PRICE e j $ 1.00 v t i n 6 BOTTLES 17 $5.00 BEST REMEDY KNOWN FOR CATARRH SORE MOUTH on SORE THROAT In all forms and stages. PURELY VEGETABLE. REQUIRES NO INSTRUMENT. USED and ENDORSED by PROM¬ INENT PHYSICIANS. Dr. R. B. Davin, Athens, Ga., says: “T suffered witfc Oetnrrh five years. Hut since using CERTAIN CJk TAKIIH (JURE am entirely free from the dineatoe. Dr. O. B. Howe, Athens. On., says: "CERTAIN CA TARRH CURE cured me of a eevere ulcerated sore throat , and I cheerfully endorse > it." Mins Lucy ‘'One J. Cook. bottle Oconee Co., remedy Ga., entirely writes. Sept. 17th, 18N5, of your cured mo of Catarrh with which 1 had suffered greatly for livo yours.” J. H: Allgood. Athens, Ga., writes 8ept.25,’86,'T entire¬ hsd severe sore throat moro thun two weeks : was ly curod by CERTAIN CATARRH CURE in one day* CAN YOU DOUBT SUCH TESTIMONY? WE THINK NOT. a few of our many oe rtifleates are given here. Others can bo obtained f rom your druggist, or by sddreHHiug 8 C. CO., ATHENS, Ga. FOR SALE BY 1)1!. J. REID. rOBACCO REMEDIES Th9 Greatest mmural Discovery of the we. 51; family aught to be withuut (hem. THE CL1NGMAN TOBACCO OINTMENT Till: HOST liFKrUTIVK 1*111 IM NA¬ TION on thonmrkot for Pilos. A M It ft (INK for (tcliiiuc Hum never fuileil to Rive prompt intnla, rolief. Will < ur© Anal UJeorH, Itch. AI)8 «‘«bh, I 1 Tatter, Kilt Rboimi Iiarber’8 Ring* worms, PimploH, Boron unri BoIIb. Price it O ct*» THE CUN6MAN TOBACCO CAKE N;m iocs own iti:,>ii:i>v, tum-s »u Wound?- Out*, BrulMHt, Spralxm, KrywpeJftn, liiil*, C’arbupiBono Horn Tliroat Bouioo** ItafoiM, (.V»»'•»* Ulottra, Korw. .RnAfini; Sore Eywi, twnti, Orchitin. Gout Ithrumatlo Toog. (bmf C'< Ida, Congha, Sting© Rr-nchitis, Milk Knnko ullnya mid looaTIrritation Dog Hitea, of insnetk. Ac. In bo t all und Inil uMiiaUon from wbatnvnr enuae. l*f ice *i*> t*t*. THE CLINGMAN TOBACCO PLASTER Prcun.ri.wl m > i , unliii a to flic iiiiinI N|tl>ATI «Hriititlr VP. piim 1Nl It ipIrH. ICO KNTSs of lhr compounded I'l HI ST with the * I Hpncially recommended purest TobfU’oo Flour, «nd in for Croup ot irritant Weed or Cake infill ot the Brea mabniioH. at. nnd for Aches that «• nod lawn I'nins where, or rum’dory delicate of the system, from too a state Application the iiatient is limit,let” henrt lie stronger of ibo'l'obauooOake. For Mondaehe or other Aches Am) Fains, it fa invalmil.le. Price l.» ct». Ask yonr druggist for these remedies. or write to the CLINGMAN TOBACCO CURE CO. DURHAM, N. C., U. S. A. 33N ENGINES /' ft) f AND 'm ?■■■ BOILERS!. of .-.,11 Sizes. Writ® for Circular ami tell u* what you want I Klmlrn, V. Laslcm , AgCMit OriiiirSo,wV>rk<>Hire. Him.* lahki. A 1 I.npton, AiEfl/u our i,ai<-nto<l Yemeni Holler will not inline. No danger of burning Hues. __ SMITH'S ile [to] 1C ' . EANS (G) One CleLr?ho doso relieves Skln^on'i Neuralgia. theN^ves'Snd They cere g'*- and B Pr0 reath b.^thout V^them^n^‘i’nVJo^wHI Rrlcc, 26 cents bottle. n.Ter Sold by Drugglats them! and per generally. Sent receipt ot Medicine Dealers pJitpaJd, on prlco | n s ta m p 8l to any address, J. F. SMITH & CO., *»'"«•»'«. and Sole Prop ST. LOUIS. MO. OUR ■ Hilt DEPARTMENT mpplUd with all the rrqnldftaa for AMag all hinds of Job oB'i Book work in Firah Uam Bt/le. Promptly and at lUa tacobla PriMfc WEDDING CARDS, VISITING CARDS, BUSINESS CARDS, BALL CARDS, POSTERS, mm i 'W w in mk V w nu made name or am lost Won derful Cures on record.