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Some Pythagorean Hysterics. - - } Every lover of rare aad carious in formation knows that most of the anoieats were "dead set"' against bean?, but no ? modern uaraveller of old-time mysteries knows why. It may be truly said that there are bat few philosophers <>t the present day that "know txstn^.'' Pythag oras admonished his pupils t--> "abstain ? from beans," but on what grounds 50 ; one knows. He was al-:o authority (tr the old-time suoerstitiou that any sen- | tence written in bean juice could be ^een plainly reproduced on the "disk of the moon! Andrew Long says that the ancient fo'k-loje of be:?&s is & most curious and interesting topic, because it _ * seems wholly ou; of the question that . 'tre should ever understand what it was all about. Demetcr was the patroness of all frmis and vegetables, but the ancients considered it impious to attribute to her the discovery of the bean. Heraclides, on the authority of Orpheus, declared that beans buried in manure piles forth with became human beings. ? St. Louis iRepablic. A Bavarian Grip Cure. This treatment for influenza is due to ? Bavarian priest, says the London Stand ard. 4 'Go to bed at once ; Wash your neck, chest and the whole Upper body with" vetje cold water, and tie 1 dry linen towel about your neck. Cover your?eU* warmly, but not too heavily. Continue to wash yourself in this manner every hour for ten hour*. Th^a completely wash over the entire body with cold water aj rapidly as possible. 'After this complete lavation,* proceeds the old priest, 'there broke oul .^yth a violent ' perspiration that the CJ patient was drenched with it all over as he lay in bed, and with this perspiration the last re f mains oi the disease were likewise swept i away; the patient Lad regained his fyr . rae r vigor.'" Split tire Singer's. Larynx. Professor Schuller, a celebrated Berlin physician, recently bad occasion to split in half the iaryux of a well known singer. After^ Seventeen days the wound was proeo'.uiced healed, and curiously enough it was found that the singer not only had not lost bis vocal organ, but ti>at he is now enabled to use it to much better advantage than heretofore. I know oc sevefalJNew York singers who ought to go to ProTej&or- Schullcfr, of Berlin, and get their throats cut lengthwise. ? Ne?r York Recorder. ? The products of the farms, mines, for- | ' : ests and fisheries of the I'nitei Slates are valued at $25, 000,007,000 a year. ' V> wS^>A!-i ' - 1 - ?1 Beware ef Ointments for Catarrh That # CodihId Mercury, As meTcury will snrelv destroy the sense of i noell and completely derange the whole sys tem when enteringat through the inncouw sur faces. Such articles should never he used ex cept oa preemptions from reputable physi cians. as the damage they will do is ten fold to the fcood wq can possibly derive from them, j Hall's Catarrh Cnre, manufactured by F. J. j Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0Mcontains no mercury, anqte taken JKL-rnaily, and acts directly upen the olood a;*f mucous surfaces of the system. ? \ jltt buying lUut's Catarrh Cure be stire you get ihegettuintf. it is Utcen internally, and mad* la Toledo. 0bk>, by F. J. Cheney & Co. f far* tJoid by Druggists, price ?5c. per bottle. t i " - ? * > 0v*ft300, 000 oranfe trees were planted in Mexico last year by planters fro:u Califor nia. % Mrs; Cleaveland * 'i Tells of ller &ire of Nervous Dyspepsia - Kn A. B. Cleavelanrt. of Milford. the sto ... Mr of theSorcrcw Brother*, of Boston, the famous bolWers. In a loes and Interesting statement (which wUl be sent to full to any one who wishes it), JIta Oeav?Und' says that a few years ago she had a so -Jttv form of nervous dyspepsia, the symptoms being Palpitation of the Heart , -r-fwrmtajs sensation In tho stomach, faint 'ng spells, , Mda* awfal death-like feeling from whic^-j ?he Often thought she should never recover. Shewjig llnJ and languid all tho time and <Jkl not d^e , to Be down for fear of a fainf ^y speiL ShehaAftix different physicians but none did her any good. One d*y, Heading about Hood's Sarsaparilla she decided to try it. The fainting spells grew less soon ceased ~ *rfaoHfc\ Mer appetite returned, and has Increased Ficqn 88 to 132 Pounds j^^p^gMteuta^teensowen for 23 years, does all hex HK mmhold Work easily. To . Hood's Sarsaparilla ,h* JhsMdrftesaU her Improvement and Is ready to $:j ? <ua?&we anyone of the merit of this medicine. If jgi-; i >oo miter similarly, try Hood's Sarsaparilla. 11 i H ??**? PWU rareaU Lhret Ills. "MOTHERS' FRIEND" ^ To Younsr Mothfers Rata Child Birth Easy. ? - Shortens Labor, -f ' Lessens Pais, Endorsed by tfyt Leading Physidara. Km* to FMJKJB. BRADFICLD REGULATOR CO. , ATLANTA, OA. , ISO BY ALL DRUQOISTS. Ely's 6naa Bala wiucvu CATARRH ApfSy HKn^nto ttoi LVMOrU. &LY L'Roak, s?, M. Y. Tutt's Tin* Pills enable the rty^ptic to eat whatever iw ffiskef. Thfj cairn the food toa.\ <irniliite iiiid noarbh the body. r?v?> ? ppf'.itr and dwlop fU-^h. rri<v, 23 ?*nU Fxact siie rthovrn in border. OPIUM: Makes Rubber Hlamp? Ch??p. >fxMi for vrkrs and samples phin* Habit Cur#>d in 10 t SJJiTu y rurffi. *? STEPHENS, Lebanon rOau>? Jk?ch<^'s German Syrup is more j Sttccess&l in 'ilia treatment of.Coii . sumption than any other remedy 'prescribed. It has been tried under every Variety of efcfcate. In the bleak, bitter North, in damp New the fickle Middle&tate;, it, moist South ? every Itfca; been in demand by ? _tioa??iTy. It has been em ployed ii every stage of Consump |i tion. In brief it has been used and its the only true and ItSaMe Consamntion Remedy. JL Wm- i-l?' THE FAR* AND GABDEN. OVERPEEDEMG sheep AND LAMB 3. Sheeri have strong digestive organs in | that the^ doinot need grain to be ground ! for them A Yet ao domestic animal is j more eciily cloyed. The.. danger of j overfeedlhg 13 oae always to^ iijost i closely /guarded against. It id much j bette^To give a little under what the j ah e/p will eat thaa to give an ounce ' over. Lambs have still weaker diges tion than sheej>, and require more care against overfeeding. Yet if never oyer- j fed they wiil make larger gain from the same amount of food than with older sheep. ? Boston Cultivator. To crruzE a drt ditch. A very useful thing for a firmer to | know is how to utilize a dry airc'n, and in California trrey have an excellent way ! of doing it. After the water is turned out in L-arJy summer, instead of allowing , the banks to become a Swamp of weeds, to his own detriment and the undoing of those beiow, the farmer plows the j banks and the bottoms of the ditch and i plants pumpkins therein. Supposing hia ditch runs, 3ay, for three-quarters of a mile, He raises from fifty to 100 wa^on loads of pumpkins of the largest kind. After they are gathered m the fall and the vines are dry he dumps them into ditch' an i sets lire to them. The result is a aitsh as clean as a garden- walk, no weed seed to be spread over thousands of acres as soon a3 the water is turned in, to say nothing of the bal ance to the good in a large and valuable crop at a comparatively light expense. ? Chicago News. IS TAR TAI ER IXJURIOC3? Edwin Fox, Eaton County, Mich., desires information whether tar felt ap plied to the stem of apple trees, as a protection against rabbits, will prove in jurious. For many years weijave used ^ the ordinary tarred building and^oofing paper and felt for wrapping the stems of apple, quince and peach trees to protect . tnem against the attacks of boreis, up to the present hour, we have never discovered that the bark under these wrappings was injured by the tar. We renew these wrappings every two years, and on removing the old ones have always found, tho bark clean and b#iitby. We have, however, known healthy tYees killed by applying fresh warm coai tar direct to the stems and bark, and probably ma le ^aper or felt, with the tar dripping from it. might* prove injurious, but no dry paper, or one well cured, can possibly injure your trees, and it will prevent the TSblrtts trom gnawing the bark. ? American Agriculturist. - 1 MANAGEMENT OF ROADS IS WINTER. The breaking of roads in deep snow Is best done by drawing a heavy roller over the snow. This packs down the snow and makes a hard surface, on which horses and sleds may raa without sink ing, and the packing dowa ia this way avoi<is the l neon renience.cf piling up on sach side of the road and running iu a Gjulley, as is done when the roads are worked out with a stifftr plow. The rolier should be ten feet long and six feet in diameter, and made in sec dons of live feet, so as t:> be turned with ease. The rollers are covered by a frame hav .ng a seat for the driver and assistants ind for the tools that may be needed in iny emergency, such as shovels, blankets for the horses and for the men, if t:ie weather becomes very cold. At suitable distances turnouts should be made, where teams may pass each other, and these - ; should be within sight of each other, so that a meeting may not be made in a rrow place. Where the travel is suf ient to require it, a double road should ; WHEN THE* MILK IS FIT FOR CSB. * A variety of opinions and notions are rentertained regarding the use of the milk for culinary purposes, or for drinking ?that from the newly-calved cows, says the Indiana Fa rmer. No established . rule seems to be in force, an i the interval between calving and using the milk varies from three miikings to nine day^T" e^ch ck:rymaa having a theory 01 his own to determine the time required before the milk is 4'^ood." 0.i account of these ideas* and in the absence of positive 1 proof, and the knowledge of liow to do ? it, a great deal of profitable mtik-.is sacrificed or thrown aw.iy under the sup position that it is noi Wealthy and is uu titted for human foo:!. A simple w.iy to settle the question aud dispel all doubts is to place a small quantity of milk in a vessel upoa the stove, allow it to come to a boil, and if no appearancn of curdling is present, the milk is all right.* Heat at boiling point produces i the j/ua^e that makes visible to the eye the condition when it is proper to use the milk, aud ia no. other way ? except b^ihe.jrore dilficult process of analysis, ! ar guess ? can this be ascertained. It will be found generally, if no other con ditions are normal, and ttie milk is frocs a cow in perfect health? that eurdliag, under the treatment described, will dis appear, after the third or fourth milking from the time the caif w^jTifcropped, and when tins' occurs the mifk may, with entire confidence, be utilized in any way desired. ? Farmers' Review. . i , WANTED, beiter plotwes. It is Irardly too much to say that good plowing is*he foundation of gooi farm ing. In the good olu times, when State and county fairs were novelties, plowing matches were frequent and popular. We had poorer plows, perhaps, but in many sections, at least, we certainty had better plowmen. Fannere' sorts competed at ti e plowing matches, and Scotch and j Eajish plowmen astonished us by the skillful manner in whiqh they turned straight and regular lap-furrows. 4iBut," we asked, "what is the good?" In our climate, and with moder.i harrows, pul verizers, and grain drills, such furrows are seldom, of any special benefit, while frequently a fiat wide furrow will better wkiistand brought. We wanted to plow ! laiier. ajn i ire t in the croos. - He was j the best plowman who could tarn over two or three acre> a day. Perhaps we plow too wide a furrow, but there is not much possibility of our plowing narrower unless we use plows that will turn two or three furrows at once. But we need better plowing. Look at many of our fields of oats and barley any year. It is not too much to s-ay that a really clean field is an exception, while patches of thistle are the rule. They are a grrpving evil. Notwithstanding the hdi iJuit we have better implements lor ou|v*:ziag land a, id preparing it for the I in- i better caicivacors for work ing arnJLg the crops, and really do work I our lan l better tsan formerly, yet Can ada thist%s are on the increase, and the reason is -jtfcgely poor plowing. With out desiri^To go into details, we would like to ssK every iarmcr to look carefully to his piow points. The plow goes in on the light ? sandy land, but when it comes to a bkrd spot it slides over, and there, soocct or latex, will be found a patch of thistles. Look to your points. ?Ameri can Agricuturiist. r ' ^ EFFECTS OF FROST OS FLA5TS. Frusi kills or injures pl^s ia more made.? New York Times. observation, especially of tender plants, I have found that the effects of frost vary in proportion to their more or less watery uatuie and to the condition in rcsrard to moisture overhead and at the O r roots in which they may happen to be at the time when they get frozen. Some plants will bear cold to an aimost in credible extent, provided water is with held. On this point I am. sustained by a well-known English authority, who tells of having seen large examples of Agave Americana that have s'ood in pots for a whole year or more without water until their leaves became sb riv^H^i^bear as much frDiS witbgiifoeiQi: alleged as : would have killed them had they bees pitfmp and full of moisture. Th/ harder J kinds of Echeveria are m like rfonaer in different to a considerable amount of cold when their roots and tops are quite dry. But this condition of dryness m=*y easily be pushed too far in t le case of 1 some kinds of plants, especially such a> i are grown in pots and which if the soil i has been allowed to get su dry that they are in a stagnant, feebie state, are often ! killed by cold, when ir the roots had been in a more moist condition little in jury would have resulted. Tui$ applies more particularly to plants of a n^n-suc culent character, such as ferns a ad iitany greenhouse specie? that contain a large proportion of "^;>re in tnei branches and ; stems. Shrubby Calceolarias growing iu pots, with the soil in a mo ler.itely tno;st state, suffer little whea caught by frost that would have kdlei them hid they been in soil too dry to keep the leave; crisp and plump. The Lemon Verbena will bear several degrees of frost when the soil is in a half ra list state, but if dry when frozen it rarely recovers. Numbers of other plants might be named that are very susceptible to injury from frost whea the soil in which their roots are placed is too dry, thus showing ! that although tn my plants will bear a { low temperature when the soil about Vneir roots is quite dry, there are others t*> which the principle does not apply, far from being able to stand more "iroat when their energies are stagnated fiom want of water they sutler in pro portion to the extent to which their dry ing process has been carrie 1. ? New York World. FA KM AND GARDEN NOTES. Breel up instead of down. Tb . breeding stock for nest year can oe mated up now. Make the hens scratch for at least part of what they get; they wili be the healthier. Ground oat3 and bran can be used to /good advantage in making up a ration for poultry. Vegetables cooked in some form can always be used iu making a change of diet for the fowls. i Never ship an egg that is iu any man ner soiled. The apppearance is a prime factor iarthe sale of any article. Kerosene is one of the best materials to apply in the hen roosts to clear them of lice; apply it liberally with a brush. In nearly all cases a combination of early chickens for market with eggs in season will pay better than either one alone. Near a good market ducks can often be made more profitable than chickens, especially wheu an incubator is used in hatching. To produce a large market fovl, one that fattens readily an J is easily con fined, cross a Brahma cock with partridge Cochin hen. X A breed that may be best in one locality will not always prove best in an other. Select according to locality as well as purpose. Coal .ashes arc goo I to scatter under the roosts. The objection to wood allies is that they "are too caustic, often injuring the feet. Unless they are provi-ted with quarters something better than the average, it is a positive cruelty to pick either ducks or geese duriog the winter. While ducks will usually begin to lay 1 early in tlie season, it is not best to have them hatch until spring. They do not tbrivein cold, damp weather. Posting two or three thicknesses of paper over the cracks on the in?ide will add considerably to the warmth of the poultry house. It is cheap and elective. On the farm, under average conditions, it does not co^t any more to raise a pound of turkey than it does to raise a pound of fork, and the turkey biiugs the best price. Wa en cooked vegetables cannot be se cured and feci to good advantage in the poultry yafd a good" plan is to take well cured clover liar, run it through a cut ting box, scald throughly and then feed. It costs no more to keep an incubator run to its full capacity than when only one-haU or three-quarters fall, in hatch ing for prodt every item of cxpeus? must be considered.- Test the eggs by the seventh day. A well known farmer is of the opinion that in tea years from now. or perhaps less, a herd of cattle with horns will be as hard to find as a herd of moolcys has been in the past. The practice of de horning is gro.ving in favor. Sunslu'ue as a Disinfectant. I Half the zymotic disease in the world j is the result of damp, dark, an i their progeny ? mould, decay arwl-dirt. Any ! physician will testify to that. The following quotation from a paper read recently before the American Public Health Assoiation by its President, Fred erick Montizambert, M. I)., of Quebec, ought to be read by every housekeeper i in this country. ''Everyone can do a little, if only to i make our home o: one r.>o:u bright, j more cleanly, and more wholesome. Sun light, pure air. and thorough cleanliness are natural eae:nies to di>e i>e ircrai?. The experiments of Koch, Ransom, and others prove that the living germs <>;" consump tion, when exposed to the sunlight, lo?e their vitality in a few hours or even in n j few minutes, if the layer in which they j are exposed be thin enough, ::nd that even ordinary dayli jht, if it last long enough, will h ive'ash.iil :r eSYe-r. Taerc i is no sounder philosophy ,n the oM saying that, 'tilers is> in >rc health in p. ; sunbeam than indrugi;, more .i:<; in p ut air than in a physician's skill."" ? St. Louis Repubttc. J T!?e Grip i? Ancient Greece. E. . Bishop, of Norwich, Conn., who is a student in A. inherit College, ha? discovered by reading Thucydides, Book ! II., that the ftrip prevailed in Greece j 470 B: CM ana it was by far more violent and mr.re frequently fatal ia its eliecta than to day. In the book named fqer< is an entire chapter on the disease and%U : ..its symptom5, 'vh?ch are minutely de scribed, and are li <.??? thi->e noted in these ? times. It is Utscubed as being a queer and troublesome malady, and the mental dejections of its victims are said to be the most distressing feature o i the disorder. ?New York Times. t f * Pennsylvania s Department of Agri ; culture wllkurge Congress to provide a i ! wmedj for lejxosv^ L\ /"r ' * il**! - LaK ' ? *" REV. 1)R. TALMAGE / V | ; i THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN ' DAY SERMON. ^ j Text: "And He, came down xcith their, and stood in tfuplaha." ? Luke vi., 17 Christ on the mountains is a frequent study, We have* seenJHira on the Mount of Olives, Mount of Beatitudes. Mount Moriah, Mount Calvary, Mount of Ascension, and it is gjorious to study Him on these great nat ural elevations. But how is it tliat never be fore have we noticed Him on the plain - Amid the rocks, high up on the mountaiu, C hrist had passed the night, bat now, at ear ly dawn, He is coming down with some es pecial friends, stepping from shelving to shelving, here and there a loosened s;ou< rolling down the steep sides ahead of Him, until He gets in a level place, so that He can fce approached without climbing from al) sides. He is on the level. My "text says. "He came down with there and stood in th'* plain." Now that is w> at the world wants to-day mere than anything else ? a Christ oa th'e ievel, easy to get at, no ascending, no de scending, approachable from all sides Christ on the plain. The question among all consecrated people to-day is;. What is the matter with the ministers? Many of them are engaged in picking holes in the Bible and apologizing for this and apologizing for that. In an age when the whole tendency is to pay too little reveren?e to the Bible, tEH' are fighting against Bibliolatrv, or too mucia < reverence for the Bible. They are buildin* a fence on the wrong side of the road; not on the side where the precipice is and off / wh;ch multitudes are falling, but on the upper side of the road, so that people wjfl not fall uphill, of which there is no dangej\ There is no more danger cf Bibliolatry* <v too much reverence for the Scriptures, than> there is that astrology will take the place of \ astronomy, or alchemy the place of chemi*; 5 try, or the canal boat the place of the lim ited express rail train. TV hat a theological farce it is; ministers fighting against too much reverence for the Scriptures; ministers making apology for the Scriptures; ministers pretending to be friends of the Bible, yet doing the Book more damage than all the blatant infidels on all the earth. The trouble is oar theologian* are in in the mountain in a fight above the clouds about things which they do not understand. Come down on the plain and stand besid9 Christ, who never preached a technicality or a didacti cism. What do you, O wis? headed ecclesi astic, know about the decrees of Goi? Who cares a fig abont your sublaosarianism or your supralaparinuism? What a spectacle we have in our denomi nation to-day? committees tryiug to patch up an old creed made two or three hundred years ago, so that it will fit on the Nine - teenth century. Why do not our millinery establishments take out of the garrets the coal scuttle hats which your great-grand mothers wore and try to fit theai on the head * ot the modern maiden? You cannot fix u;> a three-hnndred-year-old cree 1 so as to fit our time. Princeton will sew 011 a little piece, and Union seminary will sew on a lit tle piece, and Alleghany serninarv and Dan ville seminary will sew on other pieces, and the time the creed is done it will be as varie gated as Joseph's coatpf many colors. '1 hmk of having to change an old creed to make it clear that all infants dying go to heaven! I am so glad that the committees are going to let the babies in. Thank-you. So many of them are already in that all the bills of heaven look like a Sunday -schooljm niversary. Now what is^he useof fixingup a creed which left any dowrt on that sub let? No man ever doubted that all infants dying go to heaven, unless he be a Herod or a t_ harles Guiteau. 1 was oppose i to over hauling the old creed at a!), but now that it has been lifted up and its imperfections set up in the sight of the world, I say, Over board with it and make a new creed. There are to-day in our denomination five hundred men who could make a better one. I could make a better one myself. As we arc now in process oi: changing the creed, and no one knows what we are expected to believe, or will two or three years hence be expected to believe, I could not wait, and so I have made a creed of my own which I in tend to observe the rest of my life. 1 wrote it down in my memorandum book some six months ago, and it reads as follows; "My creed: The glorious Lord. To trust Him, love Him and obey Hfm is all that is re quired. To that creed 1 invite all mankind. T. De Witt Talmage." The reason Christianity has not made more rapid advance is because the people are asked to believe too many things. There are, I believe, to-day millions of good Chris tians who have never joined the church and are not counted among the Lord's friends bee use they cannot believe all the things that they are required to believe. One-half the things a man is? expected to believe in order to enter the church and reach heaven have no more to do with his salvation than the question. How many volcanoes are there in the moon? or, How far apart from each other are the rings of Saturn? or, How manv teeth there were in the jawbone with which Sampson smote the Philistines? I be lieve ten thousand things, but none of them hnve anything to do with my salvation ex cept these two? I am a sinner and Christ came to save me. Musicians tell us that the octavj consists only of five ton^s and two semitones, and all the Handels ana Haydns and Mozarts and Wagners and Schumannsof all ages must do their work*" within the range of those five tones and $#0 semitones. So I have to tell you that all the theology that will be of practical use in our word I is made oat of the two facts of human sinfulness and divine atonement. Wit'ihi that octave swing "The Son? of Moses and the Lamb," the Christmas chant above Bethlehem and the Hallelujah of all the choirs standing on sjas of glass. Is there not some mode of getting out of the way of these nonessentials, these super fluities, these divergencies fro.n the main issue? Is there not some way of bringing the church down out of the mountain of con troversy and conventionalism and to put it on the plain where Christ stands? The pres ent attitude of things is like this: In a famine struck district a tablehas been provided and 1 is loaded with food enough for all. Tho odors of the-meats fill the air. Everything is ready. The platters are full. The chalices are full. The baskets of fruit are full. Why not let the people in? The door is open. Yes, but there is a cluster of wise men blocking up the- door, discussing the contents of the caster standing midtable. They are shaking their fiats at each other. One says there is too much vinegar in that caster, and one says there is too much sweet oil. and another says there is not the proper proportion of red p?ppei\ I say, "Get out of the way and let the hungry "people come ittrk, .Now our blessed Lord ha$ provided a great supper, and the oxen and the fatlings have been killed, and fruits from all the vine yards and orchards-' of heaven crown the table. The world has been invited to come, and they look in, an 1 they arj hungry, and t&e people would pour in by the miilions to this worll wide table, but tQe door is blocked up by controversies, and men with whole libraries on their backs are disputing as to what proportion of sweet- oil and cayenne pepper should make up the ere id. I cry, "Get out at the way and let the hungry world come in." The Christian church will cave to change its tack or it will ruu on the rocks of dW^V lition. lie world's population annually in- - creases fifteen millions. No one pretends that half that number o people are con verted to God. There are more than twice as many Buddhists as Protestants: more than twice as many Buddhists as Roman Catholics. Protestants, 135,000,000; Catho lics, 195.000,000; Buddhists, 400. 000,000. There are 175,000,000 Mohammedans and 2*^0,000,000 Brahmans. Meanwhile, many of the churches are only religious clubhouses, where a few people go on Sunday morning, averaging one person to a pew or one person to a half coz mi pews, and leaving th<i minister at night to sweat through a sermoTi with here and there a lon^ traveler, unless, by a Sunday evening sacred cvneert, he can get out art audience of re spectable size. The vast majority of the church member ship around the worl I put forth n > direct effort for the salvation of men: 1 1 I say there would have to be a chang^? 1 correct that and sav. th^re will l?e a Whang.'. If t here be fifteen minion persons at:e l every year to the world's population, then there will be thirty miluoa ad lei to the church, and forty miiliou and ft* t v million and sixty million. How will it be don1?1 It will be done when the churcu will ,n Christ on the plain. Come down cut o'J the mountain of exclusivoness. Come down out of the mountain o." pride. Come down out of the irountain of formalism. .Comedown out of the mountain of freezing and indifference. Uid Dr; Stephen H. Tyng, great on -earth j amnn heaven, once sa>d to me: ''I rn m favor of a change. I do not know what is ' t-' ? best way of doing things in tae churches, but I know the way we are doing now is not thebest way, or the world would !>e nearer its salvation than it seercs to bV So I feel; so we all feeL that there needs to be a change. The point at which we all come short is presenting Carist on the plain, Christ on the level with all the world's woes and i , wants and necessities. The full change will have to come from the rising ministry. We n">w in the field are too set in our ways. We are lutnberei up with-t^akn:calr!rej. W e have too many concordances an i dictionaries an I eaevclo I aedias and systemi of theolozy on our head i to get down on tto plain- Our vocabulary i is too frosted. We are too much under the domination of customs regnant for many centuries. Come on, younytaneb of the ministry. Take this pulpit, take all the pulpits, and in the street, and the market place, and the family circle preach Christ on the plain. i ?> As soon as the church says by its. attitude, not necessarily by its words, "My one mis* sion is to help for this life and help for the life to come all the people," and it proves its earnestness in the matter, people on foot and ; on horseback and in wagons and in car riages will come to the church? in such numbers that they will have to be met at the | door by usaerg, saying: "You were here | last Sunday; you 'cannot cottTi to-day. (ienth men and ladies, you must take your turn/' -1 s And it will be as in the Johnstown freshet and disaster, when a government station was opened for the supply of bread, and it took the officers of the law to keep the suf ferers in line because of the great rush for ! food. Wheu this famine struck world real | iz s that the church is a government station set up by tbe government of the universe to provide the bread of eternal life for all the people, the rash will bs unprecedented and unimaginable. Astronomers iiave been busy measuring vrorlda, and they liave Tol-i as how great is the circumference of this world and how great is its diamerer. yea, they have kept on until they have weighed our planet and found its weigfrtjto be six sextillion tons. But by nosciencajias the weight of this world a trouble "beta weighed. Now, Christ stand ing on the level of our humanity stands in sympathy with every trouble. Th^ere ars so many aching h?a1s> His ach^l un ier th? thorns. There are so many weary feat; His were worn with the long journey up and down the land that received Him not There t are so many persecuted souls. Every hour of His life was uuder human outrage. The world had no better place to receive Him than a cattle pen, and its farewell was a slap on His cheek and a spear in His 6ide. So in tensely human was He that there has not been in all our rac3 a grief or infirmity or exhcuatiou or pang? that did not touch Him once and that does not touch Him now. The lepers, the paralytics, the imbecile, the manic, the courtesan, the repentant brigand ? which one did He turn off, which one did He not pity, which ope did He not help? The universal trouble of the world is bereavement . One may escape all the other trouble*, but that no soul escapes. Out of that bitter cup every one must take a drink. For instance, in order that all might know how He sympathizes with those wfco hav? | lost, a daughter, Christ comes to the house of Jarius. There Js such a big orowd around the door He and His disciples have to push their way in. Fro$i the throng of people 1 conclude" that this girl must have been very popular. She was one of those children whom everybody lues. After Christ got in the house there was such a loud weeping that the ordinary tones of voice could not bs heard. I do not won der. The dead daughter was twelve years of age. It is about th^happiesfc tiins In most lives. Very littie^Jdren suffer many injustices because the^Bre children, and childhood is not a desirable part of humau existence?they gat whacked or set on. But at twelve years o( ago the child has come to self assertion and is apt to make her righto known. And then, twelve years of age it too early for the cares aud anxieties of life. So this girl was, 1 think, the merriment of the household. 8he furnished for them the mimicty and the harmless mischief, aud roused the guffaw that often rang through that happy liome. But now she is dead, and the grief at her departure is as violent as her presence had been vivacious aud inspiriting. Oh, the bereavement was S3 sharp, so over whelming! How could they give her up! i suspect that they blamed themselves for .his or for that. Ob, if they had had some other doctor, or taken some other nwdlciue, - or had been more careful of her health, or If they had not givan her that reproof som?> time when she had not really desarvei it. II they had been more patient with her hilari - ties an J, instead of hushing Her play, had participated in it? You know there are so many things that parent* always blatna themselves lor at suciTtiH^fs, Only twelve years of age! So fair, so prtajnisingj so fuU of life a few days ago, and aowvso still ! Oh, wiiat it is to have a daughter dead! Tbe room is full of folks, bu: yonder is the room where the young sleeper is. The' crowd can not go in there. Uuly six persons enter, fi''e besides Christ? three'frlouds, and. of course, the father and mother. Tliey have the first right to go in. The heaviest part of tie griei was theirs. Al eyes in that room ere on the face of this gir! . There lay the beauit'ul hand, White and finely shapen, but it was not lifteljin greet ing to any of tbe group. Christ stepped for ward and took hold 'ot that hand and tidd, with a tone and accentuation charged wltb tenderness and rommaud, "Damsel, 1 sa} uuio thee, arise!'' And without u uiumtiiit'' delay she arose, her eyes wide open, her ' cheeks turning from white lily to red rose; and the parents cry . "She lives! She lives!" and iu the next room they take up the soun l, "She lives! She lives!" and the throng in /front of the doorway repeat it, "She lives! She lives!" Will not all those who have lost a daughter feel that such a Christ urthat can syropatbiz?? Christ on the plain. I care not from what side you approach Him, you can touch Him and get His help. Is it mental depression you suffer? Remember Him who said, "My Cod, Mv God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?' Is it a struggle for bread? Remember Him who fed the five thousand with two minnows and '?five biscuit-, neither of the biscuits larger than your fist. Is it chronic ailment? Renember "the woman who for eighteen years was bent almost double and He lifted her face until she could look into the blue sky. Are you a sailor and spend your life battling with the tempests? Remember Htm who flung the tempest of (ienesareth flat on the crystal pavement of a quiet sea'. That Christ is in sympathy with all who have trouble with their eyes, and that is be coaiin^ an almost universal trouble through much reading ni rail cars, and tbe overpres sure of the study in the schools where chil dren are expected to l?e philosophers at ten. boys and giris at fourteen wita spectacles. I sofr with all such trouble Christ is in sym pathy. Witness blind Bartimeus. Witness the two blind men in the house. Witness the two blind men near Jericho. Witness the man born blind. Did He not tur? their perpetual midnight into miduoon, till they ran up and down clapping their hands 'and . savin?. "I see! I see!"' 1 hat Christ is In sympathy with thoss who stammer, or have silenced ear-, notice how promptly He came to that man with impedi ment of speech a t\d gave him command of the tongue so thai he could speak with eas?, ond, putting His fitfWr? into th-) ears, re tuned the tympanum. Is there a iacK"%4 circulation in your arm, t'aiak of Him who cured the defective circulation and the inac tive muscles of a patient who had lo3t the use of hand aud arfm, by saying, "Stretch forth thy hand!" knd the veins and nerves and muscles resumed their offices, ani though in doing so the joints may have cracked from lon? disuse, and there . 'may have been a strange sensation from elbow to finger tip, he stretched it forth ! And nota j ing is the matter with you, but you may ap peal to a sympathetic Christ. And if you feel yourself to be a great sinn?r, hear what He said to that repenting Magdalen, while with a scalding sarcasm He dashed her hy pocritical pursuers. J? And see how He made an immortil liturgv out of the publican's cry, \M3-od be merciful to me a sinner," a prayer r> short th it tha most overwhelmed offender can utter it, and long enough to win cslestial dominions. It was well put by a man who had bean con verted, and who remembered that in his di?solute days ha found it harl to ge: occupation, because he could not j^res ;ut a certificate for good character. In commending Christ to the people he | said, "Bless Go^nl have fouul ouf- t a. at j Jesus will take a man without a character !'' I Christ on a level with suffering humanity. | Mv text says "He catna down with theai ' and stoo 1 in the plain." No climbing up j through attriLnue/t vou cannot uulerstand N j ascending of th* heights of beautiful | rhetoric of prayer. No straining after ele vations you cannot reach. No hunting for a God that you cannot find. But going^Hgbt ! straight to Him and looking into His face j au 1 taking IIi.-> han 1 an I asking for His par-. | don. HiscomfoJt, >1 is grace. His heaven. Christ ou the level. When during the siege of Sevastopol au officer ha 1 co.u manded a private soldier to stand onihe ! wall expose i to tiie enemy ami receive tbe j ammunition a.- it was handed up. whilw he. the officer, stoo I in a place sheltered from j the enemy's gans, (Jen^ral Gordon leaftpl | upon the wall t'? help and commanded tiie j i.lfijer to follow him, uud then close! with | words, "'Nev^r order a man -to do any thing that you are afraid to do jnourself (Glory be to tjoi. the Captain of our salva tion has Himself gone through all the ex !>osun?s in which He commands us to be . | j s courageous.. He has been throug'u it all, and ' now offers Uis sympathy iu similar straggle. One of the kin^s of Jiugland one night iu disguise walking the streets of London, a?d not giving account of himself, wa? anvsv I i and j ut in a miserable prison. When rj ' "leased and getting ba>c t<> the pil-tc \ h? j ontered thirty tons of an I *. l*rge ; s>upplv of foil ior ih- nt;h: prisma :-r? oC j London. Out of nis o**:i *ri-in?-^s t iat mgbt he di I tai< Aa ! our lArljthe JCuig aforetime endun ?eont* 1 ;u 1 sickjau I huu i gry and persecute i anii sla-n, out of His own experiences is rea y to fc-ip ail, and pirloa aiL rind comfort a li, tuitH^cu j al'. Oh. join film in th? plain. As long as | yon stay up in the mountain of your pride you will get no h alp. That is tbe reason s> P manv of itttai never find tno Gospel . Th jt j sit ligb up . oa the iloat Blanc of their i ooii4oaativetie3s,aad they have their opiaioa ^ i " i ? i . ? a oo tit uoa, ?nd their opinion about tae ?oul and their opinion about eternity. Hats you any idea that jour opinion -will have any effect upon the two tremendous facts? that yon are a sinner, and that Christ is ready at your earnest prayer to save you? . In the final day of accounts how much will you opinion ba worth t Your opiulon will not be of much importance before the blast of the archangel's trumpet. When the life of this planet shall be thrasheAut ! with the - flail of th under bolts uob-xly ami ?uk about -your opinions. Come aown out of the moun tain o I opiuionativcuess and meet Christ on the plain, where you must meet Him, lor never meet Htm at all, except as yon meet Him on the judgment throne. A Christ easy to get at ! No arme:l ?entinef to challenge you. ??o ruthlesi officer to scrutinizu the papers you present. Immedi ate response. immediate forgiven**?. Imme diate solace. Through what struggle people must go to get a pardon from worldly authority! By what petition, by what hin drance, by what nervous strain of anxiety, by what adroitness. A count of Italy was condemned to be put toiieath at Mila<i. The countess, hearing of tlie ^eateuea, hastened to Vienna to seek hi* pardon, The death warrant was already oa its way. The counter, arriving io Vienna iu the nlgbWiiostened to the ptiaee gat-js, Tin at tendants forbade her entrance at all uni es pecially at nighr, but she overcame the n with her entreaties, and the empress was wakeuedand the countess pleaded bsfone her for the life of her nusbaad, and than the emperor was wakened to uearthesams plea. , Commutation or sentence was granted, hut bow could she overtake the ofiiaer who hi I ?started with the death warranty aud wouli fche be too late to save th* life of her hus band* By four relays of horsey an 1 stop ping not a moment tor rood, she rpacliel th-> city of Milan as her hatband was jonJihe way to the scaffold. Just in ..tim?to sav&shltn, and not a minute to spare, she came u?. \ You wee there were two 'dpO-rollies in the way. The one was to get ttfe pardon signed, and the other to brmj it toohe ri^ht place iu time. Glory be to Uo-1, wa need go t trough no such exigency. Nj long road to travel. No pitiless beating at a palace gate, Pardon here. Pardon nj?. l'ar ion for asking, Pardon for ever. A ioUi to get a r, A. Christ on the p'<>i ?! ^ TEE "LABOR WORLD. The Bank of England employs 1100. The Typographical Union -is- worth $7000. There are 4500 women printers in Eng land. Last year was a successful one among the fruit growers of Colorado. Anderson, lnd., is to have an aluminium factory, employing 1QD9 hands. Massachusetts Knights of Labor rc c>ntly held a State Convention. Tbk Journeymen Brewers" National Union has fifty unions and 4700 members. An agency is to be established in St. Paul, Minn., to secure work for released convicts. Thirty-two thousand people in Tliur (ijgia, Saxony, are employed in making toys. The New York Typographical Union is to establish a school to teach type-sotting by machines. The London (England) tailors have asked , the County Council to fix the same rate for women's work as for men's. The coal industry of the United States furnishes employment to 300, (XX) person*., to whom $110,000,000 is paid anuually in wages. In Great Britain, the total sum paid in wages for the year 1891) amounted to $215, 000,000, "or an average of $333.90 per capita for, the total number employed. "" The miners of the Clearfield region of Pennsylvania hava demanded an advance in wages for mining "low coal." The opera tors say that they will refuse the advance and close the mines. The official organ of the mill owners in Germany insists that the eight hour work day is a necessity for horses, as no horse eo n work more than" eight within twenty-four hours without injury to its health. The Trades Council of Glasgow, Scotland, has petitioned the Town Council of that city to establish municipal workshops for the purpose of uiakpig all clothing needed tor the inmates of/public institution*, and uni forms for th/police and other officials The average daily output of glass bowls amounts t6 about 46,300 gross. Germany, Belgium and Austria-Hungary "Turn out about 37,0^0 gross, or about four-fifths of -the product of the world. France so small au output as 109 gross. Britain turns out about <5000 gross daily. Oi' the other pro ducing countries Sweden makes the highest with 1516 gross daily. The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engi neers has now about 30, #00 memtx-rs aud 485 lodges; the Firemen's Brotherhood has 25.000 members and 475 lolges; the Urder of Railway Conductors counts 10. -100 members in 320 division?, and the Trainmen's Broth erhood has 21,000 members in 420 lodges. Counting the switchmen, the carmen, the telegraphers ami track-foremen, the total number of organized railroad employes wjll reach over 200, 000. '^\ 4 Artificial dower- makers in Paris, France, earn from fifty to seveuty-five cents a day; but there is a long slack season. Pan maker., in some instances, in Paris, earn as much as $1 per day ; and a good dressmaker, working by the day in private houses, earns about the same, if the does not have meals. But seamstresses dressmakers or white workers) earn from forty cents down to twenty-five centi a day, and there is a season of least two months in which there is no work at ail ^ PROMINENT PEOPLE. Cardinal. Manning's estate sums up j $m Sir Arthur Sullivan, the composer, is a martyr to the gout. George Hanlon, a welt known acrobat, has abandoned the stage for the pulpit. The Czar of Russia is a very btisy man, frequently working till 2 or 3 o'clock io the morning. ! f ^ _ H. F. Djckens. sou 'of Charles Dtmkens, has been appointed a Queen's Counsel in ; London, England. ; Mai Hearst, tlu> widow of the lata .Sen ator from California, is said to carry a life insurance of $400,000. General George W. Jones, of Dubuque, fighty years of a^.j, has just been admitted to practice in Iowa courts. The Patriarch of! the United States Sen ate, Mr. Morrill, of Vermont, is neariog the ?nd of his nigbty second year. Prince Victor Emmanuel, heir to the Italian Crown, is oue of the hands jmest and most accomplished men of his station in life, Arabi Pacha, the exiled Egyptian mis chief-maker, live? on the island of Ovlon, amid coooanut groves, haunted by squirrels ind magpie robin* Sir Charles Russell, the famom Eng lish advocate, always tries to dissuade his :li ?nts from going to law if their cases can be arranged out of court. The Marquis of Hartington, even while the stormiest scenes are beiug enacted in the British House of Commons, peacefully sleeps on his bench in a sitting posture. J. T. Trowbridge, writer of juvenile ? literature, is again settled at Arlington, Mass., After an absetic? of threj years in France, Italy, Germany and Switzerland. Gounod, the French composer, is a tine looking old man. with white hair. He is an erratic worker, and derives his best inspira tion when, he is in a church or a cathedral. ? i Congressman LANH.v.M,^of Texas, repre sents the largest district in the House of Representative*. It embraces ninety-eight , counties, some of them large enough <>f them j selves to make a respectable State. It wcu'd be difficult indeed t" nam > it more wr.^atile man or a more prolili" wi-ite:* than Edward Atkinson, of Bost-m, Ma^s , who, in spite of his large bu-fine-s aft xtrs, never tires of instructing his tell??w?. y The parents of ex-^nator IngalK of Kansas, are still living at Haverhill, Muss Tn? fath-r, now ovei eighty years ot age. w the invent >r of several useful mf'bin-.'s eiiipli'y-'l in manufacturing shoe-. St- NATi 'it Bkj? k, oj^ >aio."-*tr^?^ ii>* hair id almost the Jac-siinn*? of a curiy auburn \v i while 4|fcator John S hen nan s wig is i adjusted wiril th* careless uoncnalanoe sup }H>sed to bs clwiTveteri-U'.* of |>x>ple who i have so muub hair they non't know what to | do with it. ?' Andrew Cah<>' ?" has donated in th* i Stat?* of P?fii ? A'lvaii'f1 *l.'*X>,0.?0 for thi | Pittsburg I.ii-r uy. rl, '*?'?>,??)> for tn? f'itt* I buiy. \rt < taiiei van 1 .duj-um, for 1 the Allegheny City Library. th?* Caruegio Librarv at Bra I loci., f-t ?/ ">? lor th" Johystown Library, f*- i ? : f ?r th? E,licbui*gh|<" Pn >ii I. ?? , at; I more titan tir.t *'?>.' libravi-. :) t>un f?-r:ti.in-?. h'*> ii '??. Am a*i i ?: SejVil t iMnery worning women nave hmuivju & labor union in Antwerp, liel"iu:a. One of the bc?t te!<*znr>h o-. ? it .... "-j Boston. tutu i : ? i. i . t " ; ~ " * * \ Privates in the arm; of the United States are paid *20 a nontlj. The Florida sevon is not cossiderer, , Wide upea uutii Febrd&rj. i ? ! ' 1 Fitter Tips of Idiots. Impassions of the finger tips of idiots hate been found by Dr; cTAbundo to show very different marking from those of sante people. In a number of idioti the makings on the tips of all the fingen of each band were identical, and in one idiot the tips of the thumbs had thf same markings as those of the fingers. There was a noticeable smoothness of the finger tips in all the idiots. ? New York Joir* naL The Only One Ever Printed. CAN YOC KIND THE M'OBD? These is a 3 inch display adven isement la this paper, this jveek, which lias no two words alu e except on*j word. The same is true or each new one appearing each week, from The Dr. Uarter MedScinel'o. This house placet- a "Crescent" on everything they raakeand pub lic. nLook tor it. send them "the n?me of rhe word and they will reiurn you it >ok, beauti FCI. LlTUCURAPHSorSAMPLKS KKEE. The trouble on tho Mexican border con tinues. Many person* are broken down from over, work or hou-e'K>ld cares. Brown's Iron Bit ters rebui ds trrts.sifclem, ail- diction, re move* excess of bile, arid cures maiaAa. A ependid tonic for women and children. i> jiak vaspar, viyoaiin^. a valuable *eln of coal has beun found just beneath the grass rortta ? Is youb b!ood poor? Take Eecc barn's Pills. Is v?air liver out of order? v s4 Beecham's f'iifv 2S cents a box. The manu?aeture of bm.*t su^ar Is attain in^ large projections in Nebraska. For Coughs aiiil Throat troubles use Brown's BltOXCHMLTitOCHUS.? "Tli?y Stop an attack of my astaina couch very promptly.**? C? FalcA, MianUrttfc, 0 hin. ? Natctrai. gas has beeu found near Salt Lake City, Utah. Lao ibs ne#iin.' a tonic, ^r children who w&ut building: up, should take Brown's Iron Bitters. it is rdcrs-uU to take, cures Malaria, Indigestion. Bilio 'sness an l Liver Com plaint^ makes the Blood rich and pure. Ik you would be correct in pronouncing Manitoba accent the last syllable. FITS stopped free by I >i<. Eun's naa.iT Nehve Restorer. No lit? after lirst dayVt use. Marvelous curea. Treatise and $2 trial bottle free. Dr. Kline, W1 Arch St., 1'hlla., I'a. ONE ENJOYS Both the method and result* when Syrup of Figs is taken ; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and actf Gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, di^els cold?, head- - ?ches and fevers a-nct cures habitual constipation. S^rrup of Figs is tha only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste ana ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in ita effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy Vnoira. 6yrup of Figs is for sale in 50o and $1 bottles by all leading- drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FBAkWSCO, CAL. IBUMILLE HEW YORK. K f. v Kennedy's MedicalDiscovery Takes hold iii this order: Bowels, , Liver, Kidneys, i Inside Skin, | Outside Skin, I l)_+*te# everything before It tbat ousht to be out. j You know whether J 3rou need it or not. 9aM by every druggM. .-uid manufactured by DONALD KENNEDY, ROXBCItV. NAHM. Reasons why | YOU OUDERJ^JOt 4 SEEDS! FROM J T.W.WOOD A. SONSi RICHMOND, VA. < GARirfN SEEDS. ' At 1,000 miles dl.-:anco we make It Juat ' u easy for you to obtain tli? best and i most Improved varieties and lat* est noveltlr*. m we DKI.lVEil POSTPAID RDiwIirre ail Otrdeo Beedt hi pej^: and ounce rate*, and give IS <~ts. worth extra pkv Bw-ds for each f l .i-0 wort a orderwd. We alno have epecl&l uj<it rates on Seeds In balk. Our GRASS, CLOVER, I and JVld *-.-d "h ie It the largos* la tbe S<>utli':n? m^Tiv - most convincing * proof of our tUh nx*-lo b<*eds and rea | PA44.it.lt; prices. 1 NO RISK ? INSKMUNC; >lONKY through the i riui!*. ur.d ?*? guaranire the aafe arrival ?'f uil of'Urs tilled by ua. 1 f ill In' r:nat;c n and cultural direction* ! of ail Fartn and <<ardrn < rops Is Riven in (?iir NYvv ( MtuJoiiiic, \\ bkb t.i the most In ctrtiC ? ???.rKsn.j. Mailed frtc. K*nd for It. T.W. WOOD &. SONS Seedsmen, RICHMOND, Va. COPYRIGHT t . Bard to kUt$ \ / ? the big, .old-fashioned pilL It'e pretty hard to have to take it, to& You wouldn't, if you realized fully how it shocks and weakest the system. v-. j sj -? Luckily, you don't have to take it. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant PelleU are better. j Thcy'ro sensible. They do, mildly and gently, more than the ordinary pill, with all its disturb* ance. ' They regulate the . liver, stomach ana bowels, as well aa thoroughly; cleanse thent They're the original Little Liver Pills, purely vegetable, j perfectly harmless* the smallest arid the easiest to take. One little [Pellet for a gentle laxa tive ? thief for a cathartic, . Sick Headache, [Bilious Headache, Con* sti^&tion, jTndisesuon, Kiiious At* tacks, and all tltrangemenls of the Liver, Stomach and Bowels are promptly kn*l permanently cured. They're v^he cheajx?s? too, for they're giiuraniced to give satiafao-c. t.ion, or your ty Ls returned. * You pay only l'dr the good yon get Nrikltb ilrl^r ? ? toil* Ik- >*i\ ,iO>' a yvir. Smi-I ft h" Kiniplo. Mr. , J. 11. 1>VK. Kdttor, lluf PAtENTSlSi^e FBirslo^rn - Dm all MtaOHMK M disabled. r> for lacrviw. t* TTTI ?>? ? P?rt#ecel w rl:? for A.W. ifcOoimat ?an. wAmtim. - - - ~ IX a A*CairdiMAnjK DO YOU INTEND TOBUILO A HOUSE? SSSSr3 ?f Tuiwi oa f rtuWhrd wend wort fro? u*. We mi ntaufict<ir>>if ?n?l h*vw IN lemwt p'ul I? W fUS?. 4<pnt| ninN tn ?vrr* To*'? itdCttttf II th<* South, pitce >l*t? fufntlhed. Try?? lh?> ? I >|r1*>li, Dwir end IMh(| flttw. Oor. till tod 4 CUiitofTt, K C. KING COTTON ivy tr ted yoof ?? JOITES t5-Ton Cotton 8ctli. HOT CHEAPEST ?VT IKtl. . IV umi Utrma I joinsi of anrainirTwr, BIKCtfAMTOS. N. Y. RIPANS TABULES.rpC%l?U iLr slMil&cb. llVl* Mra !?*??, pun'v <y i;ii? k1. ?<r* mi. c and ef-( tf'i* ?Hit j.? family m>(tf icli .Kirn for! &>Uaum& C.JHM J'.fctidO ItoaL Pr<JVh, Jk 4UV )=?\ il*-)lilW|B. I.M* <>r Ai>p?m<\ Kt.uiUi IVpir?*oa. F.v-.ful D&Cftton. 1 fiiJlOW Compirxloo, Tin-*! *04' [every grnir>(<>M or r?#a:tlejr from ttnpurt [Mood.orartUun* brt><f ? w?n?rh. Uror.oririU*U?ai to perform Ihrtr pwf fmrtiwi*. PThoiMKiTra to ovt T-cAtJnrtro Unffl'.Ad tivtxkiiira TABt'tr.after o?i-iiniCa\ frW.b* mafl.irrowif. ihetl'tLVj, Ad 4na?- THE mj\4>VClTgM!CAU>0.,Wil!|>ni<N>St. J?.Y. I M *nicJ? KIUITV prr rritl ?rwl. i ('nti?cai|MlT?:a ?*fco lnv? urfck IcujjsJ mfk, should uso I'isol (\)csuinpti'<n. It ba. (honauQ.la. It ban not | c4 ono. lusrot 'oa t loll ItJii tliC bcit c?itgb >rrup. tccirtjern. 25c. 00 MT BE DEGSSYED niili fbtamcUt Wat* rhlct iMi Ujp hMi !1. Injure tl** u?k>. ?c?t l>ur? off. The tlUltiff Sun 8?ove Polish U lirlUixnt. 0?W> tew. UuraMc. *nU the consumer (or Mils or glMw package wi:b every purcfca**. GOLD MEDAL, PAHIS, 187* \\\ BAKER &X0/8 Breakfast Cocoa from * J.lchlhe riCM*of?U Lai bci-u removed. It abmlutrhj pur? 0n4 it is trilvbUr Xo Chemicals ?i? u*c<l ta !t? j^r^wmtlon. It Um mort (hrt it thru Mm ft l\t s!r<rqt\ of Cocon nil to J wllfc * fctarob, Arrowroot or Sugar, and <? therefore f:%r mort eco nomical, << *!. . 1? l> 1# than. en$ cent a < tip. I'd* ?l*IWou?, i:oar* inhinf, tircnirlkenisg, rtatLT digested, and admiral!)- adapted for ltJviU?U u well &* for j>ur<ott? in LcaUh. Sold by Grocer* t firjrwkaM. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Matt. LITTLE FILLS DO NO? fcEliK ion RlfKEI. Bor? ct'M }-? HICK IS r'AD* AI'IIL, ii-.p .. ?-j <?'; <t? ?? , oontft p*i?n,u>rp! i j.jurj*. i *lt?l Organ*. f I.i01? rurUM.IL >11;. L. tl??o? Mi -i ? . - "t 0-. ;Ci<r. CCl"*i?dl?|v!(lf'r, \-C-iq9\ oillortu <it%? ort:or;?. \v \12 tat* % lirmi JJMM ACT CO**. lWntify compW xi^n by Mo<?d. l'rr.rt.T V?cr rkuix. Th? ilow i? n'<? tj itijniKi'i io*y?l '\>r. ntlj rib tenrbttoo much. UfkTiilm >n *M pock t Tic IrtA tuai'S r/? eorvrti? T? k.-r. t r?l rr th? ?. nvsr. N?l;i ? W% All jmuli.* jro#d? bttr 'fCr?*cv&l."H ' t?.(1 ?-<?-.? rUxtp.You pet 31 rf fi took tiainU. OK. HAflTEJ? WEUICINP CO.. 5!. loitlt. Ma s n i;. PIANOS.? EASY TERlflS. S However far away you live yon can tret a piano for a small Bum down, balance in atjJl_?maUur monthly payments.. We j' ? send it on approval, to be returned*? i unsatisfactory, railway freights both ways at onr Methods ta:r and easy to understand. We take all t ho risks. Write us. Ivers & Pond Piano roldtjy all dealer*. Arc<<jn uo