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di . -.-.'ees'i on?Cthatj '.'?fcri?V&= ^Tb^.^r -scarcely J?*"-.- ^ebo,-ba?gc*e> ?T: wer^t;cvex .ti?e V " jrTCra?? bj w^^phrjst- approached; ??v^ ??wlem.^nditcgre are plenty of oliv?' '. *^ ?;???e?5 a^^.3Tee^-?&&i ptdrn .trecsr v that T"cc>rJd see... Yo*S2M?te? itthein . - thst^p climate has^ch&nged. ; Thei . tres likes wa?er, oaf W^?te cut) ing 3 : of formte, w??c?i are leafy grayer?J for K^v:'?^3^nS'^c iec?gie ? ?fftex&ly - to the pa>m tree. " 'jericho one* stood in. .seven ?&e&fif pain grove.; f01iy?t -wa^ j^f ' ' crcVn^.i with paisas^ The Dewl 'sea.has Vt, *v5ts Banks *he trnkks of. p Um ? .trees. : - . .vt floate?L^?vm-' from- some. ?l*t?n?':'. paira ?roye, and are pr?serv?e' irotu de-J ? csv bv'Ifee'isaJt which thevroo?v?d*fTO?n I _ - ". thejsoil. barresB?e?? S?s?ead; ;of fer *iity.. * - ?$??jtiss.,tod^nV*e?islatiJr<a? for j ? ?.. ^f^^^^sa^^iizslS trees; txymtr/jpj ams . r??N? a?d wes? sumew'Ka^^^jN-' . .. .. s*i lng. wherVthere ?^<^nTy/??\?.-: . Core ont vision Jerusalem^ the.sr?vi-' gious capital of all Christine age^i??ja? - was ih'>'point of observation.wher?&sj;? text conies in. Alexander rodo Enc alus. Di:k?- Ellie rode his famous Ma . . ?j^ gay, Sir Henry Lawrence rode the . jnettled Conrad, Wellington, "rode his . ' proud Copenhagen, but the cu::..:. ' of earth and heaven rides a e*?L. . that had been tied at the roadside. li was unbroken, ?and 1 have no doubt fractions at the vociferation"? >f the p pn lace. An extemporized saddle made out of the garments of the people was put ' o' ' the beast. Wht.o sonic %p gripped the-bridle of the co?t, . - s reverently waited upon Christ at the mounting. The two proct-ssien^f .*] .- . . pie now become one-those wao'cai out of the city and those who came ovi rS the hill. The orientals are more ? monstrative than we of the we . world, their voices louder, their g< lations more violent, and the syml by which they express their emorioj mere significant. The people who 3 ? Phocea in the tar east, wishing to mak< ! impressive that they would never re- ] turn, took a red hot ball of iron an< . threw it into the sea and said ti. would nevez_xetuxn to Phocei until t. ball ros* and ?Boated on tc^surface. i not surprised, therefore, af thodemon- ! stration in the .text. As tht c- tx wrrrH its rider descends' the slope of Olive; the palin trees lining the road are ca!i : j nnon to render their contribution to thc. /clcome and rFjv?v?ijr.~ T;:?--? of these trees are i?gh np, and some j).u>t needs final' 111*-1.. &ZB*???2_?J off the leaves and throw them down, j and others make of these leaves au em- ! erald pavement for the colt to tread on. j THE PALM rvPICAL OF TKIC11PH. Long before that morning the palm j tree had be? n typioa? of-iris-aj.'it' St ,-.-r t ins and Strabo had thus described it. Layard finds the palm leaf cut in the walls of Nineveh with th-- same signifi cance, in tiie Greek athletic games the . victors carried palms. 1 am very .ir:nd that our Lord, who five days after had thoms upon his brow, for a little whale, at least, had palms strewn under his & et Oh, the glorious palm! Amarasinga, the Hindoo scholar, calls it "the king am the . glasses.^ Linna-ns calls it "the prin/re isl . .?.etaiioii. ' Among aE trees that ever cast a shadow or yielded fruit or lifted their arms toward heaven, it has no equal for multirodinous uses. Do yon want Howers? One palm trec will put forth a hanging garden of them -one cluster counted by scientist con taining ?WT,000" blooms. Do you tvanf foo'li' It is the-chief diet of whole ns tious. One palm in Chili will yield nin? t\ gallons of honey. In Polynesia it is i L?. chief food of the inhabitants. Inindia there are multitudes of people dependent upon it for sustenance. Do yon want cable to hold ships or cords to hold w?d beasts? It is wound into rop< - unbreak able. Do you want article.- of house furniture? ir i- twisted into mat; and woven into baskets and slape,;: . . . drinking cups and swung into ham mocks? Do you want medicine? It-: : is thc chief preventive of disease and th< chief cure for vast population J ? y< CT want houses? Its wood furnishes the j wall for the homes and its lc: ves thatch them. Do yon need a supply for the ' pantry? It y-;.-ids sugar and starch and j oil and sago and milk an-: salt and wax I and vinegar and candles. . Oh. the palm! It bas a variety of en dowments such-?.5 no Other g -?AV:h that ? ?ver roUed the ,arth or "kissed the ens. To the willow Mod says. "Stand ' by the water courses and weep." To the cedar he says, "Gather theh?rricanesi into your bosom.'' To the fig tree he says. "Bear fruitand put it within reach j of all the ?M-oj.le."' Bat to tho palm tree j he says. "Be garden and storehouse and ' wardrobe and ropewalk and chandlerj 1 and bread and banquet and manufac-1 tory; and then be-type of what i meant : when ll inspired Davida my servant, .to say,'Th--1 righteous shall flourish like ?" pahn tree.'" Oh, Lord Gol. give ns-j more palm trees; mej? and women made ! for nothing but to oe useful; dispositions ; all abloom; branches of influence laden .with fruit; r^eoplegoed for everything^ , -. as the palm tree. If kind words.-jarej wanted, they ar* ready fo. utter them, ? :.. If helpful deeds are.needed,.they are ready to perform them. If pfctns of fulness are.to l^e laid out', they are ready ] to project them. ' If enterprises are to be forward-1., the\' are ready to lift fcl-.' them. Peo?'ltr who say. "Yes! res!" when they are a?k<.d for assistance by word or deed, instead of "Nb! No!" Most of the mysteries that bother ot hers * do not liotlier me because -I-.a*?j<;''.r:i them, but the mystery that really IK-th ers me i?? why (Jod made so many >?eo plo who amount to nothing so far as the world^sdjetterment is concerned. They st^nd " .'ie way. Tdaeyiobject. They ,di-c .ss hindrances. They grf^gest pos ?rji-1- i?s of failure. Over .-the* r >..-i of life instead of "pultog-ih-fte traces they ??lying back? the bTwciings. T'uey .. ' are the everlg <. ? yje fc >tingAO. '.Tifey axe bram .ble 'trees; ihey; are ^willows11 {ily.a^. ; - jp^uxcing. or.wild cherry tr??syi-h?ro^ ' .? only the lutter, or crab-apple frees prr> 'ducin'g oniy^the sour, while Ged would - have^us all .fiourish like the* palm rgsee. Plated in the Bible that' tree always < , means rlsefulness. But, how fij?le any '-of-us-or all of us accomplish in ti.?t di 4 rection. - We take- twenty or thirfv T years to get fully ready foi Christian . work, and in the arter pari of life we?; "take ten or twenty years for^he gradual^ gleam* ant ?~in/tfce,aix Lwas. i?rixT | . ['4^5$?- ? iVite &.vj^.:??b^ ?ir^joi ?Pay -crystu?Ch^-.^^r-^?p cove^J?rel ^"w^tom^^-por^^ [rand 'ihe-i^l^^^adre' bjr^t^-?*eo?*i ?h>ugb s?' i^bj^am. that you toss ine .^bz^r?K?r?^?ff?^r ' an&crus'n. metaader ?y??r^l?>i$??I "ara doing my best io fulfill what l-<was made- for. Clothed in white ? come o?:*?. .^heavenly mission,'and ;xvhen m'y-work ^is ^done and God "shall - call m mernhig-vapor I shall go .back, . :iTi"rawm by" the fiery, course's oi? the sun.'. .'*'Wh??? doest ihou, insignificant ^grass. 'iSade^chder my -feel?' "I ain^oing a work,""yaya tho grass blade, **as b^rri can. I "?clp to make up the soft. beauty' -;of" field and' lawn". I am/satisfied^ if, hZK&ii?'millions Of others no bigger, than I, : 5 caa Ngive. pasture. tp the. .^S?ks^nd j ?e soil an<np?^k^r?ih rTi? . who.-cJetheS?the lilith of i tiff ?W?^?Ptls??ie \yi;&;tiu?coat of gmli i." l?$^?r^..wha?, "k>neiy^?iixkl?,|^?ii >t?^t4B% t^a^j?r?ns'" fro^'at?^a^il 'i&^'Up ant^o^r^i^sap^1--' ' ' "jai* nke "?et?'-tha?tT nice ,me yjw"! "gather" up th~ and sear and then, e;^tn^rs' toll. I refresh the" :ikir?:T?e"dTV-CTWinrl tu laug:: hdrves?f ,ox_?t^jSt .and fields of . fr?.wn-.?f the stbrai ?nbow. At ?ren: ?rn.:' slopes I will !. pitch mfr ine???SM^XfV^r nie .?.'nail dash r the sai?ron ?"n?!13??;-purple and the tire j. of-the^unset A pillarof cloud like me h-djlhe el:' ?sen;?crossthe desert. and sur ^rbTinfled by such' as 1 the judge of heaven and cart ii viH at last descend, for'Behold he cometh with clouds!'"'} Oh. my friends, if everything in the in animate world be useful, let us immor tal men "ind women" be useful, and in that rt s])OCt be like the palm tree. But I must not be {empted by what David says of that green shaft of Palestine, that living and. glorious pillar in the eastern gardens, as seen in olden times -tlui.palm tree: 1 must not be tempted by "what the Old Testament says of it lo lessen my emphasis of what John the Evangelist says ol' it in my test . A LA WFUL ROBBEBY. "Norice that it was a beautiful and | "lawful robbery of the palm tree that . lp rd n.:. ?... up Christ's triumph on the road to Jerusalem that Palm Sunday. The long, broad, green leaves that were strewn under the feet of the colt, andi:, the way of Christ were toni oil from th? trees. What pityj'some one might say. that those stately and graceful tree. should be despoiled. The sap oozed out at the [?laces where the branches broke. The glory of the palm tree was appro priately sacrificeoVforthe Saviour's tri umphal procession. Sw it always was. ^ itjdways will be^Sn this world-no worthy fn?'m"Itfnir^"y gnTj without tb? tearing ch/wu uf something eSe^iSroSsTi lyn bridge, the glory of our continent. ! must have two architects prostrated, j the one slain by his toils and the other, -fori'J.v-U'po invalided. T,?w\ J pictures of the worhr'na.., est coloring, the blood of the artists who'j made them. The mightiest oratorios that ever rolled through the churches j had. in their pathos, the sighs and groans ntilio imposers, who wore their lives out in writing the harmony. American : independence was triumphant but it moved on over the lifeless forms of tens : rf thousands of men who fell at Bunker ! Hill and Yorktown and the battles.be- i tween, which were the hemorrhages of . the nation. The kingdom of God ad- < vanees in all the earth, but it must be over the lives of missionaries who die of * malaria in the jungles or Christ an workers who preach ard pray and toil and die in the service. The Saviour tri- j umphs in all directions-but beauty and i strength must be torn down from thc palm trees of < ''.:?]-? ian heroism and coa secratiOD and thrown tn his pathway, j To what better use-could those palm: trees on the southern shoulder ox Mount j Olivet and clear down into the Valley of j Gethsemane put their branches than- to j surrender them for the making of j Christ's journey toward Jerusalem the more mcturesque, the more memorable j ami the more triumphant? And to what | better Use e..;; (J we put our lives than! into the s ii rifice for Christ and his cause j and the happiness of our fellow crea tores? Shall we not be willing to bM toni down that righteousness shall have j triumphant way? Christ was torn down for us. Can we not afford to l>e torn ! down for bim? If Christ could suffer so j much for ?s.*c?n we ndt suffer a little for Christ? *lf he can afford on Palm j Sunday to travel to Jerusalem to carry; a cross, can we not afford a few lea'.'es from pur branches to um ke emerald his! way? A KKW LEAVES FROM OUR BRANCHES. The process is going on every moment in all directions. What makes that father have such hard work fo find the hymn today? He puts on his spectacles and holds the book close np, and then holds it far off, and is not quite sure whether the oumber?rf- the hymn is 150 or 130, and the ringers with which he : turns the leaves are very clumsy. He stoops a g< ?> "i deal, although once he was straight a> an arrow, and his eyes were ?teen as a hawk's, and the hand h< offered tc h: ?ride on the marriage day was of g<M.d?y shape and as,Ged.made it. I will U liaron what is the matter. Forty years ago he resolved his family should1 have no Deed r d iris children should he ; well educated and suffer none of th* I disadvantages of lack of schooling from , whichhehad suffered for a*lifetime,apd that the wolf of hunger should never put its paw on his doorsiU, and fori forty pr fifty^years nexha?"been tearing . off from the palm tree of 'his-.physical ' .strength* and manly form branches to I throw in the pathway of? his household. | it bas cost him 'muscle and lorain and health and ei&dghr,, and' there have beeil iwisttd off. more'years frqm. his life than any mau in.the*'crowd on the famous Palm- Sunday- twisted " off .Branch?s f rum ^th?^ palm troes on the road from B^.pajfiqJerusalem. What | naaicos'tha^ mother^look ?hr much older ' than she' really ??"*.YjOu say she ought not yet to hive one'gray line in her haw. The trath is the family was not always as well -off as now. The married-pair had a hard struggle ?at the start. Ex amine the tips cf the forefinger and thumb of h*T right hand'and they will tell you the .story of the needle that was plied day. in and day out ? . . Yea4 look at both her.hands .and th^y will tell the story of tire "time when'she did* her ow? work, her own mending and-?cnibbing and washing. Yea, look into* ?he' fa*e . and read the story of ? scarlet fevers'.Ind croups and midnight ' watchings when none but G^d and her self in that house wV awake, and then' the bu rials .and the loneliness afterward, winch'was' more eAa'tJsting. than the preceding watching nad- been, and no* one now t? puf to bed. How fair she a?rje?f'ina .\^t?r/..4Wf?o?ie' sjomra???s /crops/ bad J. ?ail?d t?roxtg'&^oa^^'^r:'|U><^s 'cpci?M cn^?.and^c?r he W?re his.cdd'c?ati^ "^ong ?nd'mad? his old" hat g?o? that ho might 3:eep yoe- atl'scEool or. ?bli?ge? -Wh?tris that, my yoting man, under your fihe^'boot todays the boot "that so fcel? fits your "foot/ioch a boot as your father could never afford to \year? ItPnrnstb? >Jea? ?-om .the palm tree-of your fathers canse; his. maimers are a Bi^*M?a?h-1 ion?d; -tigf-to. smuggle'iim ^.snd smugK gie bira- ou%but'e#Il in.'ycOT.j^r^'frtendV Itaks. h?n. to the ficmser <o?^God >ua -Kai to' votff't^or^an-ct.'^a^ "ildb-fe;as as.-tfell gotten up as^y?feJHP^.^? English parliamenp a nremb^-wa?^ ing. a great speech that -was unansT^ra J^^?cwA" derisively cried ont, "I re-.\ Jge?t"6$r yo^awhen you blackened my ??n&?t?ftsT "Y<?s," replied the man. ?*anx? Aid I not ^oiif'^^yjiever bc ashamed of your carly su*^?5undings. Yes, yes, all the green' lefye&fre walk ?ver were torn uff ?some palin tree. 1 have cultivate*o>?be"Rabit of' forgetting the"nnpl*5aBaht t nings of life, aig? I chiefly remember the smowh^hings, "ftnxl aa far as I remember now'in? Hf? has for the most part moved on over a road soft with green leaves. Th"e*y were torn off ' two palm trees that stood at tho start of thoxoad. . The prayors, the Christian ex ample, the good advice, the hard work of my father and mother. Kow they toiled! Their fingers were knotted with hard work. Their foreheads were wrin kled with many' cares. Their backs stooped from carrying our burdens. . They long ago went into slumber, among their kindred and friends on the banks of the Rarita?, but the influences .-they threw in the way of Aeir children are yet green as leaves the moment they are plucked from a palm tree, and we feel 'them on our brow and under our feet and they will strew all the way until we lie down in the same slumber. Self sacrifice! What a thrilling word! Glad am I that our world has so many specimens of it. The' sailor boy on ship board was derided because he would not fight or gamble, and they railed him a coward, lint when a child fell over board and no one else was ready to help, the derided sailor leaped into the sea. and, though the waves wpre rough, the sailor swimming with one ann carried the child ou the.other ann till rescued md rescner were lifted .into safety, and the cry ?>f coward ceased and all huz zaed at the scene of daring and .self sacrifice. . Wben, recently, Captain Burton, the great author, died,'he left a scientific book in manuscript, winch he expected would.be his wife's fortune. He often told her >o. ile .;aid, '"This will make you independent ..nd affluent af^jj.1 But it was a book which, thov. with pure scientific design, she felt w?r?d do unmeasurable *;jfensagsr to public "inor?is. With the two large volumes, which had cost her husband the work <*f years, she sat down on the floor before the fire, and said to herself, "There is a fortune for me in this book, and although my husband wrote it with the right tao ?ive aSd scientific peoclemight be helped by it, to ihg -*ra.st L ?jority of people it would be^ffnr?ful, and I know it would _damag# the world." Then she took apart the manuscript sheet after Sheet and put it into the fire, until the last bra wns consumed. Bravo! She flung her livelihood, her home, her chief worldly resources under the best moral and re ligious interests of the world, now MUCH ARE WE WILLING TO GIVE ur? How much are we willing to sacrifice for others? Christ is .again on the march, not fron Bethpage to Jerusalem, but for the conquest o* the world. He wall sure ly take it, but who will furnish the palm branches for the triumphant way? Self sacrifice is tho word. There is more inoney.paid to destroy the world than to save it.' There are more buildings put up to rain the race than churches to evangelize it. There is more .'?ravel literature to blast men than go^ Litera ture to elevate them. Oh, for . power to descend njK>n us all like that which whelmed Charles G. Finney with mercy, when, kneeling in his la w office, and be fore hf. entered upon his apostolic career of evangelization, he said: '"The Holy Ghost descended on me in a manner that^eeined to go through me, body and soul, leonid feel tho impression ?ike a wave of electricity going through and through me. Indeed it seemed to come in waves and waves of liquid love. I: seemed" like the breath of God. lean recollect distinctly that it teemed to fan me like immense wings. I wept aloud with joy and loye. These waves caine over me and over me one after another, and. until, I recollect, I cried out; '! shall die if these waves continue to 'pa over nie.' I said, 'Lord, I cannot bea." any more/" And, when a gentle-man came into the office and said, "Mr. Fin ney, voa are in pain?" he replied, "No, but so happy that I cannot live." *My hearers, the time will come when ujion the whole church of God will de scend such an avalanche of blessing, and then the bringing of tho world to i j vi will be a matter of a few years, perhaps a few days or a few hours. Ride on. ( > Christ! for ti evangelization of al! nations. Thou Christ who c??dst ride on th<> unbrolien ?plt down the sides of Olivet; on the white horse of eternal victory ride through" all -nations, and may wc, by our pray?ass and our self sacrifices and our contributions and out consecration, throw palm branches ir^j the way. 1 clap my hands at -the coming victor*. I ^eel this morning as did gie israelites when on their march from Canaan; they came not under the shadow of one palm tree but of seventy palm trees, .?stanMing in an oasis among a dozen gushing fountains, or as the Book puts it', "Tw< 1 ve wells of water and three score 'autt ten palm trees." Surely there are more, tm.t seventy such great and glorious souls present today. Indeed ?t is a mighty grove ol palm trees, and I feel something of?the raptures which I shall feel when, cur last battle f?*Ught,.and our bast burden carried, and pur last tear wept, we shah become one df the multitudes St John describes "clothed in w&ite robes and palms in-J&eir hands.^' .fia?.rbou brigit, I thou swift advancing, thoa, everlasting Palm Sunday of the skies! Victors over sin and sorrow and death and woe, from the hills, and valleys of tke heavenly Palestine, they h?ve plucked the-, long, broad, green leaves, and all the ransomed -some in gates of pearl, and some on battlements "of amethyst, and some on streets of gold, and some on seas of sapphire, they shall stand ic numbers j ?^ea^^tnnnaa malad?o^--^. .7~?MP mg- wher*f|yi a>|rfc.ctt#? happens ThVSiem?ns EfecLl?*Light^mpi?y, of Berlin, -will spend '$2S5,O?0 <jrf4t?e? hiliition at the World's Fair. I : ? The soil and climate of the newly opened lands of Oklahoma are said fb .be most favorable for tobacco culture. The owl is unable to move the eyeball; which is immovably fixed in the socket by a strong elastic cartilaginous case* Bismuth melts at a point so far/^e??W that of boiling waterthat it can be used for taking casts of the most destructible objects. 4 To tell a wpman-you love 'her without doing so, and then tb love her. without telling her is the-Alpha and Omega of flirtation. Since Patagonia was divided 'between Chili and the Argentine Republic it has been developed into a wonderful country for sheep raising. Baron Hirsch's agents have "presl-nted an application to the government of British Honduras, for lands upon* which to locate a colony of 5,Q0oR?ssian refu gees. " .' Poor Taste of Two Englishmen. It is a common thing to see the Eng lishman say or write things which no American Would utter or put on record. Lord Ronal -Gower, representing one of the noblest of* English houses, finds no sh .ime whatever in telling in his pub lished diary how he used to write squibs in the newspapers, satirizing his hosts of the day before because they let thc smell of duiner come into the hall. Mr. R. L. Stevenson is credited with a remark al most equally graceful to the effect that tho reason Thoreau never drank vine was because there was no wino in Amer ica fit to drink. , When we consider at hov many houses in this country- this live'y writer um-t have been a guest, and how cordially the hosts must'have shared with him the best they had, poor though it might be. *i-..rr,..^v .,y farriv enousrh be classed ? m ptrtnaaapo ^ooi i t>> low the highest stannum ^. ners.-Colonel Higginson in Harpers Bazar. A Query for a New Tork Club. A paragraph appears-in ono of the daily papers under this heading: "Car negie Complimented-The University Club Entertains Him at a Banquet." Following this is an account of the ban quet. Mr. Carnegie was. in thc- opinion .of the-reporter, apparently the guest of honor. As he puts lt, "the members en tertained Andrew Carnegie and ex President White, of Cornell university." If the reporter thought as we do, the precedence should have^been thus, "Ex*; : -^resident White, of^or ?oil, and Mr' Andrew Carnegie." But why should the University club entertain Mr. Andrew Carnegie? He is opposed to university education, and says so very frankly. He wrote a series of letters to the Xew York Tribune on the folly of the higher education. He has of course a right to his opinion, but, holding such opinions, why should the University club do him honor?-San Francisco Argonaut. I)r. Morell Mackenzie'? Income. Tue amount of money earned by Dr. Morell Mackenzie during his thirty years of practice must have been very large. Within a few years of his commencing practice (in 1862) he was making *25,uoo a year, and his income rapidly increased as his reputation spread, tiil about 1875 he touched high water mark, with "tak- : ings" of from fGO.lKK) to ?70.000 a year au enormous figure for a practice, the bulk o? which consisted of guinea fees. San Francisco Argonaut. No Enoch Arden for Her. After an absence of eighteen years. James Griffin returned to his home in Plymouth. His wife received him at the door. Jolie was very cool, recogniz ir : her lord after his long vacation. She said to him: "Begone. I will have ny Enoch Arden business." Griffin took the first train out of town.-Cor. Phila delphia Record. A Suggestion Xor City Physician-. The emergency which occurred re cently in a family living above Twenty third street and below Fifty-ninth street ghould serve as a .suggestion to physi cians of that district. Shortly after 11 < o'clock in the forenoon the wife and mother of the household referred to feb and sprained her ankle as she was ajxmt to enter her carriage in front of her resi dence. She was immediately assisted into the house and the coachman dis patched to the f "ily physician. He soon returned with the word that the doctor was out, and a round among the medical offices followed with*" the same result. Every physician in that neighborhood appeared to have the same office hours and not one could be reached, it was oveir an hour before the suffering woman got medical assistance, and the|? it was through her work in a certain hospital that one of th?jsnrgeons waa-dis- < patched to her relief. ''? It would seem to be a good planf for ' doctors to arrange their office hours with ; some regard to those of. other medical ( men in the same district, so rhat-one or j two should be always on call, good as < welL^or the profession as for the laity..-- ! Her Point of View in -New York Times ;-*! ' mt? "3fc7>j .'*?-? - - ' Jt? * * . . . Vbea Baby was ?cfc, we gate lier Castoria. - W?en she rsc ?Xi ". -...?pe crfwlf or Castoria. ' When she b??ftb^?^, s&^harr to Caster* When the had Children, slw^ve them Ctatoria, - ?, . * ?? the dirmer p^-t5rigado--ax^ hurrying to their places of ???y labor when the last of th? jught workers--leave' for ^horrie. Tdies?B.are' the -newspaper stereotypers and-pressmen, the bakers, the telephone girls*arid'those wh*o work the all night stores.-Chicago Tribune. * -T" . Trf Giant Chestnut Tree. Probabjv the largest chestnut tree in Connecticut stands in tho town o&Mans fiekLpn'tbe land of Mr. Whipple ?-reen^ Itwas^omtedtr?t"l?'me by Mr. Nathan St?rkl^ather. We visited it on/A^ag. 2?*1S90. It is in an open pastare, abotrt three-fourths of a. mile east from'^Mans fleld Station, perhaps 'fiftyr*oftV"froin the house of Mr. Green and not far from' the traveled road." A small brook' nins a short distance from the tree. The circumference- is twenty-three ?feet at four feet from the ground. It is heavily buttressed all around, and the trunk is apparently sound. Four largo branches have been sent out-tthe lowest, ten feet from the ground? measures sixteen feet four inches in circumference and ex tends toward the northeast. The cir cumference of the buttress*, or raider of their roots, exposed above, th?grouud is fifty-four feet. Some of the large and high branches have.been, broken, the result probably of severe snow or ice- storms, so that it is not i>erfectly symmetrical. The di ameter ff the spread of the branches from the northeast to the southwest is eighty-three feet, and from the north west to the southeast 100 feet. Mr. Starkweather estimates the height to be eighty feet. It is ? noble specimen of the American chestnut, which has with stood many years of winds and storms and promises to live many years-yet un less attacked by the woodman's ax. Let UJ hope he will spare that tree.-Gurdon W. Russell in Hartford Times. A Kc ii nu-kubtt; Sermon. A well lo do, well fed London clergy man recently preached to a congregation oi poer p*!otile in the slums, and took for .ij' roDic, "How to Be Happy Though ' 2s>:l He eloquently reminded bis i hough, they'might 1*,- hun ton 'JJV... /Inviting: .Frozen Feet, in cold weather never wear a woolen stocking inside a thin, tight shoe. To do so is to invite frozen feet. The wool grows damp and clammy with insensi ble perspiration, the shoe pinches the blood vessels into sluggish torpor. Be twixt them you have a frozen foot al most before you know it.-New York Journal. ll CU RES SCROFULA . P P P \ CURBS' - 3L??D POIS-ON. PPP ; C U T=l E. S ' RHEUMATISM PPP \ CU RES ? "MALARIA; ? . ? U R ES DYSPEPSIA. REGISTRATION HE. TnE Books of the Supervisor of Regis tratiqb will be open to register any one, entitle-? under the law, the JFIRST M?NDAY oT each ?month, up to and in elusive of the FIRST MONDAY OF JULY, 1892. Any one desiring blanks for renewal of lost certificate or change A residence will be supplied by address ing .me at Richland, S. inclosing ?tamp. N. C. M< T'CNALD, Supervisor Registration Oconee County. February i, 1S9L 5-3m Surveying; LANDS SURVKl'JSD in ?ny part of the county. Pricesjeasonable. '* T. H. HARRISON, jj October 8,1891.. 4L-tf ?'\ 10 .10'45' ' > ' .li 25, y .10 50 ' 9 45 . . a Camden*JVn>. Clearmont^ Ar Camden. ' Columbia- - . - - V MAIS' I.rXE-EASTBOtTsTO--r?AII>T. . A.M. P.M. P.M. P,M. Ar Charleston. ..ll 05--1 15 9 56" 10 2o I Lv Summerville. #0,25 12 27 '9 07 9 36 PregnalP? : I .V 9" 52 ll 45 8 28 S 58 George's: .... 9 4t) ll 31 8 15 * Bmnchvill.?;:. 9 15 ll 0u,? 7 40 S 15 ! Ar Branchville .. j, -.Jr>T>tr ::o Lv Bamberg ... "'. Graham'-s. " Blackville .. li Aiken. " GraniteyihV " Augusta...... UU'ft?. 7 ?)0 JO 20 0 48 io 00 8 50 S 36 8 00 6 28 5 25 5 05 4 30 > C?I:I'MBIA nivisio.v. Ar BranchviTnY x^^^ " OrangebuO. :. s 20 . " ?t.Matth*w's. 7 38- % ;,-JCin<*vi?le."?.33 - * ' OAMlfftX ?RAXCh. A.M. Ar Kingville. LvX'amden J'c'n. '^T'learmout_ " Camden " Columbia...'...??; 50 P.M. 8 10 7'10 G 43 P.M. 6 19 5 46 * 5 33 5 00 0 00 WH? stop to let off . f Meal Stations. . passengers.' i Additional trains, daily-Leave Colum j bia 9.00 A. M.. arrive Kingville 9.50 A. JU. i leave Kingvjib &43 IV M., arrive Colum bia y& P. M. . (&LIJMBIA. NT.WBERRY AND LA? *' * KENS RAILROAD. * Dailv-Ex. Sun. T\M:* 3 :>). .4 21. 3J37_. 6 IS1. 44. Daily-Ex. S?n. j .Lv. Columbia .*. .-rAr.. ...... Inno.. . ....Lv. .Little Mount'n.. " .. .. .Prosperity... *' .. .. .Newberrv.... " 8 -'JO_Ar.Clinton. A.M. 31 0o? il 09 9 O? : ft 24 G 30 _i CAROLINA CCMBERLAND GAP AND CHICAGO RAILROAD. Daily Ex. Sun. Dailv Ex. Sun. P.M. * A.M. 6 lo_Lv_Augusta_Ar_ '.? 15 6 49_" .. Grauitcvi'Je.. .Lv_:? ?5 7 05.. ..Ar.Aiken."... 9 00 7 15_Lv.Aiken.Ar-S 45 8 00_"_Trenton_Lv-s m S 15....Ar....Kdgeticld... " .... 7 45 rrmocGH TRAIN SEKYICE. Throngl? trains daily between Charles ton and Augusta, between Ch; Heston and Columbia and l>etween Columbiaand Camden. Through Sleepers daily between ? "Charleston and Atlanta-Lea ve Charles ton ;'. I.", y .M.. arrive Atlanta GM A. M.: twxve Atlanta 11.15 P. M. libia- i.ct.v ?: Columbia earhship Co. Wednesdays lo Mondays >t Columbia '. and from Ul. CON at Charleston with for New York. M and Fridays for Jae. Thtirsdavs and Saturcbv daily with R. & D. R. R. . Washington. New York and points hast and North: at Columbia daily, except Sunday, wita R. A- D. R. R.; C. fi G. Division, to and from Greenville and Walhalla: at Augusta daily with Georgia R. R.." Central R. R. and" P. R. A- W. C. Ry.: at Camden daily with C C. A- C. R. ! R., through '.rain to and from Marion, N. C.. and Blacksburg. For further information apply to R. L. LEAY,' Union Ticket Agent. Columbia. S. C. ? E. P. WARING. I Genera! Pass; Agent. C. M. WARD. - . Gcueral Manager* si*-' fy ag ^ ? ?> um Jm Wm ITriO?T PAIN ^Vtlam:ic Coast Line, Passenger Department. Fast Linc ' Between Charleston ; ami Columbia and Upper South Carolina and Western North Carolina. 1S92. Wilmington, Ar. C., Januar}/ 31, WKSTWAKD. ?No. 52. Leave Charleston (N. E. R. R. Depot) .w. * ; 50 a m " Lanes.".. 8 32 a m " Sumter. !M:lam An ive Columbia.10 55 am " Winnsboro.'.. 5 :>7 pm " Cheste :.:. 6 30 " Rock Dill.7 OS " " Charlotte. S 00 " Arrive Newberrv. 1 05 " " Greenwood.3 06 " " Anderson...'. 5 4:i " (*? 'Greenville. 5 35 " "? Walhalla. 8 00 " . " Abbeville. 4 08 " " Spartanburg. 2 45 " " Ilendei-sonvifie.5 Ol " " Asheville., 5 53 " EASTWARD. ?NO. 53. Leave Asheville. 8 50 pm Leave Ileud?rsonville. 9 51 pm " Spartanburg.*..12 05 pm *' Abbeville.10 50 aro " Walhalla. 8 00 a m " Greenville. 9 25 ** ' Anojenion.JO 05 " " Greenwood.1157 am Newberry. 1 57 p m " Charlo tte. 1 50 p m " Rock Hill.2'43 " " Chester. 328pm Winnsboro. 4 20 " Columbia.:. 6 00 " " Sumter. 7 25 " * Lanes. 8 45 " Arrive Charleston (N. E. R. R. Depot) .10 30 pm ?Daily. . Nos. .52 and S3. Solid Trains between Charleston and Columbia, S. C. ?? M. EMERSON, Ai s't ^eriT Passenger Age n t. J. K. KENLY, j* . General Manager. ? Wm .SCHEWCXE, IN- EFFECT '.APRIL 10. 1892, * Trains run by 75th Meridian Tune? " Brtwmi Colombia and <"rc?=nville Via Bollon Except ' -Exofpr ; S-Jidav STATIONS. S'ndav Nc ll. No. li.; A. M. Lye. . , Arr. !\ M. 11.10 .. Columbia .. 3.50 ?P. M. P. M. i ' 12.10 .?.. Alston- :>.ixi ? j 12.10 ...Pomaria .... 2.40 12.45 ..Prosperity.. 2.37 1 1.05 ..Newberry..- 1.57 l.io_Helena"... % 1.52 . j 2.02 .. Chappells .. 1.07 : 2.45 . .Ninetv-Six :.i 12.40 j . [A. M.] ' ?0(5\. Green wood.. 11.57 J :;.2S ... Hodges.... li.32 . . -SSS. ... Donald's. ?U1? * 4.01 ..Honea Path.. W.5&1 4.20 f.... Helton .... 1?.:-.?. '"??"'4.45 ..WiHiamstori. WA* : P. M.? * . ? 4.52 :. ..Pelzer..-, lo. 10 - 5.07 .. Piedmont.. 0.5? Arr. Lve. 45 .. Greenvil'e.. ?u.15 Boiivoon Columbia, A I~ toa ' au <1 Mpaf. . .- < . lanburs .-rtr*" . . Dailv., ! ??teiv. - ' ,~ No. 13. STATIONS. Xo.*i4.f"* - A. M. Lve. Arr.'P: M. 11.10 .. Columbia .. Sp.50 .P. M. . V 12.05 ....Alston.... . 3.00 i 1.05 ...Carlisle.. l3?j ; 1.15 _santuc-f i:?o ' .?1746 _Union ..... LOO , * ?18 ....Pacolet...' 12?03 Arr. Lve. A. M. 2.45 ; Spartanburg. 11.3' BeiH ocn Columbia, ?wborry aud Lan* rca?. Ex. Sundav. I Stations. I Ex. Sunday; No. 15." I I No. 16. Lvll loam Columbi:. Ar 3 50pm 12 05pm Alston Lv 3 00pm 1 05 p m Newberry 1 57 p m 3 07 p m GoldviH? ll 21 a m .", 30 p m Clinton lo 55 a m 4 15 p m Laurens IO 15 a m j Between Walhalla. Anderdon. Bollon und ii roon ?cille. Except Except S'nday STATIONS. S'nday N<>. 12. No. ll. A. M. Lve. Arr. P. M. 8.20 . ...Walhalla. .. S.0? Arr. Lve.; .Seneca... 7.30 Lve. Arr. : >vio . '*""',Ci.V,~. '^T.15 ', _?\rr. Arr.'' lo.a-;....A?nivison... y . Arr. " Lve. 10.30-Pelton_' 5. Ki Lve. Arr. :.11.40 .... Belton .... 5.12 Arr. Arr. 11.02 ..WiHiamston.. 4.4", ll.io ... Pfizer.... 4.::<; 11.27 ... Piedmont. P. M. Arr. 1 12.1? .. ureeliv?i?e . . 3.40 H< -tween Hodgon and Abbeville. No ll. No 15. WESTHO'. XT). Kxc't. Exc't ? Sun. Sun. : - p. M.A. M. Lv Hodges_ 3.33 11.37 P. M. Ar Abbeville. - 4.08 - 12.12 No 1^. No 16. EASTBOUND. Kxc't Kxc't Sun. Sun. A. M. P. M. Lv Abbeville.. 10.50 2.45 Ar Hodges_ i M'.'. Trains leave Spartanburg. S. C.. A. A C. Division. Nottlibound. :;.-">4 A. M.. 4..">0 P. M.. 6.57 i*, M. (Vestibuled Limited; Southbound; 5.00 A. M., 4.27 ?. M., 11.43 < A. M. (Vestibuled Limited); Westiiound. : W. N. C. Dirision. 2.50 p. M. foi Qender sonville. Asheville, Hot Springs and Knoxville. Trains leave Greenville, S. C.. A. ,v c. Division. Northbound. 2.44 A. M.. :?.::7 P. M.. 6.05 i*, M. (Vestibuled Limited): Southbound. 6.16 A. M.. 5.34 P. M.. P. M. (Vestibuled Limited). Trains leave Seneca. S. C.. A. ?- : . Division. Northbound, 1.17 A. M . LIT ;.. M.: Southbound, '.'<< A. M., 7.22 p. M. PULLMAN CU: SERVICE; Pullman Palace Sleeping Car ?on Trains 0, in. :r,, and 38 on A. A- C. Divisi. u. J. A. DODSON. Superintendent. . Columbia, S. < '. W. A. TURK, Ass'tGen'l Pas?. Agt., Charlotte, X. C. W. IL GREEN, General Manager. , ' Atlanta, ?ia. , JAS. L, TA VIA)K. Gen'l Pa?s. Agt., Atlanta. Ga. SOL. HAAS. Traffic Manager, Atlanta, Ga. ROBT. A. TIJOMI-SOX. ; * ROUT. T. JAYNE.*. : THOMPSON k ?, Attorneys and Counsellors at Late, Walhalla, S. C. Special Attention Given to all Business Entrusted to sOur Care. Septem! er 3,1891. 3?a A Big Shoe Sale at Norman's. Ladies'? Button Shoes, 85c., 90c:, 81, 81.10, 81.25, 81.40, 82,25, $2.75 and best at $3. A few Lace Shoes left. Men's Shoes from a Brogan to a Kangaroo and Calf Sewed. Infant's and Children's Shoes; only a few left, A varied line of Hosiery. Hand Painted Picture Sale. A beautiful lot of Hand Paint?d Pic tures in Oil Colors at "take-your-breath" ?rices.' Also- Frames Albums, etc. Only uringthe special sale. Remember-60 days onlv. The early* bird catches the worra.' Np throvrin a box bf matches or spool .thread business* Ve are in Alli ance earnest./ '' _ " y. * TU? Xormam farrell C? j?? so Well adapted to I reeo?sniendi. as su perior to any prescription imotm to me," ' B, A. AECHES; DM IT JphTych. I>rr^ctojry PlB ?F^REACHEsG APP'OiNT MENTS. TThtirrofeftiTpf - April next the p ;ta* apncurjjmeate on Seneca-Circuir. ?. ChurcObu*, Rev.'AlIston B. >larl Pastor, will be pSKT^g : V . SENECA, firsthand second'S^ndays, ll A. M. and fourth Sundays at S P. Sunday School at io A. 31. every Sun?' Prayer meeting every Tuesday flight at o'clock, and Epworth League pray meeting every Thursday afternoon at 4.: o'clock. F?ir.ViEW, first Sundays at 3.:l0 P. y. and third Sundays at ll A. M. FRIEXOSJIIP, second 'Sundays, at P. M. ami fourth-Sundays at ll A. Sunday School at 1<> A. M. " Prayer n.<$ti ing every Wednesday night at s o'clc^ ^gk Oi.u IVKK.VS. third Sundavs/at 3-.' .V M. Appointments for fifth Sundays wi \ announced hereafter. . _ ' Kev. M. "F. ' Whitaker will prea? l? 2?L Fairview C hurch every second Sunday ll A. M. The following arc the appointment of Kev. J. A. Wilson, pastor, at til Seneca Presbyterian church and Keowt| chapel : Preaching every first and thi \ Sabbath at Seneca, both morah aunight at.J.1.30 A. M. and S P. il. every "first" Sabbath afternoon a o'clock at Keowee chapel. S .school every Sabbath at Seneca : M.. and ?very Sabbath afKeowe at 2.30 P. M." Appointment* of Walkalla Chat ?. Church, Month, 1S92. Walhalla. 2.1 and 4th Snmlays ? ' , Zion; 2d Sunday at Z\ P.;<3i. Oconee, 4th Sunday at 3j"r\ M Whitmire, 1st Sunday at ll A . Jocassee,- 1st Sunday at 3* P. M. . Double Springs. 3d Sunday 3t ll. Laurel Spring, Sunday at. Z?? P - The above is the plan- for the Wa Charge daring the present cOD?e year. . . IL C. Morzoy, P. VDivine serv ice ta the Ep?seopa? Ch every third Sunday in. the month, A. M. and 4.30 P. if. Also, every " at 4.30JP. M.. and all Holy Days" il. Special sendees notified. J. I). MCCOLLOCGH, ML Preaching in the Walhalla B church every 2d Sunday in each m morning and evening, at ll A. M., p. M.: 4th Sunday in each month A. M., by the pastor. Rev. EL W. Z Sunday School every Sunday v, lo o'clock. Prayer .Meetin/" ' day night at 7 o'clock. - \ Services in the Lutheran " bc as follows: Every lirst. Sunday of the month in tin guage; every second and for of the month in English. Sei>. menee ar fifteen minutes to ll o'c M. Sunday School every Sunda ing at 9.30. S. C. ZKTT Services in the Walhalla church every first and third the month in the morning a In the evening, on every i fourth Sabbath, at 7* o' ' school every Sabbath o'clock "V. ?-lf*Ml?A\ iwpsanirx t?^s '^'-'A' WA? ...l".7ces Ulr w.. ! and fourtli Sabbath of ; morning ,at 11 o^clock. j onv same, days immedia i preaching service. '' Services in Ebenezer ch' and third Sabbath o'clock. ?um Atlanta A: Div .C< INDENS/ED W 'HEDI'I.. CC EFFECT .'A. ."Northbound. Sw BASnotS TIME. ' Liu Lr.Atlanta(?.T.).... I. " .Chaniblee. " Nbrcross. .. Duluth. " Suwanee. Buford. .. Flowery Branch. .. Gainesville. ?..VJ " Lula. .. Bel!ton..v.. " Cornelia. .. Mt. Airy. .. Toccoa. .. Westminster. " Seneca..*? . " Central. Earleys. " Greenville. 6.0."> j?t. " Greer's. " Wellford. Sp&rtanborg. &57pr .. Clifton.;. " Cow j ?eil s . .' Gaffney?..'. - Black-burg. " Grover. .. Kin^s Mt. .' Gastonta. *. bowell. " Bellemont. Ar. Cha rio! to. 9.1?) pm >o a? . Dafiv. Southbound. Cv. Charlotte. 9.45am ;.5< .' Bellemont.?. 2J2 .. Lowell. 2.2? .**. Gast-'iiia. 2" .. Kin^S Mt.:. .. Grover. Btacksborg. '. Gaffneys. .' M Cowpens. .. Clifton.:. .. Spartanburg. 11.43 am .. Wellford. " Greer's. .: o .' Greenville.12^6 pm 5 " Easlevs. 6 " Central.C " Seneca. T. Westminster,. 7. " Toccoa. s. " Mt. Ai ry. ? '. Cornell:*...... s " Bellton..T...y. " Lula....:. " Gainesville. 3.41 pm " Flowery Branch. Y .' Buford 1. Suwanee. " Dulutir.. " Norcross. .. ChamMe Ar. Atlanta yjrfcT.)... . Additional train* Nos. r< . modation. daily except Sunu 5.3e p. x.. arrive? Lula S.12 e. (Caves I.ula6.oo A. M., arrives Aila. Between Lula and Athens-No. 1. Sunday, and So. 0 ilaily, leave LP and U.40 A. M., arrive Athens V).t l-.'jO P. M. Kerurninff, leave Athens, . except SnilclKy." andsb. 12 daily. 6.2t 6.45 A. M.. arrive Lula8.05 p. M. and ?.3>. Between Toccoa and Elberton-No. except Sunday, leaves Toccoa 1.00 P. M Elberton 4.40 M. Eeturninif, No except Sunday, leaves Elberton 5.00. Toccoa ?.30 A. x. Nos. 9 and '.0 Frillmai Sle^pit between and Ne-" York. Nos. 3? and 3S- Washington ann Sont! Vesti?'i?ed limited, between .'.tlairta zr. iCKton. On thifftra i n." extra fare is Through Pullman Sleepers between *' and N'?w Orleans; als?.between Wast Memphis via Atlanta and Birmingb For detailed information as . through time tables, rates and F Car reservations, confer wi^ address MAT Assistai mu ?