The weekly Union times. [volume] (Union C.H., South Carolina) 1871-1894, November 21, 1890, Image 4
REV. DR. TALMAGKj
THE BROOKLYN DIVINE 1> SUNDAY
SERMON.
Text: %'So I lifted ? /? mtn? eyes the tmy
toirard the north."?Kaoklel viil., 5.
At one o'clock on a Detvmlier aftern<>on,
through Damownn cate. wo are passtn. ? out
of Jerusalem for a juurnoy northward.' Hot
for lletlicl, with its stairs, the bottom step of
__ which was a stone pillow; and Jacob's well.
its iminortat colloquy; and Nazareth,
BHbvltli its divin ' Im>v in Ilis father's carpenter
r <t*ho|>, and the most glorious lake that evar
rippled or flushed?
blue it alt Ice, sweet Ualllce.
The lake where Jesus loved to bo;
and Damascus, with its crooked street called
Straight, and a hundred ??i *
>iiiu Kiti una
surcharged with apostolic, evangelistic, prophetic,
patriarchal, kingly and Cbristly remIniswnw.
In traveling along the roads of Pulestin? I
am impresstsi, n* I could not otherwise liavo
Iiwh, with tlio fuot that Christ for tho most
part went afoot. Wo Hnd Him occasionally
on ? lioat, ami once riding in a triumphal
urowsiidii, as it is sot notitnos called, nlthoiigti
it seems to me that the hosauuns of the crowd
coulil not iiavo made u ride on a stubltorn,
unimpressive and funny creature Hko that,
which paltered with Him into Jerusalem
very much of a triumph. Hut woaroinado
to uudcrtmid that generally lie walkixl. How
much that means only those know who liuvo
gone over tho distunco traversed hy
Christ.
We are accustomed to rend that Betlmny
is two nriles from Jerusalem. Well, any man
in ordinary health can walk two miles without
fatigue. But not more than one man
out of a thousand can walk from Bethany to
Jerusalem without exhaustion. It Is over
the Mount of ' ilives, and you must climb up
among the rolling stones and descend where
exertion Is necessary to keep you from falling
prostrate. 1, who am accustomed to
walk fifteen or twenty miles without lassitude
tried part of this road over the Mount
of < hives, and confess that I would uot want
to try It often, such demand does it mnko
upon one's physical energies. Yet Christ
walked It twice a day?In tho morning from
Bethany to Jerusalem, and in tho evening
from Jerusalem to Bctlinuy.
Likewise it seemed a small thing ttant
Christ walked from Jerusalem to Nazareth.
But it will take us four days of hard liorsebnck
i (ding, sometimes on n trot and sometimes
on a gallon, to doit this week. Tho
wnv is mountainous In the extreme. To
those who went up to tho Tip Too house ou
Mount Washington before the railroad was
?nid f will say that this journey from Jerusalem
to Nazareth is like seven such American
journeys. Ho, all up and down and
across and recrossing Palestine, Jesus walked.
Ahnh rode. Jinvid rode. Holotiion rodo.
Herod rode Am? -
..j *'n.i?7. IMIt Ul'NIM
wnlktnl. With hwdIIhii tinkles and Horn I
muscles of the legs and bruised heel mut stltf
joints ami punting lungs ami faint head,
along tlio roads nn<l where thero wero uo
roads at nil Jesus walked.
Wo tried to get a now horse other
than that on which we had ridden on tho
journey to the Head Reo, for lie hud faults
which our close acquaintanceship had developed.
Hut. nft<-r some experimenting with
other nuwlriipeds of that species, and finding
that all horses, like their riders, have faulte(
we concluded to chi?oRO a sadiiio on iiiat
ltonst whose faults we wero most prepared
to pity or resist. We rode down through the
volley mid then up on Mount Hcnpus and,
as our dragoman tells us that this is the last
opportunity we slinll have of looking ut.lei
nsah ni, we turn our horse's lead toward
the city and tako a long, sail and thrilling
look at tho religions capital of our planet.
This is t ho most impressive view of the most
tremendous city of ull time.
t)n and a roil ud this hill the armies of tho
crusaders at tho first, sight of the city
threw themselves on their faces in worship.
Here most of tho besieging armies encamped
the night before opening their vol
leys of death against Jerusalem. Our last
look! Farewell, Mount Zi?n. M<nint 1
Morinb, Mount, of Olives, Moihit t'ulriirv*f '
\Vill we never seo them ngalnf
The world is so large and ^lm^lf?wio''sU)brt,
aud there are so many things we have never
seen nt all, tlint we cannot afford t<? duplicate
visits or ROC any thing mora thanonce. Farewell,
yonder thrones of gray rook, and the
three thousand yearn of architecture and
battlefleldB. Farowol), sacred, sanguinary,
J-u<KiIffiim I "Across ]
tliis valley of the Kedron with iny right
hand I throw thee a kins of valedictory. Our 1
last- look, like our first look, an agitation of ,
Lody, mind and soul indescribable.
And now, like.Kzekic! in my tent, I lift ,
tip mine eyes the way toward the north.
Hoar lit re won one of the worst tragedies of ,
the ages mentioned in the Hible. A hospitable ,
old man coining home ut. eventide, from lity
work in the ill-ids finds two stropgera, n litis- ,
band and wife, proposing to 1odgf* in tjio j ~
street because no shelter is offered thnni, iftdinvites
them to come and spend the night in
lii - home. During the lilpht. the ruffians of t;
tti-- neighborhood conspired togothor, nnd^
surrounded the house, and left the WiJEinn
dead on the doorstep, nnd tli" husbdrnvfty^
rally in reveugo the twvlvo ^
vut the oorpso of the woman into'
twelve parts and sent a t welfth of it to each
tribe, and the fury of the nation was roused,
and a peremptory domaiid was made for tho
surrender of tli? assassins, and, tlui demand
refused, in one day twenty thousand people
were left dead on the field mid tin- next day
right eon thousand. Wherever our -borso U*-.
nay plants Ins toot in those mieientoWaiestiT"
corpse lay, and tho rua Is were crossed l?y red 1
rivulets of caera;; . ,1
Now we pass on to wli?ro seven youths i
were put to death and Ih-ir bodies gibIs
fed or hung in i bains, nut for anything
bey hud tlienis-'lvea iliaie, but as a reparation
for u-li-it their father and grandfather,
KhiiI, had done, burial was denied
tlicro y out lis from May until November.
Hizpnh, the mother of two ?.f tin-so dead ,
boys, appoints herself as sentinel to guard '
ri'<> seven ciu jives from li-'nk of r.ivcn ti>i< 1
toother wolf ii11<I |>;iw nf lion. Mh? |>iI -I-?-s
? black lent on I ho rock close by tlu*
ribbefs. fti/pali by ilnv sits on the ground
in front of her tent, unit when n vulture be
{ .ilis to lower out- of the noonday sky seeking
it.: prey nino'or (h<< gibbets Ki/puli rises, her
long liuir tly ??;; in "to wind, and swinging
lier arms wildly about shoos away the
bird <>f |>rey until it retreats to itseyrie. At
night she rests under the shadow of her tent,
and sometimes fells into a drowsiness or half
sleep, (hit the step of a jackal among the
dry leaves or the panting of a hyena arouses
Iter, and with the fury of u ma nine she rtishes
out uiHin the rock .Tying, "Away! Away I"
and then, examining Min gibbets to see that,
tliey still keep their burden, returns again to
her tent till some swooping wing from the
midnight sky or some growling monster on
the roek again wakes her.
A mother watching her dead children
through May, June, July, August, Hoi item
Iter and October! What, a vigill Painters
have tried to put. upon canvas the scene, and
they succeeded in sketching tile hawks in the
sky and the panthers erawling out from the
jungle, but they fail to givo tlio wanness,
the earnestness, th? uipernatural courage,
the infinite self socrilleo of Rizpali, tlio
mother. A mother in the rpiict home watching
by the casket of ? (lend child for one
night exerts the artist, to his utmost, but who
1s sufficient to put upon canvas a mother for
six months of midnights guarding her whole
family, dead uud gibbeted upon the mountains''
Oo home, Rizpali! You must awfully
tired. You are sacrificing your reason and
your life for th<se whom you ran never
oring back again to your bosom. As I say
that, from ill-darkest midnight of tlio ceil- 1
tnry Ki/.pah turns upon me and criea: "How
dare vou tell inn to go homo? f am a mother.
1 am not tired. You might ?h well expect
OM <? got tired a* tor a mother to get
til ed. I earml for those boya when they lay
cn in* breast in infancy, and I will not forsake
tliem now that they nro dead. Interrupt
mo not. There Htoojis 911 eagle that I
must drive Isn^'i .with my no ml zed cry.
There is h panther I mlnflAit linelt vAft* ifty
chili"'
>)o von know what that scene livoiir roadside
in Palestine mak'-s me think of? It is no
nniisilnl scene, nigllt here in these throe
cities I>v the American s woast there are 11
thousand cases this moment worse than that.
Mothers watching hoy 1 that, the rum saloon,
that, annex of hell, has gibbeted in a living
oratti 1 toys hung in chains of evil habit
they cannot break. The father may go to
K'eep after waiting until 12 o'clock at night
for the ruined lioy to como homo, and, gi vine
it up, lie may say: "Mother, coma to bed;
thorn's no uaa sitting up any iongor." Hut
mother will not goto I wo. It U1 o'ciook in the
!t, I* halt-m4 S when he comes (daggering
through the hsll.
Do von say that vnung man ts yet alive?
No; he is (legil. Dead to his father's entreaties.
I)e?il to his mother's prayi rs. Dead
to tlte family altar where he was reared.
Dead to all the noble ambitions that once Inspired
him. Twice dead. Only a corpse of
w hat lie om* was. IJibbotod beforeHod and
man an<l angels aul devils. Chained In a
dentil ihat will not loosen its cold grasp. His
father is asleep, hta brothers nro asleep, his
sisters are asleep; but his mother is watching
him, watching mm in Iho night. After ho
has gone to lied and fallen into a drunken
sleep, his mother will go up to his room and
sec that lie is properly covered, and liofore
she turns out the light will put a kiss upon
his bloated Hps. "Mother,.why don't you go
to bed?" "Ah!nshe says. "I cannot go to
lied I am Kiz|>ah watching the slain!"
And what are tho political parties of this
COUUtt'y doing for sucu r ise! They are taking
care not to hurt tho feelings of tho
jackals and buzzards that roost on tho
shelves of the grog shops and hoot alsivc tho
dead. I am often asked to what political
party 1 belong ami I now declare my opinion
of the political parties to-day. Each ono
Is worse than the other and tho only consolation
in regard to them is that they havo
pu trolled until they have 110 more jiower to
rot. Oh, that comparatively tame aceno upon
which ltizpah kukall American motherhood
and American wifehood this moment
arc looking upon sevontv of the slain, upon
seven hundred of tho sfaln, upon sovonty
thousand of theslalu. Wool wool wool
Mv only consolation on this subject is that
foreign capitalists are buying up tho American
breweries. Tho present owners boo that
the doom of that business is coining as surely
us that itod i f not dead. Thoy are unloading
upon foreign capitalists, and when we can
get- these breweries into tho hands of pooplo
living on the other sklo of tho sen our political
parties will raw to Imi afraid of tho
liquor trulllc, and at their conventions nominating
Presidential candidates will put in
their platform a plank as big as tho lilggest
plank of tho biggest ocean steamer, saying:
"ltesolved unanimously that wo always havo
been and always will be opposed to alcoholism."
But I must spur on our Arab stool, aoi
hero wo conio In sight of Dooroth, wild to l>o
the place wliero Joseph utid Mary missed tho
boy Jesus on the wny from Jerusalem to
Nnztiroth, going homo now from a groat
imtioiuil festival. "Wboro is my child,
Jesusf says Mury. "Whero is my child,
Joans?" says Joseph. Among tho thousands
that nro returning from Jerusalem th<*y
thought that certainly Ho was walking on in
tho crowd. They described Him, saying:
"Ho is twelve yours old, and of light complexion
und blue eyes. A Inst child?' (Ircnt
excitement iu nil tin* crowd. Nothing ho
st irs folks as the news that a child is hist. I
shall not forget tho scene when, in a great
outdoor mooting, I was preaching, nud some
one stepped on the plntroriu and said that, a
child was lost. We went on with the religious
service, but all our minds were on tho
lost child.
After a while n tnan brought on ths platform
a beautiful little tot that looked like a
nieoo of heaven dropped down, and said,
"Hew* Is that, child." Audi forgot all that
I whs preaching about, nud lifted the child
to n?v shoulder and said, "Here Is tho hist
child, and the mother will come and get. her
right away, or 1 will take her home find add
her lo my own brood!" And some cried and
some slvutcd, nud nmid all that crowd 1 instantly
detected tho mother. lOvirvlvidy
bad to get out of her way or lie walked over.
Hats were nothing nud shoulders w.<ro nothing
innl heads were nothing in Ji--? p .thrva.T,
and 1 realized something of what, must Imve
been Mary's anxiel y wh 'ii sir* lost Jesu-, nml
wbnt her k'riIip* s when Hi" found her liny in
tho temnle of Jerusalem talking with loose
old minister* of religion, Kliauimui, Hill el
aivl Uetirah
i iie.-sr down nn you lo-day with a mlghtj
comfort-. Mary and Joseph said: "Wli to is
cui Jesus'" and you say: "Where is John!
or where is Henry? or where is tleorge?'1
Well, I should not w inder if you found him
after n v.Iplo Where? In the same placn
tvliere .1 *?s* ph and Mary fonn 1 their ln?v--iu
tin* temple. What <l'i 1 menti by that? I
mean von do vonr duty toward (bid and tonard
yourehiM and urn o ill find hininft-er
rar.wliii" in tie* kingdom of Chri-t. Will you
sify, "t do not have unv wey of inHtpniciug
^14$. -philA?" I answer you have tie* most
treuiouiloLs line of inlhiciivn open right hetore
vou. As you write a letter, and there
are tliivo routes by which il may
go, but you want it to go the quickest
route, and you put on it "via Southampton."
or "via Kail Francisco," or "via Marseilles,"
(he tlirniv* of Hod." How long will such a
*fio?l wish take to get to its destination?
Rot quite as long us tho millionth part of a
.. ond. I will prove it. The promise is:
"Heforo tb.cv call I will answer." That
m<vins <it, your first motion toward such
prayerful exercise the hl"ssing will couv.nnd
it' tlye prayer lie made at in o'clock at night
it will l>o answered five minutes before ton.
$4i5f*orc tlioy cull I will answer."
So el),, you say, I am clear discouraged
pi&outhiv son, and J am getting on in years,
aud i fear I will not livo to sou him converted
, Perhaps not. Nevertheless 1 think you
wi^ find hint in the temple, the heavenly
temple. There has not been an hour In
heaven the last one hundred years when patents
in glory had not had nnnouiiced to
t l*iii tliu salvation of children whom they
left in this world profligate. Wo often have
to say "iiorgot," butCiol lias never yet on^e
said "I forgot." It may hi after the grass
of thirty summers has greeted the top of
your grave that your son may befoiui I in the
earthly temple It may ho llfty years from
now when some morning the towers are chiming
the nuilius to thoglorlllol In heaven that
you shall llnd him In the higher temple
which 1ms "no ncal of candle or of sun. for
the I,ord tied and tlio Lamb are the light
theroof."
t'heer up, Christian father nnd mother I
Cheer npl Where Joseph and Mary found
their hoy you will find yours?in the temple.
You see, Ood could not afford to do otherwise.
One of the things He has ttosltively
promised In tlio Bible is that He will answer
earnest and Itclicvinir itrnver. Knlliuir to do
Hint I f<' would wreck His own throne, and
tlit* foundation of His palace would give
way, and the l>nnk of heaven would suspend
payment, and the dark word, "repudiation,"
would l>" written across the sky, and the
eternal government would bo disbanded and
tied Himself would liecome an exile. Koci
on with your prayer, and you will yot. find
your child In tlio temple, olthor the temple
here or the temple al?ove.
Out on flu'western prairlea was a happy
hut Isolated home, father, mother and
eldld. By the wile of cattle quite a large
sum of money wan one night in that cabin,
and the father was away. A rohlier who had
hoard of the money one night looked In at
the window, and the wife and mother o(
that home saw him and she was helpless.
Her child by her side, she knelt down and
prayed among otlcr things for all prodigals
who were wandering up and down the world
The rohlier hoard her prayer ami was over
whelmed and entered the cabin and knell
beside her and liegnn to pray. He had conn
to roll that house, hut the prayer of tha
woman for prodigals reminded him of hii
mother and her prayers before he became i
"**?l "ti.l from thr f K/#tF H o I?f r
Mir% i rnte ? t?*l* titrti/ nuitiftli Wftn til rt t.'lff
lii a great audience, and the orator who cant
on tlio platform and plead gloriously fo
rigiiicoienem ami noo was the man wh
many years lieforc had looked into tliecnhj
op the prairie asa robber The speaker an
the auditor immediately recognized < ae
other After so long a time a mother
pre vers answered.
Hut. we must, hurry on, for the mulcted
and baggage men have been ordered to pitc
our tents for to-night at Bethel. It is alrond
getting so dark that we have to give up n
idea of guiding the horses, and leave them I
1 ttn'ii- own sagacity. IV> rido down mm
f mud cabins mid into ravlnw, where ft
horses li'in from depth to depth, riwks l#ld
rocks. riK'Kii under ruck*. Whoa' Whoi
\V?> dismount in thin plarr, nwmornliln f<
many things in liiblo history, the two inoi
prominent.? theological seminary, whereof o
they made ministers. and for Jaootfn dreau
The students of this Bethel Theological Hem
nary were called "win* of the prophet*
Here the young men wero fitted for tl
ministry, and those of na who ever had tl
advantage of such institutions will cverlai
ingly lie grateful, and in the calendar i
saints, which I read with ?*|x-cinl affectfo
are the doctors of divinity who blessed m
with their care.
I thank t tod that from these then logic
seminaries there in now coming forth a mai
nlficent. crop of young minister* who ai
taking the pulpits in all parts of t.n<> land,
hail their coming, ana tell these your
brothers to shake off the aonsnolenca of eo
turies, and get out from under the dus1
shelves of theological discussions which ha
no practical l>aaring on this age, which nee
to get rid of its sins and have its sorrov
comforted. Many of our puiptte or* <lyir
I
'.vecause they cannot endure the technicalities
: and profound explanations of nothing, and
arnnona about toe "eternal generation of
' the son," and the difference between sublaiwnrianisin
and siiprn-lnpsarianism, and
about who Melchlsedec wasn't. There ought
1 to be as much difference between the modes
i of presenting truth now and In olden time
1 ns between a lightning express rail train aud
n canal (mat.
Years ago I went up to the door of a fao,
tory lu New Kngland. Oil the outside door
I saw the words, "No admittance." I went
| In and came to another door ovor^fehlch were
I the words, "No admittance." Of course I
went in, and came to the third door ipscribed
| with the words, "No admittance." Having
I eutered this I found the people ineide raaJdnjr
j i)ins, lieantlful pins, useful pins, and nofmmp
nut pins. Bo over the outside door of niaulp
| of the churches litis been practically writt"!1
the words, "No admittance." Some have*
entered and have conic to the inside door andl
found tho wor.ls, "No admittance." Hut ^
persisting, they have cotno inside ami found
ns sounding out our little nicotics of lieiiof
pointing out our little differences of theological
sentfinciit?making pins!
Hut most distinguished was Bethel for tliat
famous dream which Jacob had, his head on
n collection of stones, lie had no trouble in
| tills rooky region in finding a rocky pillow.
There is lardly any thing else but stone. Yet
I the people of those lands have n way of dr.twi
lug their outer garment up over their lr-id
and face, and such a pillow I suppose Jacob
hud under Ills head. The pinrnl was u:-- d ill
tho Hiblo story, nnd you llnd it was not a
pillow of stone, hut of stones, 1 suppo:>', w?
that if one proveil to be of uneven surfae lie
would (urn over in tho night nnd tnV. anotner
stone, lor with such a hard loutt ho
| would often change in the night. Well, tlint
I night Qod 1'iiilt. in Jacob's dream a loug,
splendid ladder, the feet of it on either side
of the tii ed pilgrim's pillow, and tho top of
it mortised in the sky. And bright Immortals
came out from too cnstl?s of nnd>er and
gold and put their shining foot.on the shining
rungs of the ladder, and they kept coming
down and going up, a procession lioth ways.
I suppose they had wings, for the Bible
almost always reports tlieui ns having
wings, but this wns a ladder on whicb tliey
usdl hands aud feet to encourage nil those
of us who have no wings to cliuib, and encouraging
lis to believe (lint if we will use
what we iiHvctiod will provide a way, nnd
if we wiii emirioj the hnnd and foot lie will
furnish tile Indder. Young mini, do not
wait, for wings. Those angels folded theirs
to slmw you wings arc not necessary. Let
all the people who have hard pillows?hard
| for sickness, or hard for poverty, or hard for
Jieiitwm'nw-know uihiu nam pillow is the
anding place for angels. Tliey seldom
ilwcnMl to pillows of eiderdown. 'I'll, y
aelilum bniM dreams in the hrnhi of the one
who sleeps easy.
The greatest dream of nil time was thai of
Nt John, with his head on the rocks of I'atmos,
and in that vision lie heard the seven
trumpets sounded, and saw all tho pomp of
heavi n in procession cherubic, ecrapliicu
archangelfc. The next most memorable anrl
glorious dream was that or John Htmvnn,
liis uillow the cold stone of the lloor of liedfoid
jail, froui which lie saw ttin celestial
city, ami so many entering it lie cried out in
his dream, "I wish myself among them."
The next most wonderful dream was that
W usliington sleeping on Hie ground at Valley
Forge, his head on a white pillowcase of
snow, where he saw the vision of a nation
emancipated. Columbus slept 011 u weaver's
pillow, hut rose on the ladder let down until
he could see a new hemisphere. Demosthenes
slept on a cutter's pillow, hut on tho ladder
Hn?n arose to see the mighty assemblages
that were to be swayed by hlsoratory. Arkwright
slept on a barber's pillow, biit went
up tne ladder till he could see nil Kngland
ipiake with tho factories lie set going. A kenside
slept on a butcher's pillow, and took the
ladder up till he saw other generations helped
1 by his scholarship.
i John Ash wort n slept 011 a poor man's pit'
low, but took the ladder up until he could
see hisprayers niut exertions bringing thous'ovis
of the destitute in Kn ;land lo salvation
1 and heaven. Nearly all those who arc to1
day great in merchandise, in statesmanship,
in law, in medicine, in art, in literature, wero
once at the foot of the ladder, and in their
boyhood had a pillow hard as Jacob's. They
who are born at the top of the ladder are npt
to spend their lives in coming down, while
those who ure ut the foot, and their head oil
? a Imwlder, if they have the right kind of
dream, are almost sure to rise.
! notice that thoso augels, either in coming
down or going up on Jacob's lud<|M|
tix>k it rung by rnug. Thov did nul
tiVrise. Faith nddetl'to faith," good deed to
gowl deed, industry to industry,' consecration
to consecration, until you reach
the top. rung by rung. Gradual going up
from a clock of granite to 11 pillar of throne.
That night at bethel I stood in front of my
tent anil looked up, ami the heavens wero
full of ladders, first a ladder of clouds, then
n larlilor of utot*d uml oil un ottrl flown t.lio
heavens were angels of l>eauty, angels of
consolation, ungels of God, usccnding and
descending. "Huroly, God is in this place,"
said Jacob, "and I knew it not." But tonight
God is in this - lc.ee and I know it.
A Sunken Forest.
There is a sunken forest of white
cedar in New Jersey which has lieen
continuously "mined" for its valuable
timber for over eighty years. The curious
industry of digging for the sunken
logs is carried on by the people of Dcnnisville,
Cape May County, a village
which was brought into existence solely
through the wealth of the buried timber
in its vicinity. Over the sunken foicst
trees of large size are growing, und in
many instances these are < it away in order
to get at the more valuable timber,
which lies only three or four feet below
the surface. All the sunken trees aro of
enormous size, two to live times largor
' than those now growing on the surface.
| riie exact age in which they lived is a
matter of curious conjecture. It is prob'
rhlo that they were buried many centuries
ago by the action of an earth,
quake.?Netn York I'onmrrciul Ailcei titcr.
I ?
A Sensitive Ibilauce.
in a lecture to the British Association
on his ikTw celebrated quartz fibres, Proi
feasor C. V. Hoys exhibited the applica
fion if the minute threads as suspender*
. for extremely delicate apparatus. Tin
' heat from a candle at tlio extreme end ol
the hall was sufficient to turn a mirroi
i Hiispended from one of the fibres, th<
movement being made visible by tin
spot ?f light rcfleete<l on a screen. i
musical rote even produced a defloctloi
? of the spot. What was perhaps evei
? more wonderful was the demons! ratioi
* that, attraction so small as the 25-mil
r lionth of a grain might he weighed, th
? attraction of gravity of flint amount pro
( during a visilde effect on a torsion ha]
t anee made of the ipiart/. lihre.?Trento\
' (A'. J.) American.
Tke (Jrent Carpet City.
? Tlio Philadelphia I'rata says the fextil
industry is the greatest of all Industrie
I in Philadelphia, and tlio largest brand
;< ,of that industry is carpets. The trad
((( ho* been in a nourishing condition, am
s, in one ward in the city more carpets ar
* -made than in all England combined, th
" former homo of tho industry. Thor
l' are at least one hundred Nnd fifty mill
ii. i^tie city producing goods worth prob
\ ably #40 ,000,000 a year, employing full
lf ; seventeen thousand persons.
u *
A Fire Legged Calf.
[J1 Ii. 8. 8tuples, of Belfast, Mo., lifts e
? exhibition at the Phcenix House stable
steor calf witli five legs. The fifth or
starts from the nigh hiud gambrel joii
m nnd branches down with a perfect foo
1 upon which he steps tho same tut upc
'K the others. In addition to this freak i
nature the calf is a beauty, being ?n
v* six months old, and weighing 618 pound
'? Hi* girth i* four feet nine inches,
j -?mm
rt
. rfaiftT
" a j
Sledding Upline. I
A lame man, abj?c:ir* '
lias j uat in."do the a?lont Bla?o? . n?
In the Swiss Alps. $ J??*
sen has been a great.
Ho is the President of tty>A,PJn? bo
C'lub and an astronomo#4" Pe
up on a sledge whtelir *wn an* i dil
pushed by twenty-two *hll?
they bad a rather H 10 sotn# y(
parts of che^^ukgentleman snt ' p
I ver.JF^b "'Jwswlr, . n
/ '**'* of snoW'y^y *? t*n ' b
I nralnrmhes ,W ?otlon. Th? a
kl tweiity.tWo J"'10 wwa up to their h
\l waists In thol t|?wlltt,le ?,d 8**' I
1 llenum to yydpforallttlovariety, c
and iisst/n-d lift*? ory short pull
would land iyp^?P the moiin i J
daiu. ^ I
lie finally cV"1 *? trJ i4? got ofl t
his Blwlge nod.'l'* or nrea itspi, !
when ho tun?bl^^n the snow. He i
said the work "'H too hard for hit ' 1
strength ami tt get hirn np ou I
the siedgo Honi)* j Another hour's
hard work and teyotnorwae on top
of the inouutoinibiVt time that any 1
one has ever tab'T^g? journey Uf
Mont iilanc. \
It took hiui tw *1^*? uiake the as? |
cent, hut ouly oi l^lp return to tbo
hotel near the foi'jLjJJountaln, and j
during the many ^/"Hides wett
putting away twe j
luilUs,
pine s!e<lgo travelor, Xlthc veranda
of the hotel watchimrltnovemeut ol
of their relative tbrouMllocope. H*
therefore not only ascAhe mountain |
with a considerithlu ilfcof cotn^ort,
but afforded all the wA very unlqua
and interesting s|iectA thoae who
were watching the j?r?ow.? WimAington
isbtr. I
Tlio Ancient UuKThe
ancient game ohf is likely to
bo extensively playodi'bis country,
now that fashionable E?hwomon have
developed such a siid?e;ndne?s for it.
Its violent popularity iraitli Britaiu la
a new thiug. A moflc visitors to the
South of France wil( rll having witnessed
golf matches at n, whcre'therc
is u "golf links," nsthemml prepared
for its play is called^ > one way the
game is nioto violent exeno than tennis.
To "drive" a ball at goi however, one
lias t<> swing iduh'i ^Jbyi*b botl
hands over tWshotildd, vXmneli as i
carpet beater would do it. ?t is not ai
ungraceful sport, lioweveAnd for th
moment it is tlii iage li English
women, golf link* being cued ovcrj
where and golf clues lnol Jiving. by th
score. As a test ft deliver it is pre
nouneed by thosoiotnpeJit judges, th
men, even supcriogo crenet. I'atienci
sweetness through lonAmtinuod n?
versity, and a resolute (Iting down <
an inclinalioii to advamluno's ball 1
other means than fair, tJ some of tl
traits it develops.?A'no m-L Timet.
Safety Wheels for (Anibpun.
H ifety wheels have recMly lnsen fltt<
to some of the London e'Miibusos. The
are small wheel*?custom would perhu|
lie a more expressive n?{H4~ ulUuiied
the body of the y>dfcTc, nnl ordinnri
carried a few elf the ground,
that iu breaking
of Are or six inches. It'is said that
attempt will be made to have the apf
cutiotr of these safety wheels uiudc co
pulsory in order to prevent accide
simitar to those which so puiuft
lliarred the hut couching season.?1
York Journal.
Aii A indent Egyptian Scythe.
An Egyptianscythe, recently unearth
is exhibited .miung the antiquities in
private museum of Flinders Petrie
London. The shaft of the instrumen
wood, supporting a row o( flint an
which are recurely cemented into
This discovery will set at rest the sp<
lations which have l?eon made as to 1
the crops of tho land were gntherc<
the flint and early copper age. It
long been HU?|>ectcd that such an ins
ment as Mr. Pctric has brought to li
was used, hut there was no direct
dcucu.
Cure n."^ v
To euro ti felon, srfys fi correspond
mix equal parts of strong ammonia
water and hold your linger in it fi.i
toon minutes. After that withdrav
aud tio a piece of cloth completely s
rated with the mixture around it
keep it there till dry. If this treatn
in adopted when the ailment is nt
realised the pains will cc.ise at cue
boicntific American.
? | ONU BNJOYB
Both the method and result* wl
By mp of Figs is taken; It is pleaa
and refreshing to the taate, and a
n gently yet promptly on the Kidne
a Liver and Bowels, cleanses the c
11 tern effectually, dispell colds, he
" aches and fevorn end cures habit
constipation. Brrup of Figs is I
^ only remedy of Its xjnd eser jp
" duced, pleating to the taste and
H ceptable to the stomach, prompt
"T "*'t 'r"'iMrilfl ii
j en?cts, prepare^ onnviHuf rn
I healthy and agreeaMSattPtanc
| Its many excellent #we> at
I mend it to all and made
,n the most popular reafidy known
n Brrup oi Figs is usale in I
' and ll bottles by nil WJuUpgdr
it ' gists. Any reliable fir^^ist a
t, may not hare it on hand /will p
m | cure it promptly for ant one a
'f wishes to try it Do xbt aoo
1J any substitute. \
!*: ' CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP I
- , , 9AM FMUtCmOO. 04tA
WakLmm+JL if M
A noCTOR'S CONFESSION.
A
i Do?w'i T>k? Mack MeiixUii and Ad.
Tim tke Reporter Ket Te. . .
Humbug? Of course it is. The so-culled J*
ence of medicine is a humbug and has '? r
an from the time of Hippocrates to the |tfO(
tstent. Why the biggest crank in the In- towl
in tribes is the medicine man." .,
"Very frank was the admission, especially
when it came from one of the biggest ? c
>ung physicians of the city, one whose the
notice is among the thousands, though ho
is been graduated but a few years,'1 says .
10 Buffalo Courier. "Very cosy was his of- t,ial
oe too, with its cheerful grate Are, its Queen and
.nne furniture, and its many lounges and ,n
uy chairs. He stirred the Are lasily, lighted
fresh cigar, and wont on."
"Take the prescriptions laid down in the for
ooks and what do yon And? Poisons mainly, ?l(
nd nauseating stuffs that would make a
ealthy man on invalid. Why in the world /
a ten co should go to poisons for its remedies trie
cannot tell, nor can I And any ono who m<
*? " Int
"How does a doctor know tho effect of his
nedicine?" be asked. "He calls, prescribes,
ind goes away. The only way to judge would ?rj
>o to stand over the boa and watch the pa- re
ieot. Thia cannot be done. So really 1 ^
lon't know bow he is to tell what good or
turt lie does. Sometime ago, you remember,
the Boston Globe sent out a reporter
with a stated set of symptoms. He went to
eleven prominent physicians and brought ki
bock eleven different prescriptions. Tills m
Just shcTr; how much science there is in J.?
medicine." "
There are local diseases of various charaotera
for which nature provides positive remo- i,
dies. They may not be included In the regu- | 8
lar physician's Ust, perhaps, because of their *
simplicity, hut the evidence of their cura- V
tlve power Is beyond dispute. Kidney disease
is cured by Warner's Bafe Cura a strictly
herbal remedy. Thousands of persons,
every year, write as does H. J. Gardiner, of
Pontiao, R. I.. August 7, 1800:
fwr JlWIt .1 juffered more than
prdbably ever win be mown outside of my- |
self, with kidney and Aver complaint. It is I
the old story?1 visited doctor after doctor, I
but to no avail. I was at Newpor t, and Dr.
Blackman recommended Waimer's Bafe Cure.
1 commenced the use of it, and IootkI relief
immediately. Altogether I took three bottles.
and I truthfully state that it cured me."
I SCIENTIFIC AN1> INDUSTRIAL.
I What is known as Dutch gold is a
combination of copper and tine.
Nearsightedness Is overrunning tlir
French peoplo as much ns the German *
Dr. Hammond says that thin Boles are
tho worst propagators of disease among
women.
Sawdust Is being compressed and used
for gun wads In England, and seems to
enhance penetration and pattern.
L A large number of the carriages in I
( cities are now supplied with rubber tires
to prevent jolting and deafening clatter.
3 Urauium was unknown a century ago,
x lint, a lode has been found In a mine in
it Cornwall, England. It sells for $12,000
1 a ton.
0 It is said that a solution of chloral hydrate
of a strength of tive grains to tin
r* ounce of water will clear the hulr o
10 dnndruff.
About 859 species of birds aro now
? known to make North America then
home, and representatives of eighty-two
* additional species find their way to this
' continent from other countries.
'*A good many people spoil the effect
of ngood night's rest by the ridiculously
heavy bedclothes thoy use," says the London
Hoapital. "Bert clothes should bt
like body clothing, light and warm."
! The are about 18110 paper-mills In
80 Europe, and of these 300 were built Ins!
year. Tho daily product of pulp ami
paper is nlmnst 7500 tons,^nd the chiel
? material used is wood, algnuugb jute ii
80 In demand.
r " Mttl*: ?t A
p8r*enT~ 61
^^TO^glycerlne Mid two per cent, o
,11^ castor oil has shown very satisfactory re
|Q1< suits at the Springfield (Mass.) Armor;
nt4 for use with small anus,
illy The United States Navy Departinen
V?i? is collecting samples of nickel oro froi
all sources of supply from this and othi
countries, and with the design of usiu
the material for armor plate will invit
proposals from all mine owners,
fjj'* An elcctricnl company of Antwerp hi
.e despatched by the last steamer whic
,n sailed for the Congo, in Africa, all tli
18 material necessary for the installation o
W8' the first telephone Hue which is to b
" placed along the Congo rnilway.
[jOW A novel leech jar has been brought oi
j in 'n Germany, the iunovation consisting <
has tt vcf'cal partition dividing the vesa
into two equal compartments, to be 0I1<
ight respectively with puro water and wi<
evj_ moist peat, so that the inhabitants mi
change their abode at pleasure.
The cracking of tho knot at the en
of a whip is simply the conclusion <
cnt> the air produced by its rapid mov
and tient. Tho effoct differs with tho m
. gf. teriai U9cd for the whip-lash, becau1
v jt some textures present a much groater r
9(u. sistanco to the air than others,
and William J. Chamberlain, an inventc
tent of Norwich, Conn., has patented an i
first gun with a pressure behind the project
o? ir.no 4nrinmmul. u !?>
hydrogen to give a pressure of huudrt
of atmosphere*. It (tends a shot fas
and further, Mr. Chamberlain says, th
any other weapon.
Sit Is said a good cement for join!
parts of apparatuses, etc., permanen
solid and waterproof, and wbioh res!
heat, oils and acids, Is made by mlxl
concentrated si ru potts glycerine w
finely powdered litharge to a thick, i
cid paste, which is applied like gypsa
Glass, metal mod wood ews be oemeti
together by It.
Who Are Ike Greatest Keadersl
k Which class of our population is
k most addicted to reading? Home
B teresting light is thrown on this quest
il by the latest report of the Hirtningl
Free Libraries Committee. Among ol
tables therein given is one slowing
'*1 occupations of borrowers admitted <
ant |ng 1880. Here are some of the ftgu
LCt* Hcholsrs and students, 1302; clerks
ija, bookkeepers, 1138; errand and o
ijf. boys, 301; teachers, 293; shop as
art I ants, 2W<>; jewellers, 210; eornposl
U?l and printers, 192; milliners ana dr
thg makers, 109. Almost at the bottom
iro> the list omo journalists, six; r
agents, two, and reporters, two. Is
because they havo libraries of their o'
or because the people who write in m
.if papers lose tb" aste for reading bo<
?-Pull Mat) Cat >
>m- m .
flew'* This v
We offer One Hundred Hollars reward
' any ca<e of catarrh that osnnot be cured
>0q taking Hair Catarrh Cure.
K. J. Cskniy A Co., I'ropa . Toledo,
We. the undersigned, hare known K
rbo Cheney f??r the laat 15 years, and believe
' reriet: ly honorable In all budnees Iran
Tl> tlons, and financially able to carry out
.l. obligation* made by their firm,
rno Wnr A Truax, Wholesale Dru^fliiU, 1
apt do, O.
r Wai.ncno, Kinman a Marvin, WboU
Druggist*. Toledo, O.
ta Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally,
'U Ing directly upon the blood and mucous
fifthsii%?&
An Inventor's Folly.
few months ago an inventor of cet*j
apparatus of a very simple character,
:h could have been readily duplicated
nany different forms, was offered
H) for the right to a certain inland,
a. He was a poor man and needed
money badly. The reader supposes,
ourse, that tho inventor jumped at
chance and pockoted the money on \
spot. Not he; he told the buyer,
t the pateat was worth $100,000,
. he was not going to sell one town
New York State for $6000. The
le inventor was offered a similar sum
another large town in the State, or
1,000 for only two cities in the coun,
but ho refused to take it. We havo
?e facts from tho inventor himself,
1 thoy are correct. Before it was too .
e to nogotiato wo berated the man V
indly for his folly, but he was deaf to 0
jjuincnt. Tho sequel was that the inntor
never sold a single right, and ha3
s palent to this day. ? Engineering,.
Trades nnd Occapatleas.
Th* Youth's Companion for 1081 will jive
11nstructive and helpfnl Series of Papers,
irh of which describes the character of some
adtng Trado for Boys or Occupation for |n
iris. They givo information as to tho Aprentlceship
required to learn each.the Wages IS
i he expected, the Qualities needed in order n,
> enter, and the prospects of Buooess. To New ul
uhscrihers who send $1.76 at onos the paper 11
rill be sent free to Jon. 1. 1W1, ond for a full ,
eor from Uut dote. Address, K
Tua Youth's Companion, Boston, Mass. Q
In condemning the vanity at woaea, bmu }'
nip'eln of the Ore that they themselves 1
sve kindled. t
FITB stopped fro> by I>Miifig$nL*t OasAT t
gsava RnrroHKH. No fit naffer first day's use. .
Marvelous euros. Treatise andfS trial bHUe '
free. l>r. Kline, Wl Arch St.. Phlla.,Pa. ,
Kium the oil ot grumh'tppors Hpnui b in 1
claims to make the finest n mp ye ,
1*1? I.
Timber, Mineral, Karm lands and Ranches
In Mlssonri, Kansas, Texas and Arkansas,
bought and sold. Tyler & Co., Kansas City, Ma
licqm iiiy is wielth; bat It is a kind of
VI (til II IIIIU Hiu 1icu iiwu uuvia www w
i nnsfer to Ills s n. _
Woman. herdiaeeaes ami their treatment.
72 i>tRe , Illustrate I: price 80c. S nt upon receiiit
ot 'IV , coat ot ntailiiUto^Bk Address
Prof. H. 11. Ki.ink, M. D.,o^B^rch 8t,
Philadelphia, I'a. 5^
White |ilne koanla are now made by re
lucing email trees and llrabe to pulp and *
pre aing in molds.
For Impure or tbln Blood, WeaJtneee, Malaria,
Neuralgia. Indtjcestlou and Blllouanem,
take Rroirn h Iron Blttcra?it gives strength,
making old persona feel young?and young
persona strong: Dleaaant to take.
The preacher fails who trim to preach a
. ctl ino lb it hasn't been tested In nis own
east.
Oklahoma Onlde Book and Map sent any whero
on rocolptof GOcta.Tyler ?fc Co., Kansas City,Mo.
The toughest fowl can bo luade eatable If
,itit in told water, plenty of It, and oookai
vi ry slowly from live to six hour*.
The Crar ol Russia has Issued as ordat
forbidding srudause In the theetrea.
llo I nn Ever ftprcnlntr t
Any person sondlni us their nam- an I a 1dress
W'll receive Information that will l?ftd
to a fortune. BcnJ. lewis & C ., Socurily
Building, Kansas t lty. Mo.
Ho feats enough whose wife scolds at din
r lime.
1/ec Wa's Chinese Headache Cafe. Harm,
i lees In effect, quick and positive In action.
Sent prepaid on receipt of II per bottle
Adeler & Co.,h&iNVyHmlottest..Kansas City ,Mc
L ve n vcr has to be watched to see that ii
t lops a full day's work.
! Kon Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Btmnact
dtsoidern, use Brown's Iron Blttora. The Bee
> Tonic, it rebuilds the system, cleans ttao Blnoc
and strengthens the muscles. A splendid ton
Ic for weak and deoiV" '"doer-soae.
i ith ut caws. ______
' [( afflicted with sore eyes use I?r. t hou
on's Fve wnt ?r. Ilriigglst. sell at 2fte ner lw>tl|
' Ringing Noises
In the ears, sometimes a ruarlnK. bumming aound, o
snapping like the report of a pistol, are caused b
:r catarrh, that exceedingly dt agreeable and vet
g common disease. I.oas of smell or hearing also r
e lutsfrom catarrh. Hood's BarseperlUs, the gret
b'ood purifier, to a (ecullarly succeaaful remedy ft
catarrh, which It cures by eradicating from it
IS blood the Impurity which causes and psomotss th
:ll Try Hooa's narsaparilia.
I0 "I used Hood's Harsaparllla for oataf ill, and r
f reived great relief and benefit from It The eataii
wan very disagreeable, especially In the win to
? causing constant discharge from my Dose, rtnglr
noises In my cars, and pains In the back of my bea
1 he effort to clear my head In the morning by bawl
f tug and spitting waa painful. Hood's Paraaparfl
l> gave me relief Immediately, while In time I waae
1C' tlrely cured. I am never without the med'clne
;d my house as I think It Is worth Its weight In gold
th ?Mrs. O. B. Uibb, 1039 Eighth Street, H. W., Wai
xy Ington, D. O.
Hood's Sarsaparllla
i sold by aU druggists. $1| six for gs. Prepared oa
\ by C. I. HOOD * CO., Lowell, Mass.
? IOO Doses One Dollar
O" <i
" I For a Disordered Liver
I Try BEECH All's PILLS.
J; I 26cts. a Box.
1^ | OK AliL OIltJCJOlMTB.
ids fc?gg? ?
? PATENTS
Patrick O'Parrill, wAslggTotf, I
/Bm ?l? mwramraF^
a PENSIONS iSS
mm
S DON'T!!
res:
. DON'T buy a l?bcent OlR*r when you run ri
* good a on* for 5 c n(?. our "HON'T" bran
fnOfl ?x|ual to the inajor.ty of f #r. ('(OA KM and n
lift- only a trjnl to r>nvln-o tho trade of It* merit*,
tors Manufactured only by W. II. KliLISIlt
ygg. Wlaew, N.C. "The I.* r neat Cigar Firm In W
:z
" ^ r)" "'T
ii
any 'PTHO'8 RKMEDY FO
^B * Cheapest. Relief to
role- ^B Co** la UM need It has at
wale ^ ^
rj b
" :^a
|
MUSICAL.
Tliero scorns to bo little going ow
i musical circles of late, but theremuch
talk, atuong musical people^
f the marvelous cure of Miss fe?-?r
vo high contralto singer, who has j
>ng suffered from a severe throat1
r bronchial affection, superinduced
iy Catarrh in tho lload, and who1
ins been perfectly cured by the
tse of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy,
ioupled with die use of r Dr. Pierce's' y
3olden Medical Discovery.^ For -
ill bronchial, throat and lung offeotions,
and lingering coughs, it is an
unnqualcd remedy. When complicated
with Chronic Nasal Catarrh,'
its use should bo coupled with the tn
use of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy.
.11 JmnrrrintA.
Wi ?u U>uKN.
| If yon, hare a !,
COLD or COUCH,!
| onilo or Irnillm to J
!j CONSUMPTION,
1 SCOTT'S
EMULSION ...
(OF PORK S.'OW LIVER OIL)
( AND HYPOPHOSPHITES {
j OF IAMB AND SODA (
11* sunin curtM foii rr. (
I Title prepnrntlon contains tlio stlnl?ln. C
f ting properties of the II ypoplia?phit*? ?
} *Ha flno Nortrrglnn Ox I IAvrr Oil. Usttf 1
bt physicians nil tlio world over. 11 Is a$ f
palatable rt* tnilk. Tlirno times iw ffflrs- I
I nous its plain Cod Liver Oil. A perfect t
| RtflUlBlafi, better than bIIothers matin. For #
, all forms of ft anting Dim a tee, Unmckitit, j
CONSUMPTION, \
Scrofula, a?(! 35 * Flesh Producer {
II thero Is nothing liko SCOTT'S (MUL8I0N. \
It Is gold by nil IHobrIsih. f.et i?o one by I
I profuse explanation or Impudent entreaty |
| Indtleo you to accept tt substitute. f
i IPtK 0BMT8.?H Alt ft 801>># gold phtied. Ji.-.rin !!(! rtor
1 eatter combined. Fred Ualeutt. Swsrthiuure, Pa.
' trinity college.
I i High crude College for Young Men.
Rest Innmctloii, leading to Ktve Degrees. V ' '
jjtSJrs?1!" I tin nwi 4l>> to e n tear.
. Five new building* to l*> en ?ted till* year.
M in attlculatea and graduate* In rucrtrt bltH Uf
| latature.
f end for Catalogue. Itullrtln, Degree Hook, BMk.
Free.
Jon* F. cnovrru, A. lb. Dm. I.rr?., Pre*, _ '
trinity Oottegu, lUudotph Go, lb O.
#? ~ae*?a?..ri ii l aannai v rut. ~
L IA8THMAfiMRSgfFREE I
a 1?? " * "ftnn. r?r ?. KMinm.it. rm."'- J
UDMF 5*t,UX" Rookdtueplng, Rualneaa Korrna I
H"1"* Arithmetics, Short-hand, etc. '
; ^y-jsag Fr;
I gAGGy KNEES Oreely I'lint HIreti'her.
it adopted hv tudoiiti 111 llnrt.no. Anilicrat. and otbor
oihrges, nlso, bv pr<ii<?*Aintiul ntf I l?n>liiem motr evayr*
K* for 11,1,0 1,1 J'"*" town sr?i?1 Mr- lo
H. 1. OUKRI.Y Mlr* t Kitifim.
? B N 0. 41 /
C" ORN Meal. Flour &
WHITK roil I* It IC'KH.
RICHMOND CITY Mil.!.*,
3400 I* 33<H? WllllHiiiib?rf AY*.,
_ RICH MONO, VI RUIN IV. t
In Wblakey Hatotla
W I I Houred at liotna wltb>
- UriUIHwjawK
UmAmmmm? It M WOOLLKY.M.D.
YRAtifHiin.w,,. Oili. e 101!, WUlteb?UI WL_
-VASELINE-,
IOC A ONK-DOI.E.AR III I,!, aeat n? lijr gJl
w? wlH MIti r, free or all charge*, to any mrtoa ta
Oa>|UoitoQ tsataa, all ot tha loUowlog ariloL* ow?
Oaa two-onnoa bottle of Para aaethie, - MM
One two-oance bottle of Vaaotine >'<*n*6et - tt"
Oaa Jar of Taarllno Cold Cream. - 1?#
Oaa c eke of Taaallne Camphor loa, - - * ,
Oaa t'aka of Taaaltne Hoap, anaeMird, - 8*
Oaa Cake at Vaedlnc Bono,exqulalteir aoaaked^t"
Oaa tawoaaca bottle orWbMe asellDe, - - ?'
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