Newspaper Page Text
£!1tTH mm i
■ Mint !
I r FINE- WHISKIES.
EE barbecue, SUNSET,
£=: $l 50 $3.50
gallon OAbLON
5£ : ■ ■ j
LIBERTY. PURITY,
* 2.00 $4 00
Ri GALLON- Front. i r/J GALLON. DIXIE,
i) iitfiJ
$2 50 z GALLON $5 00
3= GALLON. t. A
ROYAL, ) • * ft PREMIER,
$3.00 $ 6,00
O ALLOW. V OACLOJT.
AW- STCILJVVTQ
RIED l : RONT“—
C*r. Hn»»4way •«<! St.. * Au^tista, (la.
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rpg| 5 !i* U.. v t! Tv . <
Di* (N't Si enmioniy onu-s on with siiGlit
symptoms, which wl n neglected increase
in extent and r.ulnally crow dangerous.
it ,ou surrnt from headache, dc RIPANS TABULES
PEPAIA of INDIGESTION
t^ e rjpans tabules A
vt if co mrxi N IS SALLOW or <t)U taki RIPANS TABULES ft
mji h n di <Bii: » kfttH eating, :
Ri r« m'esir *?-f VH enrt ALL DtfOrf* -r ■ RiPANS TABULES
. 5CHS Of IHi hi •’Awd, ,
I..' , 'i/?, ........: ulu! uASf fh f tslom TO ond TAKE Prosorvo thn Health.
j re <>Nii X QUICK TO ACT '
* ft; GIVES t J
Y-AV 1 MANY \ DOCTOR'S Hll.l*. ’■
.
\ Ri:ui:r. { Drnggists livery* >
! ...... ......... : S .Id by nere.
S5i56553t^57j?S5^6035'' ) 32SE>635E<5555S5o
STYLES THE 40 OF SYLPHS, OVERLANDS.BUDGES
«;ur i»*ii uauiuiaduiv ■
AU«I Hrairro W b**i Cyclm o ttrnt urn
A gout* au*jl» u V*lu«# Itl
Wanted AtitNlS, 0EAURS *mJ WHEUMiN
tv«ry«htrt In *!1 wrifilw» »«»'i fttylM, *n«i *i *11 priri* from
liSiidi* A I* I* JSAlim N*w ufltread Um4
teti Kit We
k tuy •6IA »'« wlriaSw,'.
JtZ &5S "'"‘gSfWPS
* SYLftM
OUR SUPERIOR WOUCEMENTS
MMfe
SYLPH CYCt ES RUN EASY •wa
All 0»*r Mnrtft* frifflf with
ittY*# MtfN MilW'U* « <1 ♦ 1« lUXVfV IWUh > l«*«f ffllBhlWlH ||#Al«*ra Mi l.*lfMi
la In 4 mrrlr*
Vtgftil Mvlpti »>H>vr N< n«l H»r U»U tut liaffnln taut fw*#
ROUSE, HAZARD & CO St., Peoria, 111
41 IIUK M’GII h me \l»
WflaWngi m, rVli. ’."i -Jung,- .I.-uiiph
W McGill, of the lntf>r*tittr- I'.snnr*
-cm. died in hi. reid,-ncc at 10 :»t tin
mo'ning friwu the effect, of mslarinl
Sc.-r - -1 it cv HcHicrt hits received four
edict, for rnUltiii th,- K ireatcc iiom
Hop. :o!-if reef in ;id-iit(-m to tluit toett
Merrill Wrc.-kniii Complin; Tin
- ,>,- iin» in,i«o,i•,i
, „ - i;y«i. Mv- , He 1.....
, u . 1 ...... ...... „f N. ,
It,-Mold. M.-ice . the ].<■«!« I.nchciilnt.-h.
of New York, and the rhapnmti D< r
ri. ( and Wrecking (’tmqmn). will of New
\ t.rk ll.e nnemtdH bid not W
Had*- juiblre ij jiroAoiit, and S#i rotary
||erln*t'5 will . onUmu* i • r«*t‘elve bi.!"i
U,r several day# yet. When ('ongfeti*
nyiffttipri dtahto^KmArti mb tub mmb m
nfipt*0).»riate* ibe the i«om*v will \>e for ftwardetl. raining the
\\ fs* 'k vxwtUU't
Aiu«* InNri'HUl* %rre«to»l
Mirrit f*.- Niue more anarehittfi
have ba*n arrested tCHlay. Among them
is a man nNote*) Kwncoin, who. il is
alleged, t«i uNpliiafid with Ksvmho in
DR. HATHAWAY & GO-,
^SPECIALISTS
Krgulitr liunlUHli «
Aft* fh** t >pt feDcr MlUl AIHKI*’
»Ui ffl«T }
VttuHs* an.t ml4
dtr men.
fd re-i:
* ) «• «*
«■ »|« ririu r
il i <
1 IU'
Vi < ttlntu n JV
MICH
' \ at
a a
-
fiTT *»rJ |ut|M»tr«(.
i
fr
tiifiiMi nBlrr i > nil n?«
tv rtatfer^d, ovr «vu m-tmhe ti-talmrul
m lit nV«.r*t a cuff.
vroiirv t*» r**(
«• r«l> «****• » M
0>t iun»l
t %T \ HKfl.
B-feit, L >< ' ^.<5 K
• 1 PHtl.lW Thr C' -M
* upr
«Ki\ mur mr» t . L* CO ». '■
lAAirrt AL dim ttiKiacM
•nut «*4 •• * ■ w C- -■> **. 1
tk’vTW AMi TACTS-.
W , r»rr4 i
iau
MIMI MUIR I*.*
H* ware
i a» » »« m 11 as
I*?
PR. HATHAWAY CO..
A1 i* ,N)udi hft»s4 ■
CAUTION. If tlrrtlrr XV I.
poiij le* shop, nf n r«*4|ti<r<l |>rU«*.ot •*y#
i botUitu.uut Ire It it » I hr in without mum* Atmil|MKt ou
lum liHut lualniuil.
.*X.U r nfl w jf* CD ea
* 4 £/ ,,’ lOCfl
V p a Ofl
: $if> f(\ % jjirtfe ]L| wLADITC fos
Ik ’‘"X*
-'J' \ uu
Oj" (• C xt S$l l/D 7 r
A-.- r. hlOYt
- 7**
j j ||U . \ t | 7K
- r* 1 Vil r Sik* r * m Wje'i™
'
! *
j j , ga&s,. &
W. L. Douclas
S3 SHOE TH£ BUST WORLD IN
W.I IHU'UI ^-r *f' !i»h, *4*Y Nf
i»tA«'\»on si »)>» pittr* ftii
*».»*.* I ' 1 t'lir fecit An*:
1 i; v *tf W I Dtnig la A
i hi. v ' * h
th i*>d# f'f dfllka amnualU
t^ < R ht* JMIvh lit
l *-■ in fuilatiisi,
1 !hnr luli liiw
,1 1 a ir* *vni«!i
V l
V I ikU'lUAs Ilrti.kl'M Wi»*. s •;.! I,.
For Salt by C. BEfiGSTROV.
% l.iftla* \ ,*»•*«’ Mfe«*
i fcW r
att'uugH.
H kn*»w
r»K*r f*
PIhvI up 1
ti
\\ t
C v>f N,av \ k county, to
vb cthco Jvflin B. Sexton Mci'Oedt
rte* M. Clancy, iltwaaed, U to
*y ickinfe ply »uperiativ*fly fat.
ary H-.000. od the incvHua
fTSAW.
THE I. A ST ACT.
% Thonftfind Attended th«
Funeral of Hak^r** Wife.
d..r.-d and ■ did were h-W in
. I f H,,,.,', in Franklin
k afternoon. Th<*
ji, , Uu .*11 U.n-v.dt, «no h.-re .......
■ y.o'or of the Raker fa: dv for
many re. pn-oded fnn-ral set
mon. No text was taken, and out of
.... poet ta lks w..!,es Of tb<_ farmly tmt
!“" .' l-hV,/c.'.,,*,’.o.i'of V ?er • .1 ’ were «’tn'r "
J; friends.
•I crowded to t ho ■■■re.
I’j" if t 1: on 1 toe ; log:. Irate,n
c ■ 1
' ' ' '!'» r- ; l -
ew-h dire* ion, lined
°t‘ }f,,t h ‘ ! ’ !i w;, dmg ‘'xmmge*. A
- ' - l.....the number of wad
iWMtriig, .-v„l,:,:i :,t -Ml.
A ' ...rli 11 ...... . II -.•cI-sk "t pcgjte "»« began ' ^ to
tleur dinner and ate it In the carnages.
road- to the act in the tragedy.
T e , ■her and Cl,, were buried m
Hip wlji "'' »“•' -'"Ven-i
uith ffowf*r*i.
\fr. linker vuim prwwnt, and
tx*nr up \i*ry wHI .. und<T , tfif*' .. ttraio.
Th<» w era vt-ry qoiet,
<turfriff tip’ funeral nervier nom<* twenty
nf them wit in the ff&Mery. At the hou#e
a «f*ore trf ciirfotm people wandered
around a,I day, tryinff the doom and
win down In a vain effort to ffet in.
lilt ty.ii.'S M;tv r'Rt;i||i(f:vT
He I* De-er I l.erl n«n Very Mild Man
nepfd Him.
\V;i-hinnt'*ti, l> r t Mareh 4 S»*t »r
Meu(l«»* a, the Brazilian mlnlwter to th* 3 *
Ifnlietl S'at<*« received a cablegram
ri<>m the Minister of Forelfffi Affair#
wnylriff: “The elce*|on waa tranqi»*l
resultinff in the elect! >n
(tv a large mwlorlty, of I>r Prudente
!e Moraea as T’reyMent and hr. Man
ii<-! Vli 'orlH i lierl i i as Vlce-Pre**!
df nt M
Th we rn * n u re t he rand Ida tea of the
ft* publh an tiFr BonstitiiUonal) ruir’v
Minister M*ndo<a, talking of the ftuc
' * Fnful candidates, said Moracs was of
an energetic dUpon 1’ion, but mild, ab
moat ffeidle In temr*/* tf** is al
munt 50 v'-afa of age, a native of the
Slate »f Son Paulo, which he repr *
: .ented In the Imperial Parliament after
having nerved a term AS It# Clover nor,
ticing eh-cted as nn avow *<1 Repiil»lit.-:in,
The " ter wft« a fellow «indent of
Morauw* at law kchool In their younger
fljiyM. 1 >r Pereira, the Vb e President'
«d« < i. wu h born in Bahia and was a
mAmbw of the faculty of a medical
lege there until the establishment of
the Republic in 1 RAO. when be entered
and wn« elected to the Heiuine
H* nor Mend me a Htild the term of the
new will not begin until Noe
ember 15. next, but f the best Interest*
of the country s«*eni *** <P*mnul it Pres
tderit. Pelffofo may rewlffn In favor of
M»*rne when Comer meets May 3d.
IIIHTOItlll TO HOI.VFACV
Tlit* I nlli*il Mute* t-onrt NakM *»
Good Ilacord.
Milwaukee. Wi*., Mar<h 4 Tlie He
Jiigli <hml and Iron ComuAiiy. which
i went into n receiver’s h.itldai in aril
i 1893. h»* l»eeft dtwhired roslOi
mi«r Judge Jcnkimi, of i
State- Circptt (Tfschufgmg tim -SgS
ai« o p
direc ting that the estate be iri ■.• .
the corporatioti. Duplicate the
iifder Hill be fileil tomorrow in the
United StiitcH Ci ret lit Omirta in this Hty,
Miidiumt. Wi«., and St Raul. Minn Im*
ftuslbitfdy then fter checks to the ered
iters for th<> full amount of their claims
will be sent from President Doty’a otHce.
and this action will relegate to history a
failure which. Iwith in its extent and the
celerity with which tin* intricate compli
cutloiiH grow ing out of it were settle* I.
will. 9 ta sfateil. stand out prominently
for a long time to <vun«*. 'Hie oontpany
failed for $1,250,000 Tnder the dim*
tion of Judge fcuUins U has tranauctetl n
busim'ss of Sft.OoO.oOii during the last
year, and. It is said, is able to pay all
its creditors in full. (’apt. Is. R. Doty,
the principal receiver of the company,
has. during tin* past eleven months, con¬
ducted the business under a rigid oxnfer
cntoivd b) Judge Jenkins, which pro
vfdi*d in efT«vt that th© latter should
iu-vc I court supervision of cu-rytlmre ,
Hr 1 *' ,1 > «.re ,dm led pre sident of thi
‘‘-niipHNy :i few tlavs Iwfore the failure,
and * as made mviver. He will re
mime his office of president, and no re¬
organization of the eomjmny will be nee
essaty.
The settlement of so heavy a liability
in such a brief time as eleven months,
said nn Attorney at the close of the
hearing yesterday, is in itself remark*"
l>h*. The operation becomes more no
when it is considered that creditors are
paid in full, and that the result has Wen
achieved practically by the I’nited Stales
Court.
% A V% 1*01.IN TO CEI.BBRATK
lilt- Too II uixIrt'tHh A n ul % ©ranry nm
n C«|iilal.
Anna^Jis, Md.. March 4 -Tomorrow
1h© 20tHh annivernarv of the rt*moral
of the eapitol of Maryland to this place,
will be appropriately eelebrnfeii. loapoaiof i
prominea to be the most de*
monatration in point of s\ve and sur
roundlngs that the town has ever had.
The great event of the day will be the
procession, whieh will move in t hree
divisions, starting nt 1 o'clock in the
afternoon. Several addresses will be
made during the afternoon iu the Senate
and in the hail of the House of Dele¬
gates. InvitatKm?* have bei*n sent f©
every town, oKf and county of the State
and to th© citizens of Baltimore. It
is exiHVted that fully 10,000 |H**»j»ie w ill
\ve preaent. l*he eitliens “ an* d**eon»ting * * i ““
their rt'sidencew and will illuminate a!
night. Hie coit*bration will ckwetl
with a ball.
)*Atti stwHlld ♦he t( ext
ftffntutNiioQ** »)r Taimag*
B m m © T
8 ■ fi
Is still at the front! You
can lely on it! It never
S tails to pert arm a cure!
# Dt.Buirsg;
is soL! bv all dealers for2>c
IVn X be imvled If a d«*•'«■ ofen to
ow
5’.,, ■ Nv' R ccs are a» good .4
pyrui LAHGE S TUG8 TM «*♦. Tf^ecc#
vnLn iamoa ’ Oww to eti at an wm .
HI IHE TABERNACLE.
—
DR. TALMKiE
__
Brooklyn, Mar-li 4.-From the star
tling figure of tie text chosen by Rev.
I »r Tuimmre in hi- sermon in tb- Brook
ivl , T:.U««rte » stay. the preacher
fought out the ndk-al truths of the
rhri , ?i , n retteion ft was s. ramentai
in the Tabera-o-Ie. --ibject of
-ermon -a- > .ri-t the Hon.j i‘Tur."
the test b-ing b .iah IxiH. "Who i*
-;>rrn-ni. fruuj !■ rah -th- bat >* -
.l.jsXMdfel traveling in th
.....- ..rMtotar JK
* i - ‘ * ' ' having “ ", been the
. -
-
, -
- , ■ ................ -
,.r.. „«-l h-rc or ,« ..ay Other part of the
, „•„?!; rw of sws-h setting
r„,ih . ......• ‘ ..flier ' • now
1 -•
-Hi- ■ - "’‘t.-,, „l any kmd. -
the w.,r.l- Bostrah tt.d Kd >m u- t,na t.
, -I, dc- .ptive Of .
(P f ifreftt ........
idiM* , tin* , prmiiifct , , ?*My ,, lsav; ia<*ant to <!<. *u>-
1 °
wtiIw*. h** rw/#t inly meant •> < , *
pict the Lord f* -- (jhrist, naj^nff, Who
. from 1-Mom. with
*&**! 1/anneal* irinn ... ozra i. «<i
f *
1 X ri ‘ aiUim * f, f hiM ^ rcrie. >.
U lii'ii a ffeneral is about to ffo out to
ihe wars, a ftajr and a sword are jnddiely
j»reienl«Nl io him, ami tile maidens briiiff
Itowi rs. and the yf*mtz men load the ean
nou. and ilrt' trtiii starts amid :i huzza
that drowua the thunder of the wheel**
and the ahriet of the whistle. But all
tliis will giv- «. of the ex«tomeut
«>•»• 'here Giirist «• '>»"«' »•«« «bv to ,,ea r''"
wh.-n x-A* •«■'<*» rgimpnigii
of the world * utKetiHp If they oould
have fore»*eea the nie^e that, would be
11ill to him, and thr* maltreatment he
Won’ ‘ ' v T i amid he burden# be would
have to <arrr, ami th»- battles he would
have to fi'dit. I fhink there would have
Imsmi a million vplimteerH i/i heaven who
would have it\s;^-d on coining along
with him. But, no, they only accom¬
panied nim to the gate, their last shout
heard clear d»*wn^o earth, the space la?
tween the two wwliU bridged with a
great Hosanna.
The I ntried Noliller.
You know there • a wide
between n man # gmiff off to battle and
coming back again When he goes off,
it is with epaulets untangled, with ban
Her unepecked. with horses sleek -and
shining from the |rloom. All that there
Is of struggh- and pain is to come yet
So it vvji* with Oirist He had not yet
fotifflu a battle. lie was starting out.
and thongli this v ».r!«J did not give him
n warm heart' ’ # eting there wan a
gentle mother wl ► folded him in her
arms, and a babe mis no. difference be
I ween a stable «> d a palace, between
and* caaii i drivers. A.s ,T<‘Sus
stepped on the (> f this world, i!
was amid wnffeHc shouts in the galleries
and amid the kr d< ' maternal minis
t rations.
Pul soon hosttk for<^s Began to ga
ther. They dcploy^i from the eanhg
drin. They wotv detailed from th<*
stundihff army ‘fHjey came out from
the Caesarean caatles. The vagabonds
in n*unsien. th<‘ street joingrt the gentlemen R in il, of and the
an
u» long array thfe. .ante ( i force togoth
,-fe --
3 le gnth.*rU lift- t
3 a own standard But w i--> .g$ther».
about it V f
How ford*!.* fh*'* recruits! A ftnv shore
meh, a blind beggar, a woman with an
nlalm-ter box. another woman with two
mites and a group <*f friendless, money
less and posifionkwui people uime to his
standard What chances were then* for
him? Niusftreth against film. Beth
h hem against him. Oupcruatim against
him. .Ieru»ak»m against him. (Tali
lee against hifn The* courts against
him. The army against him. The
throne against him. The world against
him. All hell .ngwinst him.
No wmuter - d him to aurren
tier But he could not surrender: he
could not apoUgi/e; ho c*>ul<t not take
any back steps. He had e»>im* to strike
for the dclivcrame of «n enslaved r:ic<'.
and he must do the work. Then they
sent out their picket* to watch him.
They saw ill what bouse he went and
whi'n in* came out. rhey watched what
lie ate and who with, what he drunk
and how much, 'n»*y did not dure to
make their film* assault*, for they knew
not but that behind him then* might be
rt re cnforeerncnt that was not seen.
But at Inst the Imttfe cam**. It was
to 1 m* more fierce than Ro»rah. more
bloody than Oettysbu**g, involving more
than Austcrlltz, more combatants cm
ployed than fi’iftbas, a ghastlier con¬
flict than all the hattW *»f the earth put
together, though! K'hmimt Burks’s esti¬
mate of thrity r ** thousand million of
its slain be aeoaimJc. The day was Fri¬
day. 'Hu* ho**- Kctwcou 12 and
o’clock. The fieV! mas a slight hillock
m»rthw©st of Jetv salcnx 'Hw* forces en¬
gaged were earth and hell, joined as al¬
lies on one side md Ifceaven, represent¬
ed by a solitary inhabitant on tin* other.
Vn lit even ttuttte
The hour came Oh. what a time it
was! 1 think that that day the universe
looked ott, Th spiritvS that, ©cult! Ik*
spared frooi the heavenly temple and
could get tonv ‘vain*e of wtug or chariot
nw d*nvji above, and spirits get¬
ting furlough from beneath came up.
Tu:d they listened, and they look#'**, ami
they watched. Oh, what an uneven
tartV! Two th* armetl on one siik*.
an unarmtsl time c« tlie other. The
rt'giment of the Homan army at that
time stationed ai Jvnisili'iH began th**
attack. Tlier low to fight. f( ^
they Wbmg*Hl to Hi© wkwI thorough'..,
drilled army of all the world With
spear* glittering n th aw it they ehargbd
i.p ihe hill The 1 iyKt*s prunca and
a mid t he cut of the |K«pu
Ni* «*, the beeli riders plunge*
th«* flanks, nr r ou.
IV W**8J»*f5 '*♦*011* t*» tell on f’h 1st.
S« c 1 h.»w fa on he looks! Thi •|'V
b,o<ii,{ stfirts. \ fWrrr and tlui
it h -
mm »*»< S
He
Feel f of the «r
reel ttodi'f th
nt He ts dying Vyt
. tiv;*d And
in th t they
I h« ralh 3 ti. worn
KOI
do the h'l Q
tic satatde 11 '
It
»w Mu
V
J
t'fOUI * and
j
V
: Hark W;
■ irapsng of a gns
an many fries-Is 5
ami hea ven ad
Cheer' <heer: Who is this that eometh
re,,., v-iotn with dyed garments from
TWrah traveling in the greatness of
strength
something grand for us after awhile,
ir„ J, >.... done p Pre-pie talk as though
„ r2l) v ', frr , m n<w , in the closing
, ^ f>f wr Hf „ „ r ; u s „ me terrible pass
„ f u{ j,.,,, wili help us. He has done
,rk already. He did it 1.881
y.-.r* \<* rf'^t as wel Ula of
\\ .reiungtoa as though he «ere gdm, ^
^/.V t,/'achieve V,f Obrfct its though he
our salvation in
,t i( . future H-did it in the year of our
" fs.aTaii. thi ■ *• 1> ^Jtion ",
™“" '* ,b ...... mv
A *. that
"
. " . ,! “' 1
’ m °’ ir " '•
f t -
, ^ight .
t- ; .,m ■ ’ ‘ u wre '
: .u—pt ( .n-t ■ ■.m.n thn. in here
strength.’ " not >»g to .» tell — you *”«**'* that he ^ is go- ^
„ e to tight for you some battle in the
, ;l „ r „ ,„ ir t ,dl you tin t the battle is
.,|,-e»d.v fought and the victory already
won
V "",
eorne :l,.,r , nag- " tie- , " “ names ol f J A« ‘ >,attlefields
where they were his ban
Hn#!l*hirian eoinjcr hack hay on
iut Inkerman and B;ilaklava: the
I’renehmsiriw J^*na and Milam tbe t»er
man, Versai.'lcs and Sedan. And Chriat
hire on the banner he carries as conquer¬
or the names of 1<U*KI i.attlefiehls h,
won for you and for me. He rides past
all our homes of bereavement, by the
doorliel! eworthed in sorrow, by the
wardrobe black woe, by the dis
mantled fortress of our strength.
Oimi- out ami jrrcct him today. O ye
«Zs‘ . , See the names of all the battle
nn his flag. Yr who arc poor,
, ||lis (1[1Nllfn fh(> stor y of Christ’s
hard crusts and pillowless head, Ye
who are persecuted, read here of the
ruffians who chased him from his first
breath to his hast. Mighty to soothe
your troubles, mighty to balk; your ca¬
lamities, irighly to tread down your foes,
“traveling in the greatness of his
str« njrtli.” Though, his horse be brown
wi1h the dust of the march, and the fet¬
lock# l>e wet with the carnage, /and the
lit be red with the blood of your spirit¬
ual foes, he comes up now, not exhaust
eiS from the battle, but fresh as when he
went info it—coming up from Bozrah.
“traveling in the greatness of his
strength.’
IIhm ,Ie«MiM Trent* IIIn ('npilveH.
You know that when Augustus and
fV>i»sUmtinc and Trajan and Titus came
l*ack from the wars, what a time there
was. You know they came on horse
back oi in chariots, and there were tro
allies N*fore. and there were captives be
bind, and there were people shouting on
all ddes. and there were garlands filing
from the window, and over the highway
a triumphal areh was sprung. The sol
id masonry today at Benevento, Rimini
and Rome still tell their admiration for
those heroes, Ami shall we let our con
oneror go without lifting any acclaim?
Il.ave we not flowers red enough to de
nict the carnage, white enough to eele
bra to the victory, fragrant enough to
breathe the joy?
Tliotse men of whom I just spoke
dragged their victims at the chariot
wheels, hut Christ our Ix>rd takes those
once were captives and invites thorn
irf$r. his <*h«Hot ?ol ride. sfhjle he puts
nml them the arm of hv^ Btreugtb*
irtte “f* Fm vc Jftved fhee yi-fffi ftVi ever
bv ing love, and the waters shall not
drown it, and the fire» ali^ll not burn it.
and eternity shall not exhaust it.”
if this tie true, T cannot see how any
man can carry His sorrows a great
while. If this conqueror from Bozrah
is going to beat back all your griefs,
why not trust him? Oh, do you not
feel under this gospel your grief* falling
hack and your tears drying up as you
hear the tramp of a thousand illustrious
promises led on bv the eonoueror from
Bo/.rah. “trawling, traveling, in the
greatness of his strength?”
The Iii-iit li «f Sin.
On which thn Kpisopal
! ‘dnnvh rightly celebrates, calling it
“Gixid Friday.” your soul and mine
"‘ere contender! for. On that day J>-
1 slJ * proved himself mightier than earth
j anil hell and wh *n the lances struck
| him he gathered tlrrn up into a sheaf.
rl*H a reaper gathers the grain, anil he
; slacked them, Mounting the horse of
*h© Apocalypse, he rode down through
th c ages, “traveling i*i the grt*atness of
his strength.” Oh that day your »In
and min? perished, if we will only be¬
lieve ft.
There may be *oma one here whi
may say: “I don't like the color of
this conqueror’s garments. You tell me
garments wer* not spattered
with the blood of conflict, but also
they were soaked, that they were sat¬
urated, that they were dyed in it.” T
admit it. You say you do not like thaU
Then I quote to you two passages of
Scripture: “Without the shedding of
blood there is no remission.” “In ihe
biota! is the atonement.” Buf it was
not >?n»r bit* C U was his own. Not (in¬
ly enough to redtlen Pis garments and to
redden his horse, but enough to wash
awstv the -ins of the world. Oh, the
blood on his brow, the blood on 1-is
hands, the blood on his fee', the blood
on his side! It seems as if an artery
must have been cut.
There is a fountain filled with blood
Drawn from Emmanuel's veins.
And sinners plunged beneath the Hoy!
Lost* all their guilty stains.
Illooil for Blood
A •k tomorrow afternoon g( °
uim-ng th * places of business or t«41. f L ■'
will l *© i difficult thing for you to find
ir.cn who. by their lo(»ks. show you thui
they ar overworked. They are prema
'only "’*? The> ar»* hastening rapidly
•ward their dec©a They have g‘»ne
through f i^i" in bus.ucss that shsitte-r
their nerv**U8 jsvsu’ms and pulled
the brain. They Imv© a >hortuess of
breath, j and « imln in the l*ack of th*'
h* d. and at night an insomnia that
atarma them.
Why a I*** they .1 nidging at businc:
early an* i\yr fun ’ So, it w**nld
K . > extract any amu»*nt(*nt
>f that exhaustion Be a use hey
waraiiciotis? I many •ases n> >.
use their own anal expenses
No; a w hundred dollars
all their wyants. The simple
enduring ail hat
exa rath and w
yep his lion prosperHis.
n rea **liing
fn that hank, from
:ip. -1-iing. a
few a few miles
l ret of r hat
It? g simply ihe
t . for which
1
n* il*-'* m
kenvOTK
rs. > ♦ ;, i-L
• ** and
g‘ B! ai ror
most uninterrup
V >f. walk amid th*
e houae ;>f he -, Here and
there you will see a dim light because
it is the household custom to keep a
hoshrdlu hrdiu rd!u rdiu rdiu rdlu bb
subdued light burning, but most of the
and he put* his wings over the city.
But yonder is a .dear light burning.
and outside the window casement
a g!a> _’>><*; containing food for
a sick child. The food is sec in the fresh
T f
w|th th;U uffwer . sj, e ha ,
^ ^ ^ Qb „ ye< , (he pbysicIan -.,
prescription, not gi ving a drop too
much or too little, or a moment too
soon or too late. She is very anxious
ixssrLrs^
each prayer and sob ending with a
kis> on the pale cheek. By dint of kin 1
s h o wts (he ntfie one through •!.
After it is all over the mother
j< taken down. Brain and nervous f?v.*r
rots in. and in one day she leaves tPv
uvalescmr child with a mother
W «w,ng and goes up to Join the three
ir. the kingdom „f heaven. Ufc for lu>.
S1 Su ^“ '"™
is< , ha , are an nn .
f . (/| . I)ted num ber of mothers who, after
th(iy hav) . navlKa , e .i a larg? family of
children through ail the diseases of
infamy and got them fairly started u P
the flowering slope of boyhood and gin
h „od. have only trength enough eft
to die. They fade away, borne call it
consumption, some fall it nervous pros.
tration. some .all It intermittent or ma
larial disposition, but I cal it- mar
tyrdom of the domestic circle. Rife for
life. Blood for blood. Substitution!
A Mother'* Sncrtttce.
Or perhaps a mother lingers Inna
enough to see a son get on the wrong
road, and his former kindness becomes
rough reply when she expresses anx¬
iety about him. But she goes right on.
looking carefully after his apparel, re¬
membering bis every birthday -with
some memento, and when he is brought
home worn out with dissapotion nurses
him till he gets well and star's him
again and hopes and expects and prays
and counsels and suffers until her
strength gives and she fails, She is
going and attendants, bends over her
id How. ask her if she has any message
to leave, and she makes a great effort
to say something, but out of three or
four minutes of ’ndistinct utterance
they can catch but three words—-‘‘Mv
ooor hoy!” The simple fact is she died
for him. Life for life. Substitution.
About 33 years ago there went forth
from our homes hundreds of thousands
of men to do battle for their country.
Ail the. poetry of war soon vanished
and left them nothing but the terrible
nrose. They waded knee deep in mu ]
They slept in snow hanks. They march¬
's! till their cut feet tracked the earth.
They were swindled out of their hon¬
est rations and lived on meat not fit
for a dog. They had taws all fractured
and eyes extinguish*d. and limbs shot
away. Thousands of them cried for
water as they lav dying on the field
the nledit aft?r the battle and pot 1’
not. They were homesick and receiv¬
ed no Tncss<;iffe from their loved ones
Thev died in barns, in bushes. In
ditches, th? buzzards of the summer
heat the only attendants on their ob
seouies. God. who
No one hut the Infinite
knows everything, knows the ten
ihous'indth ’ part of the lenfirih and
breadth and dcorii and height of rn
.oiish of the Northern and Southern
battlefield®. Why did these fathers
leave their children and go to the
front, and |ii y did i these you ng men
postponing lnarriake’ day* stan’
out into the probabilities of never com¬
ing back? For the countrv they died.
Life for life. Blood for blood. SubsM
tution!
But we lived not <ro so far. What s
-hat monument in Greenwood? It is to
the doctors who fell in the southern
epidemics. Why (to? Were not there
enone-h sick to he attended in those
northern latitudes? Oh. yes, but th?
doctor puts a few medical hooks in
his valise anti some vials of medicine
and leaves his patients here In the
hands of other physicians, and takes
the rail train. Before he erets to the
infected regions he passes crowded r-U!
trains, regular and extra, taking the
flyinsr and affrighted populations, he
arrives in a city over whieh a great
horror is brooding. Tie goes from couch
to couch, feeling of pulse and studying
of symptoms, and prescribing day after
(lav. night after night, until a fellow
physician says: “Doctor, you had bet¬
ter go home and rest. You look miser
able.”
But he cannot rest while so many
are suffering. On and on until some
morning finds hints in a delirium, in
which he talks of home and then rises
and says he must go ami look after
those patients. He -f? told to lie down,
but he fights his attendants until he
falls back and is weaker and weaker
and dies for people with whom he had
w -■ kinship, and far away from
own family, and is hastily put away
in a stranger’s tomb and only the fifth
part of a newspaper fine tells us of his
sacrifice—his name just mentioned
among five. Yet he has touched the
furthest heights of sublimity in that
three weeks of humanitarian service.
He goes straight on as an arrow to
the bosom of Him who said: “I was
sick, and ye visited me.” Eif? for life
Blood for blood. Substitution!
Some of our modern theologians who
want to give God lessons about the
U-s' way to save the world tell us they
do not want any bln.H in their redemp
u ,, Til l waul to -k, .hi* ho«, i-y
the bit ami hurl him back on h s
haunches and tell this rider from Bov
rah to go around some o'her way. Look
out, lest ye fall under the flying hoofs
of this horse; lest you go down under
the sword of this onqueror from Boz
rah! What meant ’he blood of th? p -
ge«*ns in the old dispensation, th** blood
^ of the bullock, the Hood of the heifer,
the blood of the iamb? It meant to pro
phesy the cleansing blood of this con¬
queror who comes up from Bozrah.
“traveling In the greatness of nii
s 1 rength.”
I catch a handful of the red torrent
that rushes out from ’he heart of the
Lord. an*l I throw it over this audience
hoping that one drop of its cWuting
p..„ -r «na> • --nic over your woui. C
i.-.v.v in tha* --nins-ui lid*- v--'i our
souls! We accept thy sacrifice! Con¬
queror of Bozrah. have mercy upon
us! We throw *ur garments in the
way! We fall into line! ride Jesus.
» Je on* Traveling, traveling the
greatness of thy stiength.”
But after awhile the returning eon*
jueror will reach the gate, and all the
armies of the saved will he with him.
I hope you wifi be ♦here and f will be
there. As wv g*» through the gates and
around about the throne for the re¬
view. “a great multitude that no man
can number”—all heaven can tel! with
out asking right away w hk'h one '
Jesus, not only because of the bright
ness of his fa**e. but because, while all
the other inhabitants ;n glory are robed
in whit«*—e^ints in white, cherubim in
white, seraphim in white—bis robes
'hall be «• arlet. even the dyed gar¬
ments of Bozrah. I catch a giimps*
f that triumphant joy. hut ’he gate
•r** us and shuts so quickly I can hear
niy a sentence, and it is this: “Unto
him arho hath washed us 111 his bioo-J.
Cot ’
New York, Friday Morning, ilaTch . „
_
—The lowest prices for the year upon
this crop were touched last Monday
e red some 33 points from the lowestjio
t *tions touched. >o doubt a portion ot
this advance is due to the natural r^c
tion from the severe decline of the last
two weeks, but tte b»«M o «
^
English * spinners have again
t0 lm y their cotton freely.
wjth 6yeiT probability of their contiau
ing tbeir present rate of purchases for
g(>me time to come. ssaiir
j^r*,rrur been promulgated for
formation ' that has
^ ’ n ^ months past, namely, that the In
07OTraP n t ba S decide,] to impose
tax '..Vticles in their budget of March 22d upon
«n i^ds imported into India, gold and
« tt l on excepted. We understand
^,*811 , h f this tux importV ic'cn.ivaleut to 5 per cent.
“swe except %e those men
Honed tioneri anove, and effect will be to
Simulate the export o <« goods ^
^^Me^aT V. tV- ' mmnniUo conceive' how will
™ h( . effect of this action
^ Manv years ago the withdrawal
? cent on the importa
^“dvan^in f Knglisb yarns into India started
the price of cotton which
hafi come down in history as one of the
^ remar k a ble of all the fluctuations
_ n tbe cotton market. Tlie question pre
gents jtsolf forcibly to the mind as to
w . bet ] le r this action is the starting point
of an improvement in the cotton trade
of the world. Curiously enough, it is
expected that the effect of this course by
the India Government will be to weaken
the price of silver and advance the price
of cotton. If it should do so it will only
show that the silver question is as far
from being understood now as it was
twenty years ago. the to market
The movement of crop
i* falling below last year, as each week
passes by, and we enter the month of
March some 200,000 bales behind the
crop of 1889-90, which proved to be
7.300.000, and yet estimates of the crop
are as widely apart now as at any time
during the season, But above ai culcu
lations as to the yield of this year’s crop
is the condition of trade, and it is to be
noted that durin? the past week there
has i een a distinctly better teelins in
financial circles as to the improvement
in the general conditions surrounding the
prosperity of this country. It is evident
that more people are daily being em¬
ployed, but as yet the improvement is
sioiv, and is not a rapid disappointed one. The cot¬ this
ton trade has been so
year oyer the course of prices that they
appear to have completely lost heart as
to the possibility of any further advance,
and interests in the market are reduced
to the lowest possible limit, Should,
however, this improvement in trade con¬
tinue, it may lead to a distinct revival in
cotton, which is now selling at prices
that certainly warrant close attention.
Further investigation into the reduc¬
tion of the purchases of fertilizers con¬
firms our report of last week that the
amount of fertilizers which will be used
ir. planting the cotton crop this year wili
be smaller than for many years past, if
it does not reach the low point of 1SU2.
Notorloa* Robber CnnBht,
El wood, Ind., March 4.—Murray Cain
and Bid May, member? of the famous
Goodman gang, were captured at Orestes
Friday night by Jules Carnal, a farmer,
from whom they were stealing five
beeves, which they had in a wagon and
i'Uta and caught with them at
relied gun opened fire up and both
3 o’clock. He will were die.
temblv wounded, and Cain
They were taken back to Orestes and
placed under arrest.
The Civil Marriage Bill.
Buda Pesth. March 4.—More than 300,
000 person© joined today in the demon¬
stration in favor of the civil marriage
bill. Ex-Minister Crioz presided of thou¬ over
largest of the meetings Tens
sands marched through the sreets, cheer¬
ing for the cabinet and waving flags
and banners. Crowds have stood all
day before the house of Maurice Joaki,
the author. Premier Wekiri, Count
Czaky, minister of public works, and
Divon Silagii, minister of justice. The
appearance of any cabinet minister m
the street was the signal for tumultuous
demonstrations. >
,1ns. M. Bailey Bend.
Danbury, Conn., March 4.— James
Montgomery Bailey, the “Danbury
Newsman.” died suddenly this morning.
He had been sick altout two weeks with
bronchitis, and there was nothing alarm¬
ing in his condition till within twenty
four hours of his death, when pneumonia
developed.
— Stormy Passage.
New York, March 4. The Cunard
liner Lneania. whicih arrived this morn
ing from Liverpool and Queenstown, was
24 hours overdue. She had a tempest¬
uous passage. Joseph Baditzki, a steer¬
age passenger, fell into the hold and had
his skull fractured, causing death. His
body was buried at sea. The Lucania
has* been laid up for the winter and this
was her first x'oyage of the season.
To Stop a Prl*e Fight.
Deg Moines, la., March 4.—Governor
j 0 fi ns0 n is determined to stop a prize
advertised to take place at Ceres
ton March 10. He has written the sheriff
to use every means at his command to
stop the fight, which is to be btdween
! James Ryan, of Seattle, and Henry
j Meyer of
hr'the interfere
^*1^5S*such WU Legislature expected,
v exhibitions is
They Will Arbitrate.
M’iicelins, W. Va.. March 3.—
AH the miners in the Ohio sub-district
No. 6. over 7.000 in number, affreefi
tolny to return to work Monday, pend¬
ing a settlement of the wage question by
arbitration. Committees of miners and
operators will confer on Wednesday to
appoint arbitrators. The operators in¬
sist upon a fifty cent per ton rate.
j Prohibition Knocked Ont.
j
Sioux Falls, S. D. March 4.—The
| Supreme court yesterday rendered a de
vision in the Sioux Falls Brewery ease
whieh nullifies the portion of the prohi
bition law prohibiting the manufacture
of beer in this State. The lower court
had declared the brewery to be a
nuisance and had issued a decree order¬
ing its destruction.
Majorlhank«* Die* Snddenly.
London, March 4.—Dudley Goutta
Majoribanks. Baron Tweed mul, died
suddenly this afteraoon. He has l»een
ailing for some time. He sat in Par¬
liament for Berwick from 1&53 to 1853
He was Knighted in 1881. Edward Ma
jori banks his son. Liberal member of
Parliament, succeeds to the Peerage.
The Siege Prolonged.
Rio de Janeiro, March 3.—President
Piexoto has prolonaed the state of siege
untl! the first May. The provinciai
returns of elections for members of Con
press show a majority are Republicans.
Scant interest was displayed in the eleo
tions and cc reoarati rely few Totes were
polled.