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i I SHOW ?WEL7E;F2ET DEEP. Ejj <r+ -> KBTtrribld Storm on tbe Pa-ifictJ&Mt. : Ifc h&a Lasted 24 Hours. ' , Sax Fiu^rwro, C'*r,., [Special.] ? A g *t**b and stow storm wLich has raged over $4 boars 3$ this coast is the worst in ; , ifft reports received by Southern j '? .'Wbific official* sb?>w that live snuw in ghasrta^and Siskiyou counties is the deep- i -Otverer known sincu the building of tft3 ^foad. By actual meajureinent St is 12 feet deep on a level from Siskiyou moun tain* near the Oregon line to 31ouut $ha*za. Tbe record of disaster on the; ?o$gt is likely to be heavy. as the winds ; bavc/Wea Slowing a gale >? ^kore for 2i \ bourt, , News of All Sorts. Four-fifthshof the steam Migiaes of the wotld have b^etn constructed wi'.v.a last twent y-fiv e years . The trcml/le between the Southern Pa- . ?eific company and the Order of Railway | Teiegrnpisers has been Wetted. Cocee>- j ?ions were made on boih sides, but tbe j _ resait is a victory for die telegraphers. TIms' Ilitfcfoore Evening Xewn has pass- | ed into neqf hands. IJharles H. Grastey j and T. 8rf''\SLQr;!riog;?H! will manage it. j 1 They aa?o?ace that t5e fejiort that ,'>hn j Lpaper h?I beea bought to fu?*t Gormaa | Ms false. ' I ?t orjmge crop of California ha* ?o larif? that it dutiot nta'rk large that it cUnaot 1>? ronrk- ted iu^ prices. Tb<*?saad[s of aero 3 of j California arc u'Sw be y ;>.ng ??jl>-trfceft* The o!i?c arri li^ crops o? jK&aoiv pro5?u>te Experiments in tfee jT*i-?D<j' of Cevida tea in Souciieru trill aoon be tried. IrMkotcil concerning the appointment Pre?ten Johnston to ser jjip^onecuon wish the Smithsoniaw that he is Vety tall? well over : -and tb*t Qot) only is hu Load \ ffd?ur, j^ut jxe has neither eye |l?34* cy^hfcbftJv ail of which he iost * rion wbit'i Ifj was iu the Con iippt ill leans $>eoj?W ate ambitious zr.d The- j ares prophesying that, port; wii? become tie greatest ehip i^ort of kl4?;ci>antr/ withio the next. ; gre=4>c\<rveft than >Tew York. ? $hey w$ the praatt cers in the Northern i ffcafe* weal 6i tab Ohio river and jn the prwrt .of "the Alabama rij> foiwa oit thlltbey can ship |gra-io^ e<)Uca aa<\^?k)lo Europe from i Jlei* OrkaW rao*c c?Tnj)iy than from any ?fWMCt. A few tiH'-'i s'?)i committer ' noa* Miiivr-jf Association viritcd ??to make arrangements foe Ksums fio^r to To eign coijn ty of that port at the rate " oL I* Barely }f?sl the Wind. bkdb ?ecm to bftre an i ait i net ire that if they once surrender j ihe wind and allow them 4rilt~I}ke lenres, there are ua ?i?3pr? ir0at jre for them. They lljf et*r do so except to escape njxdfhm only for a few min tui tfeeir pace ss so m&r*ciously tbat,io tie ca* of land b'suB; rates *? ;?ufl?(ieiit to carry them fcrlet fctfey know into other* hielitfeer wiU perhaps nev^er <?<> ><i tfcfr w?ty tjiick. to ' the Seivis tre theii^-nj^je jbwae. ? Science. ? - , Bmr'i Thbt Om Hpndrtsd po3ars reward for "?f catarrh Uutt caaaot be cured by Catarrh Onrj. <f* wtmr AC o., Proj*., Toledo. O. ijt ' WlrritgrwU have known F. J. tor la?i } > years, and belief** blm. rmtu>r>U? la all l>usincb? transac ItnMfiRelatferabie to carry yet aay ub> firm. Druggists, Toledo, i|| tesXM A Mastix, Wholesale Toledo! 0. CP*grirfeur;> f* taken internally, &<Jt OtBpotn the >>;< - ><\ ami mucous ?ar taPsystftm. Tt-?tlmonial> te.1 frea. fe^erbottto, Sfeld bv all drn&lsU. J l*n <mt niaa hundred grain ?!a i'Hartb Dakota. ijif ? ? . i in i i<? i. ? . , Lrt?f*- ??' t . . ' - I|||iimK Indigestion. and Stomach. Browa'* iron BiUt-rs. Tha Beat t*l?USH$?the *$stem, oleaos tb? B.-ood Bfiftena tbe mfeacien. A splendid toil ?IWdebtiJiSed persons. a? ?J j 1 W ?ssttanent'tor Oklahoma it snj> 1 ifcilfaf Ci^W Jfgf goW-baarinj quart# nscjy wv^e casta of <fc-<i>epr.e irjafcarilLv Poajesslng the best * as well as the best alterative OX *tedlciA? gives thenfoamch. to yetata and digest nourish Good Appetite msfats to natural motioa ijlrtlMtj af-tbe bodjr Most gratifying from people who bave-Mken I'i 8arsaparilla |*bgeieS<* laad similar troubles. Mfc ittf< tkeUreraart bowels, acs eas l|f an&gflfciectiy..: Prica^ 25c. KMC COTTON -JOKES yKffcffeS-Toii Cotton Scale. THE FARM AND ?ARDE>\ ? ? i SOIiE FEET IS CATTLE. ^ Cattle that have beta fowling oa wet grouiyi will a I mast surely have sore feet. The wet softens the skin between the c'iws of the hoof, wrfich 1>ecorne^ chafed *nd raw. Tiie remedy is so avoi'jf the cause, and wash the feet with warm water ai|d carbolic soap. Then, after wiping ory, aop!y an oiataient made o? four parte of lard, one o? Venice turpen tine, ope of common turpentine, and one-half pirt of acetate of copper. ? Xeto York Tint'*. GJ'.OUXD BONES KOIi POULTRY". Ground bones and cut bones ari differ ent. A fresh, jpreea bone canr?<it we'! be grouad. It may i>e crash VI or pounded,, but q ot easily ground. fttud m ii.M are in that permit of grinjin^ bones tha? have becoue hard and dnA or" ' hav* boeS st-enmcd or heated, but jthe green boees^must be pounded or c\Ji in thia pieces with Jtaives. Theryis a irrfett difference U ihe value fresh , bones from the butcher and t*>?o tint h>ve been exposed until they are dry. J (rrt^u hones contain quite a portion of j meat an i cartilage, and are greedily eaten by all classes of dowis. ? Fir.n and J; irtsuli. To PROTECT T UK CONSERVATORY. 'Hie plant -bed cloth recommended a? a fmbstitu'e for*>giass for hot beds and ; cod i frames may also be used advantage* j ooaly or: cold nights to protect the coa- j servafruy frr>.u frost. It should -be j pla : r d over the gla? in the eveaiug and ! remo/ed in the luoraiag, ualesi the i weather i:i daytime is excecdiagiv severe, j i.i which case it may rc:nain on If the ' ?ky is clouded. Tiie same material may | also he used in the same way to keep J fro.it out of cold pits aad wiuter-fracies. j Ac vcrlag of heavy paper, such as may j '? us found at a printing o55c2, forms a ! good protection, "and matting, old cir- i i>e?s and even newspapers will be foua I ; useful. Two or three thickness ot paper 1 placcd between the glass and plants oa a cold night will oftea present serious loss of plaati from the action o? extren2 frost. ? hvlie* Uome Companion. TTIXD5.HAS OX HOR323. Swelling or enlargement of the partem , bo^es of licqBSs are more likely to indi l.cate ringbone than wtndg&lls. Sprain^ | of the back tendons are usually followed ' byrounl, elastic, synovial swellings on jachslde, and these a>e known as wind falls. ; Sometimes such Wellings are due lo li ved work, and not to any sudden or severe sprain, and in such cases may lead to so severe an iudammation as to reach and employ pressure with a band age an 1 ?> id*, applyin g for an hour or : two a5 tirst, night ani morning, increas ing the time and pressure daily until the gills disappear. This- treatment may have to be continued for a ra onth or longer before a cure iseifoctel. Astrin gent lotions, such as alum and oak bark, may be used with benefit, espa^jally on recent puffis, but tho3e of long Standing require pressure in aldition to cooling and astringent lotion. SomHima blis tering may be required, but a blister j should never be applied until all heat j and tenderness have subside 1 through i applications of cooling lotioa;. ? New ; tori Sun. a no-v ro p&esebvs Irish x-otatok?. t/ The difficulty of keeping lri?h p->ta- i toes in edible condition after March 1st is woM known to Southern housekeeper^ : fanners aad merchants. Professor I Schribaux, of the National College of j Agriculture of France, has recently de- j vised 3 very simple, cheap and successful ! raetho l by which he has been j(ble to 5 preserve potatoes in the e lib'e condition j .for over a year and a half. This pro cess has been adopted by the French Government for preserving potatoss for the army. The French Minister of Agri culture publishes the details of the pro cess or the official Bulletin da Minister* de C Agricultural for >Iarch, 1891. The following is a translation of the essential part of the scheme : 1. The method of preserving consists ia pluagiag the tubers, before storing them away, for ten hours iato a two per cent, solution of commercial sulphuric nCid in water; two parts ol acid to one hundred r?arts of water. 2. The ;wi& p$t*et rates tlyi eye* to ths deptl: of about oae-fortictl iuch (two* millimeters), which serves* to destroy their sprouting power; it dots not have any appreciable eiTect upon The skin of the potatoes. * o. After remaining in tht liquid tea hour*. The tubers must be ^thoroughly dried before storing away. 4. The same liquid my ?e used any number of ^ times with equal good re sults. 5. A barrel or tank of any kin 1 will do for the treatment. Tne acid is so dilute it does uot affect the woo J. G. Chemical analysis shows that p>ti toes treated by this process are a? na tations and healthful after eighteen months as when fresh dug. 7. Potatoes thus treite l are, of course, worthless for planting. ? Gerald 3l< Ca Chf/y yortk Carolina Ecpcrvnent Sta tion. TOE BROWN SCAB OF APPLES. The microscope h^s revealed the fact i that the browirtcab Vhic'i ha* boconae j so prevalent iu certain vlsieties at aj>pkis and "pears during recent ye^rs toelf a* } plant, reproducing itself vii^see is | '(ipore;), which are borne up^nthe wind j aau Sad their congenial ibil in the leave?, . | tender twigs and fruit of the apple and [ pear. | The Ohio Experiment Station has this season conducted an extensive series of experiments, in which several preventive solutions have beeuv^tried, but especial : attention has been given to the question whether the strength of the copper sul phate and li-r.e solution, known as the Bordeaux mixture, might not be reduced j so as not t> injure the foliage and jet i accomplish the object of preventing dis- ' ease. < - The results of this work vere j shown hi ^ juicing exhibit made at the State K.ur and other places, in which sprayed frait was shown to bj almo-t absolutely free from disuse, while that neighboring trees left unsprajei whs alrurvst worthless. The spraying not oaW T?; iuces the injury to the fruit, bat it tagely increases the total crop. Thii is becausie the foliage on the sprayed I ' while on the un 5 i>r:l-"c^ it isfeea-sed and unable . to peaortii functions. The follow? r f iofjnti' i'j. were used iu these exoeri- ! | mcnts : I k..\ iU No. Copper sulrifcatef 4 | poua is, km, 4 v?;snds water 1 barrel . loraiua X\ -?Copper sulphate 4 { [pounds, lime I pounds, Paris "green 4 i uvinces, wat:r 1 barrel. \ ? Xo. 1 is used for apple aad pear scab \ | aad to prevent the leaves of plum aad ? pear trees from 'dropping pre;naturelv ; r aUo for raspberry cane scab, but should 1 cot be used oa raspberries after the j blossoms opeu. Apply once before the < leaves opea and abbuS three times tbere 1 after. Not to be used on plums and riy Jrhits krer than July 1. jKb. 2 is used on pear, apple, ^ ?ai cjerij ^*eest after the bloaorireij of destroying i 4 tfupf t*w* ! cations ,-^houlfl be made once in two i weeks kfcd oftener if the weather is rainy, up to within six weeks of the time of ripening. For the last application, | diSute one half or more ^o as to avoid line coating the fruit. ? New York World. FARM AND GARDEN XOTES. Moveable hea nests are the best. Keep jail the puiiets from early wihtcr I \ Y#>un^ cruinea fowls, if fat. make nice | table fowl. Too much linseed meal w:ii make the hens too fat. Turkeys will degenertc avery rapid!/ by i inbreeding. Do not allow the poultry to run with the fattening hogv. Oce leading cause of failure is in at tempting to keep too many fowls for the space. Tobacco leaves or stems put in the hen \ nests and around<the roosts will help to j kfeep liceawaj. Tarred paper is a goo 1 material with \ which to line the inside o? the poultry i house in wlnier. v Keep the poultry house clean an i ap- I *ply plenty of coal oil to perchei, nest | boxes, in cracks, etc. Geese and ducks should be kept in a i yard or pasture away from.Jiie well, especially the house well. j A reasonable man never beats a balky or unwilling beast. He hn't sure how he would feel himself if he were doing the pulling. Feed one pint of oats, one ' and a quarter quarts of bran and four ounces of --linseed rtfcal for a day's rations to tiio six- months-old colt, anl gradually in crease it as the colt grows older. Apples that are packe I in buckwheat chaff for winter use kc<p longer, do not lose their flavor, are leas iaclineJ to rot, and il a few are aifected th? chaH ab sorber the juices, which preveuls them ?r6m afTectiug the rest. L * % When a cow is two years oli a vrinkle begins to form at the base of her ham*. At three years this wrinkle is fully de reloped. When she is five years another will form, and after that one will come each year. Thus her age cau be known. At the Oato Experimact Station they find it profitable to sow onions in the hotbed in February or March, and trans plant in April err May. The early sorts, guch as tie Sew Queen or Marietta, Pearl, Burmuda, etc., gave results unier this treatment. Sheep must go iota winter quarters ia ' good condition you. expect them to winter well. LooSyoyer yoi^r flock now Had if they are not all u? to me mirk: do your be3t to make them so as speedily as possible. It will pay^b^yrer to give extra feed and care now, rather thin to h i ve an unthrifty (lock on your hands through the winter. The schedule of hereditary diseases adapted by the Royal Commission of horse breeding of Eagiand as rendering stallions unfit for stud purposes includes the following infirmities: Roaring, whistling, ringbone, unsound feet, na vicular disease, spavin and cataract. An eutire horse suffering from any of these disorders should not be allowed to become a parent, tli3 probability being that the disease would reappear in the oflspring. A horse led to the stable from work or driving should have a lew swallows* of water until he g-jts cool. It to be fed at once lie should have not more than two or three quarts of water. If he has to stand an hour before feeding he may have a pailful of water*- If this amount of water were given imme diately before feeding it would weaken the digestive power of the stommh, dilute the gastric juice and be apt ro c%use ingestion. Carrots make an excellent loo d for horses, particularly during sickness. They improve the appetite and slightly increase the actiou of the bowels and kidneys. They possess also certain altera tive properties. The coat becomes smooth aud glossy when carrots are fed. Some veterinary writers claim that chronic cough is cured by giving carrots for some time. The roots may be coa sidered adjunct to the irregular regime, and if fed ia small quantities, are highly beneficial. s A cowboy mxnages his swine in this way: The sows have two litters of pus yearly. The first are dropped in March, .grown on milk, clover and wheat bran, fattened! on uew c:>ru and sold at the first demand for fresh pork ia the fall. The second litters come in August. Tiiey are given summer conditions in winter? warm pens ? cut and steeped clover hay, roots, bran and coru,aad are slaughtered at the last demand for fresh pork of the season. These two marketing seasons are when fresh j>or? always brings the highest prices. , \ ( \ { The Jeff Davis Bond Stolen. Kiciimojjp, V k.J [Special.] ? It ha- . become known thiCt the bond gircn to J the United States (iorernmcnt bv .T? lTer- i son Davis to answer to the circuit court j i.i this city for treason, is -missing front the court records. This paper bears the signatures of Horace Greely, John Minor, Botts Gccrets, Smith, and other promi nent persons. The present clerk of the circuit court-. Mr. IV. F Pleasants, who was chief derk of the department of justice ii Washington at the time of his appoint ment to his present rosition. found tbal the document wa; missing soon aft r hi* advent as clerk, and ever since he has made diligent efforts to find it. but with, out succcss. He has had many oil- : f for the fac simile of the paper, one of ?hem Wing from a prominent magazine He told a Press reporter that lie had a suspicion of the thi?*f, but declined to 5?y anything about the person, except that he wa?rf$nnd The E-uperor William's Ann. An American, who was present at a State dinner in Germany and will hardly l)e invited to another, ha* given to the world his pamfui impressions of the de formed left arm of his Majesty, a subject not to be mentioned in Germany. It is fully four inches shorter than the right ou<\ and has a malformed hand, which is entirely u>c!es~. He carries his arm (a la Na;?o-con) in the vest of his coat, but he caa only pities it there with the aid of the ri-jht hand. At table he has a combined knife and fork, which slide into caeh otaer. lit iisw this contriv ance with, much' dexterity ? !'r*1 to his meat and then to eat it ? all, of course, witik one hand ? Tici^u^e. Battle -with Moonshiners. Montgomery. Ala . [Special ' -Colo nel M'>sclv has been informed that a rnid i i ? United State? force of twelve oft leers ! t talked a number of illicit distiliets who were barricaded in a reck house on j baud mountain, in DeKalb eounty, Ala- j ^ma Two hundred rounds were fired ? y the force. The revenue officers were ' ri*;>ulse 1, after having expended all th ir ??m munition. Marshal Jackson having been shot seriously through the should- [ cr. Gener I Deputy Colquitt wires Col^| oatl Moseley that two of the moonshin ers Wire eithef killed or badly wounded. 3 eps arc feeing - taken io reinforce the " - - e^f^agd dislodge the REV. DR. TALMAGE THE BROOKLV DIVINE'S SUN DAY SERMON. - a* Text: " This near thou sh.dr die."?Je re- | miah xxviii., 16. Jeremiah, accustomed to saying bold things, addressed Hanaoiah in these words. They proved true. It: sixty days Hanaoiah had departed this life. \ This is the first Sabbatii of the year. 31 is a time for review and for anticipation. J A I man must a genius at stupidity who dies not think now. The old year died in givilg ! birth to the new. as the life of Jane Sey mour, the English queeD. departed when J that of her sod, Edward VI., dawned, old year was a queen. The new shall be \ i king. The grave of the one and the cradl? i of the other are side by side. We can hardly j guess what the child will b?? It is only t?;o ; days old. hut I prophesy for it an eventfu! future. Year of mirth and ma'fness! Yea* of pageant and conflagration! It will laugh'jj j it will sing: it will groan; it will die. Is it not a time for earnest thought? The congratulations have been given. The i Tir.sui as trees have been taken down or ! have well nigh cast their fruit. The friend? ' who came for the holidays are gone in the rail train. While we are looking forward j to another twelve months of intense activi- i ties the tej?_breaks upon us like a bursting thundwhead, "This year thou shalt dief -Tfie text will probably prove true of some of us. The probability is augmented by the fact that all of u.y'who are over thirty-rive years of age hatpgon? beyond the average of human life. The note is more than due. It is only by sufference that it is not col lected. We are like a debtor who is tak ing the "three days' grace"' oi the banks. Char race started with nine houdred years for a lifetime. We read of but one antsdi- ! )u vian youth whose early death disappointed : the hopes of his parents by his dying at ^even hundred and seventy-seven years of age. The world then may have been ahead of what it is now, for men had so long a time in which to study and invent and plan. If an artist or a philosopher has forty years for work, he makes great achieve ments: but what must the artists and phil osophers ha vis done who had n.na hundred y ?ars before them? In the nearly two thou sand years before the flood, considering the i longevity of the inhabitants, there may aave i been nearly as many people as there are now. The flood was not a freshet, that washed a few people off a plank, but a dis aster that may haye swept away a thousand miityon. If the Atlantic Ocean by a lurch of the earth to-night should drown this hemisphere and the Pacific Ocean by a sud den lurch of the earth should drown the other hemisphere, leaving about as many beings as ouldoe got in one or two ocean steamers, it would give youan idea of what the ancient flood W8f. ^ At that time God started the race with a shorter allowance of life. The nine hun ered years were hewn down until, in the timeofVespasian,acensuswastakeu and only ? one hundred and twenty- foar parsons were I fouud one hundred years old and three or i four persons one hundred and forty years ! old. Now a man who has come to one hun- ? dred years of"3jje is a curiosity, and we go f miles to see his> The vast majority of the j race passes off before twenty years. To every apple there are five blossoms that never get to be apples. In the country church the sexton rings the bell rapidly until almost through and then tolls it. For awhile the ;j bell of our life rings right merrily, but with some of youfthe bell has begun to tol', and the adapted ness of the text to you is more [ and more probable, "This year thou shalt j die/' 1 thi 5? K KMCLer ??1our occuPatioas adds to the probability. Those who are in the pro i feasioiw are undergoing a sapping of the brain and nerve foundations. Literary men in this country are driven with whin aud spur to tneir topmost speed. Not one ram worker out of a hundred observes any moderation. There is something so stimu lating m our climate that if John Brown, the essayist of Edinburgh, had Jived here, he would have broken down at thirty-five in stead of fifty-five, and Charles Dickens would have dropped at forty. There is something in ali our occupations which predisposes to disease if W9 be stout to disorders ranging from fevers to apoplexy. If we be frail, to diseases rang ing from consumption to paral vsis. Printers | rarely reach fifty years. Watchmakers, | in marking the time for others, shorten their own. Chemists breathe death in their laboratories, artf potters absorb paralysis . I ameers fall under their own brush. Foun dryruen take death in with the tilings. Shoe makers pound away their own lives on the last. Overdriven merchants measure off their own lives with tte yardstick. Millers grind their own lives with the grist. Masons dig their own graves with the trowel. And I m all our occupations ani professions there are the elements of peril. Rapid climatic changes threaten our lives , By reason of the violent fits of ch? ther mometer, within two days we live both in ihe arctic and the tropic. The warm south win 1 finds us with our furs oil. The wintry blast cots through our thin apparel. The hoof, the wheel, the firearm, the assassin. . the,IL chance to put upon us their , aQnouuce it as an impossibility mat three hundred and sixty-five days should pass and leave us all as we now are. In what direction to shoot the arrow 1 know not, and so I shoot it at a venture. "This year thou shait die. In view of this, 1 advise that vou have your temporal matters aJjustej. Do not leave your wordly atlairs at toe mercv or administrators. Have your rec3ipts prop erly pasted, and your letters tiled, and your books balance.!. If you have "trust funds " >ee *hat they are rightly deposited and ac counted for. Let u> widow or orphan scratch on your toin ostor^p, 4<riiis man wroageJ me of my inheritance." Many a man has died Jeavinz a competency whose property ha-\ through his own carelessness, afterward b.'e:i divideil b? tween the administrator*, the surrogate the lawyers and the sheriffs. 1 charge you, before many days have gon?, as far as po^ sible, have all your worldly matters mado straight, for "This year thou shait die." I advise, also that you be busy in Christian work. How many Sabbaths iu tue veai? Fifty-two. If the text be true of you it does not say at what time you mav go. i*ii Therefore it is unsafe to count on ail of fifty-two Sundays. As you are as likelv*^) go in the first half of the year as in the "lass half, I think we had better divida the fifty two into halves and calculate onlv twenty* six Sabbaths. Come, Christian men, Chris tian women, what can you do in twenty -six Sabbaths? Divide the" three hundred ani sixty-five days into two parts, what can 3*00 do in one hundred and eighty-two days? What, by the way of saving your familv tha church and the world? Vou will not through all tha a-e-i of eternity in heaven, get over the dishonor and the outrage of go ing into, glory, and having helped none up to the same place. It will be foun i that many a Sabbath-school teacher has takou into heaven her whole clas-; that Daniel Baker, the evangelist, took thousands into heaven, that Dod* dridpre his taken in hun Jreds r?f thousand?: 'bat Paul took in a hundred millions. How many will you take in? if you get. in Co heaven and find none there that vou sei^t ! and that there arc- none to < one vU^vj -h ! your instrumentality [ bei of vou to crawl under some seat in the back corner ami never come out lest t ,e redeemed net their eves on you and some one cry out, 'That is 1 the man who nevei" lifted haul or voica f ir j the redemption of his fellows. Look at i him, all heaven."' Better be busy. Better 1 put the plow in deep. Battel' say what 1 you have to say quickly. Bitter cry the I alarm. Better fall 011 your kn,e.s. Better ! lay hold with both hands. H hat vou now ' leave undone for Christ will forever be j undone. "This year thou shait die:"' ^Jr^v-iow of _ t ha _rrr.-> hn h iii tj f*.< man-.irwjvl f advise all the men and womc-n notivalv for eternity to get ready. If tha text be true, J you have no .time to talk about nori-essea- j tials, asking why Go! let sin come into tue j world; or whether the book of Jonah is ia spired; or who Melchisedec was; or w3iat about the eternal decrees. If you as near ' eternity as some of vou seem t j b.?, tnera is i no time for auythin- i,ut the 'question -What must 1 do to be saved:-" The drown- 1 )ng man, when a plank is thrown him, Lm not to ask what sawmill m*de it, or whether ; :t is oak or cedar, or who threw it.* The moment it is thrown, he clutches iu , If thfs y ear you are to die, there K no timejfar anv ' ^sug but immediately laving hold to Gutf. it is high time to get out of vo& , \ou. sa-v- "I have (flmmktfcl no gnat transgression?." Bat are you s'nfnpWTh 5 your ,lis k*en hPl- w snow-comes down on the'Afcw ? tlake by nase, ana. ic is so urn* t'jjt you 1 may hold it on the tip cf the rir._*er w/thbu* ; leeiing ?i?y weight; but the H ikes eithW ? rn- y compact, until s^e day a traveler's k ot >tart> the slide, and it goes down iu an i ava,anch*. crushing to rieatn the villagers >>o the smsof your youth, and thesiusof ? our manhood, and the sins of your wo nazi- ' jood may have seamed onlv slight in- { accuracies or trifling-divergences from the risht ? 90 slijht that they are hard 'v worth ' mentioning; but they nave t>eea piLag'up : and piling up, packing together aajJ pac?in? together, until they mate a mountain of j sru. and one more step of your foot in the ' wrong direction may slide down noon vou ! an avalanche of ruin and condemnation.". A man crossing a desolate and ?' loatAx plateau, a hungry wolf took after him. ?9 broujf ithisgon to his s'aoulder and teat am^.and the wotf honied with piin, and tie 'iV - ?? - -J cry woke up a pack of wolves, and they came ravening out of the forest from all sides and horribly devoured him. Thou art the man. .Some one sin of your life summoning on all the rest, they surround thy soul and make ibe night of thy sin terrible with the assault of their bloody muzzles. Oh, the unpar doned, clamoring, ravening, all devouring sins of thy lifetime ! A maniac was found pacing along the road with a torch in one hand and a pail ;of water in the other, and some one asked him what he meant to do with them. He an swered, "With this torch I mean to burn down heaven, and with this water I meau. to out out the fires of hell." He was a maniac. He could do the one thing just as well as he could do the other. No time to lose if you want to escape your sins for "This year thou jihwlt \ = ' _ ILet me announce that Christ, the L ord, stands ready to save any man who wants to be saved. He waited for you all last year, and all . the year before, and all your life. He ha* waited for you with blood on His Lrow and tears in His eye, and two out stretched, mangled hands of love. You come home some night and find the mark of muddy feet on your front step. You hasten in. and iiud an excited group around your child. He fell into a pond, and had it not been for a brave lad, who plunged m aud brought him out and carried him ^ home to be resuscitated, you would hare childless. You feel that you cannot do enough for the rescuer. You throw your ara^s around him. Ycru offer him any com pensation. You say to him: ''Anything that fon want shall ba yours. I will never cease' to be grateful." But my Lord Jesus ? sses your soul sinking, and attempts to bring it ashore, and you not only refuse Him thanks, but stand on the beach and say. "Drop that sout! If I want it saved, I will save it myself." I wish you might know what a job Jesus undertook when He carried your casj to Calvary. They crowded Him to the wall. Thf-v struck Him. They spat on Him. They kicked Him. They cuffed Him. They scoffed at Him. They scourged Him. They mur-c dered Him. Blood! blood! As He stoops down to lift you up the crimson drops upon you from His brow, from His side, from His hands. Do you not feel the warm current on your face? Oh, for thee the huuger, the thirst, the thorn sting, tin suffocation, the struggle, the death. A great plague came in Marseilles. The doctors held a consultation an 1 decided tfcat a corpse must be dissect 3d or they wduld never know how to stop the plague. A Dr. Ouyou said, "To-morrow morning I will proceed to a dissection." He made his will; prepared for death ; went into the hospital; dissected a body ; wrote out the results of the dissection and died iu twal^ hours. Beauti ful self sacrifice you say. Our Lord Jesus Hooked out from heaven and saw a plague stricken race. Sin must be dissected. He anade His will, giving evai^thing to His peo ple. He comes down into the reeking hos pital of earth. He lays,' His hand to the work. Under our plague He dies? the ; healthy for the sick, the jjmre for the pol- j luted, the innocent for the guilty. Behold 1 the love! Behold the sacrifice! Behold the j rescue ! ) Decide on this first Sabbath of the year whether or not you will have Jesus. .He will not stand forever bagging for your love. With some here His plea ends right speadilyc ?-This year thou sholt die." This great salvation of the Gospel I now offer to every man. woman and child. You . cannot buy it. You cannot ?arn it. A Scotch writer says that a poor woman one cold winter's day looked through the win dow of a king's conservatory and saw a bunc'.i of grapes hanging against the glass. She said, "Oh, if I ouly had that bunch of grapes for my sick child at home!" At her spinning wheel she earned a few shilliugs and went to buy the grapes. The king's Gardner tliruat her out very roughly, and said he had no grapes to sell." She went off and sold -a blanket an :l got some more shil lings, arid came back and tried to buy the grapes. But the gardener roughly assaulted her and told her to be off. The i King s aauguter was wanting m yje garden : at the time, and she heard the efceiteraent, ; and seeing the poor woman, said to her, j "My father is not a merchant to sell, but he is a king and gives." Then sha reached up ? and plucked the graphs and dropped them in the poor woman's apron. So Christ is a kins, ami all the fruits of His pardon He i freely givta. They may not be Sought. Without money and without price, take this j /week cluster from the viuayards of God. I am coming to the'.close of my s?rmon. I sought for a text appropriate for the occa ' sion. 1 thought of' one in Job: 'Uly days fiy as a weavers shuttle;" of a text in Psalms: "So teach uS-fto number our days i that wVjJi ay apply our heart* unto wis I dom of the prayer of the vine dresser: i "Lord, let it alone this year also;'' but pressed upon my attention lirst of all. and lust of all, : and above al), were the words: "This year thou shalt die.'' - i Perhaps it inav mean me. T. iough in per "ect health now, it does not take God one ! week to bring down t ha strongest physical i constitution. I do not want to die this year, i "We have plans and projects on foot t hat I 1 want to see completed: but (>o 1 knows b?.-t, , and He has a thousand better m?n than 1 to | do the work yet undone. I have a hope that, notwithstanding all my sins anl | wandering?, 1 fhall. through the in- J linite mercy of my Saviour, come out at th* ? right place" I have nothing to brag of by way of Christian experience: but two j j things I have learned ? my utter helplessness : ! be l ot* God and the all abounding grace of | , the Lord Jesus. If the text means some of j i you. my hearers, I do not want you to be j caught unprepared. I would liko to have | i you, either through money you had laid up ! j, or a "life insuranc?,'' Liable to leave the j ' world feeling that your fa uilv n<?e I not b*- ; I come_paupers. but rf you have done your ; ! I. est an I you h ave not one dollar's worth o' | ? state, you may confidently trust the I/ord i who hath promised to care for the widow , aiul fatherless. I would like to have your I soul fitted out for eternity, so that if any | morning or noon or evening or night of i lies? three bun Ire I and. sixty-five days, . . ?kath should look in apt ask, "Ara you ! ready'?'' you might, with an outburst of ! Christian triumph, answer, "Aye, aye! all i ready." j i know not what our i1a<-t words may be. i ; Lor.t Chesterfield prided himself on Iris po i liteness, and said in his last moment, "Give j Dayrolies a chair.': Dr. Adam, a dying j schoolmaster. said: "It grows dark. The I boye may dismiss/' Lord Teutenlen, sap- ! ] posing biniseif on the tench cf a court- room, i ] .-aid in bis last moment, "Con tit-men of the , ! jury, you n i!i now consider your verdict." 1 A dying play actor said: "Drop the curtain, j 1 Tise farce is played out." I would rather j t have f< >r inv dying words thos? of ou?; greater j i tl an Chester tie id or Dr. Adam or Lord Ten- j j torden : "Jam now ready to be offered, and ' : the time of my departure is at hand. I have j i fought a good tight, 1 have finished my i t course, I have kept tbe faith; henceforth J I there is la:d up for me a crown of righteous- i | ness, which the I<ord, the righteous Judge, | ! shall give me."' The sooner the last hour comes file be'.ter t ! it we are fitted for entrance in the celestial j j world. There is no clock in hi aven, because j ! it is an everlastin ^ day; yet they keep an j j account of the passing years, because they ; ? are ail the time hearing from our worli. | The angels flying through heaven rejwrt j , how many time? the earth has turned on its 1 hx is. and in that way the angels can keep a ; ! diar\ ; "and they say it is almost; time now ? ! tor father to come up, or for mother to coma j up. fcfome day they see a cohort leav.ng | j heaven, anl they .'ay, " Whither bound!'-' j i and the answer is, "To brag up a soul from , 1 earth;" and the qu>stion is ask-_'i, "What ^ ! soul?' And a family circle in heaven fin I j I that it :.s one of their own number: that is to be. brought up, and they come out? to watch, as on the beach now watch -for a ship i that is "X) bring our friends bonv\. After a while the cohort will heave m sight, flying nearer and nearer, until with a great clan; thegat.^s hoist, an I witS an embra.e, wild wiih the ecstacy of heaven, old friends meek again. Away with your stiff, formal ; I heaven' 1 w.mt n >:ie of it. Give me a ptaceol: inSnite an 1 eternal sociality. My Jeet free from tae c.ois ot earth, 1 shall bound the hills with gladness an 1 break forth ; in a laugh of triumph. Aba! aha! We weep j uovv, but then we shall iaug'q. "Abraham's j bosom' means that heaven has open arms to lake u> in. ><ow we fold our arms over our heart, and tell thgjvorld to stan 1 bac^c, as though our bosom a two barrel gate to keep the world out A Ideas*** -^t uius n.>t ? with folded arms, but SutfTieirt oj?^a. It j ??s "Abraham's bo.o:n." I s :H a motuGr and ! her child me. ting at the foot of the throat ! aftvr some years' absent The chili died twenty years ago but it is a child yet. I thiak the little ouii who die wiil remain children through ad et.-rnky. It would be no neaven without td3 iittia darlings. I do not want those that are in heaven to grow up. We need their infant voices in the great song. And when we walk out in the fields t of light, we want them t > ru* nfcead and t claptbeir baud? anl p.c: out the brightest of the tieid flow is. Yes, hire is a child and .its too iber meeting. The chil l ion g in glory, j 'the mother just arrive j. ? H >'-v change I . vou a i"e,\ . my d^id;ng! ;iv? tiie m-)ther. j ? Yes. 'saXs The i h K'. "ihis i- stich a happy \ T-iatxr. aniVo u- h t-^taken ?uch cire of me, j and htaven is >"? k::ri, I got r?ght ovg r the j fever .vith wVnch I uie:. l'h t skies are so I Ja.r, mJther!|The Sowers are pj s?"eet, ] m>;her' The* templf; is ?o beautiful, mother! Com ?.\take me np in your arms as vou c.sed to.M Oe. I do not kuj;v how we j shall stand the first day in neaveu. Do you i not think we will breaic dowa in ths song j from over delight" I oace give out in church &fa8 bjrniB : v There is ? laad of pare delight, . ?Wfcere s*mls imaoEl.ii relga, ? and an aged man st&a-iiitf^ in Irpjit of the l*ng heartily the jirrt Mm ^L\ t- r ^ ? 'ii-i He sat aown weeping. i saicr to mm arcer ward, "Father Linton, what made you cry ! over that hymnr He said, "I could not stand it? the joys that are coding." When heaven rises for the doxology I cannot sea how we can rise with it if all Aeee waves of eterlastiDg delight cotne upon theaoul? bil low of joy after billow of joy. Methinks Jesus would be enough for th<> first day in heaven, yet here He approaches with all heaven at His tack! But I must close this sermon. This is the last January to some who are present. You have entered the; year, but you will not close \ it Within thes* twelve months your eyes will shut for the last steep. Otner hands will plant the Christmas tree, and give the New Years congratulations. As a procla mation of joy to some and as a warning to others, I leave in your ears these five words of one syllable eaco, ^This year thou shalt . diftf THE LABOR WOELD. London has 15,000 cabmen. Waiters' unions are spreading Queen Vicioria bas sixty servants. New York has 26, 00 J waiters and bar tender.--. The Cunard steamship line employs 11,000 people. Brooklyn (N. Y.) bakers' unions have amalgamated. Steam engineers talk of a home for dis j abled engineers. I Electrical appliance workers of New York will rais%Xhe initiation fee from 4=1 t ? I ?5. \ j The Cramps have now $14,000,000 worth of ships in the worxs at Philadelphia a:id aoi- j ploy a t( army of 3000 men. Great Britain talks of loans to improve the dwellings of farm laborers and to assist them in getting small holdings. The labor organizations of Cincinnati, Ohio, are circulating a petition asking tha local authorities to establish municipal gas works. - . San Francisco coopers were dischaiged for kicking against a twentv-tivijJyear-ai't apprentice. Tne union rule is tor twelve year-old boy 6. The siik manufacturers of the country are I making an energetic effort to have a large I nnd full display of goods produced in this country at roe coming World's Fair. 1 n the manufacture of carriages it used to take one man thirty-five dAys to make a carriage. IWs now made by the aid of ma chinery with the work of one man in twelve days. * The Northumberland (England) miners have rejected, by a vote ot 8730 against 2880, the proportion to advocate the passage of a measure providing for a legal day's work of eight hours per day for boys. Trade unions must have been very strong even in ancient times, if we may judge by the unanimity of 20,000 mine workers for an increase of wages from seventeen to eighteen cents per day in 4151 B. C.? just 2504 years ago? with the result of overthrowing the J Athenian Government. _ j. NEWSY GLEANINGS. r ' France has 40,000 Anarchists, x Jerusalem now has 50,000 people. Alaska's exports amounted to 18,941,515. The latest estimates give China a papula* j lion of 350,000,000. - ExrENsrvE bush firas in New South Wales have destroyed crops and cattle. Brooklyn city officials took dinner in a j nowly-finisbed sewer the other day j The English ironclad Dreadnaught hal her protection decks bent by heavy seas. The taxable value of property in Tex*> ia $72,056,000 larger than it was a year ago. THB^ttnual cloth statement of Fail River, Moss.j^Eows a production of 9,045, 00 J pieces. w i> The dogs of the United Statas numbar 20,000.000, and tt costs ?490,003 per annum t3 keep them. Venezuela is on the verge of war. President Palacio is regarded as toj radical a dictator. ? W HOLESALE ? TjQ |g? - - have left the fr^rflry of Transvaal, youth Africa, emj Two rcXdre d census clerks in Washington will dh January 30 be furloughod for sixty days, without pay. ' Under the new Slate constitution. there will only be one election in Mississippi be tween now and 1895. ^ ? - The United States "tJ-3vefnment is said to be endeavoring to secure a coaling stat.on m the Gallapagos Islands. Enlisted men have proved unsatisfactory teachers in army post schools. Congres? will be asked to provide civilians who are qualified. Some Ifour bought in Russia by officials for famine ndief, at an exorbitant price, has been found so "badly adulterated as to be un lit for food. The BostOq Board of Aldermen passed a resolution loolftug to the establishment of u free university in connection with the pay lie school system. / The Fourth Assistant Postcaasler-Geufral says there are now 65, O^ postolfioes on*' the records of hisoflice, about 3030 of them being Presidential ofticei. A sanitarium* for cure of the liquor, opium and tobaccD habits has been opened by ihe Women's Christian Temperance Alli ance in Chicago, III. The jack rabbit bounty of tweuty-fl?o c?:its is costing some of the Olifornia coun ties a pretty figure. In sev?(^beeu days Sau Bernardino paid out In the standing army of the Argentine Republic of (VX*) mea there are over tK'ty generals, or about one to every one hundred bo'diers of aU other grades. '1 he Brazilian Government has askod an extension of time for the ratification of. I ',19 arbitration treaty formulated by the Inter national American Conference. TKUMIN T. PEOPLE, The German Kaiser's favorite horse is a coal blaok mare. The wealth of Baron Hi ?soli is just about t-qual to that ot' Jay Gould. Whither wrote his first published poem when he was seventeen years old. King Oscar, of Sweden, is a collector of books of poems with autographs of the writers. Congressman McMillan, of Tennessee; commits a poem to memory every morning before breakfast. Qjef.n Victoria will opeu the British Parliament in oerson ir steal of by deputy in lStfcf. The elate is February 'J. Speaker Crisp has the faculty of remem bering names and laces, an invaluable ac complishment for a man in public life. Prince Christian was shot in the fact by the Duke of Conaaugnt while hunting in* England, and one eyeJiad to be removed. Sir Morrkli. Macken zie is devoting. more and more time t'> literary work, for which the Euglish magazine pubiisaers pay a big price. Michael DAVirr,the Irish Parliamentary leader, was only eleven years old when he lost bis right arm in an accident in a Man chester mill Miss Harriet Hosvep. will give $2o,000 for the "Queen Isabella of Castile," to l>e unveiled at the opening of the Women's department of the World's Fan*. Dom Pedro's daughter, the Countess d'Eu, might have been a tirst-class prima donna had she given attention to the higher cultivation of her naturally line voice. CharlesAdolphcs Murray, Karl of Dun more, is to be President of the Union Bank of South Carolina and Loudon, shortly to be established at Columbia, S. C-, with ?>, 000,000 British capital. John P. Richardson, who died in Louisi ana the other day. was the largest planter ia this country, lie owig-l fifteen planta tions and eight store?, aal his operations were always conducted on a vast seal*1. Captain John Davis, of Deer Island, Me., believes he is the oniy survivor of the crew of fifty-two who .-ailed in the ^United Statessteimer Jamestown fort v -three years ago to caifrv fiour and grain to Ireland dur ing the food famine. Every one of ths lifiy-two men boqfCW the mast bad previously been master 01* fiwt oilicer of a ship and all jnrv?l without pay. ?* Li Hung Cbang, the Viceroy of Chioa, has a she nghtfu', not a cunnin?-lookias face, eyes stiaighter than we are accust o nei to expect to sse ia a Cnina;caa, an 1 an un- , usually long, di coping mustache and lin- : perial or "goat-je.*' Jiis hir.- ato adornment: ; alone stamps him as a man of oistinction in his native land, for an ordinary cocley wouldn t think of trying to grow a lip beard, f Big Potatoes, Professor Root came in vesterd iv with some sample? of vegetation raise \ on his farm on the Wyacoetfa^to 0]>en the eyes, till the larder and make ?jla i the heart of tha. printer. Lie Jial a sackful Ciimar potatoes, whictf capped the cli max, as their average weight was 1$ pounds each, aad two monster beets which weighed ?if po'4U<J$. ? (mftm * A BRIDEGROOM KILLED. ]-4 | By His Rival When He Was Beceiv * ing Congratulations. New Oblrjlss, [Social.]? A Pica yune's Meridian, Miss., dispatch says : "News of ti most diabolical murder has just reached the city. Willie Wiight' and 31iss Phillips were married at thy resideuce of the brides father, twelve miles northwest of Meridian. After the ceremony tlte bridal pirty was in the par lor making merry, when a young man named Johnson crept up to a window and tired the contents of a double-barrelled shot gun loadei with buckshot into the body of Wright. Wright fell forward with a groan, dying instantly. ? In the confusion that ensued the assassin sought to irake his escape, but the cou$*:iblo captured liitn. Johnson ab<l Wright were rivals for the h:ind of Mi>$ Phillips awl Johnson often threatened tlnit if sli* ' v.edded Wright he would Mil mm, but sht? pa d inattention to the threats!. Ob* lEter Prist**. CA.W TOO n.NC TH* WORD? These Is a 3 Inch dlsflay advertisement In this paper, this week, which has no tiro worde ! alike except one word. The sa:n* is true of each new oneappoarini: each week, from The i Barter Medicine t "o. TMt? house place* a I **Cre?cent" on every! hi ;ic they make and pub 1 lUJi. Ix>ok jforir, send th??m the nsm*> of the word and I hoy will return you h k?il, hsacti I FL'L UTBOGiHAPnS or s a mim.vs nuts. There iseu ep deimc oi forgery and coiiv Ine hi Gcrinnov. For Impure of thin Blood, Weakness, Mala ria V<urul*ia. Judjircstiou. and Biliousness, take Browu s iron Bit'ers? it Rives strength, making old persons fi*ol young? and young persons islrcjiij;; | leasant 10 take. Axkkica.N'X vox snot^uns are greatly is di inand a-1 ??'?????*. Fou indj rsti'Mi, constipation, sick head* aclu?r weak stomach, diM>r.lered liver - take lie. cbaaiV l'it s. t or mle by all ?lruni;ibti?. Srn John MaodonaudU ertata Is rained ?t taitm ForThkoat Dissases and Cov?hs u<e Brown's Bronchial, Troches- Like ?ll really good fnir-iis; 1 ;>?v ?-ie iuntat*d. The genuine at e sold only in boxes. i ? i Vs KITS sUTpytd-txee by Da K link's Quut Nkrvk Rkstoiuc*. * no fits after first day ? use. Mar vetaus cuwi> Treat i e and $2 trial | ?w?'tu. fre*' Dr. Che, 681 Arc bBt.Phila .Pa /__1 k ON^ ENJOYS Both the method and result* when , Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taite, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys Lirer and Boirels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head - aches and fevers and cures habitual ^^constipation. Syrup of Figs is the duced, pleasing to the taste ana ac ceptable to the stomach, nrornpt in its action an i truly benehcial in its effects, prepa;wd only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to til and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figi is for sale in 60o and $1 botyh* by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP CO. ?4A FXASCJSCO, (ML twinvruf. ir nsw roM. * r Ely's Cream Balm Is the best remedy for chiUlrcn sufTta-Ini; from COLD I \l H2 CATARRH. Apply Balm mktejw.'i nostra. tLY iiUOS., y> W'nrron St.. N. Y. u Mr. Lorenzo F. Sleeper is very well known to the citizens of Apple ton, Me., and neighborhood. lie say*: 41 Flight years ago I was taken '* sick, and suffered as no one b*it a ' dyspeptic can. I then began tak ' ing August Mower. At that time ' I" was a great sufferer. Kverv ' thing I ate distressed me so that I 'had to throw it tip. Then in a ' few moments th it horrid distress 4 would conic on and I would have " to eat and suffer "again. I took a >.* " little of your mcd , v " iciue, and felt much i "better, and after " t.ikinga little more - August Flower my "Dyspepsia disap and since tint time I ' have never had the first sign of it. 'lean cat anything without the ' least ;fear of distress. I wish all 'that arc af'.iicted with that terrible 'disease or the troubles caused by 'it would try August Flower, as I ' am satisfied there is no medicine; 'equal to it." ^ * e$\ For that I?: Horrid Stomach Feeling. ' peared, Thorough C?ra?lu.'ii( s ti 5 ? * C a* l'mctiral Instruction, tea to positions, free. BRYANT & STRATTON BUSfNESS COLLEGEriouTsViLLE; KY. Colds, (f Coughs, . ^ | \ Consumption, HOARbENH'3'i A NO ALL AFFECTIONS OK THE THROAT ANLj LUNG3. TAYLOB'S CHEROKEE RtKlEDY OF t SWEET GUI and MULLEIN IS THE LEST KNOWS REMEDY. A<V ronr n; ? c i ^ t '.r m^rrhant for it, A. > 1> * K K M* S'. JiH! I \ LTfc?1 * 1 We are anxious to know every one w|jo wants a piano, new or second-hant Are you one of them? Then send your*; address, with request for catalogue, etc., to lyers & Pond Piano Co., Boston - - . ii ? jj-'t .?:j' . ! - . " | CCPYWVa IS9I Full of IroubU ? the ordinary pill. Trouble when yoit take it, arid trouble when you've got it do'.vn. l'lentv of cnpleasaD&? ness, bat mighty little good. J k With Dr. Pierce's 1/ feasant Peileti, there's no trouble. They'll made to prevent it, They're the origi* nal little Liver Pills, tiny, 6ugar coated,- anti-bilious granules, purely vegetable, perfectly harmless, the smallest, easiest and best to take. They cleanse and regulate the whole system, in a natural and easy way mi Idly and gently, but thorougnly and effectively. One little Pellet for a laxative ? three for a cathar tic. Sick Ileadachc, Bilious Head* ache, Constipation Indigestion, BU? ions Attacks, and all derangement# of tlie liver, stomach and bo well art prevented, relieved aiid cared. k * They're the cheapest pill yon oan buy, for they*!*? guaranteed to give, satisfaction, "or your money is ^ turned. You pay only for the yalue reived. Can you. ask more? PATENTS^? ? A 1111111 Morphine Habit Cnnwl la It UPltflLra^BffiiiSSg $65 A MONTH for 3 Bright Toon* Ladfc* tu caeb county. Addre* F.W. ZIKi.LKU Jt CO., Phtl?*? P?* !n Print. WolrjL Foe details *?nd 2c ? to W. ?. KRAMER it CO.. Chanuf, ^rrstoprs - dm ' >4 disabled. ? lee for lucre*** 38 , perienec. Write lor I -aw*. A.w. Mc Rons. Wasmisotov. 1). C. A Civnsxi Health Heifer tolls bow. fl(K\ a year. Seud for rantpto. Dr., * ? . DYF., Editor, r RRTWRI.!.^ ixiTUifl A ca- tafto a( ? WoTnlrl A^miacn^aiM ?JJreM, w. wjH mail trial Wll|.llwrTU|f| mu, 1AfT Itlt M. C0.,8DCHtSItM.l.r I uicH fiveor ?tJcitRE parties II ?jmuM send at enco P"Kw>hw Scbasttas, OfTTA. IT. R. I. & p. Ji. R.. Chicago. TEN CFSTS. la rtimp* 1?.?r rack f??r tho rJlckest chrd* van ever shuffled, (Of tl.W you wili receive free by express tea pudtft dTyOuITtEIID^ llflllQC1) tf so buy yoar Saab. Doom null rtF m BUodn, Moulding*. BraZkeU. ? ? ? WUU I pahifters. Newela, and aUJtfcMte of Turned and Finished woo<l work from aa. We art manufacturers and ha*e the larjtett plant B> the State, Agents wanted tn ererr Town andCeufty ft C?- Soutb. Prkx.' lists furnished. Try aa. f lint I/. i- .**n?b. l>our and H'lnd 0 t. f til and A Street. CnahLOTTB, If. C. \\i!H iM'N'S. Ki: im .-ij. tna whleb tli?* hsruK injure tlu* iron, ai.ft burn oL Tlie Rising dun Ktovo polish i.s liriluaPt,* less. Datable. end tlia cmuninttr pa\s lor or glass pacLagc with c?ery | 'iircha.sc. Consumptive* and peopU who have wcik luno or Asth ma. should us? I'lBO'iCur* for Conpcaiptlon. II baa eared thouiosdi. It tans not Injur ed one. It is not lad to ta?ti~< It is tfco boet couyh ?yrup. 8f>H eTerrwher<*. 3rt?. GOLD MEDAL, PAHIS, 187a W. BAKER & CO.'S Breakfast Cocoa' from \vli1< || tho oxcttt of oil luu> b?*v n removed, Is absolutely p urf and if is soluble.': Xo Chemicals aio ??<?.! in it. 1 preparation. It l a* t,.ore t/uw tUrte tintet (Ag sU'tn&h of -Cocoa mixed wl(h h'tniru, A rrovrrout or Puijur, ami i* therefore far more eco li?>inirat, rotting U** than on4 i<>< !ti o<)>. It:# ilelicioun, noar? {fhiiic, strengthening, iasilt moKSTcy, nml sdmiiably adapted for invalid* as well as for j>irr??r>n* in licallh. hold l?j Grorcr-J cicrjnher*. W. BAKER & CO., lK>r Chester, Mai?. S N U 1 LITTLE LIVER do sot ccirK kob sick*?, B"r* fr? ,0' SICK II EAD* ~ , "*v ?' (lifi'licc.eocaU. p?ti?n,torpid RinatlN. Thfywotm *u*l crtvif. t '-rsovo tlaotra. <j;j? M. "7**; .! binder. Con1 ?* . Duioiid nrrvotm <W otnftr?. n?K UnJ L'AILT ACtSOW. f?j)lvWi<?n by ^lurifyiAC |)100<1. 1'WEIV N tUbTAKLIC. Th? dow ?? ii ir-rty i>iljus!'i! to r oivm*<\ onr pill eta Bt??-rtctoo n.u-K." v*lcoi.i?Ir.? 42,carrk-<l to pock t 1>? Kutl i^nc.l. Uusmess man'" gr?** eonrT.itocr. Tsk^n e?-.:T th&n eugir. S^ldewy A!i p^riuine i.far "Crr?wot.** b?n<l 2-cfat ?Ump . You jtl :c pipe book wifh itmpi*. 08. KARTER WE'JICINt CO.. St. Lo?U. . -d -2 To Young Mothers CO HOT BE DECEIVEO