CORES ALL 5 LDQD DI5EA.5E5 ami pr--ri'jc r. with grat i&tlsfartion fur ibo ear of tli i. fcoruiulou. u:i-wr and tvi-jr, 6.k:i.i.:l:tr Ewelii:ii, Rheuiuatiaui, Malaria, old C.'irc.'c L'k-.'ii l: it tavo reiMtl all treatment, Catarrh, earln. I'.i'son, Tt.r. S al.i Head, etx., etc. P. I. T, t powrrful t"!ii-', hit. nn errpllent nrptlier. Mil 111 are pvi-.med and whose blood Is la t . nriiru -., Iii niitrvii lrrfful.iiitim, ar P P M K fc: J.4 i-J 'q & E & l,t-. Uli.'UV Li lifilL'U IT- Ui- Nnii.i.TlUl tJHtC Hlili MuOll- cleatxisi" i.r. ptrtks of P. 1. 4, Prickly Ash, Pok Root LIPPMAN BROS., Proprietors, Druggists, LippEiaa'a Block SAVAHHAB, OA A Happy Welcome Is guaranteed to tlio.se v.'Lo will cull at my Saloon, which is stocked at all times with the Choicest of Domestic and lin poited Liquors and Wines. All the latest drinks compounded :u;d manipulated by skillful men. DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED Cl(! A1IS, And a large lot of tine Tobacco uFToit Pike 2s o i stic Cakolina Co UN Wl'ISKKY MY PLACE IS IIl'.AClQCAlS- ters. James L. Dickinson. (At John Ginn's old stand. LIPPMAIM BROS., Proprietors, Druggists, Lip-iman's Clock. SAVANNAH, 64, SPECIAL RUN No. 19. UKEATKKT VALIE OX EARTH. I'ylet-'s Fnnimi Antique OiU IJoll t'ur talu JK'li cumiiletr, b apeciul circular.. No. 40Q4, 3 ft. 6 in. long, net $16.00 No. 4009,4 ft. 6 in. " " 821.00 No. 4010, 5 ft. Ion-, - - " $23.00 Also see new ISO page catalogue for 1892. Creat cut of about 40 percenttrom former list. BOOKS FREE, postage lOc. Shipped from St. Louis, Mo., or Indianapolis, Ind. EJ:VU COIXTKKS A SPKC1ALTY. We refer to every Bank In Thirty States. TYLER DESK CO., St. Louis, Mo. PENNYROYAL WAFERS. th.'.o orvtitM- liy .t' vo.ir diukvir. parliculars niii.il- I 'Jr .-tu'iiii. 1 iki r Ik.x. Address, IX llLK A Cli I'.'A !( Al. COMPANY. i)TK(UT, Alicit- For Sale by Dr. J. H. Powell, UOLDsnOKO. N. V. KIN IS BO cures ti; Em Pom 1 1 CURES ALARIAj X-Sjw"--A siwiik- monthly rtieiiii-inp fur ludiud .' lS&rroiwi-'K free, l.t-uhfty a.-i t painless ?vY &&5SrJ,i!--:llariie ' aches ;in:s -.m a p. C W$j&$j proaeh. NowumM l.y over 3,lH ladies. ALAJAZOO weed H& WILLIAMS MFG. CO. Ji E TO S Z KALAMAZOO. MICH. ) BBMfcfcl ALLIANCE INFORMATION. Dr. Houghton, the Poet of the Order, In Rhyme. An Official Statement of Gold and Silver Coinage For One Month Shows Their Market Value. Wa?iiington, I). C Coinage exe cuted at the mints of the United States in the month of May aggregated ."i.380, 000 ieces, of the total value of $5,070, 270. dold pieces numbered o'-7.200, value $1,11.1,'. (00; sdver puces 2.079.700, value $.H;,170; and minor coins 1,872. 000 pieces, value -f 17,200. OLU CIRCULATION'. ty VR. A. S. HOUGHTON. I. "OM Uiiit'c Sam," a fanner man, Set out on- snuiim-r ilay To work upon liis nifalow lainl An.l cut a loail ot hay: His sun broM tK'J ia-e slmiu' clear with health, Jlis u iink ami liuilis were lithe, .a n l with his tirawny hainls he swiinij '1 he swalli plodileiii he.Vt he. It took a rettv lively mail To i'oli..w liiui that (lay. A lliiMUK'h Hi" ripened timothy lie out a rinht of way; Hut as he licaivd the upper eml His scythe, turned by a stone. Cut through Ids co hide hoots and clove His flesh clear to the hone. The t,l tod i miu red out, a ranlnur : stream. Till stanched hv those around. And L'ncle Sam. a h-lpless man, l.av prostrate on the Kronnd. I'M "face all blanched, and like the dew The perspiration stood I' poll his brow, and trembling now And iaint from loss of bloo , i his stalwart, brawny inun of toil. As helpless as though dead. Was can led to his home and placed 1'pon his downy lied. The doct-ri- came and tit a glance Told what lie needs must do To build his circulation up. And make him flood as Lew; He left an Iron tonic, pills. And raid to feed him well. Anil soon old l'ncle Sam would be As though no harm befell. II. Old Uncle Sam," our Government, .Set out one summer day. And from our wide and rich domain To winnow want away. The shop and factory, farm and mine. Alive with healthful toil. As busy hives or Industry. Enriched our fertile soil. It took the world to then compete With us so rich and free. Our commerce reached the orient. Our flax adorned the sea; Hut ere we reached our hundredth year An accider.t befell Our currency, and hemorrhages The bankers' caverns swell. Now raiiit and treinblinsr. L'ncle Sant 'I he doctors will consult. If wisdom guiles their treatment then We'll welcome the result. Hut if dissension mars their talk We'll quash them one and all. Ami treat the case with common sense At 'lection time this fall. The blood he lost must be restored. The circulation needs la-plenishlng with currency. As does the man who bleeds Require feeding rich and strong. i n restoration cause: So we both gold and silver coin Would freely mint by laws. If L'ncle Sam anieuilc grows On gold and silver food. We'll "s;nit Hie public credit rock" And feed 1.1. u on the Hood; If private coi jxirations can With water stulf their stuck Why can't the ieople do the same. As Moses smote the rock t For all the difference between A dead and living man. Was that the blood was .tilled in one, Ltit in the other ran. : The man who has no money, aud finds himself compelled to get some, with no place to get it except from those who have no more than they desire themselves to use, must make concessions to get it. lie fretjucntly sacrifices some of his prop city for less than cost when in this di lemma. Yet this is exactly the condition of the farmer every year when the crop is dumped on the market demanding money to pay debts. There is not over one bill ion dollars in circulation scattered out among sixty-live million of people for a basis of one hundred and thirty billions of dollars exchanges in a year, aud it only does about y percent, of the business, and yet the farmer demands two and one-half bil lions in sixty days. There is no money for him, and he must and tloes make sacrifices to get it. National Economist. The Marion Independent, (Ind.) says: Forty years ago farmers owned a greater portion of the nation's wealth than now. Farmers owned of the wealth of the nation in 1850, live-eights. Iu I860, less Ihan one-third. In 1870, a little over one-third. In 1HS0, a little over one-fourth. In 18.10, less than one-fifth. This, too, while farmers compose over 50 per cent, of the population and pay over 87 per cent, of the taxes, from which (if you will allow the digression) it will be seen thnt the application of the Henry Ueortre land tax scheme would not seri ously affect us if wc paid IheVther 12 per cent., and let the ''world go free." These peculiar hardships to the farmers will be further and better understood when we uote the fact that while the total wealth or the nation is given .h $(;.". 000,000, 000 iu round numbers, only 17, 000, 000, 000 is taxed, and of this, $14. 000, 000,000 is charged up to the fanners. Washington, U. C Senator Cock-, rell h is introduced (by request of a former citizen of Missouri, now a resident of Washington.) a bill "for the free aud unlimited coinage of a temporarily correct silver dollar," and it was referred to the finance committee. The purport of the bill is to have the President designate every year the amount of silver equiva lent in market value to the gold dollar and to have silver dollais minted at that rate. IF The Omaha Tocsin. (Neb.) says: here did the people ever get the idea that it is to their interest to pay tribute to railway manufacturing, bridge and othtr monopolies, in the way of subsidies taxes, bonuses and other sources? Just how it pays a people to yive away a part of their wealth, unless they do it on the theory that it pays to give a reward for tne return of a lost, estrayed or stolen right, is a mystery that only a female ciairvoyaut, or ;t liohemian .Jew, would tackle. The stockmen of South Dakota havt recently imported fro n Tennessee a num ber of Iiusshi'i wolf hounds to help iu the extermination of wolves, which hav of late been killing numbers of calves and colts. The tickets for the next Bayieuth, Wagner festival have all been taken, the urn realized beiog $140,000, of which c'i'.'A'Oo was subscribed in England. The Sult Ste. Marie Cana. wnl co, 84.000.000. FARM AND GARDEN. WOMEN AND THE GARDEN. Take ycur wife's advice about making a garden, but do not leave the hard work it involves to her. A man with horse and cultivator can do the work quicker and easier than a woman can do tho work by hand power alone, as they will if no help be given. Boston Culti vator. DETASSELIN'G CORN. Detasseliog corn is again a subject for consideration. The process consists in removing the upper portion of the stalk to which the spray of male or pollen bearing flowers is attached. Several ex periments have shown that it increases the crop to remove the tassel from fully one-half of the stalks before the pollen is shed. The results of some extensive tests made by the Nebraska Experi mental Station 3bow the oppesite effect. There was a uniformly lessened yield upon the plats when one-half or the stalks were detasseled. Similar results obtained when the tassels were remove! after the pollen had ben matured and scattered. Ne.v York World. PROPER PRESSURE IN CHEESE MAKING. A frequent mistake is to apply too strong pressure at first to the newly hooped curd. The pressure should be gradual, and the snug squeez-e only given, after several hours. The white whey tnat starts from a severely pressed curd is rich in butter fats, which will net ap pear if the curd is allowed to settle firmly in the hoop before strong pressure is applied. The facts go to show that ths average full cream cneese has parted with far too much of its fats iu press, vats, drainers aud hoops, and is often found to be a half skim when it readies the consumer. Great hue-and-cry U raised over ttie idea that it is commer cial wisdom to take out a pound of but ter fat to each hundred pounds of milk, which tests four and one-half per cent, fat for cheese making. The cheese is no better that has lost that amount of fat in manufacture thau is another cheese from which has beeu skimmed an equal amount, aud the balauce of the fat retained by skillful manufacture. A little care at the beginning of the opera tions will always prevent such wastes and result in a better product. Ameri can Agriculturist. A VETERINARY VIEW OF CRUELTY. The following is the report of a com mitted appointed by the British National Veterinary Congress for the purpose of lurther considering the subject of cruelty to animals fiom a veterinary point of view, and publishing a declaration in the name of the Congress on certain practices and painful operations oa animals. Lameness may be painless or painful. Those case3 where the lameness passes off with exercise are prima facie cases that are accompanied by pain this specially applies to cases of navicular dis ease and spavin. In such cases horses ought not to be worked, and when worked it is cruelty. The practice called twitching causes acute pain and. is frequently unjustifi able. Burning gas for lampa3 is cruelty. Knocking out wolf teeth is cruelty. Extracting temporary teeth save for a surgical reason is cruelty. Docking and nicking horses are cruel. Marking and branding animals when necessary, should be performed by the quickest and least painful method. Worming the tail, docking and crop ping the ears of dogs are unnecessary and therefore cruel operations. Operations of various kinds are fre quently performed on animals by igno-, rant persons, and much cruelty is caused thereby, which ought to be publicly dep recated and prevented by law. All pain ful operations not required for the good of the animal operated on are of a cruel nature. No operation causing paiu to an animal should be performed by au unskilful person. All necessary opera tions ought to be performed in a scien tific manner and by the most human methods, in order thereby to prevent tho infliction of unnecessary pain. Western Agriculturist. LAMIN'ITIS, OR FOUNDER. Founder may arise from various causes, such as continued bad shoeing, freezing of the feet, overexertion, a sudden chill from drinking cold water when heated, or overloading the stomach with whole hard com or other grain. In the initial stages there is usually a stiffness of one or both front iegs, and by careful exam ination you will find that the feet are feverish and tender and this is why the mare moves about in her endeavor to re lieve the pain in her legs and feet. He move her shoes and poultice her front feet until the fever subsides ami tender ness is entirely removed. Wurui poul tices are best during cold or cool weather, but iu warm weather cold ones are preferable. Give tho mare twenty drops of tincture of aconite in three or four ounces of water to allay the fever aud repeat the next day if the fever con tinues unabated. Keep the mare's stall well covered with clean straw for bed ding, and encourage her to lie down as much as possible. Give steamed or boiled corn or oats while under treat ment, and when all signs of fever have subsided put on a bar shoe it the soles of her feet are at all tender; if not, allow her to run out to pasture during Avarm weather until the stillness disappears. If you cannot afford to give the mare a rest, then apply the warm poultices to her front feet as soon as she conies in from work in the evening, levying them on all night, removing iu the morning, after which wash in warm water and wipe dry. Also give her a few doses of the aconite and work her as gently as possible, re membering that sho is in pain and every step only increases her misery. New York Sun. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Soapsuds are good for most garden plants. The grape loves sunshine. Fruit for market, as a rule, is not well sorted. A rich soil is necessary to secura crisp vegetables. Flowers cost little in summer und are always a joy. Never allow the hens to driuk from stagnant water. If a lawn is to be made, prepare to sow the seed early. A slow but healthy growth is desira ble in a fruit tree. Potash is an essential element in the soil of an orchard. Don't be in a hurry to pull the mulch off from your strawberries. The goose eggs set under hen should be turned every other day. Farming in the garden works badly, but gardening on the farm is excellent. Manage to plant trees in some way along the fence, if no other place is open. For raspberries, tho richer the ground the larger and better the quality of the berries. From this time oa through the summer (the average tann Dutir uoijs not pay to. the making. Manure from the pig pen ii oae of the best that can be used arouml the rhu barb plants. "Two is company and three is i crowd" applies to triplet lambs as wcli as to lovers and the gooseberry. Shrewd flockmasters put to use a ewe that has lost her lamb by making her act as wet nurse for lost or discarded lambs. If they are picked regularly during the season geese should average a pound oi feathers each, and this should make the.n pay. On rich, level bottomland stock farm jug can be made profitable, if anywhere. ,But do not waste such an opportunity on scrub cattle. Hay that is cut, cured and housed be tween daylight aud dark dos not often lose its sweetness by being suri burned or water soaked. Often when the lambs are doing well one is apt to think a little extra feeding will make them do better, but this gen erally proves a mistake. Most of tne disease which is reported each year among sheep is the direct re sult of exposure, neglect, rtarvation and unhealthy surroundluga. It may not pay the majority of farmers to make a specialty of dairying, but in connection witn otner products it can readily be made profitable. Why not train the calves to lead and train the boys to lead them, and if wed followed would often save much trouble ,in the handling of the cattle. Both the animal and vegetable king doms are subject to the same laws. Seeds as well as stock may be improved by careful selection and breeding. The advantage of barn cisterns cannot be over estimated. Providing water for the stock, they prevent water lrom the roofs filtering through the manure. There is only one way to run a dairy successfully, and that is to make a busi ness ot it. The farm must be adjunct to the dairy, not the dairy to the farm. Give the boy all the hard jobs an! tin chores that you don't want to do yo.ir self, if you want him to leave the farm. It is a pretty sure way to accomplish this. On a majority of farms milk could ba used with more profit in feeding it to tne pigs, poultry, and calves than in making it into butter and selling it at ten cents a pound. Are you thinking of feeding cora and making "big" hogs for next winter's market? If so, you have not observed that "light bacon" hogs are the pnesthat bring top iriees. If you plant a field of sweet corn, in order to experiment a little with 'green soiling this fall, don't have it a half mile away from the stable. A fiiend of ours who did this lound that soiling didn't pay. When the farmer finds his cattle with a husky cough he may attribute the same to indigestion from ofer feeding. Cut dowu the supply fifty per cent, for two days and. the result will be immediately beneficial., We should lend every eacourag invent to steps that tend to develop new agri cultural industries. Even if we do not wish to engage in them ourselves it re leases land from the production of other crops, and that benefits us all very directly. A Canadian apiarist is ot the opiniou that bees wear out and die more quick I v in windy weather or in windy localities than where the air is still. Hence the importance of selecting a sheltered locality. How Edward Burnett thinks that "cows are imide; not bred."' He say take the best bred calf and put it into the hands of one man, and a poor cow results, while in another man's hands the same calf would make the highest type of dairy cow. Hence his theory. Do not spray fruit trees until the bloom has fallen. If you do you will destroy the honey bees, who have been working so industriously to make your fruit set. And your enemies are not oa hand to be destroyed until the little fruit appears to lay 'their eggs in. The man who wants to buy a Jersay bull and who has not made a study of pedigrees will have to trust a good deal to the honesty of a reputable breeder to supply what he needs. A trade -mark for honesty is valuable property whether one sells bulls, fertilizers, or flour. Careless and unkempt attendants wh force cows into filthy stables are respon sible for the inferior if not poisonous milk served to customers. Clean sur roundings conduce ta good health, whether of man or beast. Time con sumed in making a cow comfortable will be as money in the dairyman's pocket. It is not a new fact, but yet a remark able one. that if a fruit tree, apple, pear or cherry, be strippes! entirely of ita mrx in tha sApnnd week in June a new sur face of bark will immediately take the place of the older one. It is Deuevea that the chiet growtn oi aeciuuuu nc in our part of the world takes place at midsummer. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. A '.nriil.l three veara old IS half the height it will ever reach. A man obtains his maximum height at forty years of age, a woman at fifty years. The medusa is a fish so fragile that when washed on the beach it melts and disappears. A tropical moth, called the atlas moth, has a wing spread of one foot. It is gray in color and flies by night. An electrical brush has been iuveuted to kill grass and weeds along the track. It destroys every blade of grass it touches. Carbon is so good a conductor of elec tricity that, in the form of coke, it is used to make an earth connection for lightning rods. Experiments toward rust prevention are being made in all the Australian col onies, and a conference was held in Adelaide, in March, to report results. There are most beautiful butterflies in the Malay archipelago, of an exquisite blue and other iridescent hues, which measure eight inches from wing tip to wing tip. . f The "horn" of t'ne rhinoceros is simply a hypertrophied bunch of hair, the horns of lizards and of cattle are morphologically hypertrophied portions of the skin. When ripe, the bauaux consists of seventy-four per cent, of water, twenty per cent, of sugar, twj per cent, of gluten, and the remainder of mineral matter and woody fiber. Every portion of soapstoue lost in cut ting is utilized in other ways. It gives the dull color to rubber goods, is used in paper to gain weight, aad is aa ex cellent article to use in making fire-proof paints. A remarkable case is that of a man who was stabbed in the heart. That or gan was punctured, but.yet he lived and would have recovered had he not be come intoxicated before ' the wound en tirely healed. Experiments in Germany show that peat is a good material in which to store potatoes, turnips, onions and other simi lar vegetables. Potatoes, after eight months, were found in perfect condition without ever having germinated. Several of the higher ape3 share with man the involutionary habit of blushing. Indeed, they seem to possess it to a higher degree then we do, for the blush of an ape extends over a larger portion of the body than that of a human being. It i3 elaimed by scientists that all the lime in the world has, at soma timo, been a portion of some animal. The same atom of lime has some time, no doubt, been a portion of many different animals, and possibly of human beings also. Heligoland is to be made a harbor of refuge for Ashing vessels, aud is being fortified heavily. The island is to be a scientific station, the German Govern ment having erected laboratories there for the study of marine zoology, anJ eapecillly of the economic history of food fiuhes. The perpendicularity of a monument is, although few may be aware of it, visibly affected by the rays of the sun. On every sunny day a tall monument has a regular swing, leaning away from the sua. This phenomenon is due to the gi eater expansion of the side on which the rays of the sun fall. In Germany, barrels and tubs are now being made in a single-piece by a new ijsteni of cutting logs into boards aa! veneeis.'. The log is steamed and softened, then placed in a machine and rotated against a knife which shaves off a continuous veneer, or board, till the log is consumed. In making barrels, a 'strip is notched in each edge, au 1 then it can be rolled into cylindrical form, ready for hoops and heads. k WISE WORDS. Imitation is the sincerest flattery. Gratitude is one of the rarest vir tues. As soon as we form a habit wo have a master. Every sin that is not forsaken marries and raises a family. The best way to teach children to do good is to show them how. Friendship is the gift of the gods and the most precious boon to man . A thankful man owes a courtesy ever; the unthankful but when he needs it. Never lo9e your temper. Nobody wants it; all have enough of their own. The scorn of genius is the most arro gant and the most boundless ot all scorn. The man who has the right kind of wisdom never makes the same mistake twice. The more you love yourself the better, if you love your neighbor to the same extent. Goodness does not more certaiiily make men happy than happiness makes them good. Half the gossip of society would perish if the books that are truly worth reading were but read. There is no remembrance which time doe3 not obliterate, nor paiu which death does not terminate. If a man look sharply and attentively, he shall see Fortune, for, though she be blind, yet the is hot invisible. As riches and honor forsake a man, we discover him to be a fool, but nobody could find it out in his prosperity. A syndicate has been formed! in Syd ney, and an agent dispatched to E -.gland to open up and permanently establish a market for Australian horse's. RELIGIOUS READING. TIIF. WAITING ONES. There are some anion-,' the 1U sed Waitinsr, watching every day. Peering through the mistv shadows To the clear and lighted way: LUtening in the dusky twiligut. Waiting even in the nightf 'Mid the toil and heat of "noonday Bending forward to the liut. And they speak in eager whispers "Can we see His chariot yet.'" "Will the Master come this "evetiin- " "Will the heavenly Friend forget;' So they stand, these earnest s-ervarts. Waiting, watching evermore For the clouds to part asunder, And reveal the open door. There arc dark-browed ones amon- tUm Looking through their eves of nijilt ; ' There are fair-haired little'children ' Peering up with faces bright : There are a;ed pilgrims, longing Tor the Master's spoken word; There are some in every eountry Waiting, watching for the I'rd. But they take their daily duties. And perform them as" for Him : And they read His loving message When'their eyes are tired and dim. They are living'lives of blessing Lives of love for His dear sake. While they wait with eager longing. For the "morn of joy to break. He will eoine. and will not tnrry : He will fold them to His breast; He will make His watchers hajipy In a calm aud holy rest. He will give them Satisfaction For their days of waiting here; He will till them with joy uneeasiiii; When the Master shall appear. RF.I.K..IOX AXD El'SIXESS ARE NOT MMINVT T1IIXOS. It has been a mighty inisehief.that religion has so often been divorced from theo'thir ways and modes of men. Men have looked at it as something distinct and peculiar. hav ing its own sphere and its own powers, and not as the fountain and father of all good ness and truth. The man of (iod has been separated from the man of science, the man uf liiera'ure. the man of polities, the man of business. The world has helped the separa tion, and -o has the thurcb. An ignorant piety, a strong and shrewd impiety, have done the same work. The general exercise of the intellect, the coininon charities of the heart, the familiar proceedings of the life, have In en to frequently regarded as provinces into which religion has no right to penetrate, or should only come when invited, and be thankful to be treated as a guest, and not expect to be honored us a sovereign. Hence literature, art, social life, worldly en Jjagen ents. have been treated as things apart from godliness, and not as things which goil tinessis to iossess, and through which it is not to a t and be seen. To borrow an express ive illustration, the partnership has been dis solved between religion and other business, and thus it has come to a disastrous bankruptcy. That it is co, is apparent from the fact that there is a gen eral disposition to regard immoralities con nected with money matters in a diHerem light from othtr immoralities. The same standard is not applied, the same measure is not meted out. There is more entle trent inent of the pecuniary sinner than any other sinner. "It is only the way .f business,'' covers a multitude of bins. A man. in many circles, had better defraud his creditors than deny a single article of the popular creed, or violate a single conventionalism of respect able society. A. J. Morris' Iteligion aud business. " WHAT IS ITS LESSON? There is a famous picture in one of the palleries of Europe which is called "The Monk's Kitchen.' The room is exceedingly plain, the furniture scanty, but the work is being done bv angels; one washes the dishrs. r.tiotht r scrubs the floor, another rakes the fire; all are perfectly at home in their re spective work. Nobody knows just what the picture is intended to represent, but any one may make a guess ; what is yours? Miue is that the white-winged celestia's are not fpeciali.-ts. but are general practitioners; that they have a mission to human need and that, filled with heavenly grace, they find their highest felicity in their self-adaptation. Is there not something iu our naturts which erives a place for the sen timent"! somewhere in the Fatherhood of Cod? You go into a parlor whose win dows are mairnificently draped, on whose walls arc paintings of rarest cost and beauty, whose furniture is of massive mahogany up holstered with exquisite taste; if there is no bric-a-brac, if every chair is at the same an gle and every picture at the same elevation, you confess at once the grandeur, you miss and sieh for the homelike. So if in our thought God is invested with the sublimi ties his omniscience, his omnipresence, his omnipotence, if to us he is the Creator, the (iovernor. the Judge, our souls will be awed, but thev will sigh for a sight in f'od of the brother with his familiar embrace, the friend with his loving accommodation to our peculiarities of temperament and cir cumstance. Pulpit Treasury. I.AHOr. AXI TKl'ST. Men and movements that have no ChrM on board go to the pottom. The rocks are strewed with the wrecks of human schemes and ambitious -nterbriss: pulpit genius has often ended in splendid failure. Every man. every entej prise, every ellort thnt Jest's takes into his own hands is insured. Do your best, brother, and trust' We ruin isteis and you Sunday-school teachers, and other servants of Christ, worry too much over the rooming or the withholding of re vival seasons. We can plow, and we can sow, but we cannot force a single Kernel of gospel &eed to come up. Oiir only duty is to live right on, and toil right on, and pray right on, and leave the early and later rains to come when God chooses to send them. I never worried about a "revival" yet. and thus hastened :ti coining by an hour. Uut, often, when I w n not even exje tinK it, the gracious shower came. A true, earnest Christian life has its disappointments and chastisnients : but it Las its blessed surprises also. Heaven w i.l have some glorious surprises for thousands of hard-working, ill-paid Christians who never made anv prominent ligure in the world. Some of them may sit up along of the Weslcvs, the Spurgcons and the Moody. Dr. T. C. Cuvler. I bishop Wafnwriirht relates a touching in - -nt hexiitifnilv ilPivtrnfive of the re if.'. Oil- dent yearnings of the late Daniel W coster ' Soon" after I returned from Egypt ami the Hoi y Land, he-ring that .Mr. Webster was in town. I culled upon hiinat the Av, as I was always act ut,iud to do. 1 1 re ception of lne wa iiio-t cordial and ali-ctio;.-ate. He asked me m nv questions astomv Eastern travels, and a- I rose to sr a '' ,,e took me bv the ham! -;! s:iid. "I want yon to do one thing for ):.-. You have been o. r li.tin i .. r ti.- l-r m: I I can comma nd, and ! : e ..u sit dov n will. me one hour--but I .... r- 1 lO go with VOtl fiom t.'ace to nlac Ktth- lehem, Nazareth, J. i u-alem. the sea t Galilee, Jordan, litit.a:.). the .Mount ol Olives and tell me, as I point, how it looks the bills, the trees, ti..- rocks, the land, tU water. I can n'-vc;- - iiere, M;t I would look as nearly as 1 -,n ujon every sptl Banctilied bv "the iir.M-i.ee of our blessed Lord while "Le tabY;i.i;eid in the t!eh His eyes tilled with f-rs. and he earnestly pressed my hand. M it i dudes of emotion" swelled my heart. 1 ivtur.ied the prt-siirc. and in silence departed." A word of kindnesM is a seed which, even when dropped by chance, is sure to sprng up a flower. :