Ki;V. DR. TALMAGE HIE BROOK LtX IU TINES SUNDAY T-rf- "Oh. thill rt.'irf tmiil.t . - .",-..... L . . I.. n . ,. . . . . . isoy'ir -woumim. XSlll., la. 1. ,i 4 . c :. 'i:i: . .. ' tVar, nlays distressing, is especially rain- r; m h.ir i tinw. n hen the crops are all pa ly f'ir thrt su kle, to have them traiden dtjuvti ,,v cavn'ry Ir-rse "and havy g'jjiiy tram'- nflyif! the fields is !' enough to make .......V- - tlLlf (..l- t ' I. At I A. nn ''"' ' i n mst great ;,rl.rif "it in hurofteanl France and r:n.i"y -ereeoniingintdhorrM collision, I .t. Wr ss tli'ir Cu'di'ii liar-v.! ami - -1 Vi r - - " ' -- . . . - . t . i'j l.iit-i j it'hfl, ami the trrioh.-s dug in -the verv iiii" i('t iii-Mi-, me long tho of Imttl) sharpening- to mow wn harvests -7 of men in great nrows l th .lead. It was at this season hmvcd that the army: jr.f thi Pbilistin.-s tfft cijnie i ) An upon Jietnleiieni. Hark to I he !lmi.irpf tileir VOICes: the niMhinT of t . I-) "i rti.-in.''T.-the l''Hie of tijo.rtrumiKjta, and the Ia.l an 1 his men fall back! Th ttipls lii'-t s:in-ti'Ti- ! lM- the da v. T ilt IliM'l htn-r where, to bile. He 1,- I lw-n hrnll -ht Jin in ! itif jin - - - nnf. fill ii'(l; tll-V'-ion wh re th y were I orn and brought uj If you should go brick to the old horn-? fctb-i-i. V " c'.uld, wilb your -ves shut, find v iir way to the mradov, or the orchard, or tf.- hill ba'-k f the hoiv. with which von H -c n r iiu in sitie.aid they know all about . I.. .1 , 11 . . - 4 r - larniii.'ir 11111 ly r loriy vears ago. Mo av .1 kru-w the c ave i,f Adnllani. IVrhaps, 1 ih t!, u.viiofKi riys, iv ha I. plaved "bide- S;vl - with his comrades all almt nil, ave.; nnJ j-tough others bun) L')t jot have known ; it, David d'L traveN'i say there H only one wav of tret f'lri into that cave, and that is by a very . 1) arrow path; but li.avi l was stout, and jfeaily-heaihyl, and -t--ail v rierve I ; and so, yu'h his three lra" M.iT p'licers. he goes al"!ig that path, tirpjs bi wny.into the cave, sit d'wn. looks n inn 1 tiro r(Kf and th d;rk jias-iiri s of f t-i' in untailn feds very 'I'cary with the fori-e.) march: ah 1 wat-r he tnisf have, r die. j I do riot; lnow bijt there hiay hsve lx-. fi drop; iri k)i'ng down tho side "i i 'iunn, or mac mere may .inve l e'ii wine . " whter ' in the .at-skin . slung to hin girdle; --but i it u rn iK t w hat, Ire wantl. Flo wanted a i cp, full, -cold .drink, sucli a man trets ilv out df'ii'i ild well with moss-covered l'i'-k-i. iMvd rcriicrnltcrc I that verv nr-ar that avepf Adu'lam t'here'-was such a w.!l aBtliat. a well to whih he us-Kl to trr in vl!o.Hl-the we'l of Helh'clicm: and he al- nko t irria-in"s tint he (.m heir' the linuid" i'i "f that well, an 1 h'slpip-htd tongue 1 oi. through his hot. Tiis n l.o crv-- '-ru. that one wfuld giVe rue .Irink of the water of trie weuo, 1 etriieucm. wli'cli is by the gate!" jit was r.o f ooner said th in done. The three I p-ive stair o.'ticefs bounded to their fe--t and tttt. ISrave soldiers will :take even a hint from their' com nntidcr. Hut let ween them nHtlie well lay a ho.,tof th I'hilistines; and wjliaf could three meri do wjtli a great army? i where then? is a will there is a wav. and, 4. wjitli their swords sashing tiiisr way and that, thev m tke their path i. , the well. While the IjliilMines are nurized at the sf eming" fool fihi.lin.ss of these three men, and cannot nil ike up their minds exactly what it means, jtli- three ni-n have . corue to .the well. Tiny drop the bucket. ; They bring up the water. Th-V pour it in - the nyl, and Hon start for the cave. "Stop tlntti cry the Philistines. -Tlip them with your swords! Sta' f hem with your spe:irs! ffcep tho.e three rne-i:'' Too late! They are tjnne around the hi'l. The hot rocks are fj;!fi-,led . -willi the oVerflowintr watr from tj!i vessel at it is carried up the cliffs. The life men g., a'on.i the dangerous, path, and with he Ks flu dio t with the excitement, and -1. out of lieath in their has't thev fling their f words, led with the skirmish.; to the side of the ..cave and cry out to Kavid: "There, f ."ajitain of the flo,t, js wfiat vou wanted: a il-t... ,t 41 II C f , .11 t , . , . . se irate." "no, wen 01 iii mi 11 m, wnicn is iv LI - ' - - ' ' J- j A t. xt Is of no use to !m unless I can find f'hrid in it ; an I im'es, I e.ui bring a tiosjiel nut of these wo d that will arouse and com fort and bles-i. I shall wjsh I had never seen them; for your time would i wasted.- and against mv;soul the dark record -would lie made; that tin's day I sfoo I b fore a great au dience of sinnin-. sub ring; and dying men, and foM them of no -rescue. "' jy the cross of the Ki.n of ( ,d, bv the t hrn(ie"0f the eternal .ju-l-ment. that s'latl not b.i; May the Iord Jtiis lie'p me to tell you the truth to-day! Yon know that carrier pigeon have some times I. iters t ie l under' the wing? and they fly litiedreds of miles one hundrel miles in n;.ho)ir -caii-yihg a message. So I have, thought I would like to havjti ft now. Oh, heaven! v love! bring uit.jer thy wing to da V.. to IIIV SOIfl mid t- thn cnnlo rt u- - ' "' Ul f-eople, s.IU, message of light! and love, and p 'ace! ' If is not an niiusaal thing-to see jxoi)le gather around a well in su miner time. The husbandman puts dow n his era-lie at the well curb. The builder puts Iown his trowel The traveler puts down h'spa'ck. ! Then one draws the water for all the rest, himself taking the very last. The cup h passl nroun I. nnd the fires of thirst are put out; the traveler -tarts on his journey rind the workman takes ui ins, iuirie:i. ' My triends, we come today around tho (os(. well. We put down our pack of bur dens and our implements of ;toil. One man must draw the water for those who have gathered around the well t I will try and draw the water to d iv; and if. after 1 have TwillT.'.! l:.-: r. . m i Hi lemi luin in in;; luunmin ior vmir "'til, 1 just taste of it myself, you will not be cnnige me a "drink from the water of the well of Bethlehem.' which is bv the gate." Tins (,'ospci wfll, like -th' Wi'll spoken of in J!"1 et, is a well of IWhleheiii. David had known hundreds of vPs of ; water, but he wante.1 to drink from that particular one, nnd he thought nothing cou'd s'ake his thirst "lo1 that. And unle-s your soul and mine can K't a.v ess to the Fountain oie for sin and inn-leanness we lmit'die. Tint fountain is the well of Bethlehem. U was dug in the nuht. -It. was dug. by tho light of a lantern - 'lie star that liung down over the manner. It was dug nt at the gate of l a -sir's palaces, not in the park of a Jeru salem bargain maker. It was dug in a kirn, i lie earners lifted their weary heads to listen as the work went on. The shepherds, unable jo s'eep, iHH-ause the heavens were (iIIihI with lands of music, came down to se the op-m ,n-"f the well. The nn-elsof :-t io-l. at the lirst pu-hof the living wat-r. dipei th ir chaMces f y into it, and drank to the health of prih and heaven, as they cried: "Glorv to ol in the: highest, an-1 "on earth Hace." Sometimes in our modern barns the water is hrou-ht through the pipe of the citv to the erv nostrils of the 'horses or cittle; but this well in the I let hi hem barn was not so much for th- ieiss that ji risl, as for our race, thirst-smittten. d.-s,.rvtra el,i; and s nvoon rtruek. Oh. my soul, weai v with sin. stoop down and drink to d.aVout o that Bethlehem well! "As the heart panteth aitter the water IriKiks, so my soul pmtetli after the 'O lbl." You would get a lrtter understand ing of this .-midst the AdirOndacks in sum mer time. Here ims a" sWift footei der. the houmls an close on the track; it has ieapel chasms and s alcl cliffs; it is fagged n'it; its eyes n-e rolling in deatV tigtJp Is lolling- from its f.vmiint. n r,U'V U,, ''roon Lake and the a u. 1 n f,.,,low: 11 lM Ei ther, and it imts " ll5, ,.., , ,0uth until the nostril i clea fnbme, KM in the cl wave, and I un rWstai id it: "As the heart ,anteth for it" nrTVM'r'''''' ftr th.e. lie iii l,n.U" wa,op from th el' tin s' i '.1' kW1,,, 'Vnl of Jesus in t i ',,1Ih I'l iug iiui smie of at hvmg wat.r . Old man. who jeai-s ,(iCo didst thid the well ' -ng me s. -me of t lWst water. St t anger in a ".I an' n S,H,,'',,,, tune of -V, hen -T1- 11,0 Sti,'" Star of Bethle- . -. -.... nir soiue-oi mat w ater. Whos.v ' ( 1. 7'nhe"1r that water shrill neverfhirst. r of the w. VTlttf iVT "!Hnk of tI" gate!'' f lVthl4,,"i whic h is by the an the text, is a captunsl well. . David re- tor?'' un in fs- i-rfd,w of his rank ii ltwT dr?nk th his other tas,li . ro' . H( 'vn'nlirro.l how- the water us.J i-' , UpnvT forget the old well we 1 . irink out of when we were loys orgirls. rn,'iTr,',V t',ir!-f,n 't that bl,-sse,l the 'iMgwVhavV'T1' r,,rmvU'r th" anv Mituw . fV!,Mi s:,,, e- As think of Bow i, the past "i ?',0On,T,i,, crystalline dmm, he bar 11,6 VKre S we remember tod tu h!ho TL to holJ the rope, heai t3 that iKjat against the weU curb are still now. TT nerer get ore r thes reminiscences.. George P. orri,, th? g"t song writer of this country L." to me that his soS Woodman spare that j tree," was Mins n-ert hall, and the memories of early life were so wrought unon the andienc by that song that, after theanging was don? an aged tmn arose in the au lienee ovZ: whelmed with emotion, and said- -sIr will rou pieasetoteri mo whether the woirm -feallv spared the tm?r We never f oriret the )T under which weplavL We rler fo? KC fo,mt"n t which we drank. Alas for the man who has no earlv memories. David thoiisrht of th-f .-n e!U and h wanted a drink of it. hut he re rm. !l cptured 1 " -I'wi 1 ni to th. wei. In U-haTf of thev' , . ... . , - . ..1 t ,.,M-V. ..ve;. The Phili.-tmes havo at times can ar d it. S When -.- Uike n ns that we cannot come jto that fountain' Hieysav the wat-r is not fit to drink any- i. v- 11 i V ? iiiiy now, 1 iiere m the well of i.hil..phv, t .ore is the well of rt, there is the well of science." TbPV trr to suttit.ife. insteal of ..,ir l oylKKl faith, a .m.a,,.,, Jnoy sav a great many beautiful things fnuKl the wnsl, ml they try to f.-e 1 our Immor tal .hunger on rw leaves, arhl mir 'nt julep of worldly stimulants, when nothing will satisfy u, bt -a )irink of thJ KM mug HI I E . , S -n' of I'ethVhem, which is,at HIT Lnir. th L'ate." lliptf trviA .' when the Father s bnuiuef is ready, and the best ring is taken from the casket, and the sweetest harp is stru for the music, and the swiftest foot ;is alreaiv liftM for the dacco iTI,t,. , ...... iuf im mat uii-re iimy w? some where in the 't I,, n nointed nien, with courage enough to go forth in the strength of the omni potent Nod, with the clitteriiio- Knnr-U Ul iniin. to lie-.p the wav back again to that old well, turning, an 1 that the old place neain in the fami v think the tide is (LJosoel is to take it fu 1 in the univer S.Ly, ana in tile lerris'nti.i l.-n M., I tried worldly philosophi c, and have found out that they do not givej any comfort, and tnat they drop an arctic inidnight urKjn the ijeilh -pillow. They fail when thenj is a dead child in the house; find when the soul comer, 10 ie,ip niro tiie tathoinless o ean of eternity, they give to theJ man not so much as a broken spir to cling; to. Dejien l up m it, that well will com-i into our possession again, though it has been! captured. It there be not three anointed men m the Lord's host with enough consecration to do the work, the-i the sword; will leap from Jehovah's buckler, and the eternal three will descend tiod the Father. ud th-iSon, Ood the Holy Jiho.t conque; ing for oiir dving race the way back again to "the waterof the well of Bethlehem, w hi- h is by the gate.'" "If Ood be for us, who can be against us? ' ' Jf God spail'not hi , own Son,bii freely gave him up for usall. how shall he not with liiniul-o fieely give us all things."' "F6r I am iK-r.-uaded that neith -r height, nor depth, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to conie,' shall take from us, into linal captivity, 'the biospel of my blessed Lord Jesu.; ( 'hristJ Again, the Oosjiel well.llike the one spoken of in my text, is a well- at the gate. The traveler stojs the camel to day, 7 and gets down and dips out of th-. valley of the East, some very 1-e uitiful, cleaf, bright water, ami that is out of the very w.-pl that liavid longed for. lo you know that that well was at the gate, so that nolxfdy could go into Bethlehem without going right past it? And so it is with this (bxspel well it is at the gate. It is, in the first p!ace, ati thegat?of punlica tion. We cannot wash avvay our sins unless with that water. I taj;e the responsibility of saying that there isjno man, woman, or child in this hjus- to-day that has escaped sinful defilement. Do you say it is outrageous and ungallant for me to make such ja charge ? Io you say: "I have never stolen I have never blasphemed I have never committed Un chastity 1 have never been guilty of murder V I reply, yoii hive commit'tod a sin worsj than blasphemy, worso than i;n is.3 man oiaspneniy,1 worso than i;n- :v, worse than theft, worse than mur- We have all committed it. We your sins r -crucified tho Lord, and deicide. And if there l any who dare i iiasLii v der. have bv that is deicide. And if there o any who dare to pl-at " not guilty" to the indictment, then fhe hosts of heaven will be empaue!e l as a juiy to render a unanimous verdict against us; guilty one, guilty all. With what a slash ing strode that one passage cuts us away from nil our pretensions. "There is none that dixdh good no, not one."' "Oh,;' savs wuiio one, "all we want, all the race wants, is development." Now I want to tell you that the race develops without the Gospel into a .Kodom, a Kivo Points, a gnat Salt Lako City. It always develops dowaward, and never uoward Mivnf. :i t iiu irmconf Cni u, hold of it. What,then, is to become of our soul ', Yiinoui v in im: ianisiunenc. i;isaster. liut I bless my Lord Jesus Christ that there is a well at tho gate of purification. For great sinjgreat judon. For eighty years of trans crossion. an eternitv'of forcicenes-s Fot- m'mu leep as hell, an atonement high as heaven ; linn iniric.iiu iiinjiiiiiiiii,iiinnii limy jniicn more abound; that as sin reigned unto death, even so may grace reign through righteous ness unto eternal life by Jesu.- Christ, our Iiord. Angel of the Covenant, dip thy wing in this living fountain to-day, and wave it over this solemn assemblage, that our souls may le washed in "the water of the well of Bethlehem, which is by the gate." Further, I remark "that this 'well of the Gospel is at the gate of comfort. Do j-ou know where l'avid was when he uttered tho words of the text.' He was in the cave of Adullam. That s where some of you an now. Has the world always gom smooth' v Vlf h TTCl, , lino i- . . . , . ...... j"ui mil in ni.-ei I'ursucu 301 ) with slander? Is vour health . I wn vi good? Have jour fortunes nevei perished? Are your children all alive am: well? Is there 110 dead lamb in the fold; Are you ignorant of the way to theeemetery Ilave you never heard the liell toll when 'i I seemed ns if every stWc of the iron clapp- i lieatyour heart? Are the skies as bright w hen yon look into them 'as they used to 1-t .when other eyes, now closed, usel tc loik into them? Is there some trunk ot drawer in your house that you goto onlv on anniversary days, when there comes latiug against -your soul the surf of a great ocean of agony? It is the cave of Adullaiu! The cave of Adullam! Is there some David her whose fatherly heart wayward Ahsolom has broken Is there some Abraham here who is lonely because Sarah is dead in tie family plot ol Maehjelah.' Aftr thirty or forty years of companionship, how hard it was for them to part! Why not h ive two s-ts m the Iord's chariot, so that lxth the o'd folks might have gone aip at onv? Mv aged motl-.er, in her last moment. siiid to my father :"Fat her, vvoulun't it lie nice if we could 1-oth go to gether?'' No, no, no. We must part. And there are wounds I hearers hen to day. The world cannot comfort vou. What can ;t bring you? Nothing Nothing-. The salve they try to put 1 n vour vtounds will not stick. They can-n t. with tl e r bungling surgery men I the broken lnnies. , Zoppar the Nainath;te. and Bddid t'u Shulute, and LTipha. th- Teman:te. tvaie m. and talk, and talk, and tal. but miserable comforters are they all. Thev can not pom light into the cave" of Adullaiu. Thev can not bring a single draught of water from the Well of Bethlehem. whi. h is l.v 1 the gate. But, glorv le to Jesns Christ, there is comfort at tlie-gat! There is life in th well at the gate. If vou give me time, I will draw up a j i-omise'for every man. woman and child in this hcue. Ay. I will do it in two minutes, I will lay hold the rope of the old -well. What is vour trouble? "Oh," you sav, "1 am -o sick, so weary of lifeniiments afb-r ailments." I will draw up a promi-: -'The inhabitants will never siv 'I am What is vout trouble! "Oh. it is ls of f 1 ien -Is-tureave-ment," you say. I will draw vou up a promise-, fresh and coo', out .f the wil. ' I am th resurntMit-n and the life; he that lie licveth in me, though he were dead, vet shad he live." What is vour troublf? S'mi sav it is the infirmities of old age. I will drew v.r.i up a promise,: "Ivwn to old ag- I am with thee, to hoary hairs will I e-nrrv thee."' What is your tremble.' ,,Oh,v you sav. "I have a widowed soul, nnd my children cry for bread." I bring up th sp:o irse: "l.eiv-thv fatherless chi'dr.-n - I wilt p.-eA-rvc rh-ni alive, and let thy' widows trust in m -"' I breakthrough the arm! ranks of yeur sor rows to-day, and bring to vc-ur p relied bps 'a ttrink of the waters of the well of Bethle hem, which is hv 11 Again, the Goiel vvell is at the gate of i wotcu. i uuve ni neani vet one single in telligent account of tlie future world from anytxxly who does not thieve in the luMe. TU 1. ... . .1. I 1 ... .1 . ... I do not want toco to. the skeilic's heaven, to ' the transcendentalist's heaven, to the worldly . philosopher's heaven. I would notexdiauz xucj 1111 u Bucu n nwut me sui-Ltit inn T 1 . 1. . ..1 1 " the poorest rojnn in your honso jTor the finest heaven that Hurley, or Stuart Mill, or Dar T'lUJl'7 '!:pam1 nf- Their heaven has no euros in it: and a heaven withotit Chi-t, though you could fcW(n tJlo who1e nniven4 into it, would Le a Ml. Oh. they t 11 us there are do tongs there; there are no coronations m heaven-thai is all im agination. They tell Ul we will do there about what we do here, only on a larger sr-aV- 00, Wltn clearer intellect, and wtth alpiwtnc' go clanifjermg up over the ic?W"s in an eternal vacation. FUther than thstfl turn to my HMe. and I' find John s picture that goo-1 land that heaven which was Tour mllabv in infanz-x- i.,.--, wj.-ii,.!! .11 111c oawam HTKO will KinZ our cJjiUlreTi in the Sal.t-ath -hl wdl inz ! n31 " i . ' J ",J ,mi n a jong journev. "T'' ln B iuid tired, to i your home, tho first thinf vmi i Will CO OUr Sin ind cnrrnwn I .1 care whether cherub, or seraph, or mv own departed friends in that blessed land place t.1,mf ''P th 'P' tne ti'h of that cup wdl 1 life, will Im heaven? I was rea.i tng of how the an-icnts sought for the fountain of rxpettial youth. They thought if they could only find and drink out of that well, the old would be-.-ome young again the jick would be cured, and everybody would have eternal juvenescence. Of course thev COtild not. find it Pnnl t t u 1 :i. au?r 01 me weu or liethlehem, which in ty the gate." I think we ha1 better make a bargain with those who leave us, going out of this world from time to time. a.s to n.-hi-o -a will i . , ' - - -" " 1 - iiirru ' them. Travelers icirfinrr m,,.! i,in,n,.r "I I C will meet at at Stock- or Bethle- hy the death-pillow of tliose' who ar leaving us for tho far land, do not let us ween as though W Would non.r V.... : but let us, there standing, 'appoint a place wneit- we win meei. vv Here stialt it le? Shall it lie on the banks of the river? No. The banks are too long. Shall it 'lie in the temple? No; no. There is such a host there ten thousand times ten thousand. "Where shall we meet the loved ones." Let us make an appointment to meet at the well by the gate. Oh, heaven! Sweet heaven! Dear heaven! Heaven, where our good friends are! Heaven, where Jesus is! Heaven! Heaven ! But while I stand here there comei a revul sion of feeling when I look into your eyes and know there are souls here dying of thirst, notwithstanding the well at the gate. Be tween them and the w1dl of heaven there is a great army of sin; and though Christ is ready to clear a way to that well for them, they will not have his love or intercession. ' But I am glad to know that v.ou may come yet. The well is here the well of heaven. Come; I do not care how feeble you are. I t me take hold of vour arm nnd Jiomiv -t-r.., j to the well curb. "II., every one that j thirsteth, come."' I would rather win one soul to Christ this morning than wear the cmwi of th world's dominion. Do not let any man go avvay and say I did not invite him Oh, if you could only just look at mv Lord once: if you could just see him full in the face- I ii 1 1 , " 1 ay , n vou count oniy uo as tnat woman did whom I read about at the beginning of the services -just com up liehind him and touch his feet methinks you would live. In Northern New Jersey, one winter, three lit tle children wandered off from honn in a snow storm. Night came on. ' Father and mother said, Where are the children.'" They could not be found. They started out in haste, and the news ran to the neigh bors, and before morning it was- said that there were hundreds of "men hunting the mountains for those three children but found them not. After a while a man imagined there was a place that had not lieoii looked at, and he went and saw the three children. He examined their bodies. He found that the older boy bad taken olF his coat and wrapped it around the younger one, the baby, and then taken off his vest and put it around the other one; and there they a'J died, he probably the first, for he had no coat or vest. Oh. it was a touching scene when that was brought to light! I was on the ground ". .mn, mvi ,h urouein; me WIlole scene to my mind, and I thought U In"f of a more meltir.g seeiio than that: jlen i11 our e,t,er hrother, took ofr the rcHj ' of ,lls .royalty and laid aside the last a little vvMiile after, and it. li.oi,o-i,f u g.M-mrnt of earthly comfort, that ho. might 1 if vmi jxxir souis irom tiic oiast. Oli tho he ght, and the depth, and tho length, and the breadth of ho lovoof Chrt' Penalties for Remaining Unmarried. A Spartan law forbade marriage until men and women arrived at their full strength, and there was an Athenian regulation that inert should not marry until they were thirty-five. The Atheni ans at the same time favored married men, giving them the preference when vacan cies occurred in official life. The Romans did the same. They would help a mar ried man so far that if he had not readied the age limit assigned for the position as many of the years were dispensed with as lie had children. These favors did not altogether succeed as a marriage bait. The young men of the empire had at one time, in fact, to be forced as weli bribed into marriage, the censors going tfoing so far as to insist on all the bache lors pledging themselves on oatl. to marry within a given time. Penalties were in additionlaid on 'celibacy, and these and other disabilities on the single men were not removed until the time of C'onstantine. Taxes on bachelors have been imposed by many nations, including oar own; but no more remarkable law on the subject-was ever passed than that by the local authorities of Kastham, Massachusetts, in 161b". In that year these functionaries ' passed a law to the effect that every unmarried man should kill mv. blackbirds or three crows yea;ly while he remained single, and that as a penalty for disobeying the order lie should not get morriedj" and no one should marry him until he had de st roved the number of birds he was in arrears. A Caspian Lilly. A sti 1 more ple.is.uit afternoon I spent in visiting the h.iuut s 'of the far-famed 1 Nymph of the Caspian, wiites Edmund! Noble in the .If .,'. M.-n'o'y. Neither,- rock nor whirlpool lccts the approat h to this coy liciuty, but as the siren can le seen only in her kith, fiom the hixu rious heat of which she draw not a fev i of her chum', one might well be led t i prefer both Svvlia and Charvbdis to the 1 1 . . . - . 1 peril of the brink to which this fa-cinn tor lures unsuspecting travelers at ( hyu! van. Yet the dang r is much icon apparent than real. The Nymph 1 Ca pica has broken up no Loom holds and precipitated no fair cid.d wars; the wort j that can le said aga n-t her is that she has planted a deep and-ucver to Ik; satis lied longing in t lie heart of lwtarca! EurojH?. yien of scieno-, tender in thc'.r aelmiration of. her beauty; aud wishing ti ?ee it tlourih eisewherc. have carried h-r virtues to foreign parts in vain. Th s tall, lily-like fiower, witli its oerdowiug bulb of tender pink, Karing its seeds ir punctured gourd, and bathed far tip ir- ; slender stem by a cent. n;iil t!ow of v.e"! ! aigh boiling water, mvsteriously re- 1 newed th s queen of te-crt, unjiopulo ts Chyu pan, scattering hor perfume over j land anel sea, is the unique product of j J 1 1 1 an!l condition an l ca i r.o more b.- transplanted than the Cap"an itself. FIS1I GULTURE. AIlTIFlCIAIi PROPAGATIOX CY TIIK UNITED STATUS. Some Acconnt of the Work Dm at t lie 3Ist Important Sta tionsA Fish for Farmers- Vou ng Codfls!u A letter from Wool's Holl, on Cape C'rxl. )ia., to the New York Ji nrn says: It is generally unlcrstoo tint the l'nitcl States wa? the first of any country to be- . - United States (Jovcrmnent has something- like a dozen or more stations, but thai at Wood's Holl. on CajieCod, is cnsii ered the most important of them all. It was the individual States, not the ZV'a tional (Jovernment, that first beg-an the work, and Massachusetts took the lead, and it wa? not until 1S71 that the General Government yichlcd to the ilea of fish culture, and in that year the I'nited States Commiss.'on of Fisheries was es tablished by act of Congress. The Gov ernment has erected at much expense large and commodious quarters at Wood's Holl. There arc now I7 States and Territo ries that have fish commissions of thcii j ? own, and it has been proved that Inert is now one kind of fish the farmer may have fresh all the year round, except in spawning seasons. That fish is the Ger man carp, and was introduced first intc this country in large quantities by the commission after the do c of the Berlin Fish Exposition. At that great show the United States took first prize, a cost y cup, presented to Prof. IJaird by thf Emperor of Gcim my. When the com mission begun active operations in this line it had no boat of its own, not ever one of the ratboats which are now sc common: but soou a little sailing sloop was hired, and as the work increased a small fctearuer wa; chartered, and then another was borrowed from the Navj Department. At the present time the commission has four steamers and t number of schooners of its own. The schoouer Grampus, which is often seen coming into this harbor under ful sail, is a handsome and fast sailing craft. She was designed by a veteran fisherman of Gloucester, Capr. Collins. He thought a 'mackerel schooner could be built, combining the fleefness of the American boats ami the stanchr.ess of theEnirlist craft, and after visiting foreign countrie; with careful research and diligent study, returned home. The result of his visi; was the immediate construction of. th Grampus, of bO tons burden. She ha: run ahead of anything yet encountered, but lias had very little experience ir rough weather. Her draught i3 11 fee three feet more than that of the ordi nary schooner. On the Gampus h a tank, reached lc, an opening in thb deck. Into this wi put the fish taken by the crew in scinei from the Georges or wherever the spawn ing bounels are. If the eggs contained on the female fish are ripe, they an stripped by the attendants; the righl time for such werk is when the cgjjs cai be readily squeezed out. This period lasts about a week, anel, naturally, con, siderablc skill is required to know just when to perform this operation. Tin eggs are caught in a basin, the milt o the male is poured over them and thej become fertilized. After they are ebr; veloped enough they are put into glas! jars, which in turn are put into hatching boxes; these jars have cloths over the mouths to strain the water and keep tht fish in,' for the ;ars are united. Here th fish grow anel thrive in the water con i slantly changing by means of syphons Whenever the lish arc large enough thei are mit into the ocean where; er desireel This was done not long ago, when the Grampus n a trio between this portane Gloucester, deposited in the waters ove 15,000,00 ) of young codfish. Fish, lik. birds, always return to their birthp'aee It woulel hardly be fair to put them it the waters here, for Vineyard Soune fishing would be enormous and fishermei elsewhere would not be justly treated. The commission here has sent fish ti the Gulf of Mexico anil to almost even part of the Atlantic coat, the chie kinds being cod, carp, shad, whitefish salmon, and mackerel. As a genera thing, man cannot do the work of nature The aim is to .vc the eggs and pro'ec them. A single cod will usually la 1,00',000 eggs; from a single c m! weigh ing 10 pounds ti.ooo.OfV) eggs have lcei taken. In the natural process of fertili zation not over 10.000 of these are th fertilizing milt. '.Cod at fir.-t is nothing b it a shapeless helpless big of gelatinous matter,: and i is six weeks before it is big enough t protect it -t-1 f a :d evade the attack enemies. hejrf liatclvMi it n only one eighth of an in4li long, and as the cod i the favorite d;h d all otln r kind - o sea fish, but vt l-y tc-.v ot them come t maturity pi issiff.dy cm of a hunelrc survive. j In artificial propagation there is prac t'cally no !o;v f r o it of l.OO'V'O ! ,."i,H0 are prob.ihlv s-avtd. If ymj cai furni-h to the witcr as many lih fro;i ', tnc c I as nature can ftom lrt,n' i 1 w.uild not take many fi-li to mi'-.e a bi, I impression on the fih supply. It is th ! (ante thing ui:h t lie lolelc There ar not to-day per cent, of tiic io!,--itr ! that tl ere were iiO vears a"o, and th commission pro;s t make up this. At the head ii.nl-r h ;e e-nsiderabl study and rc-ca:e h is m ide. Ej" ricr.ce naturalists aic at th-ir dc-k in th j lafora:ory dkse-cting tSeelcad or htu ly j ing the habit f the Jiving fish. Th j commission hcrev gi". es employment to . j to T3 men, not including the sailors. 1 i -i . 1-1 Kul to be n -ootl as 1 manufacture of fPr- mII to Ijc as jjootl as linen rags in th ' Chinese Farmer and CSibese Progress. There are reasons io bcliers that th trade of this country with China ytill soon grow to majestic dimeoSons. Ol the seTen million fire hundred thousand dollars of export to China in the last fis cal year, nearlj fire milium dollars worth wm of distinetivdj agricultural products, and of their manufacture. Oi the remainder, "the latrst share w .mineral oil. The ChinesoCommlsion ir the United. Skates this year is charged - ... . Jrar 18 caarSc especially with the promotion of hanks. telegraph and telephone lines, b?hin3 which loom ; p the extension of canals, the introduction of railroads, of agricul tural machinery, and of such of our pro ducts as China needs, and she needs ol many. Her home products, aside from tea, are wheat, millet,garden vegetables, 'rice, poor nppVes, peaches, crape, etc . fhe fool of Cluna is mostly veiretablc: ' ' -,i r. : . . auu"'"-luc t-iitnsne sea coast, riven ana canais sirppiving the latter, neef ii almost unknown, except in the foreign l - settlements, and berries 1 1 - 1 ...... . . - ' 13 nientllUl: tork. tmnltrv abundant. Domestic 1 1 fc - ' w . animals, exceni uogs a, re noi common. Horses are scarce, mules are nomerous, cattle in t mall num bers, but flocks and herds arc unknown The national habit is opposed to change, and to the nation of three hundred mill ion souls goes onjiu "the good old way.' The United States broke the spell oi centuries in Japan. It may yet do tin same for China. We go for trade and j progress, other nations for trade and ' conquest and colonics, and the Chinese leaders are beginning to understand this. : A modemied agriculture, and the general intioduction of railroad and wagon servire would rejuvenate the ele cayiug "Flowery Land, which is a bald misnomer foi a land destitute of flowers and shrubs, treeless, and with a dull herbage that contrasts strongly with the culture that has ma le the American con tinentto "blossom like the rose," and to be rich in various products that its enter prise bears to all parts of the civilized world. Aiiurican .Agriculturist. Onions for Sleeplessness. People troubled with insomnia should trv an onion. Take one of the hi"- Por tuguese onions that are now to abundant on the fruit stands. Slie e it and put one of the slices in a saucer of vinegar, salt and pepper. Then gently lay it in be tween two thinly cut pieces of buttered bread or a couple of fresh aoela or Ta ham crackers. It is a wry. palatable sandwich. Two of these are not too much at a late lunch. Onions are very healthy and toothsome, but people don't care to indulge in them because of the hureulean flavor that lingers on the breath. But if a nervous, person after eating one at night finds that it brings him neeeled sleep he'll not mind the cause oi" complaint his friends may have. Come to consider, one onion i-; a good leleal, especially when it weighs two pounds, anel the two-pounders are not so scarce as one might imagine. The aver age size is half a pound. These big Portuguese and Spanish bulks are hardly fit for cooking. The Bermuelas are the one's for that, but in the line of sind wiehes the Portuguese onion discounts all the others, soothes th'j rebellious nerves anel conjures sweetest dreams. New York Times. Sheep Dairying. A Holland paper states that the pro duction of sheep butter nnd milk is becoming quite an industry in that coun try. It says that in the eastern part of the province of Drenthe (Netherlandsi many Fiiesian milch sheep are kept, principally by small farmers and day laborers. Of late butter has been ma le from the milk of these sheep, which is said to be always of a whiter color than that marie from cow's milk, is of good flavor, but has a sweeter taste. This butter is not sold on the market as yet, but if a little good butter color is mixed with it, it will be preferred, and that quite soor, to much of the butter made from cow's milk by the dairymen of Drenthe. A well has been eliscovcreel in Mobile, Ada., which sprouts forth sparkling water heavily chargcel with carbonic iciel gas. When the water is sweetened with syrup it is saitl to make a delectable beverage not unlike soeia water. "We are all lisihlp to err nnd every on i- who docs nt realizn the full valuf Taylor's Hospital Curt for Catarrh. Pamphlet free at J 1 I road wa v , Ne v Yor k . ( oian mplion Nrrly Corrd. Tthe I5btor: 1'lea.x itif'-rm your reader that I have a p.tilive rcmeiv for th atove named tlispaso Hy its tiirwdy uw thousands of h'ple w-s hnvi; Iwn icrmannty curfl. 1 shall le glad t- snl t u l.ttlesc my remely kres to any of your rcailers wb haf consumption if thy wj rt1 ne thtir Kx press arnl 1. O. addresn. ftesTHH-t fullv T. A. HLUCL'M. M. D., I-Sl IVarl rt., N. V. Bade and Shoulders r. 1 ie itrt tutiailr att -k-l try rbrunutlra ; ail ti- 1 inu at kre4. aiklt. hlp and wrl?u ar aio .ii-Um" affe t1- Tb catw of rhmmatl .01 la -tl- a -t'l rirt-altln with th" Wool which sl lrl li' yi.iU an l ru- th p.vlaa txl rbe nt ; .liji. HoyYi KarAAptrlUa ponfl- t1 ea I '. MKf Mwi ari l Ujs pro c ma a won Vrf ul rr-irw !y r iiimaUsn. "I nty Ir rjb'.rvl vrrr murd with rrimattm tr .iv hir. a'ik.lf-- ao t writ; la fart, I r-mH har I! .i k anil wa "UlnH to my 11 a mr" 'l-al nf tny t..i- I wn jimrrr t-(:l'j ar-l uff-r-1 tr'rntr t wa r-"0nu-t-l t t' try ilovi arkirUU bi- H I ttttl. 1 tlvt LtkTJ trnr if I aw wll I lli rrwimriK-.-Kl t!ol'a hxraa(arilia. W . r. V k, liioocntnzVio. I1L Hood's Sarsaparilla i n.Till .lnuf:l4. tl;Mtfor$X ITopar) oil L liulD CO, AprXrwartea. IxtwcII. Xak IOO D0303 One DoMai FREE mar mutX Fall P rfi rla Taflaa aVraaai m 'WW IOC9I m CO. Ctactai . ft O Sgood TPrcntvp soil MOW THEY FALL BEIIINIJ. There is really no profit in recom mending the worth less, for the reac tion in the minda of those who boy arhl r pointedly against every thing sold by 1 Hence, the few ofthe following rolnnf-. w" aucn a ueaier. Si5M"lKentiote. ; ridion forme,! fnw the Ion- and cautious exwrMnvof a leading dnig houx of kton MTrvsctifc in every line a uuit imiortant and valued rrvebiion; n,frioni jjy j The Claries .. Vogelcr i.ientle men: Many prvanii.ji3 are pbcol before thepiiblic, and for a time at lcji.t tlwx liave a large but teniinir- sale large, U-tauseof the extensive advertinc; temjran . as the mfrenng claa sm realize that the com-I-;d isscvcs but little merit. Not so with J:cilod. IN ftuveas has been constant Inmi the start, and to-dav wc rccanl h as one vif ih'ic standard remedies that our trado : , . . tfru -r a, a,,s,',utt,,y ntial to always :.' icixmai cxivrtenca e go.! wonls of the dniggi-ts of New r,iigianu alt fcrnl to prove that each year wih add to its sale and well de rved p.pul.nrif v Ngnl, iHn.little A: Smith." Taking the many cases of cure, publihel bv the irt prictors. cxamili-s arc inv.n nf ;f'ir.,.; .r..... : .i ' ' 7 V.v - " .2 . . I . ironic ra-- nni iin-m i 1,ol,"8 " iraUe which can approach its KIDDER A 1DRI CFRK FOR INDIGESTION ant,' DYSPEPSIA. Otw S.mO VhyMrUn h tot o thftr Approval DIQtSTVUH. uln that It U tb brat prvpmUo v mi int h u uiu inry nar vr oaa. W h nTr brd of a c$ui of DyaptM! V4uui 1 1 j.h was uiru mat wa not rurM. FOR CHOLEfU INFANTUM. IT TTIl.l. CURB THB nvrr AOORA VATKD CaHta IT WILL STOP VOMlTlNel IN t'KKONANCT IT WILL KK1.1F.VR i"VSTlPAT10!iil Tor Summer Comp'.alula and Chronic IUrrhA which rr th .limit rveulu of lmirfot dUMUoa. WOKSTVLIN will effect an linmmlULfl rtir. Take l ..STVLJN fr all alna and dlaordn the timfn-li ; ther all onme fnni iDdlxMtoa. Eour Jr-Kl-l for DIOESTYL1N (piic $1 pmr lam ottleL If l. tint not hare U aend on dollar tow nana win senai Dotti VO you, eipra prepaid Lo not tiesit.iiM 10 tenil yonr money. Our amiM to realms. r.siartiiKnna twenlr nve year. w.. r. nurifr.il .t MaaafaclurlB 4 'keinlat .S.1J ah a Hi., H.T. .Jly's catarrh UKEAbiHAL'H Cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain ami 1 11 11 a 111 illation. Heals the Sores. II o s t o res t Ii Senses of Task HAYFEVER Llm and Smell. O.I. TRY tllC CQRE.HAY-FEVER A I'M it 1. i .1 1 .1 il 0 t inloi-;ti-h 11. 11 1 .111. 1 u i.n it.l.. Hrl- i -nis at ilriu'Kist -i:liv mail. resist. ! tM iits ELY HHoTHKKs. ;'iiri i invich St., New York. W will fir Nollrt Jo!, Watch nn.l iolid JII 1 oi iialn l;.rneMM (a Ihn oil.f ' jii 'm or i-Ml-H jia'i) w nli at flail to an-.- en- i-t! r cvsl, I'-Oif-fi rerf 1 I r I ..!,r l.f, n litu'y Ii Cir I ? in iiaii i-i:c ,-irrrtl inn r llir win I ii '(v o;fl l.niuful h:it. -It In Soli. I ;!.!) l u-li nl hitln wpuh m i-iii, KUtl, II ll-'i'S,.,iltiolll V4-i nuil l lmln 'i.'MO. Tl.r li.-.m, wiii r--H kn nt o. M cold M. ICInx, onhtrUil H, h pf th tru. ao, II th re i Ir.iby ''frp-t I'ierr. WMh row ,, ,.,.4 js twtsoent rrmutllul Cbru.ni n t N.w Vr '-uiaj;r roouii.im n elirmt ,.-.it,i( of Chm:i. Car.ls N" Vr CiT-13. I ;,r t r-.l, B.rih.1fiT C krrt,. iir.l.v KV..w I i 1. 1 . . . A""r-m"nt 'f pri'-W"s.t.iii iufj Aoio- ffrarh Albom iih nw rmuti.T. f. ..mt and our f-.mi !r Book of Airat Nam, Cird.. Thh o!J r, J;r, iT. T Mount i ary rru,lii, i..Dj . a j,, r 4 will aand aaorilm for tliem wt,m vmi th. i tirft!" or mnnrw rfnn.l4. Unti.m lii I WEST HAVER fUtUSHIKO CO.. WEST HAVEN, CCHN N. I' .11 MARVELOUS 1EI0HY DISCOVERY. Wholljr Mnllke artificial )tm. Any book Irnrnnl in on rradiof. Reoomnuendwl by Maitk Twain, Kicharo rBncTon, the Sclent Ut, Hod. AV. V. ATfK. Jci.a I' IIk 'a 15, Dr. MiKon. Ac. Clannf imi OilumhU I-iw ti denU ; 0 at lrl!'n ; Z't at Norw 1 h ; 331 Wt Ol- rliii College; twotlaxMiiriira-h at Vale; o at I'ui rermlty of Peon. 1'hlla. ; 4 at Vvll-ly CIUtee i.V thre Urge claw at Cliaiauqui UiUvxralty. w. PnMpcctua tost vhv.y. from PROK. LOISKTTE. Z,7 Elfth New Yort 1 1' bpIb4 clt, ruiav. r mum Uoni furniabxl. Ut MaoUymhlp. fi 0. Writ Rlafr't Pill Gre English Coutari vt(i o, ,111 rHuo, 1 4 rill. S5 I S 11 dif. ?mpl vortb II JO, TKMM lAiim uu 1111 it iti iiora.' Xn-t V. -rew!'r Sjr,Jr H'-l l r Molly. Mb-k v. L'fllltT MI'DT. Rrxk kr:nar. rnmnn'hlp.'Unth-tw-tlr, nUfiiC Short h it I. thor-r-i-tilr tA-iht mm'. "ir fulanlpw. mnorHdjUtdt, il Im m.. B.J. . T. tfO TO FLORIDA illl'l K-. I 'll I, I '.r i !i ;i. 1 it-. fr--c ii l. In,.'. in n,, i.r Ir-il.t ;iC . h . 4. wniP O. .11. I ltllIIVi :j Ir i lUt.i st.. s v. PEHS10MS An 1 jcrui!av rln. A4 '1r- Mtt B Ktr Co irov t H4 g.WMtilnyt n.DXj 1m HmhH Cr4 tm 19 day, ft pttv till rr4 amaa. 1 . QJ. GO LEI ! wjrth JjlO iirr II. I eltlt'a V.J SaJt i worth tUM. but U aol 1 a Uj by dealers. SOLDIERS eff I'i rlnn. :: , '. llU--rn f r : v .-f (.siv Tlt t 1 ;- I. ,t t ) a. ' r 1 1' , a w rHivi-p; "z 1 f ' : - - r im. tt La-XMot A. W. IIcC o. mi- k L -.ii.. b.t. flFRRRANn FIFTH IVHFFI r and Carrlaf a IlLUltKAKD CO.. rrDOkb DAT en ts snrr I laflM. (I. . Snrl tirt'mr lioik of Inatr (SB I- Waal. S230 Ir g art -! In lh wwl-l I ramula frt. AUdra JA V ItHiJ.W'iuy.IiUrvtt. Wfi. . I.. IHII (.IA IMirib ariciaiail anlttiF lianj-.i-iird llt bav- iatila. lii I I. r.iaj, raislwui tMilal- ba r4 mhm-m that caM I ram jk. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE. lh only S3 hKAMI.KSS Mm in Hi" world. Miiu-j .-.t iA-ka or nail. FIr.-t talf. r.t fit ajvi 1 -irifiU-J. .fiirri-k. ,y-j i-..i j .ul icr. all ; it;. A ;ftlili b. 1 ifJAt tlw c-- :ng f-or C IWi a- Ar ttr- , I coiuUv . tho. I- IMtil.A S-T-ftO KIIOK la n. WMIMtftr. If aH 14 tT Jamr 4aiaa f0 - 'S m . K' 4a - S3 -v V ro. o tern iP5FTbi!CAPinP!TMft at I? All ATolRn" BOOK yet u s c a 1- - it i. Ma i m "I aWf .a . Jr,... t4 a. W Afa-Ma - mt hs -l U .T A jl.t! m - t lm rr ru . rirrvtatmjrir fuary bar. ha.1 f J UU lAs ar auM." MajUa WaMMaat 00.OOO 80LOU! ACrTrj ara taktax TSOCJa (M af 0SOZU i ww a.M m aea wr BOLIDAT Birxa y 'UBBAwib MOFiWll.ADEUHU FA. HAT cs nn.l in.i.mtwiir nitmhl- o,h rhrsi c) y arvl mntalir; rxprrirtHw a w-nm of n.-, or rmivinrw of tomach in tho inor! mr, tonrno tvUcl. Nttcr or Ua,l tastt In hcfrt tin- vi. rvo. rraiKn 'or . au.iot. UriUltUjr of tcmprr. hot fl-hfi lt.-rt,unu with ,-hiar minnx nrn, -t, tlnMivt fnv mcK wakc-futtMaL or li5turl- tml imrcfrchlnir c.twunt. If vou b;vvi. alt. or anr ctw-l.craU"i numhrr ii T,'!n,i," yu ar w.rrctlnjr from iblHHM 1 nft. or Torpid bivvr. nvowto! '.JTniMt..i jour dtMHt u hwtM the -vatcr tl.o nutnU r and .ivcrlty cf rmn 'm. No 'n.utcr wluif tnjr it hut rrni rl Or. IHrrrcCaaldru .ncilral m .l fh!Iu ' it. f Mkcn mtnlin; to lirt-v--iciu for a nntmmablo rcrtsrlhtd liiuo. If not tmxl. .ir.:.'iottrn imittmlr ami 1 -..... .';"1of " Win l. :iM-.ll.t-tt IlMtuk Hht,.tu KHu li, ;, or oTh.r irravij nute-lHtir.ro .julto babfc' tos t tn aneiviKT or uicr, n. luta fatal icrrotniJon. Dr. IMcrccN ;ollcit 1rdlrAt Dltw ro, cr n-iH p.iwi-rfuily up,-, tho Uvrr. and hnMitfh thst mut i-purtmiur tpiil 'k-nn- il,c .yn-n, of nil bl-.HU.llnt an. im. uritr.-s. frm whatever -au artinvr. It H liily eff.-rtcious in actiu it(xNi tho KM iy. and ofhor eiotvtorr ..rjrnics rtcanine. itrciurthcnmy, nnd hoahni: t hctr ttfa-n-tcK Aa in apjtctl-nis-, ntoratlvo Ionic, u ororrtolM. I,5VTlJ,,,l.,,nl. ,,,,,r,,l". 'crc.v iMUl.luur up h won.!, rf ul rv-lk ino Iwh pnimX grvi 1, f - . ------- ..... --. .ant , v mna autvi rt-vrr, Ihimfi an 1 kHulr.-. ,bMin. Ir. I'lrrcC Golden ?Iodlral OI -.-i.-i.imi un-uiiui? ii'vctHinl A no. nilllaarnl lITJ CURES ALL HUMORS. nun a emmon IU ! . or broi't ri.il. to th von-i x-mfuia. N.ilt-i ln uni. . r-lIT., vai or h.Miiin kii, m uliurt. nil tjn-o- ;iu-..t iy ti.ul bh rc t ni i. n t by il 'rttrlul, Miti(injf. and luut:iniiiiu im1. i,.. 1..;.... 11... . .11. . t Ix-uuMi liillii. ni . Itt uill I ..-... n nu. 1 I'-i-rs r.ii ir. tn-rt unutT r't-si,s us .i.-ticv in curing T.-tl.r. iktnt. hrMvl.i, llniK Tat '.uncles, S.n- t: t-si, .Vrof il .us or. nn.l Sw. llinpH. Hifi-joint lh., NMi't.- JMvHluiaV lloitn. or 'lliH-k Nock. m l I nl'tivi-rt (i'in,u. s nd , n trnlti in tmivs ior a lirgo Tn-atim'. with ookrod t it.-is. on km iMm-anin, ,,r t. tKtnw niuount "i- a 'I n ut 10 ti f nitiilotiH AflotiKKiA. FOfl THE OL00D IS THE LIFE." I'liorotiiilv tl. ati.Ho it l.v tisinir Ir. PlrrrvNi Uoldrn lcdial Iiaocr), and Rtnd lic-Klion. a bill- rikin. (movant ttiritit. vital tn iiKtli a id Iw-d ly health will tic latlih-d. CONaSUMPTION, which iKS--oriila 'iVIlie limit's lit arrested aii.i und bv tin, reined) , if taken in tlis cariitT Mast- of ih. diam. From ita mar v Ions jwitt. r vcr ihU Itmhly fatnl dirwaa. when tn-Pt tffti-inir thin n w worLt-tantcl rctn c.ty to th- ptit.lic. Or. l'icioi' thouirlit rtr-rioualr nt callimr it his "t'liNsrwrrinN tVnr," but ahaiuloii.ti that name a too rftrutivc for a mohcuic whicli, from Ha wonderful com bination of totiic, or Mn-njitirc iiiiut, alterative, or lilMK aiisinc, anti-bilious, ccttiral, and nutritive i-oh hi.-h. m un-.uale. not oalr rs a tuictlv for iV.nnumptlon, but for all v'hroiilc Diou)M of tlw Liver, Blood, and Lungs. For VTcak bururK. Hfiitlinr f Wood. Short hoks ot lirciiih, i hronit; Nrnwl Catarrh. Ilron chiliN, Antliuia, Scn- fouiiliH. and kindred an". tiiiouK, it ih an ctticient i-emtnly. Sold l.v llrtiKKidtft, at I.OO, or Si UotUt for tfr Semi ten cent iuntnmiw for Dr. Pierce' book ou t iiiisiiinpt ion. Atlilrtwa, World's Dispensary Medical Association. CG3 Iflalu St Ilt'i f ALO, N. l CURE' TOR BR-A R- THEBairi la-a'a l'rt Ivrauiaa Cuaaiuaa Ea liaca Perfectly Rattor th H83rng.l"" t jffcfi i riim4 bT coldi, hrrm or ItijtrriM la ii4 alll dmu. larWIii. roaifnrtabk, alwaya la ansltloa. Malr, amrvnallm, ka lwnkM dtti.1l. W riff V thmm li,dMm. It rit t f. IIIW OX. 651 Hrwlvay. cm. )4iK M., h Turk, ' U!alraW4 Wk ol prm.U. tHJX. PHIhADEbPHlA-SeND stamp for Cawlocuc. S SURE FITS! Wha 1 aay n I do a-H aMan tnarvly to atop tbaa it aliraaand thxii ba Itmn r4irn aain. Innnl rmrhral cura. I ha mad tb rltamuHr , flTJ. KI'lLr l i'.SY or KAl.Ll.ttJ HU KM-t.Salif.mat..dy. I tbera ba fatlarl rvi raan for nit rw raomrlnar enrn. finnd at nui l f.ir a I nata and a t'rt Krtll "17 'ui 7 in cum 1 no ,ne cwa. ira ot m IDIatlifcla r-m1jr. Kirrraaasd f.4llfflna. U. 0. KUUT. M. '.. f H.l IVarl im. Near VrkT ACENTSfCa Send for i2vJ.??.T!? h- alliTMKK. IIOMR. a4 llf.AVl.N araa iWi lA (m44. KU rartllr III . IM flfrlfil Atao.lOOO ISibl.i2.00.iji4a4. fc.lKKT.3W Wrolra.M.k-. ?msm L!3Hv-mirl PIE m THE HOUSj Gm Where th Woodbine Tvineth. Kat are rtnart, but "Rmicb a lta" l-aia tlKfm. tleimtjiit IU'. Mhf . lUcri.4. SmU t Bucri. Ulen. It-etltn. Moth. Ant. MmUl h, B?d tup. Hen IJ.. Inxix?.. M Spnrrowti. Skunks. Wra'l, fhrr. tlnp inur.k. M4'&, Muk itata. Jack Rttnu, K.Uirrrla. and 2V. Iruj3rMa. ' IUlUCJII ON FAIN - llu'tT, Forow.L lie ALL SKIS HUMORS CURED Uv' ROUGHEITCH Bcvbon lu-h" fHnUnrnt ctirr Kkin Ifu tixira. 1 im jtlra, IWh Worrna, tUorWorrii.T V irr. Sa.tt khm. Kroatl Kt. (nitlMalf Itch. Iry I'utmm, BrT"a lu b.h-aJd Hrad. Kro. Wc. Imix, x mail. K. 8. Wius, JctmyOty. ROUGHiPILES furea i-fli or HtmnrrhfMa, Itchier, IXrtb iag, ia-ljn. Lnt-raaJ and e u-nuJ rrmrij in each Mackacr. 8n run?, ItutzW or luAtL K. 8. Wuxa, Jwy t'rtf.N. J. Om Awal fm liaal amlrl vma rvwrj Ofrr W: 193. YV. V.Y.I To M EKCfi T O t,T: Aa Unt mlvf r-platM WaU-r Iitcber.frrtJal ru hit rarvfji; height, Vt .xn ttm. Al.lrw at oot?. H. V. Ta!6UJ. tic Co il Mala Himl, fhicaao. 1 :im mm mtmimmmi faKPlf. . ACatUIt a8 Zim braa Vaai Paara Sa. m atrTraa rt rma aJSiTl''" 2 ISALEH I HO 91 W0HKS, BA 1 .4 titm, karait.wtTT aal lagntwiaa mrmmm -vm j-w LIMiMMaaa4 T ZijTrfwa. aw. k,. . Th- fVl llHaiaV "it iT ar ") iiUM V4a ar -. MfaTVaT.I PUM'E ' aaM t rl - a"- " AIL 7' yoy? CA Tit r - .Tt lTa XV 1 I 1 i -" t ii iv r