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i,-' ;|l-t Vli?tel7 Om Irer Print?4 i: * i GA*jr6? F1*D THi WORD? $1- T^ii la-a^lnch display adven Lament la Plthfe paper, this weak, which has no two words -*f VW*a.Wcept one word. The same is true of (i MKb new on^ app^ariiy; each week, from The : fit* Harter Moo klaeCb. ThisUoase piac** a .j;; -Cn#acant,*en everyfliaTthey make and pub ?JMU Look for If. send them the name or the i|r wow wd they wil. ret am you book, bzavtu V9b&tTHO0RAFUS or sajcplss rstaa. 'I; ? ffcoatote Paib oflfcual* at Chicago a ra Yr;{?catat?d' over-aa apparent insufficiency of Bfm&ritabic iiowluer*. Accept in_-; reported measurements, trie Iarj$e?t erratic block. or ?ho^I<ier, as yc-: " recagnizcc. in the United States a:i { pfrobubly ia the work!, i* in the town of Malison, Ji. H.? antf, according to Pro fessjar Crosbj, of tb^ Boston Instieuteo: ot "K* ieet; heigh! content*. 0'>,0WJ cubfc! feet; and prob able *eignt, 309,01 rj pounds, or 7, ,$5$ low. Xeit to this :n size is undoubted I y tfce '&greifrock m the town of MoatviHe,Xew jL&adon County, Connecticut, generally knar* a by its Indian designation "Sheegae , " and also %<* 4 1 Mohc^aa. " In the opinion of some, this rock is an ; isolated -granite protuberance, and not a true ?'erratic" or bowlder; but recent ex awaic itions havo seemed to completely negative the first aupposidon. Its ap proximate maximum dimensions nrei t I?eugi.\ 75 feet; width, 5S feet; height, ?0 feet; eo?teSitsr 7^,000 cubic feet; wdgjbt, 6000 ton.?.*Ff allowance bo made for i.n' jpns^asc fragment which has fallen from its northeast side, the di mensions and cubic contents of "Shee? gan*' wouid approximate more cloaeiy to those of the Madison bowi ier. One point that ;?oes far toward surwtantiatjpj the daicc on behalf of the "aheegaa'7 rock that it is a true bowlder, is th>; number ^ of tjstfoubted bowlders of an immense size! aid of the saroejnaaite which exist |n comparative proximity. ? Fop u: as Seance Monthly. J f Albania' a Democratic Convention. H, Montgomery , special says: The Oeffixxratic Ex^rutive Committee; met ; litt callatfT^e State Convention to = '' aomiaade candidates for Governor and t&u$c otiicers aad ta elect delegates to* s^tJktional Convention fo* Junecd. | ' ?-? Kr j ^ ; ? Mt*. Pant Hamilton Hayne, widow of Souths famous poet, died ir. At beta j week, - Mrs. iiayne wa& Mias Slitchcl of Jjouih Carolina. Her father wai a sur : gco& in Napoleon's army. -JrCrtppi Oecejnber pAb, I waa confined to my the <ir:ppe. The Treasurer of Cooraterelal Advertli*?r" recommend i thou'd try, a bottle of "Aycr'j FectoraJ " as It had cured him of tlie eompfalnt. I sent for a bottle, ao<l in U4ya I w^jrablc to rename my buainc^a, am now entirely cored. ItooJr.no ofher remedy, I can but sive credit to the "Cherry I'ectoxai," gratefully recommend as a spfdy tor this disease. Tours very truly* F. T. IiARKtsoy, "3 Park Row, Xew York. X. T. farmer )aa been acquitted a book aginfc who persisted in Look on hi 'ii. AJp> HOARSZ.NBSS.? The irritation induces couching imm^-.iafoiy retiev U^e of "Brotcrn? j Bronchitis Troches. ' Oldr ? boxes. . lata Duke of Devonshire, owned 13:i, of E^ogU h land, lying in fourteen The mmt roll o? bis estate amounts year. aa'tvPlLLS enjoy the liir^est sale of j. ? y nie Uiine in the wor:d . ffeieau, Extgland. ^Oea cfcrta, typewriters and book rar, Col., have combined in a labor eggwiatlon. tepure of thin Biooi, Wenkr.ov. \a i?. /adieeHiioo, aad B>ii<>u<-n?**, (? Bikers? it givee* strength, f<?ona feci ;oung? and youag i taaaant to take. rOrlWM mint iii turning out ICO, iiProfit :-.Wl . F. Kltiroth, an esteemed Irteacbcr in the town of Morrow, itatea his case so clearly thatnc ^_jent is necessary, farther than fo ttotik?e raa^iOiihi and out o! health, and Do Likewise 1 SUMS add my aao* to the Uat of grateful for benefit derived from tt has been worth $100 a aw- in the (oQovmg manner, ^ta. : I have tdool for S yean. last fall I became harf-no appetite, cealdn't itfeep at aad bMsia* to detrfBtetedtaatr it wa? im tn perton* my duty u a teacher. 1 My Resignation ta two week*, but I was penaaded to mapartBa. WitUn a week I so _ that fi oontlnoed my school sad am 'ateffl rh**?^*xJ two bottles aad feel like a aad hairs ovqr $300 dear from 1 2 spent W. f. ELTZ80TK. Hood's 8arsapari1la tmH Mood pBrifie?, the beat strength builder, ai HO telperj," Olre B a trial c a Ft flay the best fsaafly cathartic. ICE SO WoKET F ' you wouU protect voursctf f rom Painful, Profose, "Scanty, i4ippf?$scd or Irregular Men struation you must use BR ADFI ELD'S FEMALE REGULATOR THE FAR# ANt> GARDEN. RONE MAXURE^FOR HENS. There is phosphorus ia eggs as well as lime in their sh^fcl?. The lack of these materials in wiater is often one reason i why hens do not lay well. We have feed the commercial phospaate to hens, mixed with ;zrain, and they ate the first almost as greedily as toe other. But ground bone is cheaper as well as better. The gizzard will grind it so thit the hen will get most or the good available fr >iu it. ? Jyjsfxrn CuUixnt/yr. ENSILAGE IN BARRELS. An inquiry has been made in fegard to keeping ensilage in barrels, for the u>e of poultry. It is too late now to {,ut ii|> ensilage, but ij the barrel is strong and will resist the required pres sure, there is nothing to preveat the the s^or.i M; of cut corn, green clover, ^iiw, raobige or any other material; but the previurc m:ist be sufficient to entirely exclude the air, as fermentation, should it result, will destroy the con tents of the barrel. ? Farm and Fireside. ? SPIDER* I!T THE CO>^ERVATOB?. We oftea heard of red spiders in con nection with piint3, and what an amount' of damage is caused by them. But it should not be inferred from this that all spkkrs are injurious to plants. The so calk-d red spiders which are jbor.aful to' ptosis, are not true sliders j but are a* ipecies of mite ? sma*!, indeed ? but mighty o?ten iu numbers and eject. The true spiders, such as spin visible webs and are found in dar.-: corncrs about buildings, are predacoms in their habit.-*, and live upon flies and such in-? sects as may prove injuriou; to vtgeta tior. Their presence may" not be apprc. ciated, becausc o? the prejudice which* many have against them, bat they ace' j frieu h in the conservatory rather vhan foes. Th?v should not be classed with the little mite known as red spider.? LaJietr Urns Gompinbn. THE HEAT OF A HOTBED. There is one necessary element of growth in the germination of seeds (this will be fully explained on another -Occa sion) besides moisture and warmth, and this is air. If a seed is buried too deep ia the soil it doe3 not germinate. This is a matter of common experience, as when land is plowed deeply f,y dug up from a considerable de^th, seeds ger minate that have laic m the ground foo many yean. Almost all seeds contain a Urge proportion of oil, and this is a pro vision of nature for their preservation. This oil reiists decay and prevents rot ? tin? of the'seeds. The manure from an old hotbed spread out on the surface of the ground the next spring will almost al ways produce i?any weeds, and e3j>ec ially grasfc and closer, the seeds of which have remained sound in it from the year before. The same is true of a an lire heaps a year old. ? New York Times. POTATO VISE BOREK. Ia the past five or *ix rears there has appeared in this section, writes Dr. A. G. Chase of Kansas, an enemy of the po tato that is seriousiy affecting the yield. It is a borer, about fn inch and a quar ter long by two lines in diaraater, pink ish brown on the back,* with a fight yel low, narrow stripe on the sides. Indeed, I think there may be more tbaa one kind of these borer*, although I have never found but this one in the potato; but' I have found* another and different wirrf in squash and pumpkin-vines and in the common ".careless" or hog weed, hs it is of tea r alio. I. la the potato vine they do their work chiefly from the middle of June to July 1U> They generally enter, a few inches above the ground and work up and down, holloaing out the pith and, pushing their chips out through the ^ntracce hole, like the hickory and other wood borers, and the vine soon dies. With the early crop of potatoes thei* work does little damage, but second eariy and late ? unless very late?' he ; reduce the yield from one-fourth to oue-hatf, by checking the growth. Ic my potatoes this year every third or fourth hill had a borer, and mm/ of the vine* were dead Au just 1 that ought to have beau in vigorous growth. I am not an entomol ogist to recognize the moth, or to hatch tf?e worm. I have thought that two or three sprayings of the vine* with Paris green might prevent the laying of the egg; or, wiiat is more prolxlble, two or three tiptgpugh dusting* pith insect pow der, bvU I have not tried either. ? Amer icanj&fricuUurut. COUNTRY BF.EF CLX'BS. We ustd to be fooli-'u enough, in this j neighborhood ? Philadelphia, Mo. ? to ! -sell all our nice fat beef to the butcher ! for city people to eat, and we would eat ; Ofd saiiy bacon, except Late in the tall 1 we would kill our winter beef. That way is channel now. We have, in this neighborhood an J other neighborhoods j in this county, organized beef club?, which annually kill fifty to sixty beeves, inside of a ra I! us of eight mile?, 'oefore freezing weather comes. Usually eight person* or families agree to furnish a yearling heifer. Then Eone one is chosen or agrees to do the killing, divid ing and keying of booksi, and is paid by the elub $1.25 to $1.50' for each beef killed au I thus divide J. If, in cascone ehhth of a beef is too much for one famdy, they either sell par; or take in another partner. We begin killing about the middle of September, or as soon as "nights are c>oi enough thor oughly to cool o5 the bfeef. We kilf yearling heifers because th*y make bet ter beef than steers, and sire not worth as mttcb money. Heifcrsj sell at two cents and two and one -quarter cents per pound, gross. That makes our beef net us four to four and one-half rent-!, and gives us a chance to get rid of a I bad colors and low grade cattle. ? Journal of Ayricuilur&r i-/ j ^ ?! o T3P. HESSIAN* PLY. The Hessian 8y has more or Ica^. in- ! Tested the wheat rlelds of many o.r the ; States during a r period exceeding 100 i fears. It is au imported insect and its in- ] {reduction about the time of the landing j >f the -Hessian troops in Revolutionary ; times has le 1 to. its name. Professor F. M. Webster, now cos-suit ing entomologist at the Ohio Station, de scribes the insect as a smill two-wiagei fly about one-eight 'i of aa inch, long and yf a dusky ca!o:, appearing during May i and J one anr i a^a:a in September and | October. The eggs aw deposited on -the ! . ????r s^e tlje leaves a?*d the young I as Jioo?) ? they hatpfcl make tue;r way j : P';iat behind the sheath to near 1 . the lower }oi?t there l?e~o /ne im -I ??<l<*etf m the soft part of the stem, .tftr > | they Wtss the winter and summer; hi the j for.a_. ca*e sa .he youa;j wheit% and ia ! the latter case ia toe stubble. The adults appear aau the eggs are deposited a> ' ; dates varying with the latitude, bein ' ' ear.icr ia the fall to the north Vwl iater to the southward. After the fl? i has gained possession of a Seld no reme ; cly is knowa thac witt destroy it. Among the preventive measures are f terwiag the stubble, late sowing aad ro : ta tioa of cro;js. Toe idea of late sowing iVto rMart toe plants so Voudt do j not appear catil after the grater pea* of [the laul hrooiof dies havh appears 3 aad v'ira, when, if s v.vn vwth ferGhzers, the may overc^r^sthe effect of this de b^ore wiaiec closer ia. Pashms*: '---V eariy sown wheat in the fall may destroy many of the maggots and egge. This insect suffers much from the at j tacks of minute parasites, and Professor j Riley, of the Department of Agriculture, has, during the year, imported fromEag ' laiida foreign species, of these parasites, some of which, hy his instruction, have ! ; been turned loose in the fields in the vi cinity of Columbus, with the hope th? they wiil become established in toe State. ^ ? Sew York. World. I ; -S FARM AKD GARDEN NOTES. Don't unnecessarily expose the horse : to storms and wind. It is believed that there is danger in breeding from blind mares. Save the best bay for the season "when your horses will have to work hardest. The best poultry breed is the one you have tested aud tried and is best adapted to your purpose. Two by four-inch scantlings placed , two feet from the ground or lioor make perches for fowLs. Pekin ducks are easily raised, grow rapidly, and make ilesh twice as fast as a fast-growing chicken. A breed generally has oulv one dom inant talent and seldom excels in more than one characteristic. By keeping fowls through the winter i in good condition their usefulness in the spring i? greatly increased. [ It is estimated by good authority that I good average comb wiil yjjcld from sixty ! ta eighty per cent, pure beeswax. Put away jour surplus be3 supplies where moth will not destroy empty couibs? and they should be kept in a dry place. The ignorant 1 "boss doctor" should be given a wide berth. The educated veterinarian knows little enough' about his dumb patients. In all cases of fistulu or poll -evil, it is well to give a constitutional as well as local treatment. A sore like these must affect the blood more or less. . j It does a team no good to let it stand tied to a hitching-pos&, with the thermom - eter ten decrees below zero, an opinion which everybody will endorse, i It is reported that there are in the United States 10,000 bee-keepers having 500 colonies. A very prominent bee isecper seems to doubt the statement. * i Poultry raising as aa exclusive business has only in exceptional cases proved a success; tue principal dependence for both eggs and poultry is upon tiio farmer. There are rmgbone3~ that cannot be cared, unless a skilled veterinarian exam ines the case; however, there is no way to tell that, except by trying the usuii remedies of blistering and firing. A reliance on old and tried varieties ol fruits is the proptr thing for a novice in fruit culture... Many of these old fraits are as prolific and profitable as they were a generation ago. Let the scientists and the n?teerymendo the experimenting, i Treat the dog well if yo t are deter mined to keep Vim. Feed him such foods as will satisfy the whole system. ! We have little -douot -that soma dogs are ? led to kill sheep because the system I craves for nourishment that it dotis not ! g? There's not a farm where grain has been feci, especially cotton, or huseel meal, but the evidence may be read in the fertility of the soil. These grains are so rich ia plant foon that the ani mals take but a small per cent, in its passage through the body. If you kno w that d i n and sire are without weaknesses, we would siy to a correspondent, there is no danger in close iubreedin:;. Tae trouble, is that^it. is difficult to know that. It is not to be forgotten that our improved breeds are largely the result of inbreeding. Some men will plow and work arouii a bowlder for half a lifetime. The cheapest way to dispos? of it, if it is too large to be hauled off, is to dig a pic an! topple it over into it. We have seea many an unsightly, botbeoo ne stoud effectually disposed of in this way. Pigs-eannot be grown profitably on whey alone, but when fed with cnrnmeal and shorts there is a marked saving. Seven pounds of whey about equal one of cornmeai when they are fed together, and therefore when the former is worth twelve dollars per ton whey it worth eight cents per hundred. A growinghog will, if of good breed, increase fully one pound in weight every cav of its life. If it does this it i3 pretty sure to leave a profit over cost of i seeding aside from its addition to the , manure pile. If it does n^t, dispose of it in some way. and get pigs that will do this. Tnere are several breeds that can ! be fed with prorit an ! the grades of i these for feeding are goo 1 as the pure j blood. Tho World's Largest Telegraph 02ic.\ The biggest telegraph offb.e in the world is that of London. Ic is lociteJ in the general po'stoffice building, and is not accessible to the general public. It contains more than time thousand o;>erators, and its batteries are supplie I bya plant of 30,000 cells, or enough to \ make three solid glass rows of cells irorn the Capitol to the White House. Tnis i office does more business than a'iy ofljee ? in the United States. It dispatches itV' business much quicker and inure quietly than our oinees do, aid its main opera ting room is not half so noisy a* the main otiice of the Western Union Com pany in New York. Of these 3000 oper ators about 1000 are women. They have a loom to themselves, and they do their work with American Morse in struments with registers anJ p iper re$ls. In the other "parts of the office ail sorts of instrument* are used, and the Hughes printing instruments are tho most popu lar. In the big telegraph operating room of Paris 1000 operators are at work. Nearly one-halt of these are wo men. The day operators work only seven hours, while tue night operators work tea hours, but they get bigger pay thaa those who work during the day. ? P'UUburg^ DUpatch. -Q ? V "Iloriisiroggled." 'Til 1e'l you what seems so funny to me," said Hotel Clerk Cnrmack, '-and ? that is, how some people can be so easily ; 'herns* oggled' about what they eat and j ' drink. . | '?But what does 'Lornswoggied* mean, j Mr. Carmack V '' '"Well, it is a Gieek word and an i Andalusran w<ad crmbined. 'Horn' ! means to give an order .asd 'swoggled' I means that you don't really getwhat'you *i '?rder. Now, for instincej I heard a mat* the other v ay in a restaurant order j broiled n?ackcre!. A cooked mackerel was la.d before the man r?n I he ate it r- w.th sreat re?iiht op ray ifceciaring that 'broiling' is t he only way in t he world to cook rr.ac'serel. Noiw that man was 'horns*. o;rgletr sure, for the mackerel ?was net eroded at alL It is too much \ troob.e to bro:i a iis-j, so t":e cook pats it in a pun an ] fries it a ad then ma'ses burnt lines across it witti a jred-hot pokec. That makes it iook as if t5^e tish I tatu just left the broiler."? Philadelphia ring anyone 11 L 1 J [ REV. DR. TALMAGE, I - The Brooklyn Dftine's Sun day Sermon. ? Text: m There teas sUence in heaven | about the space of half an howr.n ? Revela tion viii., 1. The busiest place ia the uniyerseis heaven. It is the center from which all good in fluences start. -It is~the goal at which all good results arrive. The Bible represents it as active with wheels and wings and orches tras and processions mounted-or charioted. Bnt my text describes a apace when th* wheels ceased to roll, and th? trumpets to sound, and the voices to chant. The riders on the white horses reigned in their chargers. The doxologies were hut&ed and the processions halted. The hand of arrest was put upon all the splendors. "Stop, heaven f cried an omnipotent voice, and.it stopped. For thirty minutes everything celestial stood still. 'Tiiera was silence in heaven for half an hour n .from all we can learn it is the only time' heaven ever stopped. It does not stop as other cities for the night, for there is no night there. It does not stop for a plagu". for the inhabitant never says, **I am sick." It does not stop for bankruptcies, for its in habitants never fail. It does not stop for impassable street", for there are no fa'.lea snows nor sweeping rreshets. \V hat, then, stopped Jt for thirty minutes? Grotius and Professor Stuart think it was at the time of the destruction of Jerusalem. Mr. Lord thinks it was in the year 311. tertween the close of the Diocletian persecution and the beginning of the wjrs by which Constantino gained the throne. But that was all a guess, though a learned and brilliant guess. 1 do not know when it was and 1 do not care when it was, but of the fact that such an in terregnum of sound took place, am cer tain . '"There was silence m heaven for halt an hour " - And first of all we may learn that God and all heaven honored silence. The longest and widest dominion that ever existed is that over which stillness was queen. For an eternity there had not been a souni. World making was a later day -occupation. For unimaginable ages it was a mute uni verse. Gol was the only being, and as there was no one to speak to there was no utterance. But that si;euce has beeu all broken up into worlds, and it has become a noisyuniver*. Worlds ia upheava.?, worlds in congelation, 'worlds in" bonflagratioo, worlds in revolution. If geologists are right ?and I believe they are? there has not been a moment of silence since this workl began its travels, an 1 the crashings, and the * splittings, and the uproar, and the hub bub artf.ever in progres3. $ But when among the supernals a voice cried, "Hushf ana for half an hour heaven was still, silence was honored. The full power of silence many of us have yet to learn. We a*e told that when Christ was arraigned, "He ans were.! not a word." That silence was louder thai\ any thunder that ever .shook the world. -oftentimes, when we are assailed and misrepresented, the might iest thing to s&y is nothing, and the mightiest thing to do is nothing. Those people who are always rushing into print to get themselves set right accomplish nothing but their own ciiagnn. Silence ! Do right and leave the results with God. Among the grandest lessons the world has ever learnel are the lessons of patience taught by those who endured uncomplainingly personal or domestic or socia! or political injustice. Strouger than any bitter or sarcastic or revengeful answer was the patient silence. The famous Dr. Morrison, of Chelsea, ac complished as much by his silent patience as by bis pttg and tongue. He had asthma that for twenty-five years brought him out of his couch at two o'clock each morning. His four sons and daughters dead. The remain ing child by sunstroke made insane. Tna - afflicted man said, "At this moment therd is not an inch of my body that is not filled with agony." Yet, he was cheerful, trium phant, silent. Tiiose who were in his pres ence said they felt as though they were in the gatea of heaven. Ob, the power of patient silence! Eschy Jus, the immortal poet, was condemned to death for Writing something that offended the people. All "the pleas in his bshatf were of no avail, until his brother uncovered the' arm of the prisoner and showed that his hand had been shot off at Salamis. Tbat siknt plea liberated him. The loudest thing on earth is silence if it be of the right kin i and at the right time. There was. a quaint old hymn, spelled in the old style, and once sung in the churches; j, The race Is not forever got dj mm a-j isciee: ran?, \ Nor the Battel by ihoa peopett That shoot with the longest zaa*. My friend?, the tossing Sea ol Galilee j seemed most to offend Christ by tne amount 1 of noise it made, for He said to'it, "Be stiil !" ] Heaven has been crowning kings and queens | unto God for. many centuries, yet heaven never stopped a moment for any such occur rence, but it stopped thirty minutes for the coronation of Silence. "Phftre was silence in heaven for half an hour." Learn also from my text that heaven must be an eventful" and active place, from the fact that it could afford only thirty minutes or recess. There have been events on earth and in heaven that seemed to demand a whole day or whole week or whole year for celestial consideration. If Grotius was right and this silence occurred at the time of the destruction of Jerusalem, that scene was so awful and so prolonged that the inhabitants of heaven could not ^ave done iustice to i\ in many weeks. Arter leartui Das; element or tne two tor Iressesof Jerusalem? Antonio and Riopicus ? had bc. en going on for a long while, a Roman soldier mounted on the shoulder of another soldier hurled ia?o the window of the tem ple a firebrand and the temple was ail aflame, and afw^covering many sacrifices to the holiness oT God, the building itself became a sacriiice to the rage of man. The hunger of the people in that city during the besiegement was so great that as some out laws were passing a doorway and inhaled the odors of food, they burst open the door, threatening the mot nor of the household with death unless she gave them food, and j she took them aside and showed the u it was her own child she was cooking for the gnast- 1 ly repast. Six hixndred priests were destroyed on. Mount Zion because the temple being gone j there was nothing for them to do. Six thou- j sand people in ons cloister were consumed. ! There were one million one hundred thou- j sand dead, according to Joseplius. Grotius . t inks that this was the cause of silence in ; heaven for half au hour. If Mr. Lord was j right and this silenc.} was during the Diocie- [ tian persecutions, by which etght hundred j and forty-four thousan I Christians suffered ! death from svpord and lire and banishment and exposure, why did not heaven listen j throughout at ieast one of th">se awful years? ] No! Thirty minutes! Tlio fact is that thi ! -"'celestial programme is so crowded with spec- ] jaete toat it can afford only one recess in ail ! tternity and that for a short space. White there are ?reat choruses in which all heaven can join, each sou! there has a \ :-torv cf divine mercy peculiar to itse'.f au 1 ~vt must lea i?olo. llow can heaven get through with ail its recitatives, with all j its canto?, with all its grand marches, with all its victories? Eternity is too short to utter all the praisr. In my t:-xt heaven spared thirty minutes, but it wili never again spare one minute. In worship in earthly churches, wnen there are many to take part, we have to counsel brevity, but how will heaven get on rapidly enough to Jet the one hundred and forty-four thou sand get through each with his own story, ; and then the one hundred and forty-four million, and then the one hundred and forty-four billion, an i then the one hundred and forty -four trillion. toXot only are all the triumphs of the past be commemorated, but all th? triumphs to come. Not only what we i:o-.v know of God, lot wbat we wili know of Him after i veras-tine study of the L>eitic. If juy text had said t ere was silence in heaven for thirty days, JL would not have been startled at the announcement. but it indicates t-Uirty mi?>utes. Why. there will be so many friends t ) hunt up; so many of the greatly good and useful that we will want to see; so many of the inscrutable things of earth we will need explained; so many exciting earthly exper iences we will wan: to talk over, and all the ?' other spirits and all thi a^es will want the ?ame,that there will be no more opportunity for cessation. *" How busy we will be kept in having pointed out to us ttie hnsrees an f heroines that the world neve^ fully appreciated ? the yetfonr fever and cholera doct>r.s wbi died, not fiym^ from their po-t4; th ? female nurse^who faced pestilence in the lazarettos: the railroad engineer* who staid at th:*:r places in orier to save ths ti'am t!-->u.;h they themselves perished iinbirt Gofliu, the master miner, who, san'ting fnrn tne bucket at ill? b:?ttom of. the mine, just as he bear 1 the watjrs rush ax, and when one jerk of tbe rope would have lifted him into safety, put a Wind miner who wanted to go to his'sick child in the tucket and jerked the ro:>? for him to be vn led up, crying. *?fe!! them the water Las bar st ift^nd weare^pbabb- lost, out w at-will seels refnge at the other end ot tbe right gal leryr1 andjhen giving the oomataud to the other miners tiil they digged themselves so near out that the people from the 'outs ids ?pouid conie to their rescue. The multitudes | of men and women who got no crown on | earth we wiH want to see"' when :thety get .< | their crown in heaven. I tell yod heaven j wili aav^j no more half hours ta sjJsire. I Besides that heaven i?'< 1WT of ibildren. They are in the vast majority. No child on earth that amounts to anything can bo kepi , quiet half an bpur, and how are yoa going to kdep five hundred million of them quiet half 4u hour, p You know heaven is much mor/oi a p \gt* than it was when that recess of tnirtv njfcutes occurred. Its population ' has q^irupled, .sextupled, centupled. Heaven, fcas more on hand, more of rapture, more ofefcuoyvidse. more of intercommunica tion, more of worship. * There is not so much difference between Brooklyn seventy-five years ago, when there were a few-houses down on the East river and the village reached up only to Sandi street, i?s compared with what this great city is now? yea, not so much difference be tween New York when Canal street was far up town, and now when Canal street is far down town, than there is a difference be tween what lieaveu was when my text was written and what heaven is now. The most thrilling place we have ever been in is stupid compared with that, and if we now have no time' to spare we will then have no eternity to spare. Silence in heaven only half an hour. My subject a'so impress me with the im mortality of & halt" hoar. That half hoar mentions! in n>y text is more widely known ? than any oth.^ period in the calendar of heaven. N(5Ere^of the whole hours of heaven are measured off. none of the years, none of the centuries. Of the millions of ages past and the millions of age* to come not one is especially measured off in the Bible. The half hour of ray text is made immortal. The only part of eternity tihat was ever measured bv earthly timepiece was measured by the minute baud of my text. Oh, the half hours I The 7 decide every thing. 1 am not asking' 4fcat you will do with the years or raoathsuor days of your life, but what of the half hours. TeU me the history of your half hours and I will teJl you the stery of your whole life on earth and the story of youi* whole life in eternity. The right or wrong things you can think in thirty minutes, the right or wrong things you can say in thirty minutes, the right or wrong things you can do in thirty minutes are glorious or baleful, inspiring or desper ate. Look out for the fragments of time. They are pieces of eternity. It was the half hours between shoeing horses that made EHhu Burritt the learned blacksmith; the half hours between pro fessional calls as a physician that made Abercroinbie the Christian philosopher; the half hours between his duties as school master that made Salmon P. Chase chief justice; the half hours between shoe lasts that made Henry Wilson vica president of the United States; the half hours between canal boats that made James A. Garfield president. " The halt' hour a day for good books or bad books, the half hour a day for prayer or in dolence, thelhalf hour a day for helping others or bUming others, the half hour be fore you go' to** business and the half hour alter your rdfeirn from business ? taat makes the difference between the scholar and the ignoramus, between the Christian and the infidel, between tbe saint and Jhidepion, be tween triumph and catastrophe, between heaven and hell. The most tremendous things of your life and mine were certain half hours. The half hour when in the parsonage of a country minister I resolve 1 to become a Christian then and there; the half hour flphen 1 decided to become a preacher of the Gospel : the half hour when I first realised that my ton was dead ^t he half hour when I stood on the top of my house in Oxford street and saw our church burn; the half hour in which ? eutered Jerusalem, the half hour in which I ascenced Mount Cal vary ; t'ae half hour in which I stood on Mars hill; the half hour in which th3 dedi catorv praver of this templB was made, and\ about ten or liftmen olher half hours are the chief times of my life. You may forget the name oi the exact years or most of the ira portaniTvents of your existence, but those half hours, like the hulf hour of my text, wili^ beimmorca'. . I do not query what you will do with the Twentieth century. I do not % query what vou will do with 1*S9>, but what will you do with tbe next half hour? Upon that hinges vour destiny. And during that some of y<Ju will rcceive the Uospsl and make complete surrender, and during that others of you will make final ami fatal rejection of the full and tree an l urgent an I impassioned offer of life eternal. Oh, that the next half hour might be t ie most glorious thirty inin utesof your earthly existence. 1 Far back iu history a great geographer stood with a sailor looking at a globe that represented our planet, an I he pointed to a place on the globe where he thought there was an undiscovered continent. That un discovered continent was Am;rica. The geographer who pointed where he thought there was a now world was Martia Behaiin, and tbe sailor to w horn he showed it was Columbus. This last was not satisfied till ho had picked that gem out of tne sea and set it m the crown of the world's geography. Oh, ye who have been sailing up and down the "rou rh seas of sorrow and sin, let me point out to you anotner comment:, yea, anocner u?>ri'', thai you may yourselves find a rap turous worl ;. and that is tbe world a half hour of which we now study. Ob, set sail for it ! Hero is the ship and here are the compasses. In other wori?, ninke this half hour, be ginning at twenty minutes to twelve by my vatch, the grandest half hour of your life and bf-come a Christian. Vray for a regen erated spirit. Louis XIV, while walking in the garden at Versailles, met Mansaf-d. the treat architect, and the architect took off his hat before t he k jug. "Fut 011 your hat," sard the king, ".'or the evening is damp and cold.*' And Mansard, the architect, the rest of the evening kept on his hat. Tae dukes and marquises standing with bare heads be fore the king expressed their surprise at Mansard, but the king said, "I can make a duke or a marquis, but God only can make a Mansard. " And 1 say to you, my hearers, God only by His convincing andconverting grace can make a Christian, but He is ready this very half hour to accomplish it. Again ray test suggests a way of studying ? heaveu ?o that we can batter uudersttnvl it. The word "eternity*' that we handle so much is an immeasurable word. Knowing that we could not uutTyrstaud that word the Bible uees it only once. We say, "Forever and e^erf but how iong is "forever and everr" lam (rial; that ray text puts under ?our eyes heaven for thirty minutes. As when you would see a great picture yoa put a sheet of paper into a scroll and look through it. or join your fftiefinger to your thumb and loo'x through the circl6 between, } in 1 th^ picture becomes more intense, so this masterpiece of heaven by St. John' is more impressive wh .-n we take only thirty minutes of it at a time. No-v we have some thing that we can come nearer to graspin-, and it is a quiet heaven. W hen wo d^ourse a bout the multitudes of heaven it Sfcst be almost a nervous shock to those who have all their lives be^.j crowde \ by many peo ple and who want a quiet heaven. For the last thirty- live years I have b?en ranch ot the time in crowds and under public scrutiny and amid excitements, and I have sometimes thought for a few weeks after I reach heaven I would like to go down in some ouiet purl or tiii realm with a few friends and tor some little while try com parative solitude. V^'hea tbero are those whose hearing is s"? ceifcuite that they get ?o sat i>f action when you de>nub^ the crash of the eterna' orcb.tj.-trn. and t aey'TwtJike ing, as a good woman in Hudson, r^vY , said, after hearing in.* sp.-ak ot' the mignty chorus of heaven. ** That must be a great heaven, but what will become pt my p$or head?' Yes, tins half hour of my text Jt a ' still experience. "Ther^ was M.'ence in heaven for half an hour." You wilt find tbio inhabitants all at home. Enter the King's Palace and take only a gHutn^, for we have only thirity min utes for all dtav./o. -'Is that Jetus?" 4'Yes.w Just under the hair aiong H is forehead is the mark of a wound made by a bunch of twisted bramble-, an 1 His foot on the throne has on the round of ills instep another marie of a wound made by a spike, and a scar on the palm of the l?it hand. But what a j countenance! What a smile! What a . grandeur! What a loveliness! What ? an overwhelmi"; look of kindness i and jrrace! Way. He lodes as if j He had rede :n--vt a world! But come on, lor our time is -ho:*!. lJ-.> you see that row of ?places? That is the A;x>*toii'_* row. Do ! ySu see t'l-it ivaca of architectural glories? That is Xir.rcvr row. Llo yo? set that immei.'S * -tru'-tu:^-? T aat ii the big* - t gest house m heav en; that is Vcbe House of St any Mansion.-." i>:< you see that wall? Shade your ey to agaias* its biirfltag splen-i dor, for that is the tvail of heaven, jasper ?alt the bottonk an I amethyst, nt toe top4 Sea this river rolling tarou.ro *?;? heart of ?he great mtrtropolu? That b the river concerning wLicii those who once lived on ? h*i banks of; the Kuison, or the Ala ia<na, or th* Ilhin,* or the ^hannoa :-av, "We. never su v the like of this i or clarity mil sheen." That is tbs ci>*.ef r;v-r <~>f h^riVt-ji ? .-o bniht. >?.> wj le. :o ; <5eep. But vou a-ic. 4 -Where ar-.? inj ns-yiums ;<>;? tiii old?"' 1 answer. "Th-j , iunabitaiits .are a 1 young." "Where are th<? hcs'j:ia.- lor tcie lanii?'' "l'ney are all asile." ' Where are th- .infirmaries for too Unit! and dea ?' "Tuev aiji see and hear J' '? A' here axe tue almhouses for the Ppor?' "Tney are a!i multimillionaires."' u Where are the inebriate asyjefuasr*!.- **Whyt there j are no saloons."' "*Yhx*re fcre the grave vardsf" ''Why, they never die." Pass down those boulevards of * goli and j amber and sapphire an?f see those [ * interminable streets bails by ' the Archi- I j tect 'of the universe into ho:netv oyer the 1|Lre>hold of/ whicn sorrow t nfcver steps, ao&outof whofe windows -races, r ebce paift w.ijh earthly sickness, now Iook r jibknnd witb inimcrcal health. "Oh, Jtotl P Hie go in acd see. thesn?" ywfeiay. W?' canrSotgo & 'there are tnow there' wno > would never consent to let- you oome up. ! You say. "Let me stay here in this place ? where they nev?r an, where ther never suf fer, where they never pert." No, no! 9ur time is short, our thirty minutes are almost gone. Come oo 1 We muit get back to the earth before this half hour of heavenly silence breaks up, for in your mortal state you can* not endure the pomp and splendor and reso nance when this half hour of silence is ended. The day will come when yon oansee heaven in full blast, but not no*. I am now only showing you heaven at tf^j r.ullest half hour of all the eternities. Com ?S*u ! There is something in the celestial appearance which makes me think that the half hour of silence will soon be over. Yonier are the whits ^ horses being- hitched to c'lariota, au 1 yonder are seraphs tin^erin;* harps as if about to strike them into symphony, and youier ara conquerors taking do*va tro:u th j blua halls or hwvor th?* trunaoets of victory. Remember, we are mortal yet, and cannot endure the full roR of heavenly harmonies and cannot endure even tao sLlent heaven i for more than half an hour. Hark! the dock in <tt>e -tower of heaven l*;?ns to strike and the half hour is euded. Descend ! Come back! Corns dawn till your work is done! Shoulder a little longer your bur-lea?! Fi;ht a little Ion ?er your battles! Weap a little longer your griefs! And then take heaven, not in its dulilest half hour, but in its.| mightiest pomp, and instead of taking it for thirty minutes take it world without i-nd. j< ' But how will you spend the first half hour of ypur heavenly citizenship after you have gone in to stay? Alter your prostration be fore the throre in worship of Him who made it poesibb) for you to get there at all, T think tr?? rt*t of vom* first half hour in heaven will be passe i la reaving your re ward if you ha^e been faithful. I have a strangely beautiful bojk containing the pic tures of the medals struck by tie Ea;lUh | Covwfcment in honor of great l>attles; thise medals pinned over the heart of t!ie re turned heroes of the army on great occasions, the royal .family present; the Crimean medal, the Victoria cross, the Waterloo medal. In your first lialf hour in heaven m some way you will l>e honored for the earthly struggles in which you won the day. Stand up before all the royal house of heaven and receive the insignia while you are an nounced as the victor over the droughts J and freshets of the farm field, v?ctor over the temptations of the Stock Exchange, i victor over professional allurement?, victor i over domestic infelicity, victor over rpe , chanic's shop, victor over the btorehouse, ; victor over hoim worrimeuts, victor over Dbvaioal distressed victor over here?1itary ?^epresaaons, victor over sin anu aeatu aj i ^%efl. Take the badge that celebrates those victories through our Lord Jesus Christ. Take it in the presence of all the gulleriea? Faintly. angelic and divine! Thf saint# tti aU thi* c'.o.-ioQ? war Shsii co nquer though tiiey die. They <ee the triumph irom afar, And seize it with their eye. , ^ Cleveland Keeps His Mouth 8hi3f. i >P ~ New Orleans, La.? Ex President | Cleveland was seen at Joe Jefferson's borne on Orange Island, and in reply to a question as to how he regarded the ac tion of the New Yosk State Democratic Committee iu fixing Feb. 22, us the date of the convention said: "I have every confidence in the commit tee's ability to transact business."' In reply to a question as to whether he !| would write a letter defining his po sition on matters political, Mr. Cleveland ' eaid: "I have written many such let ters, but I cannot say what I may write ifr the future." Mr. Cleveland will Icavs for home next; week. Bobbed Her While He Kissed Her .1 Chicago special says: Kiss S^sie ! R>y, of 149- West Madison street, calkd on Justice Woodman, 8&d, after requeu ing a private interview, told the Justice the wanted a warrant for the arrest of Floyd Tyrell, a Halstead street clothiug clerk, on the charge of robbery. Miss Iiiy said that when Mr. Tyrrell left her on Sunday evening he placed one- of his arrus around her neck, and, while in the act or kissing her, abstracted a pur-e containing f 3$ from her dress pocket. The warrant was isssued and Tyrrell v:aw arrest ?d. The price a.sked of tTie Southeastern Railway lor a piecc of Uud in Ber mondsev, England, sixteen feet deep, comprising an area of 4000 feet, was at the rate of $0.5,000,000 en acre. Three families living side by side at Easton Rapids, Mich., have among them -J forty -five children. ONI5 ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of F:igs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleiising to the taste ana ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and trjily beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup or Figs is for sale in 50o and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. At:y reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. ? 8 AH FRA/ICJSCO, CAL IdUf&YILLE KY HEW YORK. H.V. Reasons why YOU ?!lOU LD ORDER YOUR SEEDS FROM T.W.WOOD &. SONS RICHMOND, VA. GARDEN SEEDS. At 1.8W in lies dWanre it Just as easy Ar yon to obtain the best a-?'l m?t Ttrictim w.>i l*t loveliiM, m we DKLIVKR rusirNll) arjwbcre *11 Garten : rates, and Fflve fs eta. worth ft'.? k>?l SwJs for each lt.ao wcrtt. orders J. We also have ?pedal km- ra'.^s on SeedS in balk. Our GRASS, CLOVER, and T*I? i ! Kn-1 trade Is the Lar^rst In the S>a lii'-rn Si?t?s-- most uoavia'-'.ng proof of oar bi?b grade feeds y-' fonKljJc jwlces. NO RISK IN^ESDISr. MOXF.Ythrousb the mails, and we cnar:tn?a? t!i*j safe arrivit! of alt orders l?y as. FulJ information .'in-l coHuraJ direction* n[ Fh rn ari-i (inrdrn Cropn is Riven la i.i;r >'t-\v ( ntalacur, ni'-h is the n:<*t ixi ftruc eevcr issued. l!*jled/!r?. Said f<* it. T.W. WOOD & SONS Seedsmen, RICHMOND, Va. HOW TO MAKE MONET. A PROFITABLE BUSINESS ON A LIMITED CAPITAL open to anye? torf>ris hk party la eTeyy_town an<1 Tillage In the Uoiu*o stotea In which there 1* uo aewsdeaJer. S or rwrtk-uitrs aMress TUK A3Ii;eiC AN SEWS company, SEW YORK. ' \ ? ?uanrsipiVB-DM ait vciaikum IvVwMli p Ie? for lucrt*^, 'JS ?"ir? (U r P?leo?. Win* lot La??. A.W. UcCoairic* nome - Lot! usr Bees. h It appears, from a letter from one wno knows, that the black fellows of Aus tralia knew long ago of the horae-loving Jnstincts of the bee, and made use of the | ? knowledge thus : Thcj used to wait till j they spied a bee sucking honey from a flower, and then gently dropped upon his back a piece of swansdown. The bee, immediately feeling something was amiss with him, start^ for home, per haps to seek a bee doctor's advice , a* to this strange inaiady. Owinjr tor the little bit of white upou his back, the ? kt^jn eyes of the natives were able to fol K low the insect in his homeward flight, running, of course,: their bar lest to - keep pace with him. At last he reached his desired haven, an I then the natives knew where l&p honey was biddeD, and, of course, availed themselves of this knowledge to help thonu elves to as much as they wished i-j r.-jLonJvii Figiro. A I-recocio H Child's Roimrk. Among the many .ineclote; relating to the Rev. Thomas Hill, I). I)., is one told by himself. Dr. Hill aud his wife awoko quite early one morning and regarded with interest a crib whic'i contained a ! precocious child of less tiiau four years. Presently Jjie child turned her face up to the ceilin^-rind soliloquized : "Oil, how much easier it is lor u person to think than to act. .Xow, with a dog, it ii right the other way !" 1 ? 1 How's Thta V We offer One Hundred Dollar* reward f of wy i'Mcnf catarrh that cauiK?t t?e cured by taking Hail'# Catarrh ('nr.*. F. J. Chen kv <& C<K, Props.. Toledo, O. We, the uudersignedi Lave known E'. J. Cheney for the l^t: l."? ami believe him perfectly honorable in alt b?isinef>* tralisac liohs, and financially obk to curry out any ob ligations made by their ijrtu. WtbT & TiR'A-X, \Vho!eHile Druggist#, Toledo, O. Walpino, Kfx>.vN fe Marvin, Wholesale Druggist*, Tub do, 0. Hall's Ca?arru Cure i-taken intmially, act ing directly upon. the blood an?l i>vaeou? nur faces of the sykem. Testimonials sent free Price 75c. j>er Ix'tf.e. S>M by all dnireteta. There ar- five Th vial's in tno House of Representative?, all Republican's For Dyspepsia, Indigestion, and Stomach disorder*, use Iirowu's Iron Hitters. The Beet Tt-nlc. it rebni.d- the system, cleaua the B<ood and strengthens the mu$eJe-. A splendid ton ic for weak and debilitated persons. Thkuk is not a free library In PMla? de'vihia. FITS flopped frets b;{ Dr. Kuinc'8 Great Nuts Kkstorck. Not Fits after Krst day'* oaa Marvelous cures. Treatise an t fr! trial bottle free. Dr. liliue. -HI Arch St., I-'UlUl, Pa. "German Syrup" Just a bad cold, and a hacking cough. We all suffer that way some times. How to get rid cf them is tlie study. Listen ? " I am a Ranch man aud Stock Raiser. My life is rough aud exposed. I meet all weathers in the Colorado mountains. I sometimes take colds. Often they tre severe. I have used German Syrup five years for these. A few doses will cure them at any stage. The last one I hid was stopped in 24 hours. I*. is infallible." James A. I<ee, Jefferson, Col. $ COPYRIGHT IB3J T Yard off disease by removing, tfce cause or it. It's with the liver orljjo blood, nine times out of ten. A^sluafgish lirer makes bad blood r-^a^d oad blood' makes trouble. Dr. Pierce's Gold-* en Medical Discover^ makes purt blood. It invigorated the liver and kidneys, rouses everjr organ into healthful action, and. eleausea and renews the whole system. Through the blood it cures. JTor Dyspepsia, Indigestion, h'iiiousnqss, Scrofi^pua, Skin and Scalp Ijiseases ? * en Consumption for Lujg-scrofula) in its earlier stages, it'* a certain remedy. Nothing else is "just as good."1 < Anything "*f?^as gpod " oonld be sold just as thisNjs. t ItJa the only blood-purifier that ^guaranteed to benefit or euro, in cvsry^se, or th# money is refunded. ? ? ? . ' \ Tho catarrh that i3n't cored Not to you, hut to the pro*\ pnetors of Dr. Sage'4 Catar^ Bern*/ edy. They promise to pay you th? if rou have an incurabl money, it you case. They don't believe that you one. in TuH'sTii The dy^pept kathode er from mows of w< body or cxpoiUM In r vrlll And TuttS rills Te?tomtIv% ever or of mind or I the landhl. PATENTS SiiSSEJ i'VCSf IM VF,h IMMttJLE CYllNOSK I nt FOKCK ftHK <;uir?(e?d?tl the bfitoo earth. S4>wna irfcrt. Write for ctAWlam to liAYf* li.Mf & Co., Qjjtv.ttL i|l n aim MAKE! >IOSFV for jo?b? ff EL UHll! Mfe liK'u:* jo It'*' pn? {??.'? u* Si.ilc of \V3*httia1<*i. W'ritr us. (IANVvKIX i.WAlcJiKK. Iu>ft<)nein R,tt|kpf?^ K(nrh?>ifl,Wuft. A MOST11 for ) lirlfht Youaf Mf( or Xn?) Ijnlit*?a racb o*intjrJ A 44 row f. W, /iLtii-tu & qo.. ruin., P*. THS RIPAXS TATJHJW 1 Itri r t>n<l h4W?af, firiT r act '?> t.?V?r. kafofttiti n tta- i TKua>\J tor laiiovuo^-w. I) l< iingMv J*U?.av, Obktu-rh ftweh RKthfiti C; romp biti S. i MOItt 'l'.Xl vtost ii fl. * UrcviHa, Vx&u'K, H?ti! t if?. : : r*. Feu! iSreaUi, KsuJire, -UUitji (Venpisi r.tt of Apoe?lW rffeda*! ' ArctiZK on Un hni ?**' '-"WIS LMr TroU ? Sets&ss: >?>. U**rttu.n, Ein^ ,jL?rer T&tom, L5**m*m. KMM, Utah. tiua. I'KDpuv to the H*??2 I?1om o. Kft It li-.ij. - ?chf. Si:tn IK.* Ii*er. t'lc?ra.l ?Lit') r>m OtV or i-uuroi intern a Uuoa fallow On ".Ui am. Sold '-ilat bKk xr&xg IV at, er MS ?..2SrtS *t> c4rt &eir lnJ-O.Q<*. I>rtu>cT ?tTT ?SUrf! b.f ooylntvrj us* <4"ut? I .j*-: tt^if for oMfute <**)?< u^Uiiu Ihr.t i .in 1?> Injur avte. { pr-wj* tJ, l-S ijfi C^? ltw !?'? SnJ i A<i'itv?? rui o P. O. Uvi 072. N?:'?r York. -ELY'S CREAM BALM~Cleaiu?? the Kutl! ravages, AlUyi Pain utd Intlamination, ITeal* ilioSiireii, Ke?toret Taite and Smell, and Cures Gives Relief 4$ one* for Cold in Head. Apply into th? Kcttrilt. It it Quitldii A b*>rl*d. 50c. Uruggiita or by outl. SLT BROS., W Waken fit, N. Y< Syhl l>> nit Jcairm. Acccpl no mibtiit- * ? OPIUM Morphine Habit Cored Jn 10 toSOdnra. No i>ar till cured. DR. J. STEPHEN a, Lebanon, Ohio. DOYOU INTEND TO BUILD A II AIIOCI '? y?,lr Sa'h. Door*. HllllAr P P. SI ail 5. U-;uMii)jr?. Prarkcta, ? ?w WWta ? t'alaafer.;, Newela, *n<l all tin-la of Turned And PlaUT-.f d wood wt>rk fr&m u*. We are manufacturer* and have the largest p'xinl In the State A*enu who ted Ic t-v.-ry Town an<i Ceuntj to the Sonth. Frtoo lists furnished. Try ua. CburloiK! MHNh, Door nnd Jlilnd >1lc. Our. ?tb and A StNM. CBalLOTTt. N. C. CIVEN AWAY ! This is the mn?t b?aa tiful n?\v K(ML of tile yvarwhich *??? Rive r _ ENTIRELY FREE loonr cu*tonii rs'>f 1 If yo? *r?? in FLOW IBS forou' CATALOCUE of the erand?-* nt-v- in** nnd cv?r offered IT WILL PAY YOU, write now. ROBT. SCOTT A DO*. Philadelphia, Pa. KING COTTON tayw tell ycor Csttot *nJ0jSnE3 ,5-Tcn Cotton 8cale. MOT CHEAPEST ?UT ?UT. tor tarns mdirma JOSTS Of iI5GEA2?T02, BISGHAMTOS N V Consumptive* actf pe?>pl# who h?r? weak langi or Attb ma. Mould um Piso'aCur* for Consumption. It hu eart4 tk?a?Dili. it hu not lsjar ?'l oo*. It Is not bal to t*fc?. It Is the t*?i cough syrup. Bold ? ?errwh<!r?>. tSe. DO KIT ff D*C??Vfn with Caste*. JEhiriieJa. and PalnU whtcb suin tU* tuvii'!*. Irijare tt"? J.-on. an4 burn off TbeRiJir.i? Sun Mo*e polish b liniitant, 0?w \tts. Durab'-*, and tho eoavimer payi lot do LUt or i la? jacki^e irlUx entry purcfia v. fcOLD MEDAL, PAKIS, 137a W. BAKER A: ( O.'S Breakfast Cocoa frcsa irh?chtlj# exe??? of ctl his been rectoved, It abioiutfjrf pttre and it is sctuMc. No Chemicals ar<* u^ i In its jrrparation. It Las tr.rr? (},ar\ t\r<? li'nrt t\t siren ?ih Ci Cc<<? cii^i * ,*h fc'tsrtli. Arrowro t or Eugir, and i* therefore f.tr acre eco roclca!, costing i- t : (/,ci r/s.'nc ? f:it- d< no^r ?trt: stfcro : c. n?:: r ^ 9 * I Dio**Tr.n, and adxi|?blv ? adapted ic: '.uviUd* * ' m wtD m fcr pewod? In hca.hh. Sold by Gr^.r* rfcrjwfcer#. n W.^AKEB & CO., Dorchester, M &s& ? * \ 4 Hcnltb Helprr ti-!lshpw. 30c. a >?-nr. ^nilf'.r lip ?' H, I ^ : <!i{.-r. K'lfT" ii'>. FREE What Is It? I HK M <H> KT l.\?f AMU C<(iA*C LioinF.ft ?iv?* a tirlshi light from a minute so i.n tour. Half a million tn ijaiiv t;vc Ujcsmok er Kits i|;?- n-U p?kct In sir* and prl< e txjroj puid, fi.Ott. A Kin TVkkt to T?tr Wfrrro'* Fair. lit)*? l;uyul:r'?: O'lf >5 > ?ilC l'0?Tlll I'.am.s. kiiv?.' yo?:f dlmH, ifcrl y?ti u>!t "K- I if.cre" w tiftit to'ici: It. '!>:? i:nitlc lo.-ks. .i? ;? ?it* ar.?: opelt* Us. If w nti.v <; I have b*?-n dt (lOkiut!. l*rk<*. |* t ?;?<?. n antrd. W rlu* ior <.v4?<v?ir of Mldc Xuvi'li mn this ;> (? I +r. Kaiisfai iioii ?>r if.oacjr r>'(>iiilwli Mayic IttlnxJiii I Mti C.'i lir<it<ln AV, S?*>* York, RELIEVES all Bt^taacli Distress. REMOVES Kan?to. Cc5f?? of Tullnea^ [ Comisiioi, PiiK 1 REVIVES Fa il:s? ENERGY. RESTORES Jfona.il OrctflaUoo, sad V/asks z.o Toe lira. ?Z. HASTE!) UEOICIKE CO., II. LotU. B* bat Fl&pO? Musically, it is of immense importance whht one you buy. Its life will ;I;e many years; years that will niak?: or mar your musical life. Then uon t | make a ch.'i t that yon will | regret all these war.:. In the I vers awl Pond r. )t only pvt a first-class _pu6o ; yuu get a!; v< 11 pay foi^ / I We ^e:i-i on approval, at I our risk and | rect yon to a suppi)* you. ; logae.: .