FRIGHTFUL HOTEL FIE Over a Score of Live3 Lost in a Burn ing Syracuse Building. Flra Breaks out at Midnight In the Ice land Hotel Sleeping Cinests Ar,k cneit Oaif (o N Suffocated. P What proved to be the most disastrous fire that has visited I Sjracase, N. Y., for Jnany years was disco re red in the Leland Hotel at 13.30 o'clock in the morning. " An eye-tritness of the fire says it is positive that at least twenty-five persons have lost their lives, and maiiy more have been more or less injured. One woman was being low ered from a window by the aid of a rope. She had reached a point opposite the third story, when the rope became ignited from a burning sill parted, and, the woman I fell to the pavement, her brains dahed out, and her body flattened into a shapeless mass. ' So great we the confusion and excitement that the identity of those killed and injured is wholty unknown. -t Frank Cary, of Glens Falls, N. Y., has been identified as one of those that were burned to death. Many lives were lost, caused by poo pie, crazed wiih fright, tumping from win dows. U.e man ears lie saw six people jump from different windows on the Fayette street side of the building within a space of four minutes, and the fight sickened him with its horror, and he was compelled to leave the spot. , ' - i - . ' . The buildin? wat provided with both iron fire-escapes on the outside and roped on the inside, which were the means of saving many lives., - ' : " " liurnet i'oroes, a siock. oroKeroi oyrauiioc, "escaped into the street almost entirely naked, lie was slightly injured about the hands. He loses a gold watch valued at fow. ami an oi. lim- l,ij.. One woman was found' with a nursing baby in her a rnj, crouched in a stairway, where she had been orerconie by smoke. She was removed by the firemen, and it is impossible to say what her name or experience was. The fire is said to have started in the kitchen. The building will be a total loss. It was built two years ago at a cost of $150,000. It was six stories high and contained 400 rooms. It is impossible to learn how many guests were in the hotel at the time the fire broke out. The total loss will not fall hort of half a million dollars, and tlis building is partially covered by insurance. It is impossible to learn as to how much insurance was "w.rried on the hotel furniture or what the novate and individual losses will be. Following is a corrected list of the killed in the Lehnd Hotel lire: Annie Cuniminss, of New York, servant. William E. ilarrup, of E izabeth, N. J. Bridget Doyle, of Marccllus. Jtose Schwnrz, servant. Mary Doyle and Mary Padden, servants, both residents of Syracuse, are missing. No trace of them has been found, and their friends believe they perished in the lire and . their bodies are buried under the ruins. All the injured are improving, and no more deaths are expected. A TRIPLE TRAGEDY. Wife and Perhaps Child Poisoned and (he Man Bhooti II tinsel r. The residents of Perth Araboy, New Jer sey, are horrified over a double suicide and supposed murder f men occurred there. For some time past Gader Showdash and his wife lived most unhappily together, quar rels being fnquent between them on account of the husband charging the wife with infidel ity. The accusation seems to have been ut terly groundless, and Mrs. Showdash re proached his wile with her infidelity, and the quarrel that followed between them was more than usually bitter. After Showdash left his home to go to work his wife soaked the heads of a quantity of matches in water and swallowed the poison ous liquid. Her moans attracted the atten tion nt the neighbors, and medical assistance was speedily summoned, but all effort to save the woman's life was unavailing, and bhe died in great agony. hen Showdash reached his home his wife was dead. Stricken with re worse at the awlul result of their quarrel, he procured a revolver and shot and killed him aelf. . During the excitement produced by the tragedy the young babe of the couple was for gotten, but when the people in the house had recovered from their first terror the child was sought for. To their horror it also was found to be dead, and, although it is not yet known positively, it is supposed that the mother be fore she killed herself administered some of the poison to her babe. PRAIRIE FIRE DESOLATION. Ranchman In North Dakota May Suffer Much This winter. 1' T. S. Underhill, one of the railroad commis sioners of North Dakota, reports a somewhat deplorable condition of affairs among the rauchmai of his district from almost unpre cented praire fires. Between Hard and Can non Ball Rivers, and the valleys of both, the destruction has .been almost complete, while about Kill Deer Mountain and east of there nothing has been left for stock to live on. At the Riverside Ranch 500 tons of hay and .300 head of cattle were burned. In almost every instance in the valleys the small farm ers have lost their crops and feed for the "Winter. During the course of the fire the wind was-blowing a hurricane, leaping fire breaks at 700 feet In width. The ranchmen claim they will be able to pet strong circumstantial evidence that the tires were started by the Indians from the Fort Yates Reservation, who come up into the valleys and drive the game south and burn the prairies. , AN ILL-FATED SHIP. The L.tszle C. Troop Wrecked an 1 early Alllhndi Lost. The ship Lizzie C Troop, whosa officers narrowly escaped being poisoned on the high seas by Steward D. Diai while on n"vnvnTo f ... n. tl-;i j . ; . . . from Philadelphia to Xn?n-ki Jinan .u heretofore reported, has beeu wrecked on the Islaid ofLoochoo, mi lway between Nagasaki and orm sa, and nearly a'l the crew lost, taptttyj Benjamin G. Founes, her master, was accompanied by his wife and child. Her crew were aI shipped at Philadelphia, and nam frJ)WJtee. The Troop wis own.nl by TrWH&M, bf St. Johns, N. B., and ;s par tially, if not wholly, covered by insurance. It M suppled that she was on her return voy age afd-iA ballast.- "ADA1UNG ROBBERY. An Elghteen-Ycar-Old Qoy Holds Up an , Overland Stage. The overland stage was robbod the other night eighteen miles north of Ukiah, Cal. The Wells, Faro & Co.'s treasuie box and the United States mail sacks were taken. While the .robber, was tullingthe mail sacks open Driver McDaniels snapped a pistol at him but it would not go off. The robber retreated and fired two shots at the driver, neither of which took effect. The robber was aught at Olorerdale He proved to be a boy about eighteen years old, and a stranger in this community. He travelled over sixty miles afoot bei ore he was captured. He succeeded in getting about $100 from the stage. He has admitted that he committed the crime. BLOWING UP SALOONS. Drwg Stores In HorgantowN, Iud., Iu( Stop Selling "Rett Eyf. The liquor dealers of Morgantown, Indare in a state' of siege. A dynamite bomb was placed under Hancock's drug store, and the explosion which followed rattled his "red- fy?" pr'-'niacuouaiT, dmg'r Wk and the building to the amount of $1 ,5J A notice was placed on Norman's drug store door say ing mat his place was next in line. William 1 useimati, a f aloonist, was notified to leave ithiii Jwcnty days or miSt the consequencer M DB. I TALHAGE. The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sua day Sermon. Babjectt lu Jerusalem. Text: If I forget thee. O Jerusalem. let m riaht hand foraet her cunnina." . Psalm cxzzvii., 5. ; . Paralysis of his best hand, the withering of f to muscles and nerves, is here invoked if ths author allows to pass out of mind the gran' deurs of the Holy Citj where one he dwelt. Jeremiah, seated by the river Euphrates, wrote this psalm, and not David. Afraid I am of anvthing that approaches imprecation, and yet 1 can understand how any one who bas ever been at Jerusalem should in enthu siasm of soul cry out, whether be be sitting by the ; Euphrates, or the Hudson, or the Thames, If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget her cunningf You see It fa a city unlike all others for -topography, for history, for significance, for style of population, for water works, for ruins, for towers, for domes, for ramparts, for lit erature, for tragedies, for memorable birth places, for sepulcher, for conflagrations and famines, for victories and defeats. I am here at last in this very Jerusalem, and on a housetop, just after the dawn of the morning of December 3, with an old in habitant to point out the salient features of the scenery. "Now,? I said, "where is Mount Zion?" "Here at your right.n "Where isMount Olivetf "In front of where you stand? "Where is the Garden of Gethsemanef "In onder valley." "Where is Mount Calvary? before he answered I saw it. No unpreju diced mind can hare a moment's doubt as to where it is. Yonder 1 see a hill in the shape of a human skull, and the Bible says that Calvary was the "place of a skull." Not - only im it skull - shaped, but just be neath the forehead of the hill is a cavern that looks like eyeless sockets. Within the grotto under it is the shape of the in side of a skull. Then the Bible says that Christ was crucified outside the gate, and this is cutsido the gate, while the site form erly selected was inside the gate. Besides that, this skull hill was for ages the place where malefactors' were put to death, and Christ was slain as a malefactor. The Saviour's assassination took place be side a thoroughfare along which people went "wagging theirheads," and there is the an-, cient thoroughfare. 1 saw at Cairo, Egypt, a clay mould of that skull hill, made by the late General Gordon, the arbiter of nations. While Empress Helena, eighty years of age, and imposed upon by having three crosses exhumed before her dim eyes, as though they were the three crosses of Bible story, selected another site as Calvary, all receni travelers agree that the one I point out to you was without doubt the scene of the most terrific and overwhelming tragedy this planet ever witnessed. There were a thousand things we wanted to see that third day of December, and our dragoman proposed this and that and the other journey, but I said: "First of all show us Calvary. Something might happen if we went elsewhere, and sickness or accident might hinder our seeing the sacred mount. If we see nothing else we must sea that, and see it this morning.", . Some or us in carriage smd some on mule back, we were soon on the way to the most sacred spot that the world has ever seen or ever will see. Coming to the base of the hill we first went inside the skull of rocks. It is called Jeremiah's grotto, for there the prophet wrote his book of Lamentations. 1'he grotto is thirty-five feet high, and its top and side are malachite, green, brown, black,5 white, red and gray. Coming forth from those pictureu subter raneous passages we begin to climb the steep sides of Calvary. As we go up we see cracks and crevices in the rocks, which 1 think were made by the convulsions of nature when Jesus died. On the hill lay a limestone rock, white, but tinged with crimson, the white so suggestive of purity and the crimson of sac rifice that I said, "That stone would be beau tifully appropriate for a memorial wall in my church, now building in America; and the stone now being brought on camel's back from Sinai across the desert, when put under it, how significant of the law and the gospel I 'And these lips of stone will continue to speak of justice and mercy long after all our living lips have uttered their last message." So I rolled it down ' the hill and trans ported it. When' that day comes lor which many of you have prayed the dedication of the Brooklyn Tabernacle, the third im mense structure we have reared in this city, and that makes it somewhat difficult, being the third structure, a work such as no other church was ever called on to un dertake we invite you in the main, en trance of that building to look upon a me morial wall containing the most suggest ive and solemn and tremendous aariquities ever brought together this, rent wita the earthquake at the giving of the law at Sinai, the other reLt at the crucifixion on Calvary. It is impossible for you to realize what our emotions were as we gathered a group of men and women, 5 all saved by the Mood Of the Lamb, on a bluff of Cavalry, just wide enough to contain three crosses. I said to my family and friends: "I think here is where stood the cross of the impeni tent burglar, and i there the cross of the miscreant, and here between, I think, stood the cress on which 1 all our hopes depend." As I opened the nineteenth chapter of John to read a chill blast struck the hill and a cloud hovered, the natural solemnity im- I crossing the spiritual solemnity. I read a ittle, but broke down. I defy any emo tional Christian man sitting upon . Gol gotha to read aloud and with unbroken voice, or with auv voice at all, the whole of that account in Luke and John, ot which thesa sentences are a fragment: "Theytoo'i Jesus and led Him away, and He.bearing His cros?, went forth into a place called the place of a skull, where they crucified Him and two oth ers with Him, on either side one, and Jesus in the midst;' "Behold thy mother !" "I thirst;' "This day shalt thou be with Mein Paradise;" Father, forgive them, they know not what they do;" 'If it be possible, let this cup pass from Me." ! AY hat sighs, what sobs, what tears, what tempests of sorrow, what surging oceans of agony in those utterances! White we sat there the whole scene came before us. All around the too and the sides and the foot of the hill a mob ragel. They gnash their teeth and shake their clinched fists at Him. Here the cavalry horses champ their bits and paw the earth and snort at the smell of the carnage. Yonder a group of gamblers are pitching up as to who shall have the coat of the dying Saviour. There are women almost dead with grief among the crowd His mother and His aunt, and some whose sorrows He had pardoned. Here a man dips a sponge into sour wine, and by a tick lifts it to the hot and cracked hps. The hemorrhage of the five wounds has done its work. . ryM The atmospheric conditions are such as tht the world saw never before or since. It wai not a solar eclipse, such as astronomer! record or we ourselves have seen. It was a bereavement of the heavens! Darker 1 until the towers of the temple were no longer vist ble, Darker! until the surrounding bills disappeared- Darker! until the inscriptioH above the middle cross becomes illegible. Darker ! until the chin of the dying Lord f alii upon the breast, and He sighed with this last such the words. "It is finished I" As we sat there a silenca took possession of tis, and we thought, this is the cantre from which continents have been touched, and all the world shall yet be moved. Toward this hUl the prophets pointed forward. Toward this hill the apostles and martyrs pointed backward. To this all heaven poin tea down ward. : To this with foaming execrations perdition poiated upward. Round iu circlei all history, all time, all eternity, and with this scene painters have covered the might iest canvas, and sculptors cut the richest marble, and orchestras rolled their grandest oratorios and churches lifted their greatest doxologies and heaven built its highest thrones. ' Unable longer to endure the pressure of this scene we moved on and into a garden of olives, a garden which in the right season is lui nwZ- d her is the reputed tomb of Chrisfc.ATou know the Book says. "In the mwst of the garden was a sepulchre." I tern this was the garden and this the -sepulchre. It is shattered, of course. About four seeps uown we went into this, which reemed a famiiy tomb. There is room in it lor about five bodies. We measured it and found it about eight feet high and nine teet wide and fourteen f e t leng. The crypt where I tmnk our Lord slept was seven feet long. I tmnk that there once lav the Kin wrapped m His Jast slumber. On soma of these rocks the Roman government set its seal. Attha gate of this mausoleum on the on the first ivisr morning the angels rolled the stone thundering down the bill.. Up these' steps walked the lacerated feet of the Con queror, and from these heights He looked off upon th? city tht bad cast Him out and. cpon the world Me bad corns to redeem and at the heavens through which He would soon But we must hasten back to ths city. There are stones in the wall which. Solomon had lifted. Stop here and sea a startling proof of the truth of the prophecy. In Jeremiah, thirty-first chap3r and fortieth verse, it is said that Jerusalem shall ba built through the ashes. What ashes, people have oeen asking. Were those ashes pat into ths prophecy to fill up? Ho ! Ths meaning has been recently discovered, Jerusalem is now being built out in a certain direction where the ground has been submitted to chemical analysis, aniithas been found to be the ashes cast oat from the sacrifices of the ancient temple ashes of woo J and ashes of bones of animals. There are great mounds of ashes, accumulation of centuries of sacrificaa. It has taken all these thousands of years to dis cover what Jeremiah meant when he said, 'Behold the days shall come, saith the Lord, that the city shall be built to the Lord from the tower of Hananeei to the gate of the cor ner, and ths whole valley of the dead bodies and of the ashes. The paople of Jerusalem are at this very time f ulfliling that prophecy. One handful of that ashes on which they are building is enough to prove the divinity of the Scriptures 1 Pass bv the place where ths corner stone of the ancient temple was laid three thousand years ago by Solomon. Explorers have been digging, and they found that corner stone seventy-five feet be neath the surface. It is fourteen feet long, and three feet eight inches high, and beauty fully cut and shaped,: and near it was an earthen jar that was supposed to have con tained the oil of consecration used at the ceremony of laying the corner stone. Yon der, from a depth of forty test, a signet ring has been brought up- inscrib3d with the words "Haggai. the Son of Shebnaiah," showing it belonged to the Prophet Haggai, ! and to that seal rins? he refers in his prop- fhecy, saying, "I will make thee as a signet" walk further on far i under ground, and I find myself in Solomon's stables, and see the places worn in the stone pillara by the hal ters of soma of hi3 twelve thousand horses. Further on. look at the pillars on which Mount Moriahwa built. You know that the mountain was tno S'liall for the temple, and so they bailt the mountain out on pil lars, and I saw eight of thos3 pillars, each one strong enou rh to hold a mountain. Here we enter the mosque of Omar, a throne of Mohaaimoianism, where we : are met at the door by oSicials who bring slip pers that we must put on before we take a step further, lest our feet pollute the sacred places. A man attempting to go in without these slippers would ba struck dead oa tha spot. Thes3 awkward sandals ad justed as well as we ecu la, we are lea to where we see a rock with an opening in it, through which, no doubt, t he blood of sacrifice in the ancient temple rolled down and away. At vast ex pense the mosque has been built, but so som ber is the p!3C3 1 am glad to get through it, and take oft! the cumbrous slippers and step into the clean air. Yonder is a curve of stone which is part of a bridge which once reached from Mount Moriah to Mount Zion, and over it David walked or rode to prayers in the temple. fTere is the waiting place of the Jews, where for canturies, almost perpetually, during the iayti me whole generations of the Jews nave stood putting their bead or lips against the wall of what was oacj Solomon's temple. It was one of the saddest and most solemn and impressive scenes I ever witnessed to se3 ecores of these descandants of Abraham, with tears rolling down their cheeks and lips trem bling with emotion, a book of psalm3 open before them, bewai:hiT the ruin of the an cient temple and the captivity of their race, and crying to Uod for tne restoration or tne temple in all it? original splendor. Most affecting scene! And such a prayer as that, century after century, I am sure God will answer, and in soma way the departed gran deur will return, or something better. I looked over the shoulders of some of them and saw that they were reading from the mournful psalms of David, while 1 have been told that this is the litany which some chant: For the temple fiat lies desolate,: We sit in b olitado and moarn; For the palace tbat Is destroyed. We f-lt la solitude and mooro; For the wa'U that are overthrown, We sit in solitude and monrn ; For our majesty that is departed, Wert Iu solitude and mourn: For our great men that He dead, We sit in solitude and mourn; For priests who hive stumble i, : We sit in so.itude and mouro. I tLiuk at tbat prayer Jerusalem will come again to more than its ancient magnificence; it may not be precious stones and architec tural majesty, but in a moral splendor that shall eclipse forever all that David or Solo mon saw. . . - - ;" But I must get back to the housetop where I stood early this morning, and before the sun sets, that I may catch a wider vision of what the city now is and once was. Stand ing here on the housetop I see that the city was built for military safety. Some old warrior, I warrant, selected . the spot. Jt stands on a hill 2300 feet above the level of the sea, and deep ravines on three sides do the work of military trenches. Compact as no other city was compact. Only three miles Journey round, and the three ancient towers, iipiicus, Phasaelus. Mariamne, frowning death upon the approach of all enemies. As I stood there on the housetop in the midst of the city I said, "O Lord, reveal to me this metropolis of the world that I may see it as it once appeared." No one was with me, for there are some ; things you can see more vividly with no one but God and your self present. - Immedialely the mosque of Omar, which has stood for ages on Mount Moriah, the site of the ancient temple, disap peared, and the most honored structure of all the ages lifted itself in the light, and I saw it the temple, the ancient temple! Not Solomon's temple, but something grander than that. Not Z?i-ubbabei's temple, but something more gorgeous than that. It was Herod's temple, built for the one purpose of eclipsing all its architectural predecessors. There it stood, covering nineteen; acres, and ten thousand workmen had been forty six years in building it. Blaza of magnifi cence! Bewildering range of porticos" and ten gateways and doub!e arches and Corin thian capitals chiseled into lilies and acan thus. Masonry bevelei and grooved into such delicate forms that it seemed to tremble in the light. Cloisters with two ro W3 of Cor intbian columns, royal arches, marble steps pure as though made out of frozen snow, carving that seemed like a panel of the door of heaven let down and set in, the facade of the building on shoulders at each end lifting the glory higher : and higher, and walls wherein gold put out the silver, and the carbuncle put out tho gold, and the jasper put out the carbuncle, until in tho changing light they would all seem to come back again into a chorus of harmonious color. The temple! The temple! Doxology in stone! Anthems soaring in raft rrsof Lebanon cedar! r From side to side and from foundation to gilded pinnacle the frozen prayer of all ages! : From this housetop on the December after noon we look out in another direction, and I tee the king's palace, covering a hundred and lixty thousand square feet, three rows of windows illumining the inside brilliance, the hallway wainscoted with styles of colored marbles surmounted by arabesque, vermilion and gold, looking down on mosaics, music of waterfalls in the garden outside answering the music of the harps thrummed by deft fingers inside; banisters over which princei and princesses leaned,; and : talked to kings and queens ascending the stairway . O Jeru salem, Jerusalem! Mountain city! City of God! Joy of the whole earth! Stronger than Gibraltar and - Sebastopol, surely it .never could have been captured ! Ba while standing there on the housetop that Decamber afternoon I hear the crash of the twenty-three mighty sieges which have come against Jerusalem in the ages past. Yonder is the pool of Hezekiah and Siloam, but again and a?ain were thoso waters red dened with human gore. Yonder are ths towers, but again and again thev fell. Yon der are the high walls, but again and again taey are leveled. To rob the treasures from her temple and palace and dethrone this queen city of the earth all nations plottad David taking the throne at Hebrou decides that be must have Jerusalem for his capital, and coming up from the south at the head of two hundred and eighty thousand troops h captures it. Look, here comes another siaa of Jerusalem! - The Assyrians under Sennacherib, en slaved nations at his chariot whae!, havuv taken two hundred thousand captives in hi one campaign: Phoenician, cities kneeling at iff Sypt trembling at the flash of bis sword, comes upon Jerusalem. Look, an other weje! ThearmSss of. Babylon unde JSebusadnsrsar come down and take plunder from Jerusalem such as no other cit v ever had to yield, and ten thousand of ha citizans trudge on! into Babyloaiaa herni ate. Look, another siege! an I Nebu?aai- Sf ih& JerusaIem a tSs morning finds some of them seated tri umphant in tha temple, and what thay could not fcue away because too heavy thsy bre:u up the brazen, saa, and tna two wreathed pillars, Jachin and Boaz. , Another siege of Jerusalem, ana romp ay with the battering rams which a hundred men would roll back, and then, at full run forward, would bang against the wall of the city, and" catapults hurling ths rocks upon the people, left twelve tnousand dead and the city in the clutch of the Roman war eagle. Look, a- more desperate siege of Je rusalem 1 Titus with his tenth legion on Mount of Olives, and ballista arranged on ths principle of the pendulum to swing great bowiders against ths walls and towers, and miners digging under . the city making gal leries of beams underground which, set on fire, tumbled great masses of houses and hu man beings into destruction and death. All is taken now but ths temple, and Titus, ths conqueror, wants to save that unharmed, bat soldier, contrary to orders, hurls a torcrh into the temole and it is consumed. Many strangers were in the city at the tims and ninety-seven thousand ; captives were taken, and Josapbus says one million ons hundred thousand lay dead. : - But looking from this house top, the siega that mo?t absorbs us is that of the Crusaders. England and France and all Christendom i anted to capture the Holy Sepulchre ana Jerusalem, then in possession of the Moham medans, under the command of on of the loveliest, bravest and mightiest mea that ever lived; for justice mast be done him, though he was a Mohammedan glorious SaladinI Against him came the armies o" Europe,under Richard Cceur de Lion, King of England; Philip Augustus, King of France; Tancred, Raymond, Godfrey and other valiant mn, marching on through fevera and plagues and battle charges and sufferings as intenss as ths world ever saw. Saladin in Jerusalem, bearing of the sicknass of King Richard, his chief enemy, sends him his own physician, and from the walls of Jerusalem, seeing King Richard afoot, sends him a horse. With all ths world looking on ths armies of Europe corns within sight of Jerusalem. At the first glimpse of the city they fall on their faces in reverence and then lift anthems of praisa. Feuds and hatreds among them selves were given up, and Raymond and Tancred. the bitterest rivals, embraced while the armies looked on. Then the battering rams rolled, and the catapults swung, and the swords thrust, and the carnage raged. God frey, of Bouillon, is the first to mount the wail, and ths Crusaders, a cross on every shoulder or hrsast, having taken the city, march bareheaded and barefooted to what they supposeto be the Holy Sepulcher, and kiss the tomb. Jerusalem the possession of Christendom. But Saladin retook the city, and for the last four hundred years it has been in possession of cruel and - polluted Mohammedanism ! Another crusade is needed to start for Jerusalem, a crusade in this Nineteenth Century greater than all those of the past centuries put together. A crusade in which you and I will march. A crusade without weapons of death, but only the sword of the Spirit. A crusade that will make not a single wound, nor start one tear of distress, nor incendiarize one home stead. A crusade of Gospel Peace! And ths Cross again be lifted on Calvary, not as once an instrument of pain, but a signal of invitation, and the mosque of Omar shall give place to a church of Christ, and Mount Zion become the dwelling place not of David, but of David's Lord, and Jerusa lem, purified of all its idolatries, and taking back the Christ she once cast out. shall bs made a worthy type of that heaving city which Paul 6tyled "the mother of us all, "and which St. John saw, "the holv Jerusalem descending out of heaven from God.M. Through its gates may we all enter when our work is done, and in its temple, greater than all the earthly temples piled m one, may we worship. Russian pilgrims lined all the roads arouni the Jerusalem we visited last winter. They had walked hundreds of miles, and their feet bled on the way to Jerusalem. Many of them had spsnc their last farthing to get there, and they had left some of those who started with them dying or dead by the road side. An agod woman, exhausted with the long way, begged her fellow pilgrims not to let her die until she had seen the Holy City. As she came to the gate of the city she could not take another ster but she was carried in. and then said, "Now hold my head up till I can look upon Jerusalem," and her head lifted, she took one look, ani said: "Now I die con tent; I have been it! I have sean itl" Soma of us before w b reach the heavenly Jerusalem may be as tirad a3 that, but angals of mercy will help us in, and one glimpse of the templ3 of God and the Lamb, and one goo 1 look at the "king in his beauty,'! will mors "than compensate for all the toils and tears und heartbreaks o" the pilgrimage. Hallelujnhl AmenI A Lover's Privileges. Taking it for granted that Augustus is an honorable aspirant for Augusta's hand, he still has no right to expect that she will sacrifice a particle of her maidenly reserve in order to retain hia love. The privilege of calling her by her first name should be allowed" only when they are alone, never when in the company of others. He has n right to expect her to go riding or driving, or to balls, parties, theaters, etc., alone with him. If a party of young peop!e are not going together, her mother or some other chiperon should accompany them. A lew trifling presents may be accepted, but this should be but rarely. If Augusta io a well-bred girl she will never allow Augustus to suspect that she wishes him to "spend money on her;" such expenditure should not be gin until after marriage. It is a notice able fact that the girls who receive most of these dubious favors from gen tlemen are those least respected and rarely marry. Occasional books, pieces of music, boxes of bon-bons, etc., are not included in the list of articles thus prohibited, but it is best to receive from a lover only his esteem, respect and love. A lover expects, and no doubt has a right, to a kiss, when with the golden band that he places upon his sweetheart's finger, he has linked his destiny to hers ; but these caresses should not be lavishly given, for only the accomplished is certain, and the sweetest kiss -has often carried with it the bitterest regret. Remember, too, that a feeling very near akin to disgust comes with satiety. And this is true not only of men but of women. Too much a&ection on either side is apt to provoke coldness and perhaps cause estrangement. It is human nature to undervalue that which is gained . with out difficulty, and to tire of : anything if too secure in its possession. net with Himself A Cincinnati paper tells of a queei ftambler. He would wager with him self, and was correspondingly sailing ecstatically or downcast and gloomy win or lose. Jn sporting parlance, h was constantly "at horse and horse' with himself, and he found in that double-headed condition the highest delights of anticipation. :.- Although hi lacked the determination to actually bet, still he haunted the pool and care rooms with his hands in his pockets, jingling his silver coin and transferring his money from, one pocket to another according to whether his right or lef? side won. He kept a regular accounl mentally with his right and left handsj and thus realized all the excitement a betting without being subjected to tht liability of dropping his wealth, but al the same time he was constantly on tht verge of actually participating in th game, but never could muster up conr age to deposit the money on the tablet His great scheme was to. select a nun ber in a Southern State lottery, whicl he would carry in his head, and hi awaited the report of the drawings wit! feverish anxiety, which for several days previous to the event almost pros trated him, so nervous and worked u would he become. One time he actu ally won the capital prizo in this waji The gain of ao much wealth, in. hit mind, proved to be a shock ho coull not withstand,. and superinduced an tack ql brain fever wbich proved fatal. A LEVEL HEAD. Te AJTuiate mt Prcece f SIIa4 la mm During the late strike oa the New York Central Railroad, the militia were ordered to be in readiness ha case of a riot, but they were not called out. , In an interview Gov. Hill said the troops were not to be called upon except in case of an emergency. The emergency had not arisen, therefore they would not bo ordered out. He remarked that this was the first great strike w.th which he had bad experi ence, and he dkl not i ropose to lose his bead the only point at which there had been serious trouble was at Syracuse, and there a deputv sherift had lost his heodT and precipitated an encounter. The strike continued several weeks and there was riotous action at various points along tho road, but the civil authorities were able to cope with it without calling on the militia. j?, - The tt of a man's real ability comes when an emergency arises which makes a hasty call on his good judgment and discretion. The man who retains his presence of mind, retains his equipoije and exercises sound discretion at micu critical junctures is to be relied on an 1 will be put to the front. Men with level heads have the staying qualities which do not falter in the face of danger. Otis A. Cole, of Kinsman, O., June 10, ltVQ, writes: "In the fall of 1S8S I was ieelmg very ill. 1 consulted a doctor and he faid 1 had Wright's disease of the kidneys and that he would not stand in my shoes for the State of Ohio." But he did not lose courage or give up; be says: "I saw the testimonial of Mr. John Coleman, 100 Gregory St., New Haven. Conn., and I wrota to him. In due time 1 received an answer, stating that the testimonial tbat he gave was genuine and not overdrawn in any particular. I took a good many bottles of Warner's Safe Cure; have not taken auy for ono year." " Gov. Hill is accounted a very successful man; be is cool and calculating and belongs to tue class that do not lose their heads when emergencies arise. Faying: for Presents. Belle Swain was well-meaning ancT innocent, pretty, and she knew it. She was poor also, and could not afford to buy tho ornaments with which riche girls set oft their beauty. The boys who went with her to school discovered that Belle would accept pretty gifts, oven cheap jewelry, from them, which they' would hesitate tc offer to the other girls. "I know you are my friend, just like a brother 1 the would say to Tom oi Joe or Ben as the case might be, when she slipped a new ring on ber finger oi pinned a brooch in her dress. She never told Bon Paull that she took-gift from tho others. Ben was a manly, honest fellow with a profound respect for all wonion. When he left Dinsport to go into businoss in Cincinnati ho thought Belle the purest and most mod est woniau living. During that summer James Pollard, a traveling agent for a sewing-machine arm, came to the village, lio was tt married man with a wife and child whom ho neglected ; his habits were bad and his. manners coarse. But the village girls thought him a model oi manly beauty, and he said nothing about his wife. Ho tookBello to picnics, walked with her, drove out alone with her. The man knew that no girl of respectable parentage in the city"" would admit a stranger to such intimacy, and did not give the village girl credit for the mod esty and purity which she really pos nessod. At heart Belle disliked him. She saw that he was vulgar and feared that he was not a good man. But he sent her one day a neck-chain and pendant, sot, with sham rubies. It was just what she wanted to set off her white throat. It was a great temptation, and after b little 'hesitation she took the chain and wore it to a picnic the next day. As Pollard catno toward her; his eye lighted with triumph. His voice had e jeering tone when ho spoke to her which was now to it. He had now a hold upon her. The chain was like a yoke upon her nock. Belle had heaped all of her gaudy littlo ornaments upon her person that afternoon. There were the ear-rings that Tom had given her, and Joe's pin, and Davo's bracelet. Ben PaulJL was to be at the picnic and she wished to look hor best in his eyes. Presently the stranger. Pollard, fol lowed her to the spring where she had gone for water. The other young men happened to be standing together and saw them exchange a few words. Then Pollard kissed her. Ho boasted of it when ho came back. "Sho objected," ho said. "But she had not thanked mo for my necklace. It was worth a kiss. She had to pay." "A good idea !' exclaimed Dave. "She'll pay me for my bracelet." "And me for the car-rings 1" cried Tom. "And me for the pin she wears," said another. - Ben looked at them with scorn and rage in his heart. The jokers were vulgar. But what was the girl whe had subjected herself to their coarse jokes ? When she came up, pale with mortification, he avoided her. The girl who was hung with the offerings of other men. could never be his wife. Belle has her poor rings and neck lace still, and a sense of shame and mortification that time will hardly efface. No young girl should accept gift from any man. The girl who does it betrays tho fact that she is not carefully guarded by parental training, and thai her own instinct is not fine enough tc warn her of danger. Matte Happy. A day of two ago a man who lived lorty or fifty miles west of Detroit hung about the Third street depot in a way to arouse Officer Button's curiosity, and ho finally approached the stranger anol asked : " "Waiting for any. particular train?" "I'm in a fix," responded the man. -I came in on a little "business, but havo lost my return ticket and haven't a cent to buy" another." As it was plain that he had been drinking considerably the officer advised him to look around" for the missing ticket. About an hour later, being a good deal drunker than before he approached the officer and raid : .-I'm all right now." -Found the ticket, eh?" "Yes. I hadn't lost it." "In your wallet, wa? it?" "No. I jess remembered fivo minutes ago that I sold her to a broker up er street and am having a of a time with er proceeds! Hooray : Fr G'go Wash'ton an liberty." W h i t e Swe 1 1 i n g "Ii 188? my son, seven sears oU, had a white swe ling come on his r gfat leg be!ow the knee, which co-tractrd the .asclea s that his le; was drawn at right angles. I considered h nt a co firmed cr p pi". -1 wa - abrmt to take him to Cincinnati far an operation, and began gtrlng him Hool'a Saraapoii 1 to get aphis sfcength. ; Th medicine woke up his ppett e a-d toon pieces of bo m were discharged from the sore. We continued with Uood's Sim. parllla and la a few motths he had perfect use of his teg. Heuow runs everywhere, and apparent'y Is as well as ever." loa L McXcaaAV, Notary Pub 1c, B fluwo d, W. Vx ' Hood's Sarsaoarilla Sold by all drurftxta. ft; six for fi. Prepared oaty by C. 1. HOOO A CO Lowell. Mass. Tailob I really do hope yon will eettle this little account to-day, sir. J have a heavy bill to pay my cloth merchant. Captain (calmly) - Con found your impudence, you go and con tract debtb and come dunning me to pay tbem. Get out, or 111 send for the po lice." -: -:-v- lta Excellent Qualities Commend to public approval the California liquid fruit remedy Syrup of fTa. It is pleas. Ing to the eye, and to tho taste and by gently acting on the UdDeya, liver and bowels, it cleanses the system effectually, thereby rro moUug the health and comfort of all who use it. . A better thinz than being a clan tis to be a giant killer. Oae-Tfceaad Dollars. I will forfeit the above amount. If I fall Jo prove that Floraplexkm is the best medicine in existence for iyspcpsia,IndUrestion or Bilious ness. It Is a certain care, and affords imme diate relief.in cases of Kidney and Liver Com plaint, Nervous IJebility and Consumption. Floraplexion builds up the weak system and cures where other remedies fail. Ask your arosrfst for it and pet well, aluable book Thing Worth Knowing." also, sample bottle sent free: all chames prepaid. Address Frank lin IlarU 88 Warren street. New York. No man can ever be rich whose happiness depends oa money. Malaria cured and eradicated from the system by Brown's Iron Bitters, which en ricbes tho blood, tones the nerves, aid diges tion. Acti like a charm on iwrsona in general ill htalta, giving new en.ry and streng.h. Onr highest joy comes when others rejoice with us. Guaranteed flvo year eight per cent. First Mortgage on Kansas City property, interest payable every six months; principal and inter est collected when due and remitted without expense to lender. For sale by J. H. .Bauerlein b Co., Kansas City. Mo. Write lor particulars It takes something more than wool to make a sheep. Washing powders aro srongJ alkalies, and ruin clilhe. 1 ho purest soap ob'ainable is the best and cheapest. Dobbinss Electrio Soap has been acknowledged for St years to be tho purest f alL Try it right away. . It costs more to be proui"tha-il it does for everything else put together. Woman, her dlseasos ani their treatment. . 72 page, illustrated; price 50c. Sent upon re ceipt of 10o., cost of mailinz.etc. Address Prof. R. H. Klikk. M.D.. 931 Arch St., Phila,, Pa. The man who never Ih'nks is a man who driits toward destruction. Lee Wa's Chinese Headache Cure. Harm less in effect, quick and positive in action, isent prepaid on receipt of. SI per bottle. Adeler & Co.,523 Wyandotte st.,Kaitsas Cily.Mo The strongest man on earth, is the one who can best control himself. FITS stopped fren by Dr. K link's Great Nerve Restorku. No lits after nrst day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $3 trial bJttlo free. Dr. Kliue, 931 Arch St., Phils,, Pa. The man who has the courage to admit that he has been in the wrong is not a coward. Po Yon Em Speculate f Any person sending us their namo and ad dress Will receive information that will lead to. a fortune, lien. Lewis & Co., Security Building, Kansas City, Mo. - , .- Vo man can judge right whose standard is wrong, v m. ' - Brown's Iron Bitters curei Dyspepsia, Ma laria. Biliousness an I General Debility. Gives Strength, aides Uiestiou, tones, th. J nerves crea'es appetite T h'3 oeat tonic for Narain;? Mothers, weak women and children. The on'y real kings aro thoso that rule themselves. Timber, Mineral, Farm Lands and Ranchoi in Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Arkansas, bought and sold. Tyler & Co., Kansas City, Mo. The mo't dangerous placa in which to be, is to be a!ont'. Hall's Catarrh Cure is a liquid and is taken internally, nnd acts directly n the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Write for testimonials, free. Manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. The h'jrher you raise a litt e mm the more he shrinks. Money invested in cholco one hundred dol lar building lots in suburbs of Kansas City will pay from live hundred to one thousand per cent, the next few years under ouf plan. $2i cash and $5 pec month without interest cou trols a desirable lot. l-'articulars on application, 4. H. Bauerlein & Co., Kansas City. Mo. A pig pen is a pcor diamond market. ' Oklahoma Guide Book and Man sent any whers on receipt of 5Ucts,Tyler & Co., Kansas City.Mo. Some men wait for opportunities, but others go to work and make the ru. If sffi!cted with ore eyes use Dr Isxac Thomp son'sEye Water.Druggists sell at 25c per bottle B -d trers are on'y good to burn. Zjr are cured faij 5Y I . . a according to OlRECnONSwitfi eacfi BOTTLE, OREIHRQAT WoUnds, CUts, Swellings THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., Baltimore, Md. DEECHAM'S PILLS ACT lUtKES MAGIO Oil A WEAK STOLlflGll. 25 Cents a Box. OF ALL, DRUCCISTS. PATENTS i"vr.-. V l'ateut. Sent Free. Patrick O'Farrell, wglo 7R TOS250 A MOXTflcan bemsde working if Iw for ua Persons preferred who ran famish a burse and give their whole time to the businens. Spare moments mr be proflin!r employed also. A few vacancies in towns tuiil eiliii. B. K. JOUK fcON & CO.. IJui 31uia SU. Kk-hinood. Va, BestC!bugh Micine - Oil " ---- Fwilomiey Son IMEY H CHICKENS IF YOU- ' KIT0WH0W To keep them, bat It is wrong to let the poor things Saffer and Die of the va rious Maladies which afflict them when in a majority of cases a Care con Id. have been effected bad the owner possessed a little knowl edge, such as can be pro cared from ths QUE IIUI1DRED PAGE BOOK OMfn II II II I offer, embracing the 1 -ACTJCAL JXIXMIISCXJ Of : A signal service to weak "womankind is the fmuir.;: of " lost healtii tho building-up ci "a run-down" system. Nothing does it so surely as Dr. Pierce' a FaYorito Prescription. It cures r.U the derangements, irregularities and weaknesses peculiar to the sex. It.; the most perfect of strength -givers, imparting- tone and vigor to tho whole system. For overworked, de bilitated teachers, milliners, team stresses, " shop - girls," nursing mothers, and feeble women gen erally, it is tho greatest earthly boon, being nnequaled as an appe tizing cordial and restorative tonic. Favorito Prescription " give., satisfaction in every case, or money paid for it is promptly refunded. That's the way it's sold; that's tbo way its' makers prove their faith in it. Contains no alcohol to ine briate ; no syrup or sugar to de range digestion ; a legitimate medi cine, not a beverage. Purely vege table and perfectly harmless in any condition of the system. World's Dispensary Medical Association, Propr's, 663 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y. PATTERN FREE. PEMOBESTS FAMILY MAGA ZINE, the (irvaU'M of all Ma.u rt r. toe are enabled to makf everv cm our lady rfa.ler? a lianilsf-iue rt-st r t. Cut out th:s slip am! inrle it t 4U aiwo-ccct Ftamp fv-r rvtuni an1 your name aid nilcvvi to Vy .f eiiiiirtas lon"r-t. 1" l ast inh Tt . New Yfrc, and ui will rtciivf b return niad n fnf!-ize r-!!-rn, ii:u tratetl and fullv !ecrii f !, 'f M il Jacket (wort!) Jl i n Hi as a perfectly d;ii j uke, or i,i i lntfd. ("ris out u !t i ju ricii :ht .r t desired. Bust. 34, M, E8, or 43 inches. Whi.e I h trnr, l not Fashion Magazine, r.iunv nppose it tle lcanso its Fashion DeiKirtniMit, lite all its othir lepartmt-T.i U fo perfect. You realiy j.ct a rfozcu Mumts ia one, every mouth, for $2 per year. 'or Coughs 0 Gold There ia no JletJicwio lik dr. scrncirs 1 tSAM go m Ei?.Uil Tt i id.n-wit to t.c Lists an. J rri ' 4,'!' l'"T,i! 11 a p- riiclo of cm 'li in i rn i " j ' - - i-'lii- Im M t.'.mgh Mr' hie in tho Winl.!. K.irSa.lebTf Drnireists. Prico, 1.00 prr ltt!.. Dr. Srtien- 'd V-k on ingumiiun ami in t'urr, :jnil. ,l Yro. Addrrsa Dr. J II. tfchr. nclc t bon. Philadelpnia. ere lit D want to If cm a'l ntxvi'. Bone f Dow to Pick Oi flood On ? Know impcrfe Mobs and bo Onard against Fraud ? Detect Disease ai i Effect a Cure when a,nas 1 1 possible T Tell the age ty he Teeth 7 What to call :h D.rrerent PJrta tii .niniaJ? How to Shoe a Ilo:ss Properly t All tLi and other Va nable Information ran I obtained H eadinr oiir lOO-I'ACi E II.M'hTU ATE!) IJO It ME nOOIk, whls.1 we w II forwarJ. r3-S rwd, n receiptor onlr;3 reuts iu stamp. BOOK PUB. HOUSE. 133- Leonard St.. r:-w York GV;- PRECIPES FREE. Mr. niipr in!. manager or 1 . 1 mn !"ia . bas requested us to noiid to ncy lady an- s-Aeriiig imaauveriisentem uiieen it-ij- !roia bis ucw cook-Aolc, "lite 2u'-." You need not send stamp lor rt-jly. .-.ii ply send lull name aul address tu C1IAK1.KS 1,. WKllfSTKlt &, . )., It Eatt 1 Itli Mt.. New York -L ily. feM T 7KF All! or: flEST IN THE WOttLl) UllLiiy L H WHISKEY IIAB j ITS cored at home wi'.h I nnt n!n. liook nf r r- yy licolar sent Ffl C ET. f inffC STUDY. 13oot-keepinr, I3usinesi Form, KIUIilC Peumansliip, Aritbmetic, Khorthand, etr H thorouzhlr taught by 1 A. 1 1. Circulars frer. I Krrant- VmUntr, 457 Iaiu .sr., Durtalo, N. V VTANTEP In' clligent Active A-.'? it in eaoii tnvrn. I! Easy to work i:i connection it ii ber bust upm. Good -ay n ad territory to pushing man. l-or rart 'u Lirg address, stattn proseat or ir nc tic-upat , V. F.O. Gerhard t, Mi., (l!e:m UUl; , Ki t:uj ., L. M I. PENSION Great Fc!ii!0ii t..i Is Passed , Widow, er and Fathers are en- titled to S12 a mo letiu when you pft your money. Blanks free. JOStrH tmt U-TrM SERXAS DlfTIOMRT p-obUsbed, at the remarkably -ow price of only SL-OU, postpaid Ttua Book con tains Si4 finely printed ps of cior type Oil excellent paper and is han-i-somely ret errt raably bound In cloth, ltgrlres Lnsrlieh word with the Gcrniaa quirsienta ui.l pronunciation, an I Germaa words with KniflLnh definition!. It is Invaluable to Germ an who are not thoroughly famiUar with Enstlwh, or t- Americans who wish to learu oerroaa ndresn, with S1.00, MOOa ft it. UO IS. lit Utr St.. BN U-43 I prearibe and fa'ly e?s Some Hij? aa th cniy epcifle for tbecert&i .cars of this dieafe. fK122L o. ix.LKGHAiiAM.ir. n.. V? bave sold T'g G for many years, and it bt-j . s-iren the best of eat.- tartion. v I D. u. Yc-nn& co.. 1 Cbicaco. HI. klSl.CO. Sold by Dr;sls;a. Recommended iiuuui, oujecxion. By drug """i&t O 4 ( till DO (9 r?. & ii SYRUP. A-A- or M .If trfc tur. 'l tO 1ATZ. i I I xrtsaiyby ths V ClTtfftnnatl.r Tra Er a man who devoted ?5 v.-.- of h;s life toCONDUCi JN' A POULTUY YAI1DAS A BUSINFS. not as a ft time. As the living of h-r-.-self and family ciejxiM:i: J on it. he pave tbe ; t such attention a.- on'y need of bread mVA com mand, and the result was 5 grand puree-?, after he ha i pent much raonev and lot hundred? of valuable chick ens in experi-aientiiss?. What he kariu d in a!i the-e yea' : ie embodied in thi linili. which we seisd postpaid tor 25 cents in etanip. IS teachesi you how to IX tec t and Cure Dif-caeie. ho-.v Feed for L'grs nnd a -o fr F'attenm?, w bich Fos 's to Bave for Breed in a Pur;o-et and everything, indeed. y.a should know on this eubj'C TOOK TUI3. HOL'SIL 121 Leoufj-ii t t,. Y. Ci'.

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