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ednn«rs perhaps,
May have no weight although so true;
The camel pleasures of this eaTth
Break off the thoughts and fears of death.
[Chorus: Arise, arise, we’re going home—
Away to tha New Jerusalem.
Sec blooming youths, all in their prime,
And counting up their lengths of time,
They oft-times say ’tis ihoir intent
When they ate old they will repent.
Arise, arise, we’ro going home,
Away to the New Jerusalem.
When Christ tha Lord, shall come to reign
In sol mn pomp and burning flame,
See Gabriel go, proclaim the sound,
Awake, ye nations under ground.
Arise, arise, we’re going home,
Away to the New Jerusalem
The aged sinner will not turn;
IIis heart’s so bard ho cannot mourn,
Much harder then the flinty rock,
It will not break, though Jesus knock.
Arise, arise, we’re going home,
Away to the New Jerusalem.
But of the sad, the awful state,
Of those who come, but come too late;
The foolish virgins did begin
I'd knock, bnt could not enter in.
Arise, arise, we’re going home,
Array to the Ne>v Jerusalem.
O. horv will parents tremble thorn,
VVho’ve raised their children without
prayer;
Me thinks you’ll hear some children say,
I never hear d uty parents pray.
Arise, arise, we’re going home,
Aw-ay to the New Jerusalem.
..... . -----------<r«4t----
Out Hi Elit* (Jolt!.
With biii'i hands ;utd ittookingGss foot,
Wandered a child in the cheerless street;
Children wore many, who, housed and
fed,
Lovingly nest.Ad, dreaming in bed—
Curollod t'i.eir iava its the land of bliss.,
Without a care or {nought of this,
They wore warm in humanity's fold,
But this little child was out in tha eold
Out in the cold.
Bleak blow the wind tro’ the cheerless
street
Dashing along the merciless sleet,
All furred and shawled, man woman
and child
Hurried alou;;, for the storm grew wild;
They could not hoar the icicles blast,
Winter so cold on their pathway cast,
Alas! none pitied -no one consoled
The iitlie wanderer out in the cold —
Oat ia the cold.
She had no father-site had no mother,
Sister* none, and never a brother;
They had passed cm to the star worlds
above,
‘Nothing; to love*—0, moo did not know
What wealth of joy that child coaid
bestow,
3o they went by and worshipped their
gold,
Lsaviug the little ono out in the cold—
Out in tha- cold.
Wandered sho on till the shades of night
Veiled her shivering form from sight;
Then, with cold bands over her breast,
Ado prayed to her Father itt Uaavoa for
rest.
When hoars had fled, ’ceatli tbo world’s
dark frown,
Hungered and chilled, sho laid herself
down,
Laid do wo to rest, while the wealthy
rolled
In canlagoa oast her. out ia the cold—
Out in the cold.
Oat in tha cold— lo! an angel form
Brough; her white robes that were rich
and warm;
Out in tbo cold, on the sleeping child,
The sainted face of a mother smiled;
A sister pressed on her brow a kiss —
Led her ’mid acou of heavenly bliss;
And angels gathered into Uioir toiu
Thai night the little one out of the cold
Out of the cold,
An Irishman who was given to prais
ing the old isle visited a farm in this
State the proprietor of which had sus¬
pended several large pumpkins in an
a pe tree. Lie was asked what he
thought of the apples Very good’ he
said, ’for American apples; but nothing
at ail as big as we give to the children
iu Ireland.'
Johnnie came home from school the
other day very much excited. “What
do you think pa, Joe Stewart one of
the big boys, had au argument with
the teacher about a question in gram*
mar.’’ “What position uid be take?’’
“His last position was across a chair,
with bis face turned down.”
';, r SECT!ON —WE LAiL: ITS K N
1 04 «4 IjjiDAi 1N
r*s iiae
nrnr
Dot- op., who -.iojvs to have his
•'An c V'hu; V. i as pre 3ii *<1 did r=>
v N-i mu of do Biblo to do Limt
B br F. V, do not open our moot
ins ' i ;.u:.yor, uor do wo do. n by sing
iu’de DoxoJogy, but u- f . , . I ,uu
suah dis gift will be highly appro u -god
by all. liar has bin considuble talk in
dis club sbout ds revised edishun.
Some of you ha'o got do ideah dat pur
gatorv has all been wiped out an' Heab
en enlarged twice obor, an' I have hoard
odders assort dat it didn't forbid lyin’,
stealin’ an' passin’ off bad money. My
friends, you am sadly mistaken. Hell
is j;st as hot rs eber, an' Heabcu hasn’t
got any mo loom. In lookin’ obor
some ob de changes las’ night, I selected
out a few paragraphs which have a gin
era! beariu . Fur instance, it am jist
as wicked to steal watermellyons as it
was las' ykir or do y'ar befo’ an 1 do
skeercerdo crap da bigger do wicked¬
ness.
‘No change has biu made in regard
ioafin mono’ de streets. Do loafer
I I am considered jist as mean au* low as
eber lie was, au' I want to add my be
lief dat he will grow moaner in public
estimashuu all de time,
‘De ten commandments am all down
bca widout change. Siealiu an lyin an
covetin au ruunin out at nights am con¬
sidered jist as bad as obor.
I can’t find any paragraph in which
men am excused for pnyin doir honest
debts and supportin deir fam’lies.
‘i can’t find wkara poo man. or poo
man’s wife, white or black, am ’spected
to sling on any particular sty .o.
•Dog fights, chicken I Turn’, poly ticks,
playin’ keerds fur money an' handin'
aroun’ fur drinks an all sh h low bixs
ness am considered meaner dnu obor.
Fact is, I can't fin’ any change w bate her
which lets up on a man rrom beiug
plump up an down s:j ir an hours wid
do wornl Doy have changed no ’word
j‘Hell’to‘Hades,’but added at do same lima
to de strength of de Uriuatun an*
do size of do pit, an' wo want to keep
right on'de straight path if we would
avoid it, Doan’ let any white man
make you believe dac we's lost any
Gospel by dis revision, or dat Peter or
Paul or Moses have undergone any
change of speerit regardin' do ways of
libiu’ respectably an dying bouorauly.’
Way Eve did act Keep it Hired dir!.
A lady writer furnishes so mo of the
reasons why Eve did not keep a hired
girl. She says;
‘There has been a grant deal said
about the faults of women, and why
they need so much waiting on. Some
ono, (a man of course) has the presu-ntj.
fion to ask, -why, when Eve was manu¬
factured of a spare-rib, a servant was
not made to wait on her ” She didn't
need any, A bright writer has said,
“Adam never com-- homo whming to Eve
with a ragged stocking to bo darned,
buttons to be sewed on, gloves to be
mended right away—quick—mow!' Bo*
cause he never read the newspapers till
tha euu went down behind the oalm tree,
and be, stretching himself, yawned out,
‘Isn't supper, ready, my dear?’ Not
he. Be made tha lire and hung the
kettle over it himself, we’ll venture,
and pulled the radishes, peeled the po¬
tatoes, and did everything ho ought to
do. Ha milked tbo cows, fed the chick¬ |
ens, looked after the pigs himself, and j
never brought half a dozen friends to j
dinner when Eve hadn’t any fresh I
poraegranites. He never stayed out till
M o'clock at night, and than scolded
because poor Eve was sitting up and
crying, inside the gates, lie never
leafed around the corner groceries while
Evo was at homo rocking Cain’s cradle.
Ho did not call Eve up from the cellar
to get his slippers and pot thorn in the
corner where he bad ieic thorn. Not
he. When ho took them off he put
them under the fig tree, beside his Sarto
day boots. Iu short, he did not think
she was especially created to wait ou
him, and wasn't under the impression
that it degraded a man to lighten a
wife's cares a little. That's the reason
Eve did not need a hired girl, and with
it was the reason her descendants did/
Prayer answered; A great many
people say what they don't mean in
their prayers. A Scotchman wont be¬
hind a fence to pray, and declared to
the Lord that if the fenco should fall
ou him it would be no more than he
deserved. At that moment a high
wind blew the fence on the petitioner.
He arose hastily from bis knees and
cried out in a frigbteuuri voice: ‘lioeb,
Lord! it’s an awful world this.! A body
canuii say a tbiug iu joke but it’s tu'ou
ia earueei.'
i Proverbs j ;i<* >)U|scr;: :'r?
- #
‘A 'Vl -*r. .» |* . lit trial father/
u ymn)pt-p-.iyi.)s» T-Meribor cans',
mb in editor m laugh #
‘Folly is j : v t is ddlt-itutfi of wis¬
dom., t>ut - doibquoiiR '•fibaeribor caus
eth h'.g m thu house of a news
pap r maker,
‘All tbo ways of a his#: are clear in
bis own eyes except life way the de¬
linquent his aubsenuer hath in not paying
for newspaper.
‘Better is a little withirighteousness,’
than a thousand subscribers who fail to
pay what they owe.
‘A just weight and balance are the
Lords’ but that which is due upon
your newspaper bolougs to the pub¬
lishers thereof.
'Better ia a dry morsel and quietness
therewith,’ than a long list of subscri¬
bers who cheat the pricier.
‘Better is the poor man tint waiketh
in integrity, ati j payebh his subscrip
tion than the rich man. jvho coiumualiy
leiioih your devil to calk-.tgain.
‘Judgements are bacf prqjtrod for scof¬
fers stripes for the of fools,’ and
everlasting punishment; for him whu
payeth not for Lis newspaper.
‘Hope deferred inakoth tho heartsick,
is a proverb sadly realised by the pub¬
lisher who soudot'h out hills.
‘A righteous map, f.ateth lying,’
hence the editor waxetii wroth against
the subscriber who promises to call and
settled ou tno morrow yet oalletb not
to settle.
I t hi toll) like a serpen't and stingeth
like tho adder,’ whon the adder gets
through adding up the amounts duo
from his subs. * mm
Jlow To Manage Him.
Husbands, my dear iftdies. can he
coaxed to do almost auy loing; hut it!
wi 1 not do to arivd them. If tlie wife
is fond of fo r otfL•'.F,,f me ho. ’u-ifi i
is tolerably certain to oe similarly in>
dined, and mutual misery is the result
Tnere should be but one wid with a
married couple who are traly uiAed,
and that should be tho will of—both, j
To those who know the sweet authority j
of love We this will not scorn like a para-! j
dux. have known couples—not so
could many as iruthluily wo could wish after —both of whom j J
say, a dozen or
twenty years walking of tho same long
path together, that they had had their
own way. because the necessary mutu¬
al yielding had been done so choeifuiiv
anu so wuoliy that but the one way ro
mainod The worst nf husbands, pro-,
vided ho is net dissipated of course,
can bo managed if you, lbs wife, Keep
him in love with you. When that is
done all tho rest follows. How it can
bo done we do not know; you ought to
if you know what ho loved you for in
the first place We do not moan sim
ply faithful and provident and kind, but
genuinely loving. Few mortals can
withstand the power of faithful loving
devotion’
Tho rico padding is beyond com pari
son fho best, over made in spito of tho
fact that it is the cheapest. Tha secret
of Us perfection For is tho long cooking it
gets. a six o'clock diuucr tha rice
and milt should bo put on tbo stove
early ia tho forenoon. Tho best thing
to cook it iu is a double kettle. Add
to a quart of milk two heaping table
spoonfuls of rice. Lot it simmer ou the
back of" the stove—it must never boil
—uui.il a couple of hours before dinner,
luwiii Hum bo a thick creamy sub¬
stance. Then salt ami sweeten to taste
put it into a pudding dish qud bake iu
a moderate oven until it is of a jelly
like thickness and ilia top is slightly
browned. It can bo oaten either hot or
cold. If the latter is prefsred the pud¬
ding may be made the day before if
that is most convenient. If desired a
flavoring may no added. This is em¬
phatically tho perfect pudding of its
kind. — Exchange.
Grape leaves make a yeast iu some
respects better than hops, as eba bread
rises sooner, and has not the pmuliar
taste which many object to in that
made from hops. Use eight or ten
leaves for a quart of yeast; boil them
ten minutes, and then pour the hoc
liquor on tho flour, the quantity of the
latter being determined by whether the
yeast is wanted thick or thiu Use bop
yeast to raise it to begin with, and af¬
terward that made of grape leaves.
Dried leaves will be good as fresh. If
a dark film appear upon tho surface
when raising a litlio Stirring will eb->
VlafC ft.
Blanks ol ail kiuds for sale at this office
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for vat or uvA r ri lego i d- •. • M- T iv-' -fon.
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April 2nd L v 6 u: s
CSC® PRSSEHTl
Vcc i. Maroino that will
J3 Ssaw Go as IWt aafl Etay
iij tMa cno.
**, vsz-r- -~v_g
L-Ai-p.-v*;. & y y/
Shis Is the Kin-r o’: L. .7 ilaoh'.ncs. Xi
saws off a 3 Toot las iu a raiantas.
80,000 ir. vca. '.Che cLoar.cat icochiue
mad©, and fully wi -rauted. 05 reuta r tree.
Oaltod Stalos UanufActuricrr Co. t ’ Ulcaqo, iiL.
4 Of will my mat! New a Book, copy fojfL^ g f
“MEDICAL COMMON SENSE.’’ rdllJu-jSmnMn pf eg g
s«ud FREE, his to any r.ixi person post-oliice who aduress, cents
in name aiiu as
To stamps to pay suHerinf pnsiasrc. with CONSUMPTION, _
ASTHMA. any one CATARRH, SOUK TlUtOVT,
or BRONCHITIS, the information m th s ltonl; o
of Rreat value; useful ui:«i lives. it may in the providence o£ CoU.
save manv A 348 Sailtli Address, tii.elnnall, U
UU. if- WOLFE, -M.,
$1500; ATO $20 No SHOOO risk. ad ay in A Women your YEAR, own do loon or a.- 85 lily. w«ll to
as men. Many make more
than t1»o amount stated above. No one can
fail to tn.iWumoney fast. Anv one can do the
work. You can make from 50 cts. to an j
hour by devoting your evenings and spare
time to tbo biisines.-. It costs notliiug to iry ,
tiie business. Nothing like it for money pleasant' m»
kmr; ever cfferro.i before. Ttusinrss
at*.d strietly honorable. Loader, if you tvant
to know all about the best paying business '
before the public, send us y*.ur ad-uxs.- and wc
will .send you lull particulars aud piivatoteriui
free; sumplcj worth $5 also free; you cau then
make up vour mind for yourself. Address
OEORUE STINSON AO., Portland, Maine, i
r};‘?; "A?"'fu’fggfi;ri:,"g '7 “wk
wi‘a”; * ‘5 .. W“ «0%:
42am ' J figé
“X i
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CF ALL
l k ii Ai i l! m m w %] FJ n
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FOP,
k \i Vi For more jpi t ! • ■ i :
, «' .'an
■ Hi
the orgy -.ul'o !•••!•. tor
WnecWent^ jli ami pa: . n a.
above price auu
l.iii*!. i’orevexx iouji.. t. ■riiul pain
tho
IgI Sbil 8
Mustang It I'et; Liniment ■ - . s t; is • vilhontnn iinavt<. equal. Vn[ h
ver;. i>it!n Ix.ilc— nutluiu; tho oo;.M
Xluiico of Hint il)!inn:.nt:t;<i:» i’uji.
J' si’Ue. Jia oaU-elu upon llnni.m «•
itjllie l.rulr <•£•*• .tion utv cq .ally wonilvr
I 'l’ho Mexican
•.,! -1 t V\ ’ *4 t ] ! A • M [ ; r ft p r> ,
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gij i-s > '*i - V-/ ) J Ll 0 v di Cd
if Liniment ia peiuU'd l>v somebody i
ji every tlu- house*. Uveiy t.ay briny news « . „
i tffouy of mi atvinl scald or ) uni
jj subdued, of rlivumutic martyrs vo* pjj
' hii stored, v eil by or the ti healing vahiaMc power Iioi of sv this nr ox ^ ”
Wi
! l which apeedilv cures such ailments of “I
'the IU .MAN FLliSH us X'
I ,, ii jautl Joints, KheumatUm, Cnntriicttd Ntvellfngs, Muscles, Hums Stiff\i X
ftculd s, <itts, Urul’iui I nii*Ii .....|
pprniiu, 1*<> i suit » I,note us Itites am! ■
Sores, ......................... Luers, Mess,
l'Toatbitn,fhilblaius.
Gore fsippies, (itked Breast, r. :>«i, ’
Miudceil every form of external dis- pd
rdjease. 11 For tho It heal.; Brute svithout Crcatiok scars. it
f.,1 cures rej
pFoandn, Sprains, Swintiy, Stiff Joints,
;ieases, liar ness Sores, Hoof tMs- >*.
'A Foot Hot, Screw Worm, Scab, P
llniinw llorii, Serotehes, Wiud
rathe Sores, Poll Evil, . ..... •ijmun
which Sight anil every other uiiiueutf
p| rafl to Stable .cl tho Stock occupants Vacd of the t hit '
!-j « i arc id.uliuent pJ
Walways The Mexican Mmhuig
and it is, cures i-.ivoly, ami never disappoints; jt 't
po.
i rri kjsLh *jqf cfoAn ouiLkJ yj BEST
cr ALL
pi n r« n 1 hri n rr; J ^ .It! n
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;;; (33 Gij
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m Cli BEAST,
iqmp.o m
April Huh,
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/ \VA> A "A- c/
FOR RAILROAD AND EXPRESS CO.ViPANiFS
LSTIMATES AND DRAWINGS t UriNISHLC
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Many _ of onr custom JPREfi. r» ma*ic Addrcvs, from r ’ »i*» * i *: <lcr»
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