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! r ■Mlta 'VHEK day is done. ITsen day is done and down the steer) if rose-hued sty the shadows creep, fo nestle where the valley fair injiled through noon's sheen of sunbright *ir, tnd wrap the drowsy folds hi sleep— r hea does a solemn essence sweep Vthwart the soul and vigil keep. Is faithful mourners keel in prayer, If hen day is done. ’n that strange hush, dear God, we weep iur shattered hopes and blindly reap rbe scattering grain, the wealth of tare, that meets onr hand. In weak despair Ye seek tby throne, as wayworn sheep. When day is done. —Josephine Puett Spoonls, HUMOR OP THE DAT. Have the door—Rugs. Pie-rates—Ten cents a slice. Always takes the house by storm—-the lyclonc. The crow doesn't fly from a cornfield sithout caws. A church bell, like truth, should not ip tolled at all times. Conscience is that within us that tells ss when our neighbors arc doing wrong. Naturally a fellow is quite upset if his iest girl throws him over.—Detroit Free Press. The expert manicure generally has con- dderablc “work on hand.”—Yonlcrs Gcuelte. Druggists, however prosperous, always lo business on a small scale.—Lawrence American. The busy little bee works by the job, hut he does just us good work as if he ubored by the day. His Mother—“What are you doing out (hero in the rainThe Terror—“Get- tin’ wet.”—Atlanta Journal. Life is fall of compensations. Thou the husband is out all night the lamp is ! lot.—Tine Haute Express. “Oh. I wish I’d been a man,” cried ; tlrs. Bjoason. “I wish to heaven you \ had'” retorted Mr. Bjouson. —Ejtoch. THE FARM AND GARDEN. CUT FEED FOE HOESES. The London Omnibus Company found that 3000 horses fed on sixteen pounds ii ground oats, seven and one-half pounds of cut hay and one half-pound of ;ut straw did as much good wark and kept in as good condition as another 3000 fed on nineteen pounds of uncut hay; thus saving by grinding the grain ind cutting the feed six pounds of feed per day, or a saving in the feeding of 5000 horses, amounting to per day. —Times-Democrat. MATURING OF CAFU.NS. Capons certainly grow more rapidly than ordinary chickens, but at first the food appears to be all used in the in- srease of the size of the frame, and they do not lay ou flesh and fat until their growth is checked, consequently wc may say they are late in maturing. But this is not a fault, because capons are in no great demand until midwinter or later, for they command tho highest price dur ing Lent, because it is then that the rich, who can afford such luxuries,- seek tho best in the market for their Sunday din ner.—JVvte York Sun. HOUR-MADE BCYTHt-SU.UiPJS-NUl. Since the advent of mowing-machines there has been little use for scythe-stones, and manufacturers of them do not seem to know either the most convenient form or quality of stone to use. Those made now are too thick and clumsy, and lack the "grit” of the Quinnebaug stone of forty years ago. Any one cun make a better seythe-sharpener than he can buy. The old “rifle” for this purpose will be remembered. Cut a piece of shingle or other wood in the right form, besmear the blade with hot, melted glue, and throw on sharp sand, all that will ad here. The finer the sand the finer an edge it will give; but then a flue edge on a scythe is not always desirable.—SVu- eajo Times. THE BEUrrLIKG IKCUBATOlt. With nU her smashing of eggs the hen does not destroy one-quarter what incu bators do, as hens hutch certainly twenty- Good advice is worth more than money, j live per cent, more chicks than do the but Jones says that somehow he cannot wake his creditors sec it iu that light. “It fills the bill,” remarked the ban tam pullet when she picked up a large ind juicy grasshopper. — Washington Star. “Why, Adolphus, what is the matter? Why do you tremble so!" “My best girl just ‘shook’ me.”—Binghamton He- yublican. When the butler begins to brag of his honesty it is time to fall ou liis nock— end feel for the spoons iu his coat-tail (Kjcket.—Epoch. “I guess I'm a Jonah,” remarked tho tmall boy who had been punished. “It teems to be my luck to get whaled right (long.”— TTasLayte/i Post. “No; I can’t say that I want the earth,” mused the freight car tourist. reasonably good incubators, and tea times as many as the poor ones, and the chicks | arc, as a rule, stronger when hatched, and i grow up larger fowls, and lay larger j eggs. There is not, up to this time, a t breeder who has used none but his own j stock, who has nsed incubators for the I past four years, that his fowls are not of j small average size and his eggs smaller I than they were from his flock four I years ago. I tell you, sometimes it. will I make one-quarter the difference in the weight of tho eggs between the size of the eggs set in the incubators and the size of the eggs the stock raised out of these in the incubator lav.—L>rnr«' Chicken. ENSILAGE FOOD MAKES RICH MILK. Hoard's Dairyman states as a hard fact that more fat exists in milk made from “About three-quarters of it is water, and j cows fed on ensilage than in milk of that I ain't got no use for.” I cows fed on dry food. Ensilage contains The man who says he is going to get i mor<! fatty matters than the green corn or there, and don't you forget it, makes | the ^ oru “™“^ 11 A he “aa 1 "' 8 !’: iyi 8 more noise about it than the man who is •dually there.—Atchison Qtohc. Why is it that a woman. When she becomes mothar iu-law, Though she may have been sweet as sugar, At once learns to jabtier an 1 jaw? —Lawrence American. Teacher (to class)—“In this stanza what is meant by the line, ‘The shades nf night were falling fast’?” Bright Hcholar the blinds. Bachelor—“Ned, how would you de fine a love letter?” Benedict—“A lovo letter is a thing that ten years afterward you generally wish you hadn't writton.” —8-mere Me Journal. confessedly richer in fat than simple dry ! corn fodder. Then it is a hard fact, too, | that tho more fat in the food the more ! there is in the butter. This hard fact, admitted now by many scientific persons i who formerly disputed it, is dawning on the consciousness of the dairymen who j pinned their faith on the mistakes of ! these scientific persons, but who have not been so ready lo acknowledge or forget “The people were pulling down (i lc misleading. “Practice makes per fect” not only in mechanical manipula tion but in intelligent deduction from premises learned by observation. And when a dairyman finds that the licher the cows’ food is in fat the more butter i the cows will yield ho has approached I don't believe in allowing domestics lhat stage of comprehension when he w ill make it a point of practice to select the best foods for the fat contained for to get the upper hand. I make my serv- *nt keep her place." “You are lucky. Ours never does for more than three the feeding of his cow>. weeks. ”—A merican Grocer. “You arc not tlic young lady to whom I give lessons,’’said the piano-teacher. “No; the young lady to whom you give lessons is sick, and she sent me to prac tice for her.”—Boston Courier. Tippit—“Look at that tramp going by. He’s a corker, eh?” Wagwcll— “Judging from that ruby ou his frontis piece I should say he was more inclined to be an un-corkcr.”—Gazette. THE GAME OF LIFE. Existence is honey and cake to a few, But with most of us life is a scuffle, And ere with the gam? we are finally through, Though do our keen Lest to be brought into view, ITe find we are lost in the shuffle. —Chicago Post. A body servant, newly engaged, pre sented to his master a pair of boots, the leg of one of which was much longci TO DESTROY LICE. Sulphur is advocated as a lice dcstroy- i cr. It is recommended to dust the hens | with it or put it in their dust hath, ! claiming that the heat from the body j generates a gas which destroys the lice. | It is accepted by nearly everybody that j this is a fact, vet it is an erroneous idea. The fact of the heat from the body gen- I crating gas is absurd, and for destroying lice it is a folly. If you wish to use sul phur in any form give it in dry weather internally, and only externally for scurvy leg. To kill lice effectually several reme dies may he resorted to. Lard to widen is added about one-third kerosene oil, well mixed together and applied lightly j under the wing*, behind the comb anr. around the vent, will usually dissipate vermin. Insect powder is very good and As the weevils are sealed tip within the peas during the fall and winter it is veiy difficult to reach them with poison or kill them without destroying the vitality of the peas. If wanted only for feeding purposes the grabs within can be killed by subjecting the peas to a high tem perature for a few moments In a drying kilD, but this would render them worth less for planting. The only practical system to pursue with this insect is to be careful not to plant weevil-intested seed, and if all farmers make this a general practice the weevils would in a few years become far less numerous and destructive than at present,—Few York Sun. FARM AND GARDEN. Do you know what each crop costs I For hard times—industry and econ omy. Secure good help for both field and kitchen. Newly set trees aie often given too much water. Can we produce English mutioa with out feeding turnips? Keep the raspberry canes pinched back about three feet high. Before using it, sift all dairy salt through a hair sieve. Let the boys aud girls prepare some thing to show at the fair. Good cattle will not remain good on poor pasture and short feed. Remove all useless growth from fruit trees while it is young and tender. Rich, raaist land is essential to tho production of nice, suceuleat vegetable*. Insect powder, freely dusted on, will destroy ants and other insects on shrub bery. Burn the limbs trimmed from your fruit trees. By so doing you will destroy many insect pests. Destroy all blackberry and raspberry canes as fast as they become useless, and thus destroy insects. In trimming cut off all limbs that cross each other. Leave only what grow upward and outward. Feed your fruit trees if you want them to feed you with good fruit. Try man uring on an old orchard. Plan to have a good supply of vegeta bles to store away for winter as well as during the growing season. All young animals should be brought under tho process of education from the very beginning of their lives. IVhen the udder is inflamed milk fre quently and apply cold water. If it is a very bad case apply a linseed meal poul tice. Give the birds chopped onions occa sionally. They are among the best of foods, aud arc often preventive against disease. Meehan, the Philadelphia horticultur ist, says ths fibrous roots, like the leaves, perform their function for the season aud then die. Breed well, and when you have a heifer calf as the result of such breeding, feed well and train properly and you will have a good cow. It costs at least two ounces of butter per cow before the effect of a bad fright, caused by a strange dog running through the milkyard, wears away. If that dog insists upon having fun with the cows on their way to or from the pasture tickle him with some cold load if there is no other way to stop him. Let the laziest man or boy and the best-natured one drive tho cows to and from the pasture, and never complain about his slowness if he keeps the cows moving. If you arc sending a mixed lot of hens to market it will pay to grade them, so as to have each coop as evenly as possi ble. They will sell more rapidly and at better prices. Look out for the rats and other ver min. These things greatly lessen the profit of the poultry business. For stop ping up holes broken glass in cement or mortar is excellent. Arc you crowding too many chickens into one roo«ting place? Are you per mitting chickens under four mouths to roost other than on floor or coop? If so, correct these mistakes. During the warm weather havo made a frame large enough to cover the milk tank; cover this with mosquito bar. This will keep out insects, aud at the same time not interfere with the heat passing off from the milk. The practice of testing cows for milk and butter, was until ten or twelve years ago, almost unheard of, but with in that time, and especially during the last half of the period, some astonishing results have been demonstrated. sure, but costly. Kerosene oil is sure than the other. “How comes it, Patrick, : death to lice, but in its raw state would that these boots are not of the same | he too irritating to the flesh of the hen, length?” “I raly don't know, sir; but 1 and I conceived the idea of using it in what bothers me* most is that tho pair [ the following manner with gratifying re- lownstairs arc in the same fix."—WhiU ' suits: Take a five cent bar of soap, snave Mountain Echo. A Primitive African Guu . Among the trophies of Germany’s past triumphs that grace tho grounds which surround the Marino Academy building Rt Kiel none is of moro interest than a cannon made by nativcs*o£ Africa and captured from them in a battle near AS AFRICAN PIECE OF ORDNANCE. Pangani. It has not the slightest eon- J trivanco for aiming, and its caliber it very email. The carriage is made of | wood. The wheels arc cut out of one \ piece, approximately round, and are i fattened to the wooden axles with long ! rusty nails. Tho piece of ordnance op- j patently would prove moro dangerous to ! its owners than tho enemy.—P?i'«a Ob- 1 emer. it fine, dissolve it in enough boiling water to make it thick, stir in a pint of kerosene oil and add boding water slow. !y, stirring quickly so the oil will not float on top. Let it cool down to blood j heat. Now take your fowl nud hold it in the mixture, head out, with your hand rub it well into the feathers, rub them , down and keep them confined in a warm 1 place. Do this on a dry, warm day, aud it won’t hurt them as much as being out in the rniu all day. I am as afraid of ! lico as of roup, canker, swelled head or | cholera. The other pest is the small red ' lice, which will reduce a flock about as j quick as disease if they get the upper hand, but are more easily disposed of. 1 Completely cover the poles with pure kerosene oil and they will never trouble ; you any more.—Orange County Farmer. NEWS AND NOTES FOR TF03LEN; A morning dress should never be elab orate. It It ant now good form to wear many ting*. Good Idd ii the latest thing for evening shoes. Dress is very “loud”iu London this Season- Canvas dresses for outing are favored bv ladies. A Maine lady possesses a slipper 178 years old. Just H50.000 women are married yearly in England. Figured lawns are usually made up over colored silk skirts. There are only sixty-six new shades is sued for autumn gowns. Sunset glass is the most unique thing for table ornamentation. Velvet ribbon is much used for trim ming organdies and summer silks. The easiest way to clean rubber over shoes or even boots is with vaseline. The use of curling Irons is thought by some ladies to induce the growth of the hair. Beautiful gauze ribbons, in checks and plaid, are selling at a third less than cost. Flowers become more and more a part and portion of home necessity and deco ration. Now there are lounne robes made of silk, very after the cut of the masculine garment. A strawberry about three times the size of the original fruit is the newest device in menu cards. A new song entitled “A Reverie'' wa» composed by Mrs. Henry T. Spooner, a Boston society woman. The smallest waist of any woman iu fashionable London is said to measure eighteen and ono-half inches. A daughter of the hte Hon. Henry J. Raymond, editor of the New York Times, is a practicing physician in this City. Miss Elizabeth Strong, the painter ol REV. DR. TALMAGE THE BHOOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN DAY SfcHaON. Subject: "Wings of Love.* Tbxt "The Lord God of Israel, vnd** whose wings than art come to truif.”—Ruth ii. 13. Scene—An Oriental harvest field. Grain standing Grain in swaths. Grain in sheaves. At the side of the field a whit* tent in which to take the nooning, jars of vinegar or of soar wine to quench tho thirst of the hot working people. Swarthy men ctriking ’—ir sickles intothe:"st!!iig barley Others .at).in .. . an is for the sheaves, putting , n? end of the baud under the arm, and with the free arm and foot collecting the sheaf. Sunburned women picking up the stray straws and bringing them to the binders. Bcaz, a lino looking Oriental, gray bearded »nd bright faced, theowner of the field, look ing on, and estimating the value of the grain and calculating so many eohahs to the acre, ■ml with his large. synqiaUietic heart pitying ih? overtasked workmen and ths women, with white faces enough to faint, in the hot noonday sun, But there is one woman who esi>cciafly attracts tho man’s attention. She is soon to be with him the joint owner of the field. She has come iYom a distant land for tho sole purpose of being kind to an aged woman, . I knew not what her features were; but when tho Lord God sets behind a woman's face the lamp of courage aud faith and self sacrifice there comes out a glory independent i of features. Bho is to lie tho ancestress of Jesus Christ. Boaz, the owner of the field, as soon as he understands that it is Ruth, ac costs her with a blessing: "A full reward be given thee of I he liord God of Israel, under whose w ine then art come to trust.” Christ compares Himself to a hen gathering the chicken* under her wings. In Deuteronomy God is represented as an eagle stirring up five nest, in a cpcal many places In the realms David makes ornithological allusion*: while my text mentions the wings of God, under which a poor, weary soul had come to Irnft I o*k yoov attention, therefore, while, tak ing tho ruggeetiou of my text, I speak to yon in all simplicity and lov* of tho wing* of the Almighty. First, I remark that (hey were swift wing* under which Ruth had come to trust. There is nothing iu all the handiwork of God more curious than a bird’s wing. You have been animals. Wed her hands in Paris last ^^^m 0 Um«.o^ho4 fly with one strobe nf the wing; and when it lias food in pros|>oet, or when it is affrighted, the iHilsatious ol t he bird’s wing are anlmtg- inahlo for velocity. The English Lords used to pride themselves on the speed of their fal- wi.e T}.—o liirirs nheu temrd. hod lu them year aud has not been able to resume work. Mr*. Mary Wing, of Fayette, Mo., eighty years old, docs the washing, cook ing, sewing, knitting, etc., for a family of four. carrier pigeons In the time of Anthony and The orchid is copied for brooches, but , a . t theHege of Jerusalem! Wonderful speed: ivelry of this kind is only considered to | jewelry of this kind is only be properly worn by women of rare ami strange beauty. All the "swellest” floral decoration* made in London during tho season wen: the work of two lady florists, Mr*. Nor ton and Mrs. Green. Rumor has it that Julia Ward How. is emulating the late Horace Greeley in the matter of handwriting. It is not every printer 1 hat can read if. in r.ce hour. The carrier pigeons were the '•I wraphsof the olden time. Swallows have be n shot in our latitude having the undt- ge-fed rice of Georgia swamps in their crone, ihowing ihat they hnl come four hundred mile* in six hour*. It baa been estimated t hat in the ten years of a swallow’s Ufa it flies far enough to havo gone around the world eighty-nine times, so great is its ve locity. And so the wings of the Almightv spoken of in the text, aro swift wings. 'They aro swift when tbev drop upon a foe, and ewtft The sweet pea ha* been the favorite i SheraST™' 0 ^ Clp ^ t * 1 ** k ' 11 * flower in Loudon this season one in a new shade of pink, whtah called the “Princess Beatrice.” Narrow ribbons of fine quality art now used to finish the bodices of dresses at the back rather than the wide sai-’u which has been so lonq 14voted. A portrait on ivory of Sirs. Fremont in her youth, a valued memeuto of General Fremont’s, was placed on hi* breast at his death and buried with him. The newest wrinkle in parasols is out ‘ which conceals in it* cutvcd handle tht ever useful glove buttoner and powdet puff. They arc within a box which opens with’a tiny spring. Rome of the elaborate skirls arc math with deep flounce* of beautifully woven, lace or embroidery, which being pro tected from wear can be removed when the garment needs laundering. Louise Abberna, a gifted French painter, ambitions for tho ermine of Rosa Bonbeur, wears male attire, and has a grace of manner and speech that a Chesterfield might have inspired. IVntervtllr, Penn., is proud of several things, among them a ladies’ orehestra, in which the little Addle, the big fiddls aud the hom are all manipulated bar- moniotiily by maidens young aud fair. At the Neuilly fair in Paris, the laditt have, among many devices for fun ant, jnoney, a swinging boat in which a verj rrnrvrl x ivi i f o f i/ ivx mol e> ■ m a w Punished for la...it tVItU Lilies. Home of the high case Hindus of Bom bay have gut themselves into trouble by ittendiug a social dinner with two la dies, one of wuotu was Dt Emma Ry der and tho other the well known Pan dita Rttojalha, who will bo remembered a* a recent visitor lo this country. The priests have brought these offending g-m- tlemen to trial and pronounced sentence against them. For eating a simple meal with ladie s in the open day, these pol luted Hindu* must “hangc their sacred thread. ' go through a pruce.i of p irga tion, “bathe in sain? barred tank or rivet,” and do other ridiculous and in convenient things.—Philadelphia Press. Making Paupers Support Themselves. t’kA BUGS OB PEA WEEVILS. . The pea weevil is one of those iusia- iou> pests which is very difficult, if not impossible, to control. It is constantly increasing in numbers, and has ilready become so abundant and widely dissemi nated that there are few localities in the | United States where pnasar* not infested I with weevils, and for this reason are not , fit for seed. For many years nearly all | the seed peas sold by onr seodsmeu have | been imported either from Europe oi i Canada, but of late the pea? raised in I Canada are becoming infested with this pest. The weevils are so small and of | such a dull color teat they are rarely seer i in the tjcld and gard. i when at work upon the growing crop. The fernah beetles deposit tbeii eggs upon the greer ; pods, and the minute grub, hatched frou ■ these bore through the pois into the peas within, the hole marie by the grubs tips ing up as the peas enlarge iu giowth When we gather green peas for the table j the minute grubs within are not teen, and no one but the entomologist suspects their presence, but they aro there ail the same and go into the pot. When the peas are left to mature and gathered for seed or veuW Mr. Timon Tydo—“Yon promised ms j last year that you would give me anothei! chauoe this summer.” Miss Di'ly d'AUer (expectantly)—"] ( remember.’’ Mr. Timon Tyde—“ Well, Dilly dear, I won’t jou release \ourself from that : promise?”—Pick. Hereditary Longevity. •Jueeu Victoria, on the occasion of J the opening of tho Southampton Dock* : conferred the honor of knighthood'on ! the Chairman of the Dock Company, j bteuait Macnaghtea. an l public refer- ! ence to his ancestry, has developed a curious case of hereditary longevity. The new Knight is seventy-five years , old, and hi* grandfather was born in the reign of Charles II. To make the aston ishing fact seem more incredible, this boy, born in 1079, was the nominal Colonel of a regiment at the Battle of the Boyne, uiuo years later. He married at the age of eighty two. aud the falhci of Sir Steuart was the youngest ton of this extraordinary marriage Tho grand- lather himself lived to be 102 and th« father eighty one l trier these auspices nobody dotes to imagine what limits Sir Steuart. who is strikingly hnlo and well- preserved man, does not propose to him self.—.Yee York Times good imitation of real sea sickness may bt ; got up for the modest sum of oue cent. On an up town street iu I’hiladelphin there are six house* adjtining <ach othei in which the wives are all sisters. Tht last was married a month ago, and la*l week secured the house adjoining tho*'. of her sisters. Mr*. Stanley, noc Miss Tennant, has e pcouliar fad. Her hobby is parasols, ol which she ha* a wonderful collect ion. They undoubtedly excite the liveliest ad miration of a man so careful of his com plcxion as Stanley. A pretty aud somewhat romantic little widow of thirty-nine, who lias the np jicarancc of tvrenty-tbrac aud the friski ness of a spring kitten, wears a bracelet made of the eix silver coin* that closed the sightless eyes of three husbands. Apparently Kentucky is n good place to go to If yon want to livo fo be very old indeed. Aunt Matildy Raley, of Raywick. has recently died at the ad vanced an? of 123 year*. Her mother. Charlotte Shuck, wa* 13S when she died. The field of women''. 1 work increases. The Russian Government has issued at order permitting the employment ol women on railroads. On the Transcas pian line there are female station masters, traffic managers, *ign»l women and point women. Miss Juliet Corson, the well-known | ‘ professor of domestic science,” con j tinues to teach her classes regularly, ' though she is go confirmed au invalid that her lectures are read by her secretary from | dictation, while she direct* aud illustrates' her methods of cookeiy seated in an in- 1 vslid chair. Princess Beatrice, of England, is a «»ank on the subject of laces. She ha' a voluminous scrapbook, bound iu ivory , son bs walking by the way, especial 1} i and the child goes too near a pnscipkje, how it i longdonsit take for the father t« deliver the cin'id from danger: Longer than It taka* God to cwooi) for the resrne of His chlMroo. The fset is that you cannot get away from the care of God. If you take the steamship cr the swift rail train Ho is all the time along with you. “Whither shad I go from Thy spirit, and whither shall I flee from Tby presence; J f l ascend up into heaven Thou art there, ft I make my bed in hell, behold! Thou ert there, ff T take the wings of the morning and dw ell in the uttermost part* of the aea. eren there Thy hand *haU hold me." The Arabian gazelle if swift as tba wind. II it gets but one glimpse of the hunter it put*many (Tags Utween. Solomon four or five times compares Christ to an Arabian gazelle (calling it by another name) when be says, "My beloved is like n roe.” The dif ference is that tho roe speeds the other way; Jesus tpeeds this. Who but Christ coul l have been quick enough to have helped Peter when tho water pavement broket Who but Christ, eouldbnve been quick enough to l - *)!* the Duke of Argyll-when In his dying mo ment, he cried: ‘‘Good cheer! I could die :r-o a Romm*, but t mein to die liken Chris tian. He. who goes f-st goes cleanest!'’ I lied a friend who *tr.o:l by the track at C yr- lislc, Penn ,when lh‘' ammunition bad given out at Antietam. and lu* saw the train from Harrieborg freighted «ith shot and ".VU as it went thundering down toward tho baitlo Arid. He said that it stopped not for any •'ros'ing. They put down the brakes for do grade. They held up for no peril. The wheels were on fire with I'm- spcod ns they unrhrd pint. If the train did not come up" : n tin;* with the ammunition it might as well n<4 ;:ome at all. Bo. my friends, then* are times in onr liras when wc most havo help immediately or per isb. 'i he grace that comes too late is no crave nt alb Wha! yon and I want is a G->4 —now. Oh, is it not blessed to think tW God is always In such quick pursuit of Hk dear children? When a s-mner reeks pamam, cr u 1 milled soul need* help, swifter thaw thrush’s wing, swifter than ptarmlranVi wmg. swifter than flamingo's wing, swiiter than eagle’s wing arc the wings of the Al mighty. irctnark further, carrying out the idea of my text, that 'ho wing: "under which Ruth had come to trust were very broad wings. There have been eagles shot "on the Rocky Mountains with wings that were seven fee? from tip to tip. VThen tho king of the air sits on the crag the wing* are spread over all the eaglets in the eyrie, and when the eagle starts from the rock tin* shadow is like the spreading of a storm cloud. So the wings of God are broad w-ing*. Ruth had been under those wing.; in her infantile days; in the days of her happy girlhood in Moab; in the day when he gave her hand to M.ddon, m her first marriage; in ' h dnv when s’’ ■ *ept over his cr iv : m tb? dnv when s.> tringca out lino the w’i:iernr-> of poverty; in the days when s': • plucked up the few siraWN of barley dropped by ancient custom iu the way of th? poor. Oh' yes. the wines oi God are broad wings. They cover up all our wants, all our sor rows. all our sutferiugs. lie puts one wing over our cradle, and lie puis the other over our grave. Yes. my dear friend*, It is not a desert iu which we ar - placed, it I* a nest. Sometimes It is a very hard nest, likethot of the eagle, spread on the reek, with ragged moss and rough sticks, hut .still is a nest; and although it may tie very hard under us, over u* are tho wings of tlie Almighty. There sometimes com-'*; a priod in one's life when he'feels forsaken You said, "Everything Is against me. The world is against me The church i* ng«in*t me. No sympathy, no hope. Everybody I hat come* near mo I ‘brants at me. I wonder is there i* a God, anyhow!” Everything seems to be going slipshod and at haphazard. There doe* not seem to lie any hand on tho helm. Job’s health tails. David’s Absalom get* to be a reproliate. Martha's brother die-. Abraham's Sarah 1 goes into the grave of Machpelab. ‘‘Woe I worth the day tn which I was born:' he *aid i many e Christian. I isvid reeiued to scream out m bio sorrow, as lie said: "is His mercy , clean gone forever’ And will He be faror- i able no more’ And bath Ho in anger abut up His tender mercies’" Job, with his throat •wojlen and ulcered until he could not cwm covers, iu which specimens are pasted' swallow the saliva that mu into Ids mouth, with accompanying notes written iu her exc ‘ a ; ,n * ; How l.m., before Hiou wijfc de- own royal fist. It is possible that this valuable assortment of ink and thread 'will be published for the edification of i mamma e anbiects. It has just come out that it is the cus- ; other purposes ths grubs are present and tom in many London parishes for the poor boards to provide able-bodied pan pen with brooms and assign them to sweep certain crossings, making thorn support themselves from what they can get ip this way, and thus reducing the workhouse expenses propuitiouateljq — 'JOUwAXimu.. >.._ eating away the substance, but a fet weeks later they change to the pupae •‘age and irom this to ‘he perfect beetle or weevil form by t*c following spring, when, if kept in a waim place, they will cut a hole in the *kin of the peas and es j tape, and this accounts for the holes iu I your *t«d psu about which you ipqujj*. A Fulara nf B?ei keg'. ‘Jnc rt t!ie liigo'S! feature^ cf the IVorld's ia:' .u Chi'a to will lie furnished by Mil waukee, \Yi*., provided the plans now being talked or are curried out. It will b« u beer palace, modeled some what after th? corn pol ice of Sioux City and the ice p tlace ol ot Raul The imposing s‘ruc‘:ue will b? limit entirely of b >r he, - ca-ks. bottles and otheu appurtenances of ‘be boet indus try. The plan is to h<*' e all ths Mil waukee br"'er* contribute to the aifait. Tu«ide ‘hi 1 , tmmeit?* ritu-''ire rheie "ill b's I'mil? ot iv. r*v»in.; eritibiri. —Feu yp- 1 . 'T'rq', Fabricated "Old Mel.il Hoik ” Since the rage for th? present style of ' domestic architecture set iu, aucient j metal work for use in house building has ; been in demand. Jn the days of old the blacksmith and the brassworker used to make wonderfully beautiful work for the great people whose sumptuous homes ; j were adorned with every luxury. AVin- | dow gratings, lanterns, fences, balconies, I balustrades, even furniture, were fabri- j sated of metal in the uio*t artistic fash- i ion. Most of these relics of ths past | rre now owned by different museums or i private collect?!*, but utaaT of them .,ui soul, and ‘.ben H? comes back after a have been ph '‘ojia oh’d. and in it tnes* ••hita to the nest an-t say*. ‘‘Opanthrmoutb 'eoitrentatioa* * r.s‘ sre soidf'*" qir - 1 vide aud I wiil nil it, and He dropr tnto Jt Ofi^i15U ftr ac r J f:*M ai li prices —Ft'.' Yo-l Set' ue- part from in? aud i.v " me alone, tiiat 1 may swallow ilown ntv spittle 11 Hnvo lhereu*ver been time* iu von Ido when you envied Hioso who‘.voro turievt? IVhsii vou longed for Hte giavediay; to do h,t v. ark for yon’ Oh. the faitble.-tie,- of the human heart! God's wlugs are broi l v hei t^r -vo know it or not." Sotnoume the mother bird goas away from the nest, and it -ems vary strange that she should leave th,, callow’young. She plunges her beak into the bark of tlv tree. ,-1:1 she drops into tli» ,. mu field aud mto the r V“f at file teriiy . nd into Jbo furro- • • o ;-i mi -I uu i ■ -i. jddu ami call anti wonder why tho mother does not comeback. Ah, she has gone for food. After s while there is a whirr of wiiigr.and the mother bird stauds ou tiie edge of the nest, and the little ones open their mouths, uud the food ft di opped in; and tin it tin old bird spreads out her ifatliers an 1 all is peace. 6o,aomcllmea, God leaves us, De goes oil to got bread for then Accommodations.” I know it. Tho seamen’s friend society is Inviting all the sailor*. The tract society Is Inviting all the destitute. The Sabbath-schools are inviting all the children. Tho missionary society is Inviting all the heathen. The printing E of the Bible societies aro going night y, doing nothing hut printing Invito- > this great gospel banquet. And are you not afraid that there will be more guests than accommodations! No! All Who hare been invited will not half fill up the tabic of God’s supply. There are chairs for more. There ore cups for more. God could with One feather of His wing cover up all those who have come, and when He spreads out both wings they cover all the earth and all the heavens. Ye Israelite*, who went through the Red Sea, come under! Ye multitudes who hav. gone into glory for tho last six thousonc years, come under! Ye hundred and forty- four thousand, au 1 the thousands Of thou- sends, come under! Ye flying cherubim and orchangc’. fold joni - plzioas, end come under' And yet there is room! Ay! If God would have all the space under the wing* occupied he munt make other worlds, aud people them with ether myriads, and have other resurrection aud 'judgment days, for broader than all space,broader than thought, wide as eternity, from tip to tip. aro the wings of tho Almighty' Oh! under such provisions as that can you not rejoice': Come under, ye wandering, ye weary, yo troubled, ye sinning, ye dying souls; Come under tho wings of the Almighty. ’Whosoever will come lot him come. However ragged, how ever wretched, however abandoned, how. ever woe begone, there is room enough under the wings—under tho broad rings of the Almighty I Oh, what a gospel! so glorious, so magnificent in it* provision! I love to preach it It is my life to preach it. It is my heaven to ( reach it X remark, further, that tho wings under which Ruth came to trust v-'ere strong wings. The strength ct a bird’s wing—of a sea fox ,' wing for example—you might, gu \*s it fro ,i the fact that sometimes for five, six or sev<-1 tays it **, -?* to fly without, resting, i n, . nave been condors iu tho Andes tnat cou, overcome an ox or a stag. There have he eagles that havo picked up children an I swung them to tho top of tho cliils. Tin flap of au eagle’s wing has death in it to everything it strikes. There are birds n ho*, wings are packed with strength folly, to lilt, to destroy. So the wings of God are strong wings. Mighty to save. Mighty to destroy. I preach Hint—"the Lord, strong and might v; the Lord, migliiv in liattle!' 1 He flapped Hia wing, and the antediluvian world was ; gone He flapped Hi* wing, and Babylon j perished. He flapped His wing, and Hercu- j lanenm was buried. He flapped His wing, i and the Napolouic dynasty ceased. before the stroke of that pinion a fleet is j nothing. An army is nothing. An empire | is nothing. A world is nothing. The mu- I veree is nothing. King—eternal, oranipo- ] tent—He asks no counsel from the thrones | of honven. Ue takes not the archangel into I His cabinet Ho wants none to draw His chariots, lor they are the winds. None t i load His batteries, for they are the lightnings. | None to tie the sandals of Hi* feet, for they j are the clouds, M ighty to save. Our enemies ! may be strong, our sorrows violent, our sins ! may bo great. Blit quicker than an eagle ever hurled from the crags a hawk or raven * will the Lord strike back our sins and onr temptations if they assault us when we are ouce seated on the eternal rock of His salva- ! tion. What a blessed thing it is to be de- i fended by the strong wing of the Almighty! \ Stronger than the pelicans wing, stronger , Ilian the albatross' wing, stronger than the I condor's win,; are the wings of the Almighty. I have only one more thought to present. The w ings under which Rut h had come to j trust were gentle wings. There is nothing | softer than a feather. You hare noticed I when a bird returns from flight how gently it stoops over the uesl. The young birds are | nol afraid of having their lives trampled out by tho mother bird: the old whippoor-will ! oi-ops into its nest of leaves, the oriole into | its casket of bark, the humming bird into it* j hammock of iiios:*—gentle ns the light. And ! so. says tho psahnist. He shall cover thee i with His w'ng. Oh. the gentleness of God! Bit even tile’ dst'i', ....„ ., | lor .1 have sometimes looked into' the birds i nest and seen n dead bird—its life having I been trampled out by the mother bird. But no one that ever came under the feathers of i the Almighty was trodden on. Blessed nest! warm nest! Why will men I stav out in the cold lo be shot of temptation ! and to be chilled bv the blast where there is ' divine shelter? Mora lieautiful than nivy ; flower 1 over saw arc tho hues of a bird's plumage Did you ever examine it? The i blackbird, floating like a flake of darkness I through the sunlight; the meadow lark,with head of fawn and throat of velvet nud breast of gold; the red flamingo, flying ovei the southern swamps like sparks from the forge of the setting snu: the’pelican, white and black—morning and night tangled in its wings—give in it a faint idea of the beauty that comes down over tho soul when on it droii the feathers of the Almighty. Here fold your weary wing*. This is the only safe nest. Every other nest, will bo de stroyed. The prophet says so: "Though thou exall thyself like the eagle, and set thy nest, among 1 lie stars, yet will l bring thee down, an’th tho Lord of Hosts.” Under the swift wing*, under the broad wings, under tile strong wings, under tne genu* wings oi the Almighty find shelter until these calam ities are overpast. Then when you want to changeneste it will only lie from the valley of earth to the heighlsof heaven; and instead of "the wings of a dove,” for which David longed, not knowing that in the first mile nf their flight they would give out vou will lie conducted upward by the lyird God of Israel, under whoso wings Ruth, the beautiful Moabites*, came to trust, God forbid that in this matter of eternal weal or woo wo should be more stupid than the fowls of heaven; "for th.- stark knoweth her appointed time, and the turtle, and the crane, and the swallow observe the time of their going; but my people know not the judgments of the Lord.” TEMPKaAN'CE NEWS AND NOTES. Geauga and Harrison Counties, Ohio, have no saloons. The women ot Nebraska propose to hold all-day prayer-meetings November 4. The liquor traffle cost* our country about $3,000,000 a day—$3,000,000 worse than wasted. Tho retail liquor truffle is now prohibitod in sevonty-nino municipalitlesof the province of Manitoba. Huron's large brewery in South Dakota, will, it i* said, In converted Into a beet- sugar factoiT. The City Marshal of Cartersville, Ga.. say* that prohibition lias dene Cartersville an in calculable amount of good. Between 150 and !i<W hogsheads of beer are given away every week to the employes at Burton-ou-Trent in the way of "allow ances.” He who made the human frame made it so wisely that it does not need the stimulus of beverages, which, when taken in excess, blind the reason, inflame the blood, sow the seed of disease, and implant an unconquera ble craving for the fatal poison- According to Bishop Taylor, tho single city of Hamburg, Germany, has exported 230,Ofli) tuns of rum and gin to Afre-a withinthe last year. Apparently the best way to convert Africa, therefore, would lie first to convert Hamburg.. The Royal Niger Company has prohibited the importation of tplritnous liquors for sale or barter throughout the greater part of its territory. Iu the remainder of its ju risdiction it has not yet tba strength to eu- foreo this law, but hopes to do so in the near future. Mr. T. V. Rowderly says that an experi- enoe of twenty years among workingmen convinces him that "liquor has done more harm to workingmen than nil other causes. It is not the drinking man alone who suilor*, for three drunken men in a hundred w-jil prevent tho other ninety-seven from accom plishing what they seek.” The Baltimore mid Oiiio Railroad Com- S auy has sent to each employe a circular rite, of which tho following is lu part a copy: "This company will not under any cii a iinstiucBS employ men who are m the habit of becomiiu? in toxica to 1 Ail em ployes known to frequent drinking pla-es must be wai uad to discontinue the practice or quit the company's service. Employes will bo discharged d intoxicated either on or off duty. No person disciiarged for iutoxdca- tion will bera-employel.'’ A Bora Courtier. During a stay of Euiperor William I., of Germany, at the fashionable watering place at Emt that monarch paid a visit to a large orphan asylum and school that was under Government patronage. The presence of so distinguished a personage created quite c sensation in the establish ment. After listening with much inter est to the recitations of several of the classe;, His Majesty called to him a bright, flaxen-haired little girl of five cr six years of age, aud, lifting her into hi* lap, said: “Now, my little fraulein, let me see how well you have been taught. To what kingdom does this belong?” And taking out of his pocket an orange, ha held it up to her. The little girl hesitated a moment, aud, looking timidly up into the Empe ror's face, replied: “To the vegetable kingdom.” “Very good, my little fraulein; dad now to what kingdom does this belong?” Aud he drew out of his pocket a gold piece and placed it on the orange. Again the U;t!e girl hesitated, but soon replied: “To the mineral kingdom.” “Better aud better,” said the Empe ror. “Now look at me and say to tte to what kingdom I belong.” At this question there was an ominous silence among the teachers and visitors who were listening with mueh interest to the royal catechism. Could she make any other reply that “to the ariima! kiagdoini” The little girl hesitated long, as if perplexed as to what answer she would give- Was the Emperor an animal? Her eyes sought those of her teacher and her schoolmate*. Then she looked up into the eyes of the aged Em peror, and, with a half-startled, fright ened look, as if she were evading the question, replied: “To the kingdom of heaven.” A church census taken this yeat shows that there are dl,?.i?,171 church mem bers in this country, and that the gain in the last year was 1.089,853. A 7 ' on one sido— the offer tlmt'i m;u!o by tho pro prietors of Pr. I? t;o’s Catarrh Remedy. It’s $500 k"'tKI for an incurable case of Catanh, no mat ter how bad, or of how iom; stand ing. They mean wkit riu-y say; they’re responsible, and the. offer has been ihadc for ye.ir*. It’s ah on your side—you lo-e your catarrh, or you’re paid *■.•>'! for keeping it. But it’s safe for them, too—they know you'i! bo cured. Dr. Sage's Remedy produces per- feet and permanent cun s of Chronic Catarrh in the Hcnd, as thousand? can testify. “Cui l in the Head” is cured with a few epplicatJOES. Catarrhal Headache i relieved and cured as if by magic, it removes offensive breath, loss or impairment of the sense of taste, stncil or hear ing, watering or weak eyes, apd impaired memory, when caused by the violence of Catanh, as they all I frequently are. Remedy sold by l druggists, 50 cents. IIotv C’nn ft n© Done f Another Great Offer to th*? Musical.—“He vrho makes Gvo pi mo* sound, where only fm© ho mdel be.ore, isa ben tfictor of his kind.” Luil do a & Hat'.?, S tMiiiorn Mimic House, -f Savannah, On., is ‘■till I ? th“ lead iu this irood work, and is on hand with u' other of itserreat i:’unimor Bnif- 3 . *See adverti ing columns.) They offer to 6-11 any oi' their celebrat d Pianos or Organs at th put ca h price dur n*; s 'Ptciuber <r Oct 'iier. O Jy a s nail ra> * jnmit do atm and b«.!ane<* when crops are sold. No fute/v#! cJktrfitjd. Write Tur parlicuiord. Five mile* may be taken as the extreme limit at which a mao is visible on a flat plain to an observer on the same level. Judicious Speculation. Money in vested n sums of from SI to $5 weekly or monthly will ,n ike you a rortuno. Write lor inf rinaiiou. iienj. Lovrla A- Co., Se curity liuildiny:, Kansas City, Mo. Marseilles, in France, is headquarter for the sale of false hair. Dr. I?. It. Cersttch, Toledo, 9, sayh: * I mmi \ i vrii»*> -.i»i -aruat-U (Idiet -. l I !,\v LAW CLAIMS 18 B M&Ca • t, a »ltmg l 4 *©’ D. G. «•! . Ml lid i «m.i s T. - AUGUSTINE’S - SCHOOL. It i lii* ’'.I! S.i . KORMAT. a*u> Conner.'! i , i «• r < Ijne*! yountf men uu<l ij ! r'i' i uud I rate Under the CiiIvngmi ch g g ?• r monm ca#b for boaid nuU tuii.“i» . v i ini i“c • Gun^aie to liKv.i;. D. i'L uoN. d L . Principal WM. FITCH & CO., 10*£ tJorooran Bubdina, WaAfilngton, D. <’•. pension mmm VIT J.i y..rx *■ \j—rt ?«• pension? tiMt! ••luim rtsll. e "in-, f J?rN • i f . TON SCALES $00 Beam Bsx Tare Be: ^ fer e' , / am ICALES \ f c • 00 1 f ], Y, a v V r. : : J’enmansh-p. .\nt i thoroiuaiy tuu,.Lv uy Kryent’w i oi c re. i->/ havo yrattici’d medicine for irorfy years, hare • jr, VG F SCC?l n ** i ki***v%a w** 4 irin T A A, 1. 1.1 . I IxA will! ef u lf*lN Catarrh never seen a preparation thet I ronld presenbo muah epnMenoe of su^cssas laan ire/’ Bold by mtnjsriafs, 15c. OiUirtY P" t'.rolauk appilcur’ous a ■ (VFaRRFU., iVll I '!! A • !' . In Russia a man may appear as a wit ness in a lawsuit against his wife. Woman, her diseases ani their treatment. 72 page*, iilnsf rater); price *V>c\ Sent npr.n re- crint of 10c . cost' f iiMilio r.etc. Address Prof. U. II. lir.iNfc, M.D., Arch St., Phlln., Pa. A storm n-v «zee Wa’s Chinese Headache Cure. Harm- lees in effect, quick and positive in action. Sent prepaid on receipt of $1 per bottle. Adder & Co M ft& W yauooUe b tKarlas City ,Mo \ Kurt«tfxn Timber, Mineral. Farm Lands Rnd Ranches In Missouri, Kansas. Texas and Arkansas, bout;nt and sold. Tyler & Co., Kansas City, Mo. A foci anti h s mon v is soon parted. Oklahoma Guide Hook and Man sent any where onrecelptoffWcts.Tyler & Co.,Kausas City,Mo. The centenniol of the fVifleoveiy of coal tn Perm«rlvania is to be celebrated in 1891 B~vf>nAv'H Pima wire ^t k Mcdach** SytoP’fRci S i!s£S ilAIDT. (hiIv *' uitd a w,a I'Gi 'y < i f: ; - : i. Di - .1. i , >i’I?•.\ . • v uiif.i.*-», «p]» A R » Tfc vf W tNTFD • T‘. 1 ?lff! i •; t v> ll'.M) 1:00.-. Home, rif I rM It '..i< > w York', g; T* ■ ishey Habits m * .e witb- •- a’* vi't FKKE. _ H-v**’'/' ” •••'• 'M.KY.M.D. Atlauia. f. u U~i. c i'. WLKthsdl BL CA N >1 * li I tins Vo wlii Write for th# Airi Colored, eople 1 ;u ilcuWirff ado NATHAN 1111 lOOK W I litimiou. . C. PENSED of FrtUAionft'uu'l I’lio nf C'krk Senate Pi *o. P •Molior . D.O. $ Ji^FEKSiON bP'.:Sj£0. Rota Mtled to 812 a mo. i-* Slauikjhee. Joskin ?:. u. fc 02SI3 ISiVJOYfS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is tak eu; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acta pentlyyet promptly ou the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup ot Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the tsste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in Its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all aud have made it the most popular remedy known. fjyrup of Figs is for sale in 60o •nd $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any 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. .. _ SAN FHANCISCO, OAt. UVisnue KV Ut IV YORK H e. MONEY IS CHICKEN*. For 23c. a linage ?x»ok, e-tpuneno* of u practical poultry rawer our log -years, n teacuei now to aeteot .■ndourcUiftea-seff; to leedforegtf* for latceuiogr; wDloa fowl* u> t®vo fur orveuuiK, Ac., Ac. Addreea BQUK HUB. U<ms£ t i-M Leomu J bt, N. Y. City. iit The Czar of Russia baa issued an order forbidding applause in the theatres. The raiuj . f * of bounds is ?e veaic-d by,tbs sals oi oj^ recognised it the tweet pronjiso c£ His grace, and the Ic'e of God is shed abraa d aud we are undo. His »iligs—the broad of the Almighty, Yes. thsy are very broad' There i* room under thoeewic it for the tixteen hundred millions cl the vac# You say. ‘ Dc'pot get the mvUatios too large, fq; tears a nothing Merit Wins And This Is The Reason for The Unequalled Popularity of Hood’s Sarsaparilla AU THI OIMST FAMILY STANDARD. A Purely Vegetable Compound, wiihout mercury or other Injurious mineral. Safe apd sure alwey,. For sale by all Drugglsit. run printed directions for using with each package. Dr. Schenclc's new book on The Lung,, Liver and Stomach sent rat*. Ad dress Dr, J. H. Schoncic A Son. ITfiiadclpuia. Do ti'ti'f truj»t any nml everybody? TY Yei*, Tho tin Ci.nrCo.. A fronts, V\ tnston, N. i’., to Intro'luco i.roat ‘ Vickie*' Ciiro-s. wi ? fend io nnv per.v.m (wire* her mor'liam or consumer!. C. O P . by •'vi•!'(’; \ ill', r-riv.!<•;:.< of exammafion ftsamnl-- lot of 1501 iv..r- for !?3.25 retail value $7.W>e They aluo fteml in Pk - j.d-l->::o h Eolu-b!.* T. stcrn-wiu liiu t'Otei, i.'.cunpaiiieit hv tho manu facturer's Runrant .• » > w: w 2U years. l"o<l.-r n » cPcumetanc''• v: 1 t’.ili i k-i c 1 ‘ ‘‘cut twice t * ou p par tv. Order * ’• ill li''> “ atic.tion aficrwartl pt $35.00 per J.OflO, ca- '. nr O m f, P,: - f; '-itlicnckn, i“a . - y i. Kit-ily for all tho iu ■ ‘"iral diRuliajTjtv; aud ; ... r. <! .ipfsof no p. a ‘.'.g;. f. i tbcticlrll. tatinfi; weuk’ii: t peeuilar t»\V<.!!ltC. m aci.iv i y I f resel l c ;tnr»<i feelsafo *HEEV!tN3CHEMI''&i rn. i > i'' < ifn-.lilig It to r. f. 'JJAPA* •-• , Jl.'F,’) - efl.MO P'-'AT.IV.U t-% FNPYCL0PJED1£BR^T^P!?CA The z\l!rii ffet»i : !»t. • *’• 1 ?t"‘‘ v ‘^♦•iinip; alfl'"* tlic 5 Vols. complete i f tbc Anierlcan ^upp ( • tnfnt to the Pr ( tnnTiica, u’ ? 0 vr.K in • H, n< w ready for debvery. Pr e s i..*0 j v vo 1 me. 'ni- -et of hooks is elepnntly l onnii in t'nrk Lircrn !•'< th " irh marble edK^s. is nronipM rryi i t of tl o criifiitnl E»(lli*h rtfltti'h and priute I i otu ihe \rrv Knjrllsh voR, coMtitiu n r f verv tv |b:.t Is In them. AH m ins, plates, 1'lust if 1 • i’- ft hi '• s tho Orl/ln»l. that sells .r §<? ner vn!,l.onnriin ehth. while ours Is sold nt fif A 1 A e ■.! . *> .n “ in ev it county to'vn in t’ o V > THF. I12 NIIV fi. Ai.i.kn ro.,?.‘W A* ; n Provi •••■.. n. v. M IMF;/ r-rtf Easily an l R riiiy. READ THIS and Tnink it Overt W- w tut |(}«l IU 11 "■ H»s wi . g Yd th -m - • u • 1 t i iDiuisy rapi y—t ’ • *<>' t *'•''' si • lie >ear roau !. 1 o . bnuc fir l'» t f ; Young meu >«r oiJ w'li‘I", ii i AV have n e l r! 1 davt. l>o net hesit ?•■. » u* 11u! rr. \<» r—Pt II..1. Ill sn tf it. a ,.! orn nl idal ida* t ,y ' •74. I’CW Mid *t iiiuiy mo ysr- A IO., No. 33 Soulli li . ltd -ill'l l, ui nila. Ga N C ‘i Aipt LoikiOr. r j .’lAflCs'; csofcr 'f k.v t ',3 . j kea V In t- .Pi/MiViti’c - ; Dale I . beptcaiher, r cud pay when 11 h : pot C'tiftb L’u ctt krown. : down IrlaLce ]■' ‘1 Voirtcrest. i ,k—.'Ry nako— iu, liilS'i’ t’HIIIw f u <• ever inude. fax t'irrtsiRr- | ^r.vidliiP r >i FEU 1800 K', S BITES, 6AVAf>:.AH. CIA. ^ I ■•-u i c, „• . .Lin- SQf . H • l.f: Jil 1 Vti iv yot wish a - — hevolvJ.h UELftfftffwjur k purcoaso tme of tbo ftric- Yi^ -— 1 . - ■ bratetJ aMllll ft W EbbON arms. The Uuei*t6!mt" ami ever manufucturea ^ud ih; flrsc choice of all ev .r ? Alanufactnrfcil in f ail.c f W or double aciiop, .-afci 1 argttmodeK Coustntcie ieutire:., . ocal uuai- Ity wrought SlCtJ, I'UJcuuU.. n.-.ie, • I I'M- WOfzJ- roanshlp and stoeg, thte umiveicj 1 . liman, durubllltY aiitlHi-eiiiDrY. i -ii.-t lu: a* cot.. 1 oy cheap mullcable cu. 1-1011 lni.tuttoas v-nlch J are often ttnld tor ttie -t..iilc * oi tic.u ima aro 1106 only unrellablo, but iiaii,,• 11, • o.lli'ii « WESSON Itevolvers aro uri ! n; u uu* Our- rel with Ann’» u.01110, adUie.-- huJ date o; l uieyta •nd »re guurantced pt. lecc iu <• .. detail, in. slotuiiou having the genulue anl ; • an l if voip* dealer cannot supply yo a au oniur uu'. to aduress below will recuive prompt ttu i cure 1. atieutlun, Descriptive catalcgie an ! price iiirui '..cd upt'*i ap* pitcuou. N > m u ^ v> KSSON, ^-Menuoutills (iarluaUrlil. .uas*. 'ii. iV 4, ] ; ri.y THE POSITIVE CURE. WZpM ITVMDlSaNrtrTorV. I orv?Li '. d. 'M