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REV. 1 ) 11 . TALMAGE.
THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S
SUNDAY SERMON.
Subject: “Rewards for the Dull a?
Well as the Brilliant.”
irn -CM O,. It. ™ <MM, It
111 11M
Matt. xxv.. F>
moro^crapiJ'^iuhe Mnnv of Urn onr,Odes 1 of iiiwhich leans n.rist H? lTvid w,.,-e
times
have ro much changed iii olden times, when
a man wanted to wreak a grudge upon his
the ha. vcst, Ms uvc.gcr would go across tho
same ildd w itb a sack full <»r th« seed of
darnel gnaa, Muttering that seed ail
over the tie d, and of course it would sprout
up and spoil tlm whole crop; unlit was to that
that Cbr st referred in the parable when He
spoke wheat of the fares being .own among the
In this land cur farma are feuced
off. and the wolves havo been driven to the
mount-ins, and we cannot fully under-
stand the meaning of the parable in
regard Ship to t ho shenher.l and tlio lost
ts:,-d«y is founded on srtnetlnng we ail under-
stand. Itis built on money, and that means
the same in Jerusnicm'a, 111 New York. It
means 1 fie sumo 10 the serf as to tlie Czar,
and to the Chinese coolie as to the i.mperoiv
Mhether it is mudo out of Lone or oraas,
or iron or copper, or gold or silver, it
apeaks ah language* Wiihout a stammer,
J he parable ol the test runs in thiswise:
The owner ot a large hi estate was about to
leave h ome, and he 1 some money that he
wished properly invisi. d. and so lie caiie .1 to- 1
geth.-r “1 his s..rvmita, ami saidt
am going away now, and I wish you
would take th.s money and put it to the very
best possible use, mid w lieu 1 come pack re-
turn to me the interest.” To one man he
gave *!*4U0, to others he gave l. sser sum-, of
money: to the Inst he gavo jIh 0 . He left
home and was gone tor years, and then re¬
turned. On liis arrival he was anxious to
know nhout his wordy together “to 1
he called his servants
report to him. “last me know,” sa d lie,
*‘what have you been doiu wit.i my prop-
.erty sime 1 have been goiK\” Tne man woo
it. 1 have m other ways n^titiy employed
it; and here am I8.S 9. Vou see i nave
doubled whatvu ^avome. “(hats very
l^ndlv‘noi!r i^VadhUfl!
ness and industry. I shal 7 reward you.
VVel done-wed done.” Oihr servant,
«tme up With smaller accumuia.ions. After
a while, 1 see a niun dragging hinise f
edoug. the with his bead han-mg. 1 know from
way ho comes in that ho is a ia/.y teilow.
^hmg-nothmg. ’ “tt by what have you
loieit. There are your tlsso.’ Many a
man started out w ith only a crown in his
pocket, feilow of and-achieved a fortune; but this
my text.with fl8ku, has gained not
.... . ^Torrto^fa^.lS ...
master,’for _______ ; __ indolence _____ _____ H ______ ___
is most always im-
pudent and impertinent Of course, he loses
bis p.acs and is discharged from the s rvice.
jjskjesu^'t^hids^eoimr from'earth^to heaverf
The servants spoken of in the text are
members of the Church. The talents are our
different qualifications of usefulness given
in dmerent proportions to different people,
final settlement. The iKeit raising of mto
some of
these men to be rulers oyer five or two cities,
is the exaltation of the righteous at the last
expulTionVf their privileges. a®! those\°ho have ml^mproved
Learn first from this subject.that becoming
» Christian is merely going out to service.
If you have any romautic idea about beconi-
God, it will he gging into plain, pract ical,
honeet, continuous, pers stent Christian
work. I kuow there are a great many people
r^nt h H.T?Ch'-i^»n iite d | m"hTwh« U ^,r» n «
•otl Isa worthy servant, and he who do 8 not
is an unworthy servant. W hen the w ar trum-
pet sounds, all the Lord s soldiers must
^ver'feTrfaTttTddXuis'the?!. Governm U^der
our -nt we may have Colonels, and
Captains, Church and Generals in time of lieace, but in
the of God there is no peace until tho
fe^rT’l PwU° :v i ct0 ' , ?. shallka ^ broSghrtatTit . ve be ? n achieved, 8 ^
am
slaves were dragged from Africa. A young
man goes to an artisan and says:
‘‘Sir, I want to learn your trade. I,
by this indenture, yield myse f to your care
sevei^years. *°I wantyou tote mv master!
and I want to he your servant.” Just so, il
we come into the kingdom of God at all, wo
mustcome, saving to Christ: “Be Thou my
master. I take I hyservice fort me and for
eternity. IchoosBit.’ Itisavoluntary service,
There is no drudgery in it. In our worldly
callings sometimes our nerves get worn out,
and our head aches, and our physii al facuh
KilR Lord Jesus, the harder 7 tin a man ** works 8 ® r V c «‘ the ,, v bet- th <»
ter be likes it, and a man in this audu-nc*
who has been for forty years serving God en*
joya the employment better that when hejlrsl
entered it. The grandest honor that can ever to*
bestowed upon you, is to have Christ say to
you on the last.Gay: "Well done, good and
faithful servant!”
Learn also from this parable that different
qualifications are given to different people, '
The teacher lifts a blackboard, and he draws
a diagram, in order that by that diagram h(
trulh uiav impress the miud of the pupii w th the
that he has been uttering. And ail the
truths of this Bible are drawn ou.t in the
natural world as in a great diagram. Here
is an acre of ground that has ten
talents. Under a little culture it yields
is twenty another bushels of wheat to the ’ acre. Here
piece of ground that haa only one
talent. You may p ow it, and harrovr tt,
and culture it, year after year, but it yields
ta a m. •-hi- re pittance. So here is a man with ten
in the «av ■ I g in. .... i and doing
good. He .
yields soon, under Christian culture,
Hero great harvests of faith and good work,
is another man who seems to have only
the one ta ent, and you may put uuon him
yields greatest but little spiritunl culture, but lie
of the fruits of
righteousness. You are to understand that
there are different qualifications for differ-
ent individuals. There is a great deal of
ruinous comparison when a man says: "Oh,
if I only had that man’s faith, or that man’s
money, or that ram's eloquence, how i would
serve God.” Better take the faculty that
God has given you and employ it in
the right that way.” The rabbis used to
say, before the stone and
timber were brought to Jerusalem for the
marseii; Temple every stone and piece of timber was
Jerusalem so that, liefore they started for
that the architects knew'in what pace
particular piece of timber or stone
should fit And so I have to tell you we are
al! marked for some one place in the great
temple of the Lord, mid do not let us
complain, to be saying ; “ I would like
the foundation stone ’or
the cap stone." i.et us ge into the very
p ace where God intends us to be, and be
satisfied with the position. Your talent may
be in large worldly estate; your talent may lie
in personal appearance; your talent may
Tie in high socml position; your talent may
be in a swift pen* or eloquent tongue; but
whatever be the talent* it has been given only
for wrne purpose—practical use. You some-
times find a man in the community of whom
you say: “He hus no talent atall;”and yet that
manway have a hundred talents. . His one
hundred talents mav be shown in the item of
endurance. Poverty comes, and he endures
it; persecution nos# comes, and he endures it;
sick comes, an* he endures it. Before
men and angels he is a specimen of Christian
patience, jaud he is really illustrating the
power cf Christ’s Gospel, aud is
for doing as much for the Church, and more
tho Church, than many more positively
active. If you have one talent, use that; if
you have ton talents, use them, satisfied with
the fact that we all have different qualitica-
tions, shall and that the Lord decides whether we
have one or whether we shall have ten.
I learn alsoAfrom this parable that the
grace of God was attended to be accumula-
tive. When God pfajiM nn acorn, He
m-ans an oak, and wB 8 h|He plants a small
“mount to be of gra -e in the enlarle hea?L He intends it
shadows growthful and until it over-
the whole nature. TSIyre are parents
who, at the birth of each child^ay aside an
amount of money, investing it, tewcting by
a ('cumulation and by compound interest that
by the time the child shall come to mid life
^‘YT^Il'^lVo^lslnTllunmuntof tune, showing how a small amount or money money
tnrest accumulate until it shall become an
eternal fort ne. (An it he no-sibln 1 that : J. vou
SSSSSsSS&S TSd'l tS&
m y«j
gave you It will dwindle. The rill that break*
from the hillside wdi e th •>• widen into a
river !in or dry up. The brightest dav started
the dim twflight, The strongest Christian
man was one* a weak Christian. laketne
one tatot aud make it two; tag* nve ana
Ky.^Th^ fl n J
L of God w u ,
very accumulative that mfe-
riorlly Again 1 learn from the text
of gif tei* noe reuse forirtdsnoa
Tins man, with the amsllest amount or
tnoney, caine grow ling into the presence of
the owner of the estate, as much aa
tosay: "If you had given me WMOOI would
have brought I18.8UQ a* w«Q as this other
man, You gave me only #188 1 ,ami I hardly
thought it was worth while to use it at all.
Bo 1 hid it in ft napkin and didn it produced give no
en’ugh-' r, suit Its B^ because iMrity you t faculties me
of
is no excuse fof indolence. Let hio say
to the man who has the least qualifications,
by I he grace of God he may bu malo
almost omnipotent. Toe marenant, who*
cargo.* K come out from every Wand of the
g ,.„ imd who, by one stroke of the pen, can
,. hll „g„ the whole face of. American .one
m.rce, lias not so much power as vou may
have liefore God. in earnest, faithful ana
continuous prayer. • You say you have no
faculty. Wo you net understand that
you might this aftcrir on go into your God, pla<e
of pi aver, ‘and kneel before of
bring doWnjSpon your soul, fend thesou s
others, a bussing so vast that it would take
eternal ages to compute iti "Oh,’ you I cant say,
“I haven’t' well fleetnesa of speech. what I want to
talk I can’t utter
say.” My brother, can you not quote
one jiassago of Bcfipturef Then, take
» hat 'proper ° ne U circums7ancea P as ™K” With 1 re , 1 .'..^i'ivV
all that one
of Scriiiture you may harvest a
souls for God. I am glad that the
work of the Cnurch in this day is bung
will bring out a great field-piece and
ra rake keall all vritti with the the firey firey hail hail of of destruction.' destruction.
But common muskets do j most of the hard
dr.v^down l V'*« ™!; v r r-tZVl"n/m
the walls of effies, and, under
wrathful strokes, to make nations fly like
s , )arkg trom the anvil. It only took one
bu ther for Germany, one /winglius
for gwit erlaud, one John Knox
for Sc-otlami, one Calvin
be as much applauded as the endowment of
KSRr&reSX'U» J Ka
under the burnt offering in the ancient temple of the
had a "priest, duty as __ imperative r _______— as that ____ -
high high priest, in in magnificent magnificent robes, robes, walking walking
into into the the Holy Holy of of Holies Holies under under the the cloud cloud of or
ffi^fSr^hewS^orTwm^r be saved'at'all,^Vh” saved all, Tho i men^with^fivo with u , five ten ten
at men or or
talents are tempted to toil chiefly for them-
selves, to build up t5 their own great name,
“'“J w“rldS f ork w^ /° W r “fhe ®i r ^“.ul^Ltfon^oTThe sfand-
cedar of Lebanon
ing on the mountain seem* to hand down the
norms out of the heavens to the earth, but it
oears no iruit, wrnre some dwarf pear tree
^^rto° to full than n birr&»W hundred wickedly
use five
neglected. subject
My tenches me that there is go-
XnthToU he^immediately farm*? Sledallthewvanto of tttexVg“ ZS
about
b j m an q 8^; "Here is tiie little account I
have been keeping. I want to see your ac-
count, and we will first compare them, and
The day will come when the Lord Jesus Christ
W ill appiar and will say to you: “Wliat
have vou been doing with my property 1
What have you been doing with niv facul-
K. There WS-SiEllS»-Swl» will be‘no from that settle-
escape settle-
nient. Sometimes vou cannot get a
men t with a man, especially if he owes you.
”-i.^o^nex^^k"of’Tn^e^ou^xt The lie
month iatis does nut want to
settle. But when the great day comes et
which I am speaking, there will be noescapw
We will havo to face all tho bills.
an “ouTanl^ wiu m nm up ’I 7r
a long iin« of figures. ”in lf sew
ten i or fifteen figures a add line, and.
attempt to add them up, and I then
two or three times, I make them different
account and without wAUn^l sin,do mistake, ‘lon^'of and with « great
a
celerity, announce the aggregate. - Now, in
the last great settlement, there will be
correct account pre-euted. , God has
a
kept a long line loiigUne of sins, profane a long line of broken
sabbaths a of words, along
line of discarded sacranvmts. a Jong line of
misimproved privileges- They will all Le added
up, and before angels, ami devils, and men
the aggregate will be announced. Oh, that
will he the great day of settlement. I have
io ask tho o? question- U "Am I ready for
it!” It is more' importance te) me to
answer that question in regard to myself
than in regard to you: and it is of more
importance yourself for you to answer it in regard to
than in regard to, me. Everyman
for himself on that day. Every woman for
herself on that day. "If thou be wise, thou
shalt be wise for thyself; if thou scoruost,
thou alone shall bear it” We nreaiitto speak
of the last day as an occasion of voctfera-
tion—a-great demonstration of power and
pomp; hut there will be on that day, I think,
a few moments of entire silence. I think' a
think trepiendqus, an overwhelming sifance sileune. i
heard. it, will be Id such.a will be the moment as the earth when
never all at
nations are listening for their doom
I learnpiho from tn a arable or the text
ibateur degrees of happiness in heaven will
ie era luuted according to ou r degrees of
i -i n> as on earlh.H Several of the com-
mentalors a.:r e in making this parable the
lame one as in Luke, where one man was made
ruler over five cities and,-mother made ruler
aver two oitieg. Would it tie fair and right
that the pro essed Christian man who has
lived very near the liuu between the world
and the Church—the man who has ol*en
50 nproinised his Christian character—the,
man who has never spoken out
for God—the man who has never
been known as a Christian only on
communion days—the man whose great
struggle has been to see how muclf of the
h oral lie could get and yet win heaven—is it
right to suppose that man will have as
51 'and and glorious a seat in heaven as the
:imn who gave all his energies of body, mind
ind soul to the service of Godl The dying
due entered - heaven, but not with
the same startling -. acclaim as that
.
which greeted Paul, who had gone
under scorchings, and across dungeons, and
through maltreatments into the kingdom of
B* pl°ry. One star differs from anther star in
( >ry, and they who toil mightily for Christ
on earth shall haven far greater reward than
those who hav e rendered only half a service,
b'ltne of you are hastening on toward the
reward of the righteous. 1 want to cheer
f ,U U P at t5, e thought that there will be some
kind , of reward waiting far There
a .you. are
Christian people in this house who are very
n--ar heaven, this week some of you may
p<*ss out into the light of the unset-
fcl n £ 8un * 1 ^ aw blind man going
along , the road with bis staff, and he
ke P fc P°’ rar hug the earth and then
Hamplrig do with his foot T said to him: “What
you do that for:” "Oh,” he said, “lean
tell by the sound of thegrouud when I am
bear a dwelling " And some of you can tell
by the sound ot your earthly pathway that
i oa atv C( ? rr ’ at 1, fa ,lea r to your l-uther weather-beatei s h ouse.
Foyagera,the ? y QU *
storms are driving you mto the
aarbor. Just as when you were looking for a
friend, you cam ■ up to the gates of his bouse,
and you wore talking with the servant, when
your friend hoisted the window and shouted:
“Come in! come in!” Just so, when you come
to the gate of the future world, and you are
the- talking with death, the black porter at
gate, methbiks Christ will hoist the
window and say: "Come in! come in! I will
make thee ruler over ten cities.” In antici-
P atlon of that land I do not wonder that
Augustus Ages,” declared Toplady, the author of "Rock of
in his last moment: "I have
nothing more to pray for: God has given
eart nie everything. )> afCer the Surely no man can live on
glories 1 have witnessed.” Oh,
my brothert aml gist « r * ( how sweet it will be,
after the long wilderness march, to get home.
J hat ' vas ' 1 bri * ht m^ienti for the tired
,) ovo j n the time . of the Delug* when it
a*
/IVnDflTA (jtlUituiA TTEIbffl IlriMo.
geLsSrifr .....—...... 1Jiri
!«' t~J»* *■»“«
»cuatmon, McCalmon Thomason »«>H»wny & Co W, . G. 1 /*yv M. Hob
erU. There WMW insurance on tin
church.
Saturday. by direction of Vic*
firsts ncuartmont L\ Commander A. E. Sholes, t.5
(<«. Ridge,-) of
Grand Army «.f the Republic, was mus.
in , lt j aK . )ur w jth Ool. B. E. Dar.
ne ii ftS Comraandor. Posts arc now being
tormed at DrinswiiK, Hrunswick 'Marietta. JMane a, JJidi.
lonega and Dalton.
wwnj I ihertv county iu«nij, ua, On will nui ipn have it* 1 fits! 11
nnnging since tne IVnr on January 1 /.
William Macon was convicted for th(
, o/ * T () h„ Snain at Joslvn V tliirtv-
«we . mile. .. South , ot . , , ,
raontbs ago. and was sentcnc d to be
hanged. The murder resulted from 8
q 0urfe l over a game of cards.
The arrest 0 / Burl. Brown, of Macon, ,
(Ja., ^do^f (J negno man aged seventy years, on
having murdered his wife,
1,111 ». Brown * who it wus alleged, ,® '
and , killed , by tram
wav run over a on
the Southweatcru Railroad, may leadltd
startling discoveries. Many believe .that
he muracrea >,*_ ills ''uo a la mrr cameu ;..j the t
body and put It hundred under the yards car, which from
WHg abo ut three
R roW n’s house • • - !
.
Judge Emory ftpeer, presiding in the
United State* Circuit O urt for th.
Southern district of Georgia, at Atlanta,
Ga., has decided that the purchase in th<!
interest of the Central Railroad of Geor
gi a 0 f the Inqchisca of the Savannah
& Dubli „ n ai i roa d Company is void,
Georgia prohibiting stock stock any corporation other, other,
from from puich puich -sing sing the the of of which which any any would would
or or naaking making any any contract contract
have the effect of defeating competition
or creating monopoly. The decision
may have nu adv rse bearing upon the
recent consolidation of railrpad int^r-
.
ests - •
^ — . .
... s ,. ;
Many thrilling accounts are told by
of the, anuoyance 101 J’'t
forces iprce3 tnrougii through the me uuuj army by uj the uuc rebel x ouw j
sharpshooters sharpshooters hanging hanging on on the the skirts skirts of of
encampments encarapmrinfej during dpring.the .the late. late war. war. ;
Earlv r„.-K-in in the the morningjof morn in oMf the-a the-a skir- skir-
mish ___________, Illinois, hue, was composed thrown . . out ^inljof&omh in advance of
■
our army, lying near Jackson, Miss., i
confronting General Joseph Johnston,
Tho men lind constructed a few tempo-
mry shelters by standing rails upright,
leaning against each other, the tops be-
ing bound together. little fortresses,
Behind one of these
though in a rather exposed position,
Captain F. D. Stephenson, of the 48th,
was sitting on a turned-up bucket, threw tak-
intr his morning coffee. As he
bauk his d “” kin « *
heard and a hall sped by within an inch
of his face, directly across dogwood the eves, tak-»
ing effeot in a little tree be-
B id e him
a ramrod, stuck it in the .ground, so that
its top would be. in the space lately oo-
cup ied by his nose; he then went behind
the tree o™,th«i. aud sighted through the bullet
hole l Itl„.rod «,„.«««-
taining the direction taken by the ball
in its flight. large Directly oak with in this great lino sheets ros©
the top of a
and streamers of Southern boughs. moss hang.
mg depndent from its •
“Boys,” said Stephenson, brandies evenly, of
“our man is among tho
t h'at tree yonder, Now,” taking a-sol-<
dier’s cap and placing it on the end of a
knotted stick, “you all load up and lay
low. When I shove this cap into view
be will tiro attain. There’s your chance,
w drivn ”
When'all was readyho slowly elevated
the cap until just i» sight from the tree,
a puff of white smoko burst from its
leaves and the cap turned riound on the
s!jcit support, . i letting ct tino- in- the davliffht uayn 0 n
through a large .jogged hole jn its
crown. . •
a moment later six Springfield drop- rifles
Bpoke I fr0 m the rail pile i, and ft man
ped . from the oak , tree, i T p eluteriling dntehincr wumy wildlv
at moss and brunches as he fell. His
last shot was fired. .
The Inventor of Yolapuk.
ft
W )
%
H mr*r
m Pvv WML fl
r<j 8^.- f V fm
m rite - ; If
a- Vi’
•) ,
•
m ■>2
Father Schleyer, parish priest of Con-
stance, and' inventor of the universal
language known as Volapuk, whose
death was erroneously reported a short
time ago, is TIis a scholar birthplace and linguist of
celebrity^ is the Grand
Duchy of Baden, aud be first saw the
light in lHill. A? the inventor of a
.language iii adapted to, universal use, he
will live h-story.
\ olapuk hat keen recognized achieve by many
authorities as an attempt to a
most desirable end, ._ a and ._ i_ in of its s........ present
incomplete has form, consisting adopted.aa only 17,-
0i)0 words, been the a.incans
of intercourse with outside world by
many houses of business in trance, Italy
and Gormauy. -Whether if will ever be-
come a universal language, .taught in
all schools in place of foreign tongues,
remains to be proved. It was introduced
in the year 1880.
Room for Reflection.
Young Mr. Sissy (to his pretty cousin,
wf let n„„',i„ ” g the vewyfiist
’ ur 4° -
CL,
g i„ „,1 would make a aplondid
•
Young Mr. Sissy—“You say she is
vewy intelligent, Maud?”
Pretty Cousin—“Remarkably so.”
Y.,„nrr Mr si aa v oh.htan.tai >,wt-ii
bah Jove, l fahney I’d bettah think it
over.o— Epoch.
P0PD1AB SCI UNCE.
———»
It has been estimated that an averag#
f feet of water fulls Hlinuftllv over
P™fo..orI™™MiB,otGorm»„,,
bees the moat reliable of all weather
riroirnosticfttions 1
f£HSSFEi , OM ,, .. ,
p uri >o«e. for wklek wM *•<•«&
1„VT and soil. . „ i i r I h„i„ he banks n k Tilt of \WfminrilaSri Newfoundland
wou ] t j appear to have been'formed- in
this way
The lightemitted by the corona during
the half solar eclipse U of U-t 1SH0 of was less than
US ^ . s. H. ^, 1 .
ing to ( aptuln W. do W. Abnov and Mr.
T. F. Thorpe.
As is now well knovn, the Great Salt
hake of Utah » no immonse, lumtlcs-
mft trazine i! of ‘ salt ! Lwi that (an be readily J ob-
. tane( ^ in an ^ ^, e31< <|Uantity ,,,. 111 . h by H,. the
»i nple process of evaporation.
A rnbic foot of icc weitrhs about 0.10
ounco S but the „ same volume of sea water
weiirhs 1280 ounces. Hence icc floats on
and but one-ninth of the volumt
of an j ceberf b . j s exposed !, to view.
I)r dastrow, of , .theit .. niversity , . 01 (Wi vv is
: that tho is the
consul, proves ear
dominant andlhe organ of the min.l in - some
? eve in others ofeye-minSd People
re thertfore ear-mhded '
. According ^.,,i to a (hicngo wagon-maker.
... k r hlckorv rcse i„htv ve, V ire to mature
g j „. bark ’ fro" ' thirty to fifty
years, white ash, thirty , 1 years, twWn tulip
trce> six ty or more years; and red oj
Norway 3 pine, * (it least jsixtv years. t
ton" , ago wise men learned to w h
their words, but an Italian fbr'weighing scientist Jha.-
invented a machine one’s
thoughts. He can tell wilt 1 her a friend
j 8 reading Italian or Greek, the greater
effort blood of the the latter affecting ‘ the tlpw of
to brain.
q,, * t t j., t satellites of Mars
t discovered, until 1877 is con-
jiubois. He suggests that they may h>ive
no not j. ] | oncr on gr held held their their present present places, places, but but
that t Jecently^fro.n jj at they they raav raav - he lie bodies bodies drawn—only drawn-only
the zone of little planets .
lying between Mars and-.lqpiter. .
observations at sixty.seven-stations in
. pam sh . ow enormous differences ■ in the
annual rainfall, ...... will, , h is • no less . than . 1 ,
-
inches on the Merra da I strelis, and
the max mum fall at *hme stations in
and at other, in October. ■
An instrum<,*nt, instrument, called called the. the auto^rapbO" autographo-
me meter, ter, which which records records automatically a itomaticnlly th« tne
topography topography and and difiemiccs differences of of level level ol ol
nil a ll places nlaees over over which which it it passes passes is is'a - a' new new ■
French c>f which
____
cannot certainly be questioned if it
realize^ .the results cla med for it. It is
carried about on 'a light vehicle, arid
those who wish- to use it have-no thing to
do but to drag it, or haye_ it-dragged,
over the. ground of wmen tney desire to
obtain a plan.
---=- ■■ ' -— " '
The Origin of Tee. -
The tea-plant grew fo.r.endless centu-
f j es j n Central Asia, and the guileless
( elestials blandly assert that the drink
was invented by Ohm Kong some thou-
, an d yfe*r*'ago. A poetic version, makes
it* sixteen* handled y«JUKj.a*a>, and ogives,
the following account of its earliest Tv /p-
neirance • “in the reign of Yuen in
accuatomecl to thfi proceed market every morning catrving. at
cj ltv break, to lier hand. place, people
a cup G f tea in The
bought S;C, it eagerly, aud from the bieak of
exhausted. U e close of evening he the ed
never 1 money recen
was distributed among seized orpHaiis arid-’‘confined' and beg-
ffard Lin The people
prison* At night she (lew through
the prison windows with.her little vase
in her hand.” If you care to do so you
- an read this story and enjoy it in the
original Ch nese of the “tha.Pu,!’ or •
“Ancient History of Tea,” and will no
doubt find the translation exact
Tea was not heard of in China again
for three centuries and a half, when a
“I'o hi” as^a Driest is said to have advised
ifa use medicine. In the ninth
century, au old beggar ftom Japan took
SO me of the seed and plants back with
hj m to his native land; ■ .The.,lapanese
relished relisned me the new new drink r , and \ built at
Osaka a temple to the memory of those
who introduced it. fins temple is still
Handing,- though now almost seven hun-
died years old. Gradually the people of
Tu.-tavv Tartaty and ana 1 Pei ersm.aiso sin also learned learnea to to love love
the dunk, and serve it all horns of the
day. " '*
The honor of introducing considered the-herb due
into Durope may he
equally to the sev^nieenfth' Dutch an<\ Portuguese.
Early in 'the century tea be-
came known and among “persons of quality”' Hutch
in Europe, in I m some
traders carried a quantity of *«g e (which
was then used to make a drink popular
in Europe) to -China, and by some in-
genious device succeeded in, making the
almond-eyed tea-dripkers think ft a fair
’exchange” which for an equal broiight quantity home of very in'
good tea, and without was the loss of single
safety Nicholas. a
Dutchman. — St. „
rite King: of the Chicago Whept I’it.
B. P. Hutchinson was born near Dan¬
vers, farm. Mass., in Agriculture 1828, and started : dt being in life to | j
on a n
bis liking, he went to Lynn, and•• after j
mastering the making of shoes started a 1
factory. He failed in 18.*; and then 1
iurned his face to the West, locating in
Milwaukee. The -town being too slow
for him, he came Board to Cljhagq in 18,>1) and J j
Went on thu of Trade, his mem
bership he worth costing .>110,009 him $ 0 . and In a year or paid so
was had j |
fcvery ,j e bt he owed in Lynn. He is «
m!m 0 { k ePI1 foresight,- indomitable will, )
„ ruat . CO urage ami' bounilles's nerve, j
_ and intent
cariner for no one, He has helped only on j
making money. the Board, though hi? many a
thfopyjias man on always inured his financial philan-.
te
benefit. He lias two sons, Charles TV.,
President of the hoard'of Trade;-and I
[ gaac> . and-lives at tlie Century Club, an j l
. I institution and opposite - arranged’by th;> -•..... board of Trade,
I founded himself. — He
l cares f or notHfng frivolities. save business, and de-
cst3 soc ial • He - is worth
pro bably $10, OOii,00 ),one-tenth of which
j ias been made within tlie past week.—
j Cincinnati Enquirer. *•
j Flilulling Mount St. Elias.
j Mount St. Elias promises be the
to
/utnre mountain climbing center of this
1 country. A traveler who has returned
frora ^ ere ’ ^ j j
'
helght compelled of u.coO abandon fee*, and the we-e then
y«w,.w to enterprise. U
f .«3 r s*aio r
another were wading through icy waters 1
fed by glaciers. He believes the moun- ]
tain cannot l>e ascended without the as-
sist.'im e oj trained Swiss mountaineers,
lltmb.— 1 ackr Chicago rs withthepartv Ilvrabl could not ;
i
A CALUfcOKMA POTATO PATCH.
*
How HowHOrl,w it Grew from fro, “ a 11 Garden totho 1,10
Ttaache Alllplioa«!’ -IK,OOO Acre.
fguscio , 0 ^I'ljrivV- .1 -Fill, &o Li?”
Inez lived , m a little oabm on . tho
Lank of a CToek in Santa Clara oounty.
'“SS KSJZ‘ tttSU
i 8U »P® 0U ' ,a r
him - here to work? So „ he , railed , eJgfcr- .
,
it»g and .watched his fow Ignacio’, potatoes grow. "were
Potato patches like
called “milpns” in the Greaser dialfejfc,
and the Spanish L* ^ law permitted the Qov-
emor to to the holder, of
miloas in order to protect thmn from the
cattle barons, who who Were in the habit
of driving thuit herds across country and
devastating-ally be ^ little Itniucio fii«ns that might
“ in the wav So naked for a
grant. » 1 ho Alcalde looked at hlsmilpa,
and found it so small that, in derision,
he described it in Ins report as a “milpi-
tun, "-or or littln little potato rv.tito nntch piuon. In ltpa a fneeti- lacei^
oils spirit J 10 called the ditches creeks,
and described the lines us running ftom
» certain tree to a point on a creek, from
. croek to another, etc. Gov. Michel
one
' T 0 rreno approved ‘ and issued to Ignacio
Inez T a grant for f ,, the i> ILini 1 ho Milpitas,
and Ignacio was protected from the raids
? f arrogant va.pieros and their hollow-
ing herds.
Under bmur tlio tne treaty tro.uyoi of Guadalupe vtuaaaiupe Hi- 1 x 1
_
rhspect and piotaut the rights of all
holders of land under Mexican grants,
all(1 a commission was appointed to
examine *” and nnss ?. on all claims it P present- T\.„=
cd. j Among the griiiits approved was
that of tho-Bancho Milpitas to Ignacio
Inez. The cession of .California to the
United States greatly enhanced the
value of tho land, and Mexican giant®
first class property. Tho de-
scription of the Rancho Milpitas was
examined. There were genome oreeks
in Santa Claro and Alameda counties,
wero ignored. grant said from
creek to creek.” Tho facetiousness of
the Alcado was not appreciated, and
Ign^io Inez’s mUpitas of two or
three acres grew to to the Rancho Mil-
pit'is of 48,000 acres and m«o patent-
ed under the laws of tho United States..
The heirs qf Ignacio, the ciganta-roll-
bg Greaser, their dmuditers became Wealthy Hidalgos,
an ff were soucht in mur-
of land f raud WftS the. floating apfl&'br. grant.
lo ,.LopeM„r.sample,
grant of land. He set forth in his petl-
non that lie .was a soldier of the Mission
San Joee, disabled by numerous wounds
received in the service of the. Church
and State; that the wounds made, him
incapable his .of active duty and forced him
to pass time in his cabin; that in-
consequence he had accumulated a large
dastards family, mostly perniciously boys; that, traitors and
in his fifty, were therefore' aetHe, even
and how much
more numerous such detrimental per-
k sons might be expected to become.in Thing the
future; that it was a good for the
State that large families of boys should
be reared in a spirit of loyalty mnl do-
votion by true and.tried soldiers
like, himself; and tlqat in . oonsid-
eration of bw wounds, is.large family.
andhis loyally he ahum,! receive a grant
pf500aqrespflandiucluded.within.oftr-> tain descrilied bounds. It
was furtkter
expended the savings of years m the pur-
chase of.stamped t taper lor t;is .petition,
Tho Alcaide approved, anil the GovernQr
iasued the grant. When the Americans.
e.„e into power it™, dteovered tot
the boumlnr.ies ^of the Lppez giaxit
lxicluded o,0uQ acres, and tlie. courts held
that the specified 500 ‘ acres could be
vitlun the ia.t,. . Ai .1 ■ quatted on
the northwest corner, and. Lopez or his
assigns brought suit in ejectment. For
the purposes of the suit he located-his'
. BOO.acres xn tlm northwest oornm-,
the squatter was put out. AnoUier man
squatted on floated the soutlieast corner. lne
grant was down there, and -ho
bought getting 200 title acres of the Intte Lopez grant,
unde, it course of
a few years that grant w s floated all
over the &,UUt) acres, and jfet.lerg on. All
parts acquired tit.e under the Lopez
grant. Fraud of some kind taints nearly
g^the nil The Mexican Me. ® (mints ’ but u the f land has A
been transferred so ott f .n tha -at any nt-
tempt hardship to purge tne innocent titles ol fraud would
work to parties and
benefit nobody. 1 or thispeasv.i Survoy-
n , i Hammond makes in his an-
'
final report tho . recommend dlon-s tart-
lmg enough * when.^regarded witl.iout.
knowledge of the history of CifiKornia
.
land titles—that, all Mexican grqnt titles
patented by the Dmted States, fvaudu-
lent and other, be once and for all con-
firmed and qmetod by act of Congress,
This means that the validity of the title
shall be secured but from attach by the Gov-
ernment, Still TeAves the question of
bounds am. line open to contest by ad.
jacent holders.
The largest artific ill basin'for drick ing
and repairing-the hulls- completed of ships in- the
■Unite 1 States, in being at New¬
port News, Va. It.isfiOOJcet long, (LIO
feet, wide, with high a depth tide. uS Itis 25 feet over
the sill at furnished
with .pumps that can empty it in two
and a half hours.
Gen. Reuben E. Davis, cousin to
Hon. Jefferson Datil find awo’ a cdu'siii
of Presidentelect Harrison, called' dri
the latter art Indiahapolis,' Ind. Tliff
general lives brigadier, at Ab^rib'en,' Miss., was a
Confederate and was a .mem 1 '
her of tbe Confederate Senate,
George AnsaistuN Sala.
George Augustus Saia, the well known Eng¬
lish writer, on Iris last Australian trip wrote as
follows to tho London Daily Telegraph: • •
“I especially have a pleaSknt "remembrance
of the ship’s doctor—a very experienced mari¬
time medico indeed, who tended me moBt kind-
during a horrible spell of bronchitis, and,
spasmodic asthma, provoked by the sea fog 1 '
which had swooped down on us just after we
..left San Francisco. But tbe doctor’;, prescrip-
ttons and the Increasing warmth’ of the tem¬
perature as we hea’red the Tropics, and in par¬
ticular, a couple of Am, cock's Vouous Plas¬
ters clapped on—one on the,chest and another
between the' shoulder blades—soon set nie-
right.” -
IMfiti Quay,*in f onneCtion with a Philadelphia
betting syndirate, won $100,000, on election.
“I!nd Been Worried F.IeIii pen .Year*.”
it should have read “married,” hut the 1
blue pencil through the errdr. i l<u-tunately
there was. cot,filterable tfuthin his obsci va-
tlon. Thohsau is dr lu'i 6 hauii,S are .constantly
worried itlrhMf to despair by tho iU.fa-aftn
that afflict.- 'th,eiV-wive*, aufi often roljs life'.pf
comfort ah if Ilappiqeks. TffleTejS hi.teiio Jip
and sure way to change all this for'tlie better.
The faille, shouldune Dr. Plerco’s Lavoitte
Prescription.
k, Co.
are leotnri ng and layin g bare the oheat.
cured Monthly and much Irreanlarities suffering are relieved and
dfleld’a saved to woman by
usa of Bra Female Regulato r.
ifainioted with, ore ayes use Dr. Isaac Thomp-
aon’s Eye- water. D ruggfata sei ut 25c. per bottle.
*• 0ld - *' Tm -
Orje _ of . the most pleasant And s^tUfacto^f ,
long-ft fl*£«"^nalwXwnby*thtSff tabl lulled firm. The John P. Lovell te?a '
wffl.XlJaWiWfflM'iSS plj^" VtSXStS
of hill, gooda, with rsqueatln an order for tha fixty-slx ehnnm to dollar*’ be returned, worth
r
A careful examination of theblll proved Its
'S^tS^xk^SSSSa
or New England Suoeei pe.ple.but it fawofthy of not*
that their Station in bualne«" etaendflurough- h«s crown out
o the sound that
rfi'K^n^t'H of ^Ke'v^ x‘^"
Cutlery, !> lt9 SportiiiK feel flood* and Fishing aafe in Tackle in .
paper can perfectly wading
retanted. All’of o«r
^uSect? £ sbunus for tihrir large iuO
Tlusimicd entm ..g.o, .
~—---------
lhmbla ram,da will lay a cable t>ei ween British Co-
and Australia and New Zealand.
—--
A Tremrndon* Kemniion .
Would have" been created one hundred years
ago by the hi7.t?ug sight of .along one of-our at the mod. xate ;u of express stx
w y
miles an hour. Just think how our grand fa-
b U f wv wrought „. 0 f the nyirvelous cure* of con-
sumption, Medical Discovery, by Dr. created Tierce’s Uoldeh
have widespread
amazeincnt. edged curable. Lo»8umpUoniaa.tlastacknowt- Ike ■■UoUlcn Medical
tnecciv-
"y “ .isi thl l j ^ t on l l i y m k ^"2ich neiriy nl bcar f in niiud will\o f hGuIt
hen lungs are gone-lt
right its work to the nothing sent of the else disease world ami accomplish
as * in tne can.
_ .
Only $150,000 Graut'a has been ralsod of the $M0,00
wanied for monument.
Chronic Cough* tin I Gold*,
And alldiseaso i of the Throat and Lungs, cap
he Cured by the use of Sc OT’u Emulsion, as it
contains tho healing virtues their of Cod LiverOl
ltd Hypophosphites in fullest form, Is a
beautiful creamy Emulsion, palatable as milk,
easily deiieate. digested, Please and Can bo taken consider by the most ott’S
read: “I S
Emulsion the remedy par-excellence in -Tu¬
berculous ami strumous Affections, to say
not him; ofordinary colds and throat trout ) 1
le.’’—YV. H. 8 . Ponnei.l, M. I). >rancliester, O.
literature, A Congress, for the Switzerland . supp ress on-of in 1839. Impure
meets in
“Give Him *‘2. and I.et Hi " 1 Gno*-.V,
We once heard * man complain of feeling
bailly, and wobdered wliat> ailtrl A ,“ u ;
morous friend said: “Give a doctor $2, and let
liiiu guess. ’ It was a cutting satire on Some
doctors, who don't always ffness right. food \ou
need not guess whtft ails ybu when your
don't digest, vvhpn your bowels, head and aches stopiacu
are inactive, and when your every
dav. and you ide languid and- easily mig^ed.
You are bilious, mid Dr. Pierces Pleasant
Purgative Pellets will bring yon out all right.
Small, sugar-coated, easy to take. Or drug¬
gists.
_________
l n the shipped next 80 uays, 3,000.000 bushels of oorti
will bo elwpad. • ....
- S5000 tn Prizes .Thb,Youth’s
’s offered hy tlm publishers of. _
roll i-a mon for the be short stories. There
are thfu piieesUf $W0 each thre-s of $750
each, and tlifte' or $-50 each. N - other p iper
pays 'for so its liberally-to ubs ribers. obtain Te the very it dasher, hest mate, will
te p
send a circular nn offer. receipt of astamihgivingthe' bos
condilioir-o tills The Companion
Two Million Headers a v subscriber eek. Every- who family
shonlAtake $1.75now,will it Any new it January-1, sends 1889,
• receive iree to
and a full-year’ subscription froia that date.
A Knd qnl Clare for Epileptic Fit*,
To the Edifar—Please remedy inform ler ypur the above
Hiat l - have a positive which I warrant tq the
yarned, Vorst disease fa-itii in cure its
cases'. »So strong -is niy vir
ttios t i’.al I will fi«nd tree-a sample who battle and
v aluable trefitise to any sufferer wfll
me his ‘ ‘ '*■' P O '' and Express . address. st.. h<ew Ke$pT, York.
H. G. ROUT. iv M. m n. 0,183 lKi Pearl Pearl St..
. Bail Habit*. - • . .
Hnbitual constipation gives rise -affections, to piles and
to other dangerous and -painful all¬
ot wWh maybe laxativc owed wWcll .by tlje. use. chilurqu of Hamburg like.
Kfers. a friiit Fig. ^laok even Dfi>g t'o.'.ds. Y.
2o cenw. * Dose one.
of Hronehitis 1‘iso’s Cui-O.far'f.vmsump- is-ihir^dh-y frdquonfc- small '-.
i»n.
Sf You Are Sick - ,
With Headache, tieurnlgia, Rh umatism Dyspep¬
sia;- Biliousness, Blood Humors,'Kidney Disease , 1
Constipation, Female Troubles, Fever arid 'Agile, -o—»
8 leepleSbRess,-Partial Paralysis,' or Nervous . J Vrctu
tration..usG Pame's Celery Compound .
'Vu and Ijc
cured. each of these the'cause is mental or
physical dvcrworkVanxicfy, exposureof malaria,
tli$ effect of wbiqh is to weaken, the meryous sys-
iiEsuiT will disappear.
Paine's Celery Compound
Jas. L. Bowen, Springfield, Mass.,- writes:—
“ Paine's Celery Compound cannot he excelled
Nerv.c 'Ionic. as
a In- my case a sipgfa bogle
wrought disappeared, a greht ch’ahge. My nervousness entirely
and with it the resulting affection
of the stomach, heart and liver, and the whole
tone of the system was wonderfully invigorated,
1 tell jny friends, if sick .as I have bee.n, Paine’s
Celery Compound'
Will Cure You!
Sold by dniggisfc S1-; six for Pa-pared finly
For the Aged, lo., Burlington, yt.
Debilitated.
w
dyes Warranted to color more goods than any other
durable.colors. ever made, and to for give more brilliant ahd
Ask the Diamond, and take
no other.
A Dress Dyed FOR
A Garments Coat Colored Renewed IQ
A .Child CENTS.
can use them!
Unequalled for,all Fancy and Art Work,
At drhggistS and Merchants', Dye Tfoolf’ft-ob.--
WELLS, RICHARDSON Sl CO,, Props., Burlington, VC
J jV ' 1 fl ' fljWftC.
• ;.j i'
iff
The Only Printing Ink: Works
In the South. * '
HODGE & EV ANS,
Manufacturers of all kinds of
Printing Inks,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA. .
n FISTULA
and fi 1 Rectal Disease 8
treated by a painl©*s pro*
oesA. No loss of time from
business. No knife, ligaturo
or erfufftio. A RADIdAt* OVRt
guaranteed treated. in eevery case
Dr. Reference* given.
Whiiokali R. O. JACKSON, 42*
St.. Atlanta. G*.
<*w Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co., Holley. Mich.
fiflTfl ----v.—:-,— r.t»«*»horn***d»*»«*ioi**i«iejrwo»u* 5 —,-..
W Wli *»ytWnrUw B «»«•»**■
»• in tin won* eithn m. Co»tiy oatat
**“*• xm» r***. ASdno, tub* * co., Aupi.t*,Mai**
PFFRS —r rr-ri— r — ■ —>-—-
1 FSfi VICO DVCS BninsyDnc-auisTm. Are the
lo^flve The muu dollar* who hus luvr-teJ Kutiber irom Uirco a* We offer uio man who wsnta .service
in a Coat, and Inot style) a earmeiit that will keep
at Ins flr.t half hour's experience m ■ JB| n m iilm dry fn the hurdest «torm. It l*
hardly a storm a finds better to protection his sorrow than that tt 1* IMA 13 W C T I called TOWKk’S PISH IIHAM*
qyuto netting, not only leel* charrined a mol- WW ■ Cow-boy “ SI.ICKEB,” all a name familiar to every them
*t being so badly taken In, but || MB over tho land. Wateryoof With
fe el* If Be do not look also ■ fin aa ■ tlie only perfect Wind and
es exact ly like ■■■ Coat Is “Tower’s FUh Bran d .-s licker.'’
Ask tor the havsllie “FlSli Jh3H»a«m,ie“d Ilii AkD 'tanexaa I Intlfi »nd take no other, IfyonFstorckeeper
for daaertptlT* catalogue, A. J. Towns, 20 Simmons St., Poston, Mas*.
«*•» •»*
Mildmb. Now,
Aunt June,' Jtm
too hard on m«,
How can you apaat
me to know exactly
.what to Jo. K girl
• ''oes IJ °t Sri engaged
k • v . ep y sndwkeu
f h _ I n*k pioiLer, aha
^iTorsprfnr JH , * „ always puts tna eff
with “Go and ask
your Aunt."
Arfirr Jaw* Well, Mildred, I purpose I
should not expect a girl of ,y uir age to be upon
aucli m%tt«r* a but ^or.laijily her mother ought to
be ' It happens
that only a short time ago 1
was reading an article on Etiquette in my in.
fallib'e guide entitled, “Bet re and After the
Marriage Engagement." I will lend fhe,mag<
azine to you, which will answer a l your ques-
tions. Aud now, that you are contemplating
i»aniage,' let mo give you a little advice. Do
not start off like your mother did, to always de¬
pend on others^for her information. ,Your
mother always says, “Go a.k Aunt Jane, sho
knows everything.” Well, I am egotistical
enough to admit that I can generally give in-
Turnin'iou on almost every subj i ct that comteup
Hi the homeclido, and yot I will tell yog can¬
didly that every bit of my house hoi. I knowledge
has been gained from reading Dcinorcst’s
Monthly Magazine. It covers absolutely every
point interesting to & family,' and without it I
would he lost for answers to your, umnerons I
questions. Every mother should take it, and I
.
every girl like you,.who ia contemplating start- ]
ing home, # 1
a new should put that dowu as tho
fl .st requisite. May be' you think rify praise is
too strong. Wdfil try for ygorself.' You say
you Want a pattern of (hat jacket I have just
finished. Unfortunately, u,Li e-is too large lor I
you, but I sec that W. Jennings Demurest,
publisher of Dunorest’s Monthly Magazihe; is
offering to send a sptcinien copy of the Maga¬
zine for ten oenta, Bend for one, and you will
get your pattern for nothing, for each Maga¬
zine contains a Pattern Order, entitling the
holder' to the refaction of auy pattern in stock
and of any aizo nnuiifactuxed. - Don’t think by
this that Demorest’s is a Fashion Magazine, for
it is not. Its fashion department is perfect, as
are ail its,.'other departments,.but Juntos it as
■
anxious for itB arrival each mouth as I am my-
Self. It'-is simply'a pnftct' t'aniily Mag.iZitie
worth tqn times ^he^ub*cnptipn prsiv,', which is
only two dollars j>eryear. If you are thinking
qf ^subscribing be iur'a nmgazino" for the homing
year, sure ami send ten cents for a specimen
of Domorest's Monthly Magazine belore de¬
ciding.. , ■ .• s Y .
trad# »n all by nnn J|J111
i parts, niach.lttftX , i; LlLl
piacinf goods our where the
and p«o .li» (-«n tefi
them, we wiil-send.l toonl
SaE person in each locality,the very
best Vvo'rlcf.lfrith wjwing-niaciMDe' thl‘»it*chmenu. rttado in .
the eli
Uhoref'otir We jriJi«|g^s«od costly 'and f re© valuable s comply*
- Mt
WP les. In return we ask that you
■ w»ho\t what we send, td those who
rosy c*L at your home, and uiiera
knaonthssli shall become ycur owa
'"^1 'KJpjS^L WVWfftiadc ^property. sfter This fha singer grand machine paientg, it
■ ^ I which have run out: before patents
\ pin out it sold for *iTitt 2$1KS, ttYit wiihtha fot
now
flrjwi* PfHalxre-hin* Beat, strongest, most use.
I Sslw5«freee'N°‘cairftal m. the world. AIM,
B required Plain,
brief instructions given.- I hQsj to ua.*t on^e canse.
. cure fj*e© lineofworks the best/ sewing-machine shown in together the world, in America. aud th*
U.Rl'IS finest of high art ever
A CO.. Box 14l». Aucusta^amef.
RTC Cqi^rroOlOl LY’S Ely’s Cream “Ealm,
W tet?i^EAoJ Give* reftff rir once lor
"HAY-ftVER®| C i »M i r. 11 cad
■; J.- f CURES | ’
r llCAT A R RH.
Not a I.,Uini«fcor SnnS
Apply Balm into each nostril.
l-‘l,V "UKOS.. frj’Warren-St.,N.Y,
FOUR BOOKS, mmu
IN OMri READING. ;
. A WfifK. F.ietorCollrri. JJ9H3 1*1 TQT lOfiJSi,
from the'fthaplam of a'n'f ft ughton
CearSir: In Aptf>,. 1885, while t\iiiikinK of taking
otrdprs itiy ordination in Septfinb<'i',‘l>H^dvllly examination would receive^iuitH-e be iield.iii a fort* tt»f
night I had only (i«) days* n <r wbicn to p:-epar8
for tK« Exam. I of;anyone hhonld r-cominf-nd a year s prepar¬
ation in the ca^e B 9 git-t«*riy> strengthrni nnpropar^p nat- as
T tral was*; but your that sfyah-m f had gbledo xo r^nreMbei cl and mu gj'«.
‘ilnfgirit i memory Of anrboftV was. afltr fad ing rt 6rue. -f thcVo-
r
. fura read Lightfoot, Proctor, H ajoid hrowne,
lTlle im amUsirfmpobhia* ?
Burs know* the fact*. Faithfully
-rp,, pEof' A ToHflEl'FwT-iiiV ttifitli^ xve.; N;T.
<* rxmm c3sssi. - . i
CHRISTMAS GIFTS
Fre© to Anyone
TILL JAN.
To the first person telling u*,
oorciictiylh© ehoytest verho m
tbe Oid Testament a. solid gold watch wort li $75. The
second, solid gold wattsh worth $40. The gold next i>, g'fiG* *rUi •
finv bed w debea rolldd-iold worth $25. PaVT« KextfiO, Pinned raigs fh'JC’. \v .1«»
$ l. 50. JVext-25, intro Illustrated 4 Cataloguei of^nna *
'offer to aniri iuoe our new wintiyun
Jews ry s-tiujmg), Wntch fi. EjchV e r»fjn and two b'llea-go D * \
(6iWer or for postage, tA
S5 ta /
r. above 30 Addn-ss office.nearest you. but
value cents.
out this ad- and send with answer. iioch-Vvri’N. '
jltf r. : *
if yA iSrehfitARRH 0
sassfssssft tlies f»il.. ur
ict fuldeo tlnuottf
tha whole r-— P 5 .
tor oHnnps same etiec#
.WS 088 K&. Clf.
a'* ....... XQMWOM SlNSf-CiTAHIH III#
1 State __a* St., filhlfiairOi Chicago, in.
s«
% •KwIM JONES
HJ 3 * *
Tiro Beiim and Beam Box for
Krerr lli^^»t^<> r U" P’ 1 .** 11 ?
a; •’P BINGHAMTON. N. T-
m
i mtdiaic able «le«p; relief effect* in tlio worst whore* cfiu*68‘,iiflnire« lot hen# c omictt fill Am
trial convinces the care* l. J?nO©,6<#<%
* 1 00,01 I>ra|Tl»tRorbVmail. moat akeptlca Sample M '
Lrgiw . ixpi^. lietTilT Par.1. r-fiimia
M. A N.| £!..
CONSUMPTION 1 hare positive flisefl-sn bv ‘t* 11
thousanda • a of remedy of for tho above and-of loner ; stAncHn* .™
have Won cured. e^es tho-wortt kind faith in its efficacy timi
wiU Bo atronar in inv with viunab»
l send two bottles free, together a
•tneatise on this diseoaeto any sufferer. • Give Fearl Jfixpfyss N. ftiiu Y
I‘. O.^ddiwM. T. A. SLOUOM. M. O., 1*1 bt, .
mm
0 ffiSBSSi 11 ii in :t ii u Iti-iii etly Co., I.ii Fayeuc, run.
Blair’sPills.'KI-.ri.rr Oval Box, dli Villa.
round, 14
m If you are not,
FMim
>8