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^ ^ H I IIW?III I HOUSEHOLD AFl-AIES. HOW TO CONQUER DUST. , That dust is unavoidable is a truism as thoroughly settled in the belief of most housekeepers as that it is disagreeable; and that it is disagreeable is to be scientifically kno'.vn from the very different sensations one experiences in a room before and after it has been s-wept ano cleansed, in the lightness and buoyancy ? -n 1 * * ?" ?% +Vic*-r-u ana Every room in modem houses lias more or less coal dust, more or less wood dijst, dust from the surfaces of wall-paper and ceilings, dust from the wear and tear of carpets and rugs, a certain amount of lice, almost imperceptible earth dust, and a vast amount of haif-decomposed vegetable dust from the roadways, from Sower-bores, from gardens, from clothing, from everywhere. At all times unwholesome, when dampness gets hold' of this dust it ferments, jdecays and becomes positively poisonous: and this must needs happen on any rainy day, on foggy mornings, on dewy nights and at that season of the year when the dampness seems to penetrate the house and it is not yet time .to light the fires ;that might dry it out or hinder it. \ The rooms of a dwelling-house, then, cannot be kept too thoroughly well swept and' dusted off, in order that the least possible deposit of dust may be left intliom The- nanftl sivppnin'" of a room AM -V'l.. - ? J - with closed doors and w;_uows, so that the rest of the house shall not be disturbed, is not so effective as it is desired to be. - .The broom cannot reach much of the dust; a powerful draught of air must help it out by loosening and carrying ~ away a great deal of it that is beyond the broom, such as that about the walls, the shelves, the mirrors, that dust which is the finest and "the lightest, which rises while the heavier mineral dust sinks, and so proclaims: itself the dust of organic decay, and infinitely more injurious to the lungs and other vital organs than any other dust. -v%-' ' - Many wives think that the less the dust Js stirred in sweeping the better the work is done, and tea-leaves and wet grass and moistened meal are thrown about the floor in. order to gather the dust and prevent it from rising. But people giving the matter philosophical attention h?ve come to the conclusion that precisely the opposite course is the fit and proper one; that a good stirring up and then a good blowing out is what the dust needs, and . that with blowing unobstructedly through ihe room as thoroughly as a wind can be made to blow, so that it is doubtful if at some time a huge patent bellows shall not be invented,-to be applied every time the broom goes to work, and scatter all the slumbering dust to the four winds of outside.-v ~ PVBut till this is done, or something like it, it becomes the interest of the indwellers of a house to see that, after the sweeping is over, the dusting shall be sufficiently-thorough to remove so much of the dust as is left, ard not merely to send it flying and let ii settle again. The feather duster may have its use before sweeping in wiping down the walls and dislodging the all but invisible particles ^inaccessible corners, ana setting that dust B :0 free that the draught may sweep it out V of tie room farther than the broom can. mf- But when the broom is laid aside, then _glean cloth dusters should come into resuisition, and they, frequently and remotely shaken, are the only things that by any possibility remove dust so as to make the removal satisfactory until the time when moie dust shall have aceuinuiatedi"" - e frecipes. >\ Indian SandvricL.cs?These"may be* made from a mixture of veal or chicken, ' mixed with chopped ham c? tongue. - After the two are rubbed together, to each half pint may be added a tablespoonful of stock, a teaspoonful of essence of an chovv or a little lemon juice. Cut thin slices of bread from the loaf, then with a round biscuit cutter cut out the sandwiches, butter each lightly, and toast until a golden brown. Spread over .them while hot a thin layer of the mix*7 :nire, and press together. ; _ Pickled Chicken?Clean and boil until tender a nice youag chicken., Tvheii done remove the meat, rejecting the bones and ?.kin. Cnt the moat into neat pieces and put them in a gloss jar. Tate suficient Drotli to half fill the jar and add an equal quantity of good cider vinegar, twelve whole cloves, same of allspice, a blade of sisce, a bay leaf and a slice of onion. Bring'to" boiling point and pour while hot over the chicken, stand aside, uncovered, cool. When cold, cover.It will be o^flP^reSdv to use in twentv-four hours.^**-^-r v '-jf" " J1* "<* Peach Chips?Peaches arc nice to use. In winter in place of" raisins,vfor puddings."?. Pee! and slice the peaches thin. Make a syrup of half a pound of sugar and a pound of the fruit,' and"water enough to dissolve the sugar.'Boil tha ^ . syrup until it becomes very thick;- put in Wk the peaches and scald well; then remove W ihem'with the skimmer and dry in the F sun. After they are dry, pack closely in jars, sprinkling' powdered sugar between layers. The syrup left, I bottle for -use in pudding sauces, blanc manges, etc. r:' Fruit Pies?In making fruit pies, mix ^^^h^^^^^gar^ar^^our^in^b^w^lr^fillj annoyed" by the pis bursting and losing its goodnees. For rhubarb and cherry pies the proportions of ingredients is one pint of fruit, five tablespoonfuls of sugar, one tablespoonful of llcur. For peache?. blackberries and blueberries, four tablespoonfuls of sugar will be sufiicient, unless the fruit is very tart. In .covering a ad effectually closing irmt pies, lake the two edges between the first finger and and thumb, and thus pinch together the whole circumference; then fold over the edges about a quarter of an inch -and again make the circle, this time with fork or print. Then if apertures for the escape of steam have been provided we may defy the liquids getting away. Carioi!> JJFniioo Notions. A fjiriftus in-',: !> Ir.w.vis on rlift rural life of Bengal -by the contents of h paper reprinted lately iiT the annual report of the Bombay Anthropological Society, -says the Calcutta From this paper V we are told the following. among other things: Shouting, il;-.- name of the king of birds drives aw; y yaakes. Shouting Ram, RhiJi! Hnves" sway ghosts. Cholera hat attacks pn 21 'ouduy or Saturday ends fatally, but xb -cholera that attacks on rhursday. The. flowering of bamboos augurs famine. Ir fanning, if the fan strikes the body it should be thrice knocked against the ground. When giving-alms the giver and receiver should not be standing on different sides of the threshold. It is bad to pick ones teeth with one's nails. iY a suake is killed it ?... i i x. .. : . ^ 9UUU1U U" UUui^;, JU>I it i> a DiUUUlUU. At night the words ^ake*' and -tiger' ihould not be meu: call them creepers and iiisecu. Do.:ioi v.ake up a sleeping physician. A ::icdream always :omss to ';>-. D;-vo;:oa w ithout headgear is v.rc. Iiv/U la a. charm against ghosts. A black cat with. a white face is ,-evy auspicious. The Diplomatic ?'I;udeu. Dos't love me for rsy weo.ua or urams'r" He asked the maid with words intease. To "vriiicl i she made this wise repiv: Lv 1 love rou, dearest, for jour I _ -*-A??yo/-K Sarham. | A REDWOOD IEEE, j ? ! "WHAT CAN BE DOXK "WITH A BIG ] D\K ix CALIFORNIA. i j Shakes. Stakes and Boards?A Giant { of the Forest That Weighs^ One Hundred Thou.-j ' sand Tons, In various parts of California?and in j i that State only?there are groves of the I i Sequoia, or redwood, the value of which | is becoming mor* and more generally j known each year. Much has been written ! regarding the beauty and utility of the I lumber cut from these trees, and figures ! i have been given to demonstrate the great i I ci/A r.mnv nf ntir.ir*. And still, be- I j yoncl the facts that there are those stand- j ing through the trunks of which a coach j and four is driven, others on the level stump of which quadrilles are danced, and others that tower COO feet into the air, no description of the magnitude of the greater number ot the trees found in the redwood forests will convey a better idea of their actual bulk than a brief sketch of what was lately done with one in the i heart of the Big Basin, Santa Cruz j County, by a party sent in there to fence j in a large area, - J ' M lit Mil ?KE i Js All of those hired were experienced workmen, and the work of establishing a permanent camp was quietly undertaken. A down t=ec?one already lying on the ground?was selected as being straight I gained and of good sue. Ii was about | ten feet through at the base and eight feet in diameter at the other end of the trunk, 100 feet away. There was already a cabin on the site selected for the camp, so the first thing done was to build a corral for'the horses. For this stakes were wanted. With the crosscut saw a section of the trunk eight feet long was . cut of and quartered. These quarters [ were then split into slabs three inches thick and these slabs again split into slakes three inches square. As fast as these were sharpened they were driven six inches apart on the four sides of the equar? laid out,and in a short time an inclosure ?<ea?" .ng forty feet on each side I " ' ' " '' ' ' j .. THE BURNT TREE. . _ was made. On cue sid<? an annex for hay and grain was btfilt twenty feet wide. About 500 stakes were thus used, which was about one-third of the number split out of the first oul. THe next cut was twelve feet long unci was split up into 'slats'' six inches wide and an inch thick, j This second cut made about as many slats as the first did stakes. The slats' were nailed as a ribbon or rail all around the two corrals, which were then nearly finished. To complete them a gate -was made to each one, the ' 'swing" post to wfcifih being hinged in primitive style. The upper end ot this post being rounded was passed through a "fork" cut from an oak branch, while the lower end, bluntly sharpened, was set on an oak block slightly hollowed out. IV (i : I | T?E SPINE OAK. - _ ? ; The line of stakes between the two corrals was cut down to about four feet in height, and a row. of stakes set slanting in the stock side. These were thep lined and floored with slats, and thus s feed, rack made in a short time. The cabin in which the cooking was done and meals eaten was made entirely from redwood, there being used in it i about 250 slats, besides joists, plates, ] tie beams, etc.. aM split from a tree. ) The roof was covered with "shakes'1 i ow mrjfio thrAA fppf lrmo* qit j inches wide and one-quarter of an inch ] thick. On the roof of the cabin ?~.d the i kitchen about 2000 was used. One side j of the cabin being; cut out a fireplace was '! built, the idobe for lining it being made j from the still biacic soil mixed with I water. The chimney of this fireplace \ ' was o." slats set on end, and the wet j | adobe was kept in piacc by a lining of I : redwood, which is slow to bum when j | creen. Besides a small fire only was | j needed mornings and evenings, the days j i' being hot, ' ~~~ i Now that the cabin, corral, etc.. were ! i finished, the balance of the time could j : be utilized in various ways. Out of the I ! trunk could be made over 200,000 shakes, ) worrli $600 on the ground, or 50,000 i , slals or stakes, or about 3000 railway J I tics. From a siugle tree?not art escsp- j i tionaliy large one?126 cords of wood J I have been cut. making over 15,000 cubic j : feet of wood, and this without utilizing ! ! much of the timber among the branches, ! ; and very few of the branches themselves. . In the Big Basin where these no':es were , ; made there are thousands of trees that j ; will measure ten feet in diameter,- hundreds of others ranging from twelve to I an "fjaof orf^ <1 "ffixv lirsvincr o KofiA of seventeen and eighteen feet. One, "The Goliah," id e solid tree measuring twenty-three feet through at the ground, twenty feet at five feet above the spread I ingbase and seventeen feet still higher up. i This tree is no*" 200 feec in height, the j tower half of the trunk being free from j j l?11 - i j THE CABES", BIG BASIN CAMP. branches. It has been estimated that its weight is about 100,000 tons, and that it j would make 1,500,000 feet, board 1 measure, of clear lumber, the branches j ana top piling up 100 cords of wood. The lumber, shakes, stakes, etc., from j i good-sized tree has sold for over 6500, i the man who got out the material being j oaid S330 for his labor. IT The Big Basin trees are, as yet, inaccessible. That is, they are too far from any railway to be marketed profitably now. But their value increases every year, and before many years they srill be cut into for the lumber they afford. It is to be hoped that before that com^s the heart of the basin may be set aside as a natural park for the benefit of the present and succeeding generations. ?San Francisco Chronicle. j Discretion. x The Small One?"Say, if a man should call you n liar, what would you do?" The Large One (with emphasis)-'-'Td knock him down." The Small One?'.'-Thanks, I sras just j going to address a few remarks to you, J but lUi wait 'till I get in Europe and j then drop you a few lines."?Life. T _ Hot Air in Balloons, * Charles P. Fest, of Gormantown, Penn., has invented a new flying machine. He has abandoned the idea of using hydrogen gas and uses ho: air. He has made a balloon of manilla paper held by a network of cords. The balloon is directed by conical orifices which can be opened fest's istvextioit. or shut. The balloon is filled with air heated by gasoline contained in cans. Mr. Fest is going to send up one of his balloons soon, and he expects it to go across the ocean. The balloon will carry hie name and address, and lie wants the j finder to communicate with him.?Mail j and Express. Where American Credit is High. American credit appears to be at the zenith in Europe, particularly in Germany. A returned traveler reports that i Philadelphian with his wife on their bridal tour admired a ring in a jeweler's window m Jfuremburg. He asked to have it reserved for a few days, as he was aot prepared to purchase it then. "Thai makes no difference," said the jeweler; "take the ring and my address and pay nae when you are ready." Afterward, having paid f$r this, the same lady and gentleman wtsre admiring 5. diamond- ] studded watch and some other articles. j "But we cannot possibly buy them," j they explained; "we can't spare the : money." The jeweler was irresistible, i "Just take them home with you," he ! 3aid, "and pay me in six months, a year. j longer if necessary; you can have any- j thing iii the shQp-" Yet all he knew j about the travelers was their names and j their hotel. The jeweler said he bed j sold thousands of dollars worth of goods j to traveling Americans on credit and had j never lost a dollar yet.?Chicago Herald. J . ^ Americans and Mustard. "Have you ever noticed," inquired an ! observant young man with whom I was j lunching the other d^y. 'ihqw few Ameri- ; cans eat mustard j" I confessed a lack of study in that ai- j section, and he continued: ' In England mustard is the great j national condiment. An Englishman j will never eat beef, bacon, ham o; j i steak without it, and many of them ! season mutton with it. An English '. ! tramp to whom you gave an unseasoned i beef sandwich would stop and ask you j for mustard before hj commenced to de- i vour it. With Americans it is different, i They never take mustard with bcc*;:, and i rarely with anything else, unless it is very fat ham. Americans deluge their meat with hot Indiau and other sauces, but they let mustard alone. My proof, say you. My proof is right here. Examine every ncristard cruet in this restauranWand you will find that its contents might have been mixed ten years <tgo, for they look as old as Methuselah and smell twice as musty. I don't be- ' lieve that there's a restaurant in this city ; that uses a psundof mustard a week."? Chicago Journal. '-Appearances are Deceitful." !; ^."HeiloUSoaiebody's lost Jbis oocket- !, bwlkJ'V ~~ ' 7~Ti i J REV. DR TALMAGE. r i E 31?00X LTN DIViNES SDft'DAY SERMON, T~xt: 4i.\'one of these things move rie.:'? Acts izx.. CI. The Rev. T. Do Witt Tahnage, 1). 0., preached at the Brooklyn Academy of JIusic, his lir.st sermon after the destruction of the Brooklyn Tabernacle by lire. Ilia audience was of vast size, and public intai'ost was extraordinary. Tlio opening hymn was: Goil moves In a mysterious way His wonders to perforin. Fie plants His footsteps In Hie sea, And rules upou the storm. TV. Tahnsge's subject was '-The Baptism of Fire," and he said: But, Paul, have you not enough affliction to move you? Are you not an exile from your native land? With the most genial and loving nature, have you not, in order to be free for missionary journeys, given yourself to celibacy? Have you not turned away from the magnificent worldly successes that would have crowned your illustrious genius? Have you not endured the sharp and stinging neuralgias, like a thorn in the llesh? Have you not been mobbed on the land, and shipwrecked on the sea; the sanhedrim agaiust yon, the Roman Government against you. all the world and all hell against you? ' IV hat of that?'" says Paul. "None of these things move me!'' It was not because he was a liard nature. Gentlest woman was never more easily dissolved into tears. lie could not even bear to see anybody cry, for >1 the midst of his sermon when he saw some one weeping her sobs aloud, "What mean ye to weep ami to break mine heart? for I am TAorlv n'nt fr> li,> li.-imvl nii'v lmt nlcn fn rlianf Jerusalem for the name o't' the Lord Jesus." VFhat then did Paul mean when he said, \Noiie of thc.sc things move me?' He meant, i will not be diverted from the work to which I have been railed by any and all the adversities and calamities." I think tills morning I express not only my own feelings but that of every man, woman and lillL' child belonging to the Brooklyn Tabernacle, or that was converted there, or comforted there, or blessed there,when I look toward the blackened ruins of the dear and consecrated spot and with an aroused faith in a loving Cod, cry out: 1 2s one of these things move me." Vt'hc-n 1 say that, I do not mean that wo have no feeling about it. Instead of standing here to-day in this brilliant auditorium, it would be more consonant with my feelings to sit uo'.vn among the rums and weep at the words ol' David. -If f forget thee, O Jerusalem. let my right hand forget her cimuing." Why, let me say to the strangers here to-day in explanation or the deep emotion of my flock, wo had there in that building sixteen years of religious revival. I believe that a hundred thousand souls were born there. They came from all parts of the earth and we shall never see them again until the books are opened. Why, sirs! our children were there baptized, nud at those altars ouryoung men and mail...is took the marriage vow, and out of those gates we cai-ried oar dead. When from the roof of my house last Sunda y morning at 0 o'clock I saw our church iu flames, i said: "That is the last of the "building from which we buried our De Witt on that cold December day when it seemed all Brooklyn wept with my household." .And it \va> iust as hard for vou to give up your loved ones as for us to givo up ours." Why, like the beautiful vines that still cover some of the fallen walls, our affections are clambering all ovc-r the ruins, and 1 could kiss the ashes that mark the place where it once stood. Y/hy, now that I think of it, I cannot think of it as an inanimate pile, but as a soul, a mighty soul, an indestructible soul, 1 am sure tl^at majestic organ had a soul, for we have often heard it speak and sing and shout and wail, and when the soul of that organ entered hetfven [ think Hande), and Haydn, and Mozart, and Mendelssohn, and Beethoven were at the gates to welcome it. So I do not use the words of my text in a heartless way, bu? in the sense that we must not and will not be diverted from " ViV -\rriv-- hy ilie availing disasters which have befallen us.-- We will not turn aside one inch from our determination to do all we can for the present and everlasting happiness of ali the people whom we may be able to meet. "Isone of these things move me. None of these things move you." When 1 looked out through the dismal rain from the roof of my house and saw the church crumbling brick by brick and timber by timber. I said to myself: "Doesthis mean that my work in Brooklyn is ended? Does this terminate mv association with this citv. where i have been more than twenty years glad in all its prosperities, and sad in all its misfortunes:-"' And a still small voice camo to me, a voice that is no longer still or small but most emphatic and commanding, through pressure of hand, and newspaper column, and telegram and letter, and contributions saying: "Go forward!'' 1 have made and I now make appeal to all Christendom to help us. We want all Christendom to help, and I will acknowledge the receipt ol' every contribution, great or small, with my own hand. We want to build larger and better. We want it a national church, in which people of all creeds and all nations may find a home. The contributions already sunt iu make a small hearted church forever impossible. Would not I be a sorry spectacle for angels and men if, in a church built by Israelites and Catholics, as well as all the- styles of people commonly called evaus-elical. i" should. instead of the banner of the Lord God Almighty, raise a fluttering ragol small sectarianism? If we had three hundred thousand dollars wo v.*ould put them all in one great monument to the mercy of Goc\ People ask on all sides about what we shall build, 1 answer, it all depends on the contributions sent in from hero and from the ends of the earth. I say now to all the Baptists, that we shall have in it a baptistery. 1 say to ail Episcopalians, we shall have in our services as heretofore at our communion table portions of tiro Liturgy. 1 say to the Catholics wo shall have a cross over the pulpit and probably on fha tower. J say to the Methodists, we mean tc sing tilers like the voices of mighty thundering?. I ^ay to all denominations, wc mean to preach a religion as wida as heaven and as good as God. We liavo said wo had a total ioss. But there was exception. Tho only things wo saved .vera thoVilver communion chalices, for they happened to he i*i another buildiag, and 1 :ai:o that fact as typical that wo are to be in communion with" all Christendom. "I bt> liovo in M|ft cdm.nunjon of saints'"' I tiiiul:, if aii thi Brooklyn firemen and all insurance companies should search among tho^a rni:w on Schermsrfcorn street, they nrouM uot (1:3:1 a splinter large as tlie tip eud j[ tha liL! !-* finger marked with bigotry. And :i-j it is said thai the exhumed bricks of the. walls of iJ.ibylon have 011 them the letter N, standing for Nebuchadnezzar, I declarc to you that it v.*e ever get a new church the letter we should liko to have 011 evei*y stone in 1 every timber would be the letter C. for that would stand both for Christ aud '.'.tthoiiciiy. The last two words I uttered in ihe old cl arch Q? Friday night, sonic of you iiiy remember, were ^Ilaileluiahf Amen!" Tho two words thai. 1 utter now as most ;.vp;-cc~ive oL m.v i'eoi 1215s in 1 his our first service after the Jiantisnj of Fire, arc Halle lajah! Amen! "vToiieof th ise things move me." V.'c are kept in this snood by two or throe considerations. The first is. {hat God rules. In what way :1k; church took fire I do not !;now. It his boar, charged 011 the lightnings. "Wcli, tha l jord controls the lightr.in^s IL.-managed them se veral thousands years bei>"o oqr electricians wore born, fiia Bible indicates that, tliongh they flash flown the sky recklessly. God builds for them a road to travel. J.ii the i'saims it is said: "Ho made a way Cor the lightning and thunder/1 Ever since ihetiine or Benjamin Franklin the world lias been trying to tame the lightnings, and they sesm t" b; quilo well harnossed, but they occasionally kick over the traces. But though we cannot master great natural f'oiv.v. God can and does, and that God is >nr "irhe-- and I.cU Fricnd'and this thougut us cor.-i Jenc?. M V ;u <J ii 1 O'iltVi ViJvl VJ tll^ IUvIWvu ?on Nation thai comes from fraternity of ;c.r.*o-.v, The people who. during the last six,oc:i years. sal on the otiier side oi' the aisle, >yh' ? fac'ss were familiar to you, but to iviiom you ho i never spoken?you greeted ;iie r? this xyeel: vrith sanies and tears as you ?aU: 'Vv eli. the oi l piac? is gone " Yon lid not want V > se?:a to try, a ad so you swej>t ;Iie sleeve near the corner of the eye. and >ivt?adei ic was the sharp wind made ,-our eye.; -.wak.. All! there was notliu,: t'i.- ::: tlt;r with you-* eyes: it .v. y.-.y:* - mi hubblj-r-nver. I tell you that .t < "imp ! ? -i: for \-ears around tho <a i.' er.uiv'i iii'. i.i1 and not have sympaih'.^,> i:i cvnn?:?a. Somehow you feel that y?.i !! ': . th>se pj.jpic on the other side i.: I -i-\ : wli you i:n >.r bat liltle, [ rosj./iv i :t.: i i an I blessed au i aw.!. a-; i: you were in the same !k>.v. i >.] jrllde up the smnehar o<*v an.I v:a;:ii to disembark at the same wharf. If yoi! jnsfc j"oM an 1 iro.i and lead .and due in safiicUsil boat, they will malt into a conglomerat?* mass: and I really feel that last Sabbath's lira has fused r.s all, grosser and liner natures, into one. It seems as it ,7.- all ii-v.f o;;r Iiaals on ;t wire connected ivitu .-::i clx-lri" battery; and when this :-'.xu;vh sorrc.v started it thrilled through the whole circle, and we all felt the shock. The eldest nuv.; and the youngest child could join hands in thi> misfortune. Grandfather said: "I expected from those altars to be buried;" and olio of the children las: Sabbath cried: "Grandpa,. that place was nest to our own ? * T M / * I house/1 Yea. tve are supported and coaI in this 1iniA iit th<i r ? nf I'hrisr That is use-] to th - fire. Oa the dark day : when Jesus died, the lightniug struck it from j above, ancl the flames of Loll dashed up I agaiusi i? from beneath. That tearful, pain1 ful, tender, blcss?d cross -sinll stands. On it ! we haug all our hopes; beneath it we put ! down a!i our sins; in the light of it we ex poet to make the rest of our pilgrimage, j Within siglit of .;ach a sacrifice, whu can feel ! ha has it hard:' In tli* tight of suchasyraj bol. who can be ?it : rarage.1. however great S the darkness Ihac may comedown upon him? Jesus li.v -! The loving, patient, sympathizing. mighty Jrsus! It shall not be told on earth, or i i hell, or In heaven, that three Hc ! ?.! c.-... n-.i I j U.yn vuii'uvu K:I\j *^JIL *JL um.1 MC51UO j them u: the lire, au-I that a whole church. was I forsaken. by tha Lord when they went j through a fa/nav? about two hundred feet , wi''\ j O Lord Jesus! shall we take out of Tny j hand the flowers and the fruits, and the | brightness and the joys, and then turn away , because Thou dost give us ono cup of bitteri ness to drink? Ob, no, Jesus! we* wiJl drink j it dry. But how it is changed! Blessed Jei sus, what has Thou put into the cup to i sweeten it:' it has become the wine of | heaven, and our scuJs grow strong. I come i now, and place both of my feet deep down j into the blackened ashes of our consumed j church, and I cry out with au exhilaration ! that I never felt "since the day of my soul's ' emancipation, "Victory! victory! through ! our Lord Jesus Clirist f" lour uar;) '. ye ircillKJiii;; >0:ats, Down fro/ii the willows lake, L"Ufl t.j ilic ;.rniso of lov* diviue ):iil every siring awake. Wo are also re-enforce! by the Catholicity that I havi; alreariy referred lo. Wo are in the Academy to-day, not because we have no other place to go. Last Sabbath morning at 9 o'clock we had but one church; now we have about thirty, all at our disposal. Their pasters and their trustees syy: "You may take our main audience rooms, you may take our lecture l I rooms, you may take our church parlors,you may baptize ill our baptisteries, and sit ou our anxious seat.-:." Oh! it there be any larger hearted ministers or larger hearted churches .anywhere th.-n in Brooklyn,tell use where they ar.\ that i may ?o and see them before I die. The inil!o:iiuin has come. People keep wondering when it is coming. It has come. The lion and the lamb lie down umm i n0'. i v\u-i oi;a?i iiivl an ?.?.v. I should like to Jkivo seen two of the old time bigots, with their swords, fightiiiiC through that great fire on Schermerhorn street last Sabbath, i aai sure the swords would havo melted, and they j who wielded t'lem have learned war no more. I I can never sitv a word against any other de, nomination of Christians. I thank God I never have been templed to do it. I cannot ' be a sectarian. I have been told I ought to be, and I have tried t j be, but I have not j enough material in me to make such a I structure. Kverv time I get the thing most ! done, there comes a fire, or something else, I and all is gone. The angels of God shake out j on this air, "Glory to Goil in the highest. I and on earth peiu-e. good will toward men." I I do not know but i see on the horizon the J lirst irleam of the morning which shall unite . ! all denominations l:i or." organization, disI tinguished only by l.ir.' locality as in apostolic I times. It was"then tho Church of Tliyatira, ! and the Church of Thessaloiiica, and the j Church of .Anticeh, and the Church of Laodij cea. So I do not know but that in the future : history, and not far off either, it maybe simi ply a. distinction of locality, and not of creed, as"the Cliurch of Iv!\v York', the Church of Brooklyn, the Church of I). . ton. the Church of Charleston, the Church of Madras, the Church of Constantinople, the Church of j America. My dear brel hrea, we cannot afford to be j j severely divided. Standing in front of the ! great foes oi our common Christianity, we i J want to put on the whole armor of God and j march down in column, shoulder Uv-i. i shoulder! one commander; one triumph! The trumpet slvc*s a martial strain O Israel! Kii-<1thee from tbs flght; Arts;*, tlie coinlj.it to maintain: Arise, and jmt ihy foes to liight. I We also feel reinforced by the thought j i flirtt iv* am wov trt n lioov?in flmt <??in never burn down. Fires jnay sweep through I other cities?but I a in glad to know that the | Sew Jerusalem is n reproof, 'there will be ] no engines rushing through those streets; j I there will be no tcmp'os consumed in that i I eity. Coming to the dours of that Church, j I we will find them open, resonent with songs, jj and not cries of fire. Ob. my dear brother ! and sister! if lhis short lane of life comes up ro so.?a to that blessed piaco, what ? ! is the use of our worrying? 1. have felt a ' ! good many tin:*; this last week like Father I Taylo;, the sailor preacher. He get in a j long sentence while; lie was preaching one . day, and lost himself, and could not fuid his I way out of the sentence, lie stopped and ; said: "Brethren, I have lost the nominative ; of this sentence, and things are generally ! mixed up, but 1 am bound for tho kingdom | anyhow." j And during this last week, when I saw tho i rushing to find fro and the excitemcnt, I said to inyseu: t do not unow just wnere we shall start again, 1 ?nL I am bound for the kingdom anyhow.*' 1 do not want to go just yet i want to be pastor of this people uutifl am about eighty nine years of age, | but I have sometimes thought that there are I such glories nh. wl t-irtL 1 may be persuaded to go a little earlier?for instance, at eightytwo or three: but ! really think that, it we could have an appreciation of what God has in reserve for we would want to go. stopping right out of the Academy cf ?J.usic iuto't.he"dories of th=- skies. All! that is a good land. Why, they tell me that in that land they never have a heart ache. They tell me that a man might walk five hundred years in that land and never see a tear or hear a sigh. They tell that our friends who have left us and gone thc-re, j their feet are radiant as the sun, and that | they take hold of the hand cf .Jesus familiarly. and that thev onon that hand and sea in the palm of it a healed wound that must have been very eruel before it was healed. And they tell me that there is no winter there, and that they never get hungry or cold, and that the sewing girl never wades through the snow bank to her daily toil, and that the clock nc-vcr strikes twelve for the night, but only twelve for the day. Soa that Jjght in the window. I wondow who set jfc there, Oh!" you say: "My father that went ifsto glory must Lave set that light in the window." No; guess again. "My mot her, who died fifteen years ago in Jesus, I think must have set that li^ht there." No; guest again. You say: "Jly darling little child, that last summer I put away for the resurrection. I think she must have set that sight there in t he window " No; guess again. -ie.Mjs it there;' and He will keep it burning until the day we put our linger on the latch of the door and go in to bo at home forever. Ok! when my sight gets black in death, put on my eyelids that swret ointment. When in the last weariness 1 cannot take another step, just holj? me put my foot ou that door.si 11. When my ear catches no more the voices of wi c and child. lot mejro rig!it in, to have my deafne-:*: erred by tfie stroke of tho harpers whoso fingers fiy over the. strings with the antheuis of the free. [ ! Heaven never burn'; down! The fires of 1 the last day. thai; are already kindled in the i heart of tlie earth, but arc hidden because God keeps down this hatches?those internal j fires will after a while bres!; through the ! crusty and tli? plains, and the "mountains, and i | the seas will be consumed, and the flame? will fiing their long arm-. into the skies; but all the terrors of a burning world wiil do no more harm to that heavenly tempi* than the fires of the netting sun which kindle up t!te i window glass of the housoon yonder lull top. Oh, blessed land! T)nt 7 do nor want to go there until I see the l'iv >'clyn Tabernacle rebuilt. You say " >11 i- Von might i as well ask me if Use sun will ri^ tomorrow , ajorninsr. or if the next spiins will put garlands on if s _haa?L Yon and 1 rnaynot do It?yon and ' niav not hvoio se-1 it., but the Church of Gcd does m.ti'.aud on two legs nor on :i t housand ie^s IIow u!d the Israelites get through the Red Sea? T supp^ obody "may have come | and said: "There i-- no need of trying: you j will get your feet wet: you will spoil your ! clothes: you will drown yourselves. V. hoi ei-er iifeav.I of " ( e.f-i! n.-vrh n swi a-? i <hat?" How ??;?! they get through it? Did 1 hey go "Co. DM they go In I V; right? To. Did they go to the loft? T-\ Ti-ev rrent forward in be strength of th-; L<ml .Mmigluy: and thai: is the \v?v we mean to grr through the Red Sea. fly goin ; forward. Bar-says foine one: "If we should build a larger church. would veil he able with yor.r v,t?": fill if?" Vv'hv. r f have ixj^n wearing ",v ei? cut for the insl ; sixteen years hi trying r?. t?y voice in. j C.[v<; in-.? room I <-.1!! y?reaeh the glories | of Christ and the graudeur- r.? lid von. i Forward! V.'o !nv? ! > march 0:1. breaking rlown all bridiro- br-hhil iw, making retreal I impassible. Throw awn v y ur knnnsiefc i" i. : impedes your murcb. j? ywir sword ani: | U-o?. Shrike !V>i* .;: ! JT-; U;v *Wr. 1 white you m To p.-i.-.i'e overbad a I?ettc.' niu-rsion li:a:i yov .i- on. JYovc your* j I -v'v ;v. T-' I r.-i. fit I !> your ! ?. .T-: I\ The bright i ! est g-'.i! 011 <ir. : ft-.: T can think j j of isa country jjar,5onp.g amidst the mount- ; j alns. But I am not afraid to lend you. I ! ! have some dollars: iheyaro at your disposal. | I nave goon payment it is yours ns lonsj as it lasts. I have enthusiasm of soul: I will not keep it back from your service. I have soma faith i:i God. and T shall <iirect it toward the rebuilding of our new spiritual house. Come on, then. I will lead you. C&me on. yea~el iru-a. not yet passo.l over Jordan' b'ivo u> on -more lift before you so into th'3.pro:nUj l lan !. You men in middle life, harness ail vour business faculties to this enterprise. Young man. put tlrj fire of your soul into thi> work. Let women conse- i crate their persuasiveness and persistence to I this cause, andthgy will bo preparing bene- 1 ? ' ^i dictions for their dying hour and everlasting rewards; and if Satan really did burn that j Tabernacle down, as some people say he did, 1 he will find it the poorest job ne ever under- I took. Good-by, old Tabernacle. I oat mv fingers 1 to my lips and throw a kiss to the departed ! church. In the last day. mav we be able to ! meet the songs there sung, and the prayers | there offered and the sermons there preach ed. j Good-by. old place, where some of us first felt the Gospel peace, and others heard the i last message ere they fled away into rhe skies! Good-by, Brooklyn Tabernacle of 1S73! But welcome our new church. (I see it as plainly as though it were already built!) Your gates wider, your songs more triumphant, your ingatherings more glorious. Rise out of the ashes and greet our waiting vision'. Burst on our souls, oh day of our church's resurrection! By your altars may we be prepared for the hour when the fire shell try every man's work of what sort it is. Weicome, Brooklyn Tabernajie of IS'jO! His Grandpa Got Eve;:. {iIt is hard to fix the exact date when a man forgets that he ever was a boy, but it is usually about the time his oldest sons two boys get big enough to cut up and be sassy to their gran'ther. That was the tune my grandfather forgot." said a man on the row the other even- j ing to a Washington Post reporter. -My j brother Lew and myself used to g.> i.o au 1 uncle up in Bucks County where the old ! gentleman lived. He was nearly eighty, weighed over two hundred, walked heavily with a cane and was the crassest man I ever saw. His particular delight was in whacking us boys with his cane when we got within reach, and running us down to the neighbors. li 'Them boys o' Lewis's - air- a leetle [ the wust. most wuthless cubs I ever seen,' he would say. i:\V& had a pet coon. It was funnier than a cageful of monkeys. One day it got into the old gentleman's early vegetable garden and dug up some cucumber vines. He caught it by the chain and broke its back with his cane. V?\* had to have revenge. It was a plain cuse of murder. That coon was in our eyes more J /-vf lioi'un. .in/1 u (tf\A<] I mf>rft I Vi ti uuuiuii UUVA ?.?. v*x.?. ? -? I of a Christian than he was.' Grau'ther had a habit of going down to the meadow and sitting on ike top rail of the fence to watch the men make hay. We sawed his pet rail half through and loosened the rider stakes. When he sat down the whole business gave away and he went over into a big briar patch. My aunt put in a half day picking splinters out of him. We were hustled on out of sight lor a week while he spread over the town his version of our attempt | upon his life. "Every evening the old lei Id v.- would I sit in the chimney nook, and sip a pint j of hot rum aud water. At 9 o'clock my aunt and undo would each take a side j and help him off to bed. He snored like ( distant thunder. If he were touched he would stop snoring for a half hvur. Oui room was on the same door. One night I couldn't stand his terrible roof- : v.-iistno' r>ic;k{t. So 1 irot my. found a ball of twine, unrolled a hundred i'cet, rss^e a slipnoose in one end and fastened it to the old gentleman's big toe. carrying the free end to my own room. Then jumping into bed. when gran'ther snored. I gave the string a tug and he would stop. It was very funny. "I felt quite pleased at my invention. Grair tber was an early riser. He woke up next morning about- 5 o'clock una found the string tied to his toe. lie got his cane and went on the trail. It led to my room, and the other end was < knotted to my wfisv. ' :Whack, v,'hack, whack, whack!' ' I got at least a dozen good blows all over my eyes and body before I could 1 wake and ?scape from the bedclothes and ; that hardwood cr.ae. I was .covered with black and blue welts for a week, and the : old gentleman was happy for at least ; three days." Armenians in America. ! Only a few years ago there were a , score or so of Armenians in the United i States. Now 'their number reaches 1 10,000, and still they come. This is not to be wondered at, for sweet is the enjoy: i ment of liberty; but far sweeter to, them is the land where they can exercise their love of industry unmolested and enjoy the fruits of their labor to perfection, i They are scatteied all over the United States engaged in various pursuits. Some are given to farming, some to mechanical arts, some to weaving silk fabrics, some to carpet manufacture, some to commerce and some to. the medical studies. Of tiiest- some nave nao. tne gooci iortune to bring their families with them, while j others (ire striving to attain the same end. , Some have even allied themselves to American women, who find them desirable husbands on account of their sober habits, domesticity,'and kind disposition, \ thus showing that they mean to be per- \ manent settlers in the land of their adop- i lion. Nevertheless, they do aot seem to j forget those whom they had left, and try ] to help them in every way possible. In j every locality where large numbers of | * rVir-m fii-p roncrrporntpr] thav havi* formfd u clubs or associations and meet once a ^ fortnight for the cultivation of social intercourse and to devise moans to assist their kith and kin in Armenia. All thesn ^ clubs have a general i;centre" in London. England, whose executive board embraces some of the most prominent membc.-of Parliament.?New York Times* A JJoy Jlnntcr. j: A buck bad been seen several times j. goiu? with a herd of Mr'. Vf. F. Soweli's ; cattlc, says tjie Sylv&nia (Ga.; Telephone, find several efforts had been made to kill ( him by the hunters of the "fork."' but - witnout success. uii w eanesuay, However, as the children were on their way from school in the afternoon, they saw . the deer with the cattle, and ?ur. , Jenkins's son went home for the gun to > shoot it. When he got heme he found lie had ?Q buckshot so taking a piece of ' lead he cut it into large slugs, loaded his gun and returned to the place where ti*e ctcer had been ietfn, and took a siauu'fcj ivhich the cows had to pass in going hoi*e. Very soon they appeared, and the buck among them. Our young hunter j c took unerring aim, fired and the buck [ \ fell dead. Being some distance from / home, he was in a quandary as to how vo g get it home, but remembering that he j i, had a small pet ox and a block wheel * wagon he asked the children to guard his ' name while he went home to get his little ox and wagon. As he was getting an: ai in shape to go for his booty. M:\ \V. P. Sov.-flf came along and helped him to got it home, hauling it with the yearling and block wagon, and dressed it, and soon each of his little school mates were ^cen trudging home with a piece of vension. i ipfcOMES ! ft! every |^djn i eythe g M|[ VVtEK f il?-0(?D SBesfAUTHORS^! See the large advertisement in a previon; I HE I %3 "^0 ^0Tr SnbscriJi Office address and 81." 1ft 8 I R 1890, and for r. f::TI yc O L 3 ST HOLIDAY XOIEEPvS, 45 jj, Address, vSSmSSSm TEilPET-AXCE NEWS AXD XOTES. Let an end be made of this idea that drunk- ! cuness is an excuse for crime. Statistics show that the consumption of j alcahoi in France doubled between i375 and i 1SS5. "Want of work does not drive men to drink nftrir:nlr mw fr* tvrs-nt: r\f v/ori:. Tho Pennsylvania Woman's Christian Temperance Clniou elected Mrs. Mar-.- H. Jones, o? Philadelphia, as State. President. I ' An infant organization of the "W. C. T. U. ; in Falcon, Colorado, has already banished ] two saloons and compelled the rest to close | on Sunday. ' j A prominent Chicago physician, ssys tbs i Lear, has opened a private hospital for the ' treatment of professional and business men 1 addicted to the drink habit. A noticeable growth of temperance senti* inent among the Indians of Southern Califor* | ivz is reported by local superintendents or w. j C. T. IT." work among them. One year's -work of one woman. Mrs. Hel^n ; L. Bullock, lias brought more than 1600 active ! and nearly 700 honorary members into the ; W. C. T. Xl. of Xew York State.. The British "Women's Temperance Asso- i Nation recently entertained at tea three bun- ; e'red traveling'showmen and their families, i A Ucspel addfess and songs followed the tea Joe Tuck field has discovered on the Upper | Yukon. Alaska, a breed of powerful natives j who hs;ve never tasted liquor. They wili i keep themselves unspotted from the Christian j trader about four months. It is better to bs singular than to wreck your own life or ruin some other soul; better to be singular than to let a shrinking from criticism or ridicule induce you to take a course that will lead you to sorrow as surely j as the word of God standeth. The Washington (D. C.) Tv". C. T. U. has [ two "homes"' under its patronage, "The Na-1 tional Temperance Horns," l'or soldiers, | sailors and civilians, and the "Hope and ' Kelp Mission," for poor, unfortunate women, j inebriates and opium-eaters. An English guide, while showing the beau- j ties of the little town Saltaire, where no I liquor is allowed to be sold, explained that the "rate of morality" was remarkably high , while that of mortality was very low, being j about thirteen to the thousand. The Supreme Court of Iowa has decided j in favor of the constitutionality of the pro-; hibitory law of that State in authorizing the 1 seizing of liquor kept for sale, even though it is sent from another State and is owned by persons living in such ether State. IX THE ENEMY'S STF.ON'GHOX-D. ... The women of the Salvation Army have taken to visiting the liquor saloons of New York and Brooklyn in order to sell the War Cry, the newspaper of the army. Two of the very' pretty army girls were in a notorious saloon not a thousand miles from the Sv:i office, on this mission the other night. Loaning against the bar wore gamblers and pugilists, and cue or two who have been jailed for using then* pistols too freely. They seemed to be shocked at the appearance of the girls bons Oil the ugly straw bonnets easily told j them who the visitors were. Several papers . were bought, when a strapping pugilist strode j up and said: "Young women, I'll buy the i whole bundle if you "promise never to conic j here again."' The proposition was not con- j sidered for a second. They said They believed it to bs their duty to visit such places, adding that the nuns of the Roman Catholic Church did so. "But, don't you know that somebody might insult you," the big man almost pleaded. "No, sir," replied the speaker of ths two. ar.d.in words touched with scorn, she added: '\So man will insult us; the remarks oi others would not hurt us." 4? was eulv after persistent entreaty ?i'-ora the proprietor that the zealous vrctasn w?v induced , zo leave the placo.?.Vcur York Sun. | I AN" ALCOECLIf 78AXCE. In the Quarterly journal of Lichrieiy, Dr. Cro'ihefj writes cf the "Alcoholic Trance in Criminal Cases." maintaining that "the trance state in inebriety is a distinct condition:"' that "this brain scnttj one in which ail memory and consciousness of acts or words are suspended;" and that "during tliis trance period crime against person or property may be comnuttea without any icotivs or apparent plan, usually unforseen and unexpected." He also maintains that this condition should be fully recognized by court and jury, and the measure of responsibility I and punishment suited to each cast-; that "they should not be punished as criminals, nor should they be liberated as sane men; they should be housed and con lined in hospitals.'* This alcoholic ' trance," which makes possible the unconscious commission :>? crime, certainly involves great peril to the lominunity. This view makes yet more obvious the !n:;x>rtanc3 of abstinence, and the t suppression of the drink traffic, to tUe. 'end \ cbiit the dangerous alcoholic "trance" may us avoided and prevented.'^Yuitia}iC}J .4cjvoccite. " " ' ^ 7-' A CATHOLIC CRUSA3JER. Saiiie A. Moore, of Philadelphia. ; President of Sr. Malachy's Ladies' Tc&4 Abstinence Society, has the honor-<*? being the first Catholic woman to gddrc.?? a public assembly in the presence of a bishop and priests. This was at the last annual convention o" tho. t-.-ttlioJie Total Abstinenca Union held recently at Cleveland, Ohio, disss' iioore sends this assurance to ??U. Willard:. "1 am with yon heart ^-1 soul in the grand meviv. 'No sec-ta.-.ianisni in rc-lisriou. no sec fi;?: a'i-ri, in politics, no se^ in" citizenship; * but -each and all of us for God and hcjne and native 'and."" . *" ir Don't Pay, o i xp jr;ir.cnt with uncei tain remedies, when ftlicted with any of the ailments for wbich jfiercc's Golden Medical Discovery Lj ?commended, as it is so positively certain ia is curative ell-cts as t^Ts^rra'nt its mauuf tourers iu guaranteeing it co benefit or cure, r money pvki for it is returned. It is warrantd to cu. c ali blood, skin and seal p dues*?* ! alt-iheum, tetter, and air scrofulous ,nd sw.-llings, as well as oonsumrjio? hich sscrofula of the lungs) if iakeii vM time ard :iv'e:i a fair trial. D.-n't hawk, hawk, splc anl disgust every>o.!y with your oftVn-<i\'e breath but use Dr. >ag;'s Catarrh Remedy and end it. Tlussian revenues <i"C increasing, while j he expend itiUws are diminishing. If afflicted with sore eves use Dr. 'i'horop^ . >u'> Eye water. Druggist sell at 2j,c per Lotito 1 Tlie mou w^o is ri?bt is seldom left. We recommend " 'Tan-ill's Punch'' C gsr. ! Tho top;-r's mitt-) is "Live for to day," Hit tie employs two d's. * _ Satarrh in the Head rk inates ia tatiiJ :ti the blo>.l. Hancs [,< proper msthotf by which :o cur - catarrh i.> to Vr'f-J the i-ijo I. Its many disagreeable r..l tlie daurer of U8vv-lopia^ mt.es l^oachitisor iliac j em'Wv lata! disease, coqsuu .prion, areeating rc- j v>vetl hv n.^T^rsspaiiUa,' euros eacarni | y pitriiyiii? !l..- 'jt th.>svsft>ni j !i'i gruiUs. i~ji.-oves the scaeral health. TiT^fScT peculiar mediciao." . I have i;?oJ Ho.i.i's Xar>aparilla for catarrh v.-iri> _ cry satisfactory results. I received more wia*&* " "r.t benelit from it than from anv ?$mocb* L ; \cr irieJ."?31. E. liiiLt-j ci c: Son. j Vaiiseoa, Ohio. i Hacd's Sarsapanlia j old by all druggists. SI; six for ?0. Prepared ou'.v y C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Low'i j 00 Doses One BoUar IflOu I 1 "RAVEL | and llllteDATrmj AND INATURaL QCHIlDREKS ~byratic,^ e| histqr^i page ' issue of this paper. Send for Colore'1, Auaoaac sirfoiiiirrissor >er ?vilt cut oat and send ns this slip, tp 7.", tvc will send The Youth's Com^ar.ion ;ar from that date. This offer, includes th< and all the ILLUSTRATED 'WEEKLY SCP] THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, ??? ???? a?i K,? ' ; A ma a who has practiced med:clnd for 40 years, ought to know sslt from sugur; read what hs says: Tolj:do. (J , Jan. 10, 18?7. Messrs. F. J. Cheney <i C>\?Gtntlrmen:;? I have been in thegeuora' practie; of medicine for most 40 ye -r-. and would say th.it in all my practice and espcrier.ee liave never sren a preparation lint I could prescribe with as much con Sue nee cf success as I can. Hull's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by you. Have prescribed it t gr<v:t many tifies and its effect is wonderful, and would spy in c nclusion that I hove yet to find a case of Catarrh that it would not cure, if they would take it a-cording to direc iocs. Yours Truly. L. L. GORSUCH, JL D. Office ~.'o Summit St. TTe v ill give $100 for any case of Catarrh that can not be <uied with Hall's Catarrh Cure. Taken internlilV: F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Props., Toledo, O. ;-5~SoM by a!l Druggists, Tile. A man likes to have .gooI neighbors whan , he must lore his neighbor as himself. Orearoi!. Th? PrtraJist oi Farmer*. Mild,equable cli:?ato, certiin and abundant crop. B'i t fru-t, g ain, grass and stock country in the world. Full iaformafinil f r.iA 2 i . 2 #?.?* ? iori?otiAn Board, Portland. Ore. The salt industry in southern Kansas is assuming majestic proportions. A dozen great salt plants are already in operation, Sid others -will soon be established. ILYas Li ft1VI ja rms?fer ^ F&JERtdM 50 Ct s. COLD-HEAD ELY BEOTHEHS, CS Warren St,, 2iew Yorfc. ^^p}fiiLDS!4 JPt FEMALE*: REGULATOR dmim^ MrwCTSUATimi J f T \ Em 1 -4 Vo3 s H '4 wn I swim J cs f/.cwTKiy S;CKNCSS Jt lr TR.Y.EW OUTttHS CHAHEfc-Qfr" 6RIKT Btf^^SY)3m3&Wi.KBUn fl TCwWO&SA^<Mfl?/?efc ^ 8RABFIELU HESU1ATGRSSL &TLAHI&Z& V . a2iotjrAaLfl?a??S35.. ^ ?<wc r *? PALMS Bt>. fN'T.J.IEfiS. ?wJad?lphIft. P?i Scholarship and position,, get, \i-rite rorclrcnla?rt?*i!5S3.Jj HABIT. Only Certain a?U, ? 5 fc'J 3 3 &*S ?-a sy CT a-K in tiie World, Or.. U1 t f&3 J. i.. s-Ttl'IIUXij U*aao3,<4 rr~ " "i-, J SJiP ey UfV:2 ?>y onr A^tat*. V*s AH nvfei* oc. I'nitKix^ ?-W miV MEDICAL CO.;' Kicliir.ciid. Ytu fl Home *T'COY.Took-keeping.Bu?ir^s,?&nnak V'iitnitishly, Arithmetic, bhort-^uya^ of> iiiOKiiigUiy tau^ut i>v iIAll>. circulars tree. BJVv ??TS COLLEEN '157 Hw St., Br^jfioo , ^ Sew York. - ' A Offing |P srrt'^EI^JlEY EA&lf a jf|j ^ iicc!ar= sent *freiC ftUfrin' \VOOLLE* ^ M. D*. ATLAx/Ia, Ga. OUlce to# Whitehall St. THE FfisllY TS'LOS SYSTEM Z3TJ U O u T..JaZ It is so simple that It can baIrxrucd. u< ana will t>e >.dit to any one toe 50<*e$(*. Xt after >itt? m.xiars irml it proves, siaiiwi'nccovv. rciult or retani tii? system*. *<-KXT8j iVAXTE". Write for terms* AdI'o.s: GiHee Ijox tk;j. st. Louts? Mb.. 15 1 prencrtba and Tally ?w SrSl (5?rs? t* GMtf AgSsr c?rr?:ii ^gsl epeclScforthacsmiacui* /SSS'l TO o i>ATS.\gj <%; ihia iiwaae. ?gtes?r*ct?-! ^ uf^ G. a.I^GRAKA2?,2L . -v. ggg cna?8eaar? ^ ASuSterUam, N. Y.* vri >? ; tr ?? "W? have sold Kg G fo* -V- wsny years, and It has WT^ T^F!r=wtf > 4110 bcsto1 faction. Ofcio. D. B. DYCTTT: 3fCO.. vj cuicaeo, iffc vMa?^SP5^'a?r,.vS-.39. Sold?jrue*t?C*AFTER ALL 0THEf?^FAiL COKSULT OP inRR^ aof q u s K3s W BMP .*? -?!> North ii Si.. ft>? the treatment < :* W-xsl j-kiii T.ruptiona^ Nervous Ouiflain!". ! ri-'-.?v iit'nzy^, Strictures,. Impotency atvl KiN'tri^ .;?:????, nc>via?w of bw? "Ions staii'lincr > r ". ? li:U oiicinatiaj^ ri?~Teil V,v UlUu KSCE Send for ?. ! ( '- "?!.?? CHICH"!"1'-"'j FNGt-JStt*vr--v. nrc cfiof-i ciAf;oN3 cftano,' ./ *4/^ Safe ?? ! Mi?>>V. A 4-. i( a.-* Dru<;.-ii.: far 'ianwl ?W\ red. n^illi-fcov,, r.-aiyl sC^-^??/riS,hr.n. Take ..o othc^v^fiNW Wi ^iopwtebojM ??Wl??Sf^,g IT- ? 1 ^ eg **Kc"i!cr rLp J^7s>Ha by retnrJ* avAo. s<uruu.?fc. g'5 I iMfflaMlftii'tf faterernfif i L- ,1 pyjaari^ry-^ a.-?.* PSTm** jy |g^lforjllu?trttqdCat?J.-w;n<. yV~. A- J.Tovftr. Bo?tonA >:viM \ Srft?s tM1 V siws iiLE ieins - ACl Or. i J.', nv ?r;iuu?ni:.viv<" ' iwivu.; rurc- hiiiou-sscss. sivlc ^ouireclic*. eostiveness. njaiaria axid all I-v.-v a:>! 5ton;acb disorders^ \Ve are rcv?- s?s:11 size I>i!e BestiiS^ espc^U'-io' adapted for children unci W8KP? vi'.fy ?mal' ami easy to u.:<c. t'tjco oaf Qitber?izc'->c per Initio. A panel size PHOTO-v^AVURE of tielibove picture, k..- J7-7i?," mailed on receipt of 2e Ad.-. iho makers of the rreat Hi-iae.lv? j ile Beans.'" 4. f S?>ffiT;-i & CO., St. Ldui3, 5 5 U?45, {the ivoNoeTTiju"; - ~Z~. , > .t r-.taiUrttc^r.t ^ vPn| .; 'Jh'tlritUt-t'Wra ?nsesJ}\: lVV'iW>V?MV-? fREfc Znds'uip.gwiUtubo ?v.,-o/jtnK'rtLnuts* ^iid for tui <S?UT<*ry. \ 1 T? kikk. Ssc.<i etUEp torCat*-. i, '/ VgrxCJAl KP.KX logce. Saiiuuooiisdesirui. I?ciJYfcltI. LfTBCTKG WFfi. Or<. 'lift 'V n?k c? . l?bli?*L-riL_ easapt a y. cl^jrroo. n^t t ^5 h ; ,|- family I! ement ana Specimen Copies, free. i wety ii iiik name and Post I 5 | f? FBEE to Jiin. I. 1 ! b FOUR DOUBLE ?59? i ' PLEMEKTS. &1 7? [ Boston, Mass, !