m prfiinent Secession ngurt raises way.
Charleston. S. GWRobert N.
rr.iirlin, one the oldest citizen of
harleston, died Friday mornmg.aged
2. Hp wbb a member of the Secession
It '.invention of South Carolina in 1880,
: 1 sinned the ordinance of secession.
iff w nt to Vafhin(rtrn m 1!W1 at the
:ryn.t solicitation of Major Robert
Vi'lf-on, th commander of Fort
-"iri.t.-r, whose, intimate personal
ri'-r, 1 hf was, to see what could be
I, , L. t , f.ftt!f the unhappy difference
.tnthf North and 8outh, but
i:;- 1 i-i h if mission.
.i a and ler !.
h ' Kri of tjrajis kndClorer Fieed
W . L- -vtM Is .Salzr. La Cross, Vis, Over
-r. hI 1- 'v freight to New i irk, Pa. ana th
! 1 i l I! I ' I I THIS ' I T AND fE!D IT with
f 'w. t-j 'he John A. alzr feed Co.. La
. , '':.. v'.'i will r. ;ivi! clven packages
v! :f.T WIT'.: and hig mi oimo'h farm
-.,,: :'. i j'I of g',rA things for th far-
. i,,. t!ir !-r,"r r l the '.i'izn. A
if.r.r;iiimn of th! Stanford estate
n !;1-1 7 hi total valuation of Pan
'. i p. pert y is Tl7 1-.3ir
n Tmpnttnnt IMffcrrnre.
' .ri.f!t to tho'iiandvwho think
i:'. n- t(:rv HTf riot af?ered with
' ,'" n' ili" vvrn simply needs
' . "im'nrt hnrrw to thrrrr
,.!,,, i ... . ..ndttion is -n-ilv fired by
f r if-. Mar.'ifart'ired by the
, I IV r.u ' o.
rr.pBtES are in bloom at Lxlnsrton,
Vii. 17. t'tnrrr
Symptoms of Cancer
. , . I rr rnv lip I iib -igreealile eruption
' i '. n. . k Aft.-r taking buttles of
' 1 -np inlla. nil t he traee of diseasa
. i i ' ri-'t ii ri'l tin' medicine hn given
viy.r and -im-iiHi. I am now al-
i' ( bk". and trnrk liken tl-v-r.
! I kitoir I It r M oiid's Saraparilla
, 1 I i h ilo with my vigor an1
I " tn mended it to mv wife, w ho
i. .. . n,M. h with rhi-innatir. troublos.
k iiv
In two years
Hood'ssvCures
om I nl.-mt IhoMlosnf Hond'n Kami-
' ' i. mii'I to ilnv, nit'l for tho last S months,
i . . im- hKi n in-w IwiiiK." Hr.v. O. f. Pow
ii. -' l M:niow.r Mr'-ft, hi. s , Illinois.
l-ill-
ur -iill lu. r UN. Ii ll..inn!i, Jaun-
F- ! "k ll.''1:l''hl. rn-i-nt.
Hicbmond and BaiiFille . B. Co.
HAMt KI, Sr i- Nr I R, F W. IlriDRRorKR
an. I Id. i v.f.s I'liUkn, V.k kivkks.
I Hi. Ini...ti,i ,t It.niTilU an.l North Oa-nlina
I'.VIHK IH.
CoDte.Scbcdalc:D fliTcd D.-c. 21,1893,
Hi l; riu.tiui,
NO
1 1 M a m
2 40 s m
H 17 a m
f Hi a m
f ' 0 a m
7 f a m
I ; 4 I ii
" M . p m
: 1 1 r rn
. m
T i i m
I .V II II t t v-'lf
I v Ki-Mlr.
A i I im ili,
I 1 I'MMMll..
.i (ii..'iiM...r.
1 .'. i .so'rn,
I v .l..iKh
' v I Mil I. tun
A r I iri-crili m
f. Mum
' i'i fi m
X 1 1 p m
m rm p TrT
M s p m
. 7 1" p m
1 00 a ii
2 3-1 a n
S -iO a n
1 v ,ih(,,
Sat..tn f, OS p m .') HO p m !S fK) a n
1 v i;,iviivt,,,ro, T :i3 p m ft m ii. Rot am
ArSnlHuiry, I'l'Opm IM a in 9 4 a m
a r stMt.x i!it il6an
Ar Asht-vi!li, 4 HO p n
i l..t Sprimrs, f, 3d p n
I v Salisbury l I.S p in ' a in IVIim
Ar Iwirl-ltP, m to p m !S a rr Ili.Sam
' i Snit,ihV I o! am 1 1 7 a m 2 p m
lip. 1 .i i am U'Jtpm 4 in p m
A I Atl'IHt
4 V p in in IS p m
' 'Imi -1 . -t T in ."i p in
A i C. Imii'ila n m
a r A ik'u-tn s ,( i a m
Ar , ..,n
-II II tfiini
Ar NuniHiah
0 . a ni
1 i"t p m
4 VI p in
8 4 " p ra
I' ( ' .V I' ) 4 H. am 4 P0 pm
Ar.i-i k-Mllo i v a in !o"ipm
XiKl IIMOUNO
N.w."ri- in.
DAILY
No 11 No"8sT
-j
.M0 f n
0 Vi am I 1 0p n.
7 41) p rr. S 'J 1 p rr.
S'Jtpni W p m
H 8 n m MP in
U 44 p it
2 : 0 p re
7 11 p rr
S iHl p rn
Anpuita
I ' lo'iibw
Cbnil.itta
' I' ' p m
'. l "i p in
'J a m
ti 1 p in
I in a m
1 v Vltmtn
A ( hci ..to,
I. I 'i ' l. tte
ArS'ili-btiry,
HIS a in
4 4 t a m
1 v (..t Spnnns
' A-hfiilii
" S'at-wvillo
Ar SMhiiniry
Iv
h-! ury (Cum lMilpm P 49 p m
Auli ......t. ,, lijum J l 4 l o is 11 t p m
Ar'iMt..n
ShI.mii. P am tSlfim
I tinnsb'o. 7 40 a m fi am
Ar liiiibani, P 47 a m 3Wra
" K'l.iKrt. lO.SSam 7"ilim
A r t.il,l-!i.irr, 1 iHpm 12 10 p ti
1 x :, U.'rr.i" l 50 Vn
1 v r-i!-ikn 1 ro a m 4 Ot) p n
A i i;... i-o.-.i .s v a m
1 (ir.oiiil.' i r. '20 am ll.'Opm 1109pm
Arl'amillfl SiWrim 1 3 i a w 13 '7 a m
" K.- viIIk, iMIam 4 a rn 4 OS a iu
" b ii kviu U2 a m IM a ro 4 51am
" 11 .'hnoo.i. 1 rs p m 7 CO am 7 00 a m
I'ailv. i-x.'opt Hunday
Between West Point and fllchmond.
i i Wrt !Vint 7 20 a. m. dally and 8 ,0
a v .bu'v eTii; t Sim Isv an.! Monday; ar
rn.- Kn Ion, ii.l (i5 and in 40 a. m. Keturn
irt '.-aw Kirhnioml 'A I p. m and 4 45 p. ro
ItU .x,-...t Sunday; arms West Point 5 00
Between Richmond and Ralilgh
VIA KKYSVILLR.
l ....
Hi, bninnd 12 40 n. ni. dailT: leavt
K.o
'! p rn. ; arrie Oiford 5 0B p,
i -..n 7 0 p m , Ptirham 7 40p .,
" o a in Hpturninft leave RalelgV
n , Uilv, P rham ft 10 a. m., Oxford
m . airive KiysviHe 1010 a. m. .
n 1 1 p. m r) iilv
'"i". A H B. R, Ir-ara OsfoH
i ' !" p ni daOy enoep piinday.'l I 40 t
. an a. r-.ve Hemb', n r! 00 a ni.
' p m .1f.;ly, ex.-epf Sun l.iy and 12 M0
v Ki-i.irn.rir, ImTp Hti.deron 6 40
I " '-'' p m, ila ly except Sunda,
' p in. dully, and arrive at Oxfoid
i and Oil p ni daily except Sunday,
' p ni daily.
' at d it rnnnect at Richmond
i i 1
' a
f.d 5
N
fi ni and t. Went Point and Baltimore daily
n pt Sunday.
Nl-.pinB Cr Ncrvlce.
On train No.. 35 anl Sfl, Pullman Buffet
P roper letneen ew York, Atlanta and
Js -ks .liv.llp.
I N
: :-;? mid Pullman Sleeping car
MiktoNew Orleans "New York to
Y
krntTille and Tampa, and
. u i, . , k A'hevil'e. and Washington to
' 1 !l " "1 H ning iar New Yoik to
i : v, and ( bail .tte to Sivannah.
liti No II an I J run gelid between
Hi bin n I and Atlanta and carry Pullman
b ' I I n i ii bitween RMmnnJ
'i'li- an i I eiboro.
E IM'IIKKI K, J. S B THOMPSON.
i..ipci tn'enoeni
I'hinwH. k S- ( Ki.-hinrnl, Va
i W A 11 KK. (ien l Agt.f
W Rl ii)Hton, U O
II IH UWICK Aset Uenl Paae. Aa't
AtUr.ta, () '
pY.H UIU 'W, .SOL HAAS,
- O.ii 'nr., 1 ratrli; Manager,
? l' whin i .u. D. V. Wa-biotOD, D. C
FARM AXD (JARDE5.
CARROT OKTJTJ.
Aa English gardener reports that ha
effectually destroyed the carrot grub,
fcfter it had beeome so abundant as to
canM the tops of carrots to wilt, by
watering them with a liquid made by
putting a bushel of lime and a bushel
of soot into 100 gallons of water. This
was well stirred up and allowed to
stand orer night, then the next morn
ing the clear water w&a used freely in
the common rose-nozzled water-pot.
New York World.
WASTE Of noon rODDITR.
An enormous quantity of corn foddr
is grown each year, but not one-third
of its fe;ding value is procured.
Hundreds of thousands of acres of
stalks are allowed to stand in the
fields until December or-January until
the grain is hanked, and then the
cattle are turned in' the field to put
what they can. Usually thy find
only blades whipped off by the wind
and blown away, and tho stalks baut
and the upper part the best portion
ruined, and even the husks weather
beaten so as to be of little valuo.
Huch feed sr remains is of poor qusilit v.
The greater part of it is rotting (,a
the ground. There is hardly a bottor
or cheaper stock feed than corn fodder,
yet most farmers treat it aa though it
had little or no valu. - Farmer'sf i uide.
NOTES ON WHEAT.
From field experiments carried on
at the Agricultural Experiment Sta
tion, Purdue University, Inliam, re
ported in Bulletin IS, extending over
ten years, it appears thit none of th
varieties of whoat trie I have Rnv ten
dency to deteriorate or "run out,'" pro
Tided proper care in exercise . ,,
wheat proved to be "runt proof," bit
early wheats were generally lews in
jured by rust than later kind Kiht
pecks of aed per acre gave the best
returns at the station, the avpiAp;e
yield for pine year bein? 30.3-1 buslils
per acre. Th best results cam'? fr:
sowings rftade not latr than 8 -pt:iri-ber
20. The value of crop rotation ;n
maintaining yields of grain has 1-en
strongly emphasized, or a compari
son of rotating crops with consent
grain cropping for seven years show I'd
an average gain of 5.7 bush-.-ls pr
acre in favor of the former. Another
important repult obtained was that
wheat may be hniveHtd t nnv time
from the dough stage to t he il:id-np(
condition, without appreciably aftV;t
ing the weight or yield of thetrr.,jn.
A comparison of the forms of nitr.ioeii
r fertilizers for wheat indicated that
sulphate of ammonia is b"lr than
nitrate of no la or dried bloo I.
SOME ADVICE TO ORIVERS.
A driver gave his horse six quarts of
oats about two hours earlier than ho
was usually fed. The harness was
being put on while the horse was feed
ing. The driver managed to g-t his
breakfast in the meantime. Shortly
everything was in readiness and the
horse was started on a long drive. The
driver urged the animal with the whip.
At the end of thirty miles the horse
began to ignore that instrument. He
went slower and slower; filially befell
dead. Post-mortem exam iunt ion
revealed the fact that the oats had not
been digested. The lining of the
stomach gave evidem-e of bavins b;en
in a high state of irritation. It whs
plain that the horse's previous ac
cumulation of nerve power had been
largely exhausted in defending the
terrible irritation set up by the shnrp
points of the undigested oats. Had ilie
horse been permitted to stand, or lio
down for au hour after ft-eding h
would have prepared not only a re
serve of material to sustain !iiinsvlf,
but the imount of nourishing material
accumulated would have helped him to
endure his exhaustive journey. Time
is required for the digestion of food
before beginning a long muscular
strain. It must also seem clear that
when the effort at hard labor ends,
time should be given for rest before
taking food. Rider and Driver.
PKOTTTSTTES FOR A HORSF STABLF.
A horse stable should have thorough
rtramage first, then a solid, non-absorbent
floor ; next, the stalls should
be roomy, and the feeding troughs
should be made so that food oinnot be
wasted. The best lloor is one urtde of
cement concrete, of one part of cement,
two of sand, and five of coarse gravel,
laid three inches thick, and when well
dried anil hard, saturated with hot gas
tar. This makes the lloor waiei and
vermin proof, and very durable, with
sufficient elasticity to prevent injury
to the feet of the animals. The st-dls
should be six feet wide, the lloor ;- p
ing one inch to a shallow gutter in the
rear, from which the liquid mass mm
flow away into a drain. The feeding
trough should have a deep grain box.
if grain is fed, or if cut feed is used,
the whole trough may be the full
length of the width ot the stall. A few
bars fastened across the top of th-
feed box will be useful to prevent the
horse from throwiur out the feed, as
some will do. If long hay is fed, this
should be given in a rack above thw
feed trough, but on account of the
great waste in feeding lojg hay and
whole frrnin, the hay should be cut
and the grain, finely ground, be mixed
with it. This avoids the loss by waste,
which is often one-half of the food.
It is desirable to have a drain from
the stable to a manure pit at a dis
tance, where the liquid may be ab
sorbed by the coarse litter. The
width of a horse stable should be not
less thnn twelve feet, to afl'ord space to
move about in easily. The loose
boxes, ma le nine feet square, are the
most desirable for safety and con
venience, and these may open into a
passage five feet wide. A feediug pas
sage should be made in front of the
stalla.
FARM FENCES.
The growing scarcity of timber in
some parts of the country, and its en
tire absence in others, mase the fence
question a more serious one year by
year. Only in the newly settled
heavy-timbered land do we now see
rails split for fences. Wire in some
form is almost universally used for
this purpose. The woven wire feno
iug which is made in various widths
answers every purpose of a fence, but
it- is too expensive for general use.
Wire and picket fencing does very
well, but it is liable to be broken by
unruly animals, and once a rent i
started it is 6oon of little use to turn
stock. Barbed wire, which composed
the original wire fences of the Wet,
is cruel, and many a horse has been
ruined by being caught on the sharp,
knife-like points.
There is a way of making a wire
fence, however, that is free from the
objections that have been brought
against the others. Plain, smooth
galvanized wire, o. 10 or No. 12, may
be stretched tightly, and fastened to
wooden pouts, with a single ais-inch
board at the top. Instead of the board
a co-nmon "two by four" spiked tothe
oete may bo used, from five to sevec
wires ara needed, according to what it
is desired to fenca against. The lat
ter number put four inches apart near
the gTonnd, and farther apart toward
the top of the post will keep hogs,
cattle, sheep or horses within the in
closure. The railing or board at tin
top is often used on barbed wire fence ,
as the animals can see it more plainly
than they can the wire alone, and
there is les danger of their running
against it. Wire fence of any kind
should be thoroughly braced and Tery
tijrhtly stretched, .r they will aoon
sag and get ort of shape. New York
Tribune.
FARM AM) ARtnr yoTKA
Strain the milk before the cream be
gins to rise.
Medium sized hogs now bring th
largest prices.
The milk is largely affected by the
physical condition of the cow.
It requires about twenty-fiTe poundi
of milk to make a pound of butter.
There is a scarcity of beet sugar
seed in Europe owing to the drought.
The number of sheep killed by dogs
every year is said to exceed 700,000.
To make dairying a success, a dairy
man must be a worker and a business
man.
i.tp'rien-e I butter makers say that
t in :n i -h washing spoils the flavor of
butt-r.
The great fool crops of the world
nre wheat, corn, oats, rye, rice and
potatoes.
There is a good market for trotters
now , but only at p rices consistent with
the facte in the case.
Colts in training, if well eared for,
grow better and keep in better health
than when running at large.
It is established that a horse whose
individuality is strong enough to
create a family type will also fl ths
color with great uniformity.
First-class fancy animals, suitable
for driving and carriage horses, sound
and well broken, are reported as
scarce and bring good prices.
Prices running well into the thou
sands are no longer giTen for road
horses unless the speed and other quali
ties are of an exceptional character.
Many trotting horses, owing either
to natural defects of temperament, to
bad training or to imperfect prepara
tion, are exceedidgly difficult to con
trol. The winter is the time to build the
intended silo, as it can be done with
less interference in other work. Have
the. silo ready and complete for a crop
of corn next season. A silo soon nays
for itself.
Sloppy food is not advisable as a
continued diet for pigs. Give a change
occasionally. The hogs are very par
tial to whole corn, fed dry, and will
eat it from the trough, either shelled
or on the cob.
Currant and gooseberry cuttings
should be about five or six inches long,
and planted two-thirds their length in
open ground. They will root more
quickly if cut a week or two before
using and packed in damp moss. It
is well to keep them partially shaded.
The Sharpless strawberry has been
tested over a large part of the conn
try and does well in almost every lo
cality, but in spite of its excellent
record it sometimes fails. The Jessie
is a line berry when it succeeds, but it
f.hould be tested well before planting
extensively.
Turnips are easily kept by pitting,
if not put in too thick. Make the pits
long and about three au 1 a half feet
high. Cover with straw and about
six inches of earth. Ventilators should
be jdaced about every ten feet. Tho
pit is best made in a sheltered place,
where the suow will not be blown oft
SCIENTIFIC AS I) INDUSTRIAL.
When oxygen is in a liquid state it
is strongly attracted by a powerful
electro magnet.
The beef extract factories in South
America make one pound of extract
from thirty-four pounds of meat.--
A cubic foot of new fallen snow
weighs five and one-half pounds on the
average, and has twelve times the bulk
of an equal weight of water.
It is strange, though true, that in
Asia and Africa, where grass will not
grow, the most beautiful flowers and
shrubs flourish to perfection.
In tiling band sawn, tie a string
where yon begin to file, and then you
can tell when you get around, and
therefore all the tetth'will be sharp,
and ymi will not file any of them twice.
Dr. O. V. Thayer, of San Frsncisc'o,
hfls successfully used the solar cautery
burning glass in removing facial
discolorations of the skin of large area,
also in removing tattoo or India ink
marks.
i At the two large abattoirs of Lyons,
I'rauce, the guards protect the ani
mals to lie slaughtered from seeing
anything connected with the slaught
ering of other animals; a terror is
found to have an injurious effect upon
the secretions and flesh of dumb
creatures.
Refined crystalized sugar, whether
made from the beet or the sugar cane,
is almost, chemically pure and sac
charose, and is the same substance in
both cases. Few articles of food are
so generally free from adulteration as
granulated not powdered or coffee
crushed sugar.
The rate of mortality of London is
shown by a recent report to have
steadily decreased with the introduc
tion and perfection of adequate means
if disposing of the sewage of the city.
At the end of the eighteenth century
the annual average mortality was esti
mated at fifty per 1000, and in J 892 it
had dropped to 10.1 per 1000.
In South America among the moun
tains the evergreen oak begins to ap
pear at about 5.100 feet, and is found
up to the limit of the continnous
forest, which is about 10,000 feet. The
valuable cinchona tree, from which
Peruvian bark is obtained, has a range
of elevation on the mountain slopes
runniug from 4000 to 9500 feet.
In the process of extracting gold
from its ores molten lead is used in
stead of mercury. The lead is melted
on a shallow hearth and the powdered
ore is fed at one eud aud carried for
ward as a film over the surface of the
lead by means of an agitator moving
over it. It is thus brought to the
other end, where it escapes through a
hopper. In order to prevent oxida
tion of the lead the chamber is kept
filled with carbonic oxide from a gas
producer.
A pious-looking man snatched a lit-tl-
woman's pooketbook in a New
York cable car. She jumped off the
car after hjm and chased him until her
cries brought the police. The thief
is ntrested and the plucky woman is
.-.; in carrying her nocketbook.
A white deer, the first seen in Penn-
ivHina for years, was killed near
l'oxburg, in that State, recently.
REV. DR. TALMAGE
THE BROOKLYN WVINirS SUN
DAY SERMON.
Text "n nvjJh-ta n path to gkirvt nff
ftin." Job xll.. 32. J
. VJ,nT f u" "rT ,honn,l ywrs minister of
reiie-ion should preach from thta Bible, then
wil yet be texts unexpoan4M and unex
plained and unappreciated. What tittle
has been said eonoerninjr this chapter to Job
from whih my text It taken bears on th
eontrverev aa to what was really the levia
than described as rlterurblng the a What
creat nr it w.i I know not. 8oms My ft was
a whale. Some ay ft was a craovllle. My
cwn opinion Is It was a sa monster now ex
vn"f. No creature now floatln(r In Medtter
rioean or Atlanta waters corresponds to
Jciii .J'si.'rintlon.
'haf most interests me is that as it moved
.... i.imuun tne neep it left the waters flash
in? an I resplendent. In the words of ths
!"xt'., msketh Path to shine after
Mm. Y hat was that illumined path? It
was pnospboreMen-e. You find ft In the
w.ike of a ship inthenUrht, especially after
roil en weather. Phosphorescence la the
IJiiHnfnar of the sea. That this flfrure of
Fp-e.-h is correct in describing fts appear
au"e I am certified by an Incident. After
rroS-nt? the Atlantio the first time and
writing from Basle. Switzerland, to an Amer
ican magazine en account of my voyage, rn
whidi nothing more fascinated me than ths
pbocphoreG?ene in the ship's wake, I called
it th. htrbtnini? of the sea. Retornlns; tomy
hotel, i found a book of John Ruskln, and
t he f)rt sentence my eyes fell upon was his
description of phosphorescence, In which hs
ealiel it -the lightntn of the sea."
Down to the postofflce I hastened to get
the manuscript, and with great labor and
some upepae possession of the maga
zine arti -le and put quotation marks around
that on sentunce. although it was as orig
in U with mo as with John Ruskln. I sup
pose that nine-tenths of you living so near
the s-a"oast have watched this marine ap
pear ui'-e called phosphorescence, and Ihope
that the other one-tenth may some day be so
bappy as to witness it. It Is the waves of the
sen diamonded ; it is the Inflorescence of the
billows; the waves of the sea crimsoned as
was the deep after the ea fight of Lepanto ;
the wave of the sea on fire.
There are times when from horizon to
nonzon the entire ocean seems in conflag
ration with this strange splendor as It
changes every moment to tamer or mors
dazzling color on all sides of you. You sit
looking over the taffrail of the yacht or
oeo.ni Fiamer. watching and watting to see
what nw thing the God of beauty will do
with the Atlantic. It is the ooean In trans
figuration : it is the marine world casting Its
garments of gloryin the pathway of the
Almighty ns He walks the deep ; It Is an In
verted firmament with all fts stars gone
down with it. No picture can present it, for
photographer's camera cannot be success
fully trained to catch It. and beforettthe
hand of the painter drops Its pencil, over
awe.) and powerless.
This phosphorescence is the appearance
of myriads of the animal kingdom rising,
falling, .laying, flashing, living, dying.
The luminous animalcules for nearly 150
years hiive been the study of naturalists and
the fas -iiiatlon and solemnization of all who
h.ivo bruin enough to think. Now, God,
who puts in His Bible nothing trivial or use
less, calls the attention of Job, the greatest
Fcii-niist of his day, to this phosphorescence,
and :is the leviathan of the deep sweeps past
points out the fact that "he maketh a path
to sbin after him."
Is that true of us now, and will it be true
of us when w have gone? Will there be
eubspicut light or darkness? Will there be
a trial of gloom or good cheer? Can anyone
between now and the next 100 years say of
ns truthfully as the text says of the leviathan
of the deep. - He maketh a path to shine
after him?" For we are moving on. While
we live in the same house, and transact busi
ness in the same store, and write on the same
table, and chisel in the same studio, and
thrash iu the same barn, and worship in the
same church, we are in motion and are in
many respeots moving on, and we are not
where we were ten years ago, nor where we
will be ten years hence. Moving on !
Look nt the family record, or the almanac,
or info the mirror, and see if any one of yon
Is where you were. All in motion. Other
feet may trip and stumble and halt, but the
feet or not one moment for the last sixty cen
turips has tripped or stumbled or halted.
Moving on! Society moving on ! The world
moving ou ! Heaven moving on ! The uni
verse moving on ! Time moving on ! Eter
nity moviug on ! Therefore it is absurd to
think that we ourselves can stop, as we must
move with all the rest. Are we like the crea
ture of tiie text, making our path to shine
after usV It may be a peculiar question,
nut my text suggests it.
What influence will we leave in this world
after we have gonethrough it? "None," an
swer hun Ireds of voices ; "we are not one of
the immortals. Fifty years after we are out
of thu world it will be as though we never In
habits.! it." You are wrong in saying that.
I pass down through this audience and up
throuc'i these galleries, and I am looking for
some one whom I cannot And.
I am looking for one who will have no in
fluence in this world 100 years from now.
But I have found the man who has the least
influence, and I inquire into his history, and
I find that by a yes or a no he decided some
one s eternity. In time of temptation he gave
an affirmative or a negative to some tempta
tion which another, hearing of, was induced
to decide in the same way.
Clear on the other side of the next million
years may be the first you hear of the long
reaching Influence of that yes or no, but
hear of it you will. Will that father make a
path to shine after him? Will that mother
make a path to shine after her? You will bo
walking along these streets or along that
country road 200 years from now in the
character of your descendants. They will
be affected by your courage or your cow
ardice, your purity or your depravity, your
holiness or your sin. You will make the
path to shine after you or blacken after you.
Why should they point out to us on some
mountain two rivulets, one of which passes
down into the rivers which pour out into the
Pacific Ocean, and the other rivulet flowing
down-into the rivers which pass out into the
Atlantic Ocean? Every man, every woman,
stands at a point where words uttered, or
deeds done, or prayers offered, decide oppo
site destinies and opposite eternities. We
see a man planting a tree, and treading sod
on either side of it, and watering It in dry
weather, and taking a great care in its cul
ture, and he never plucks any fruits from its
bough. But his children will. We are all
planting trees that will yield fruit hundreds
of years after we are dead orchards of gol
den fruit or groves of deadly upas.
I am so fascinated with the phosphor
escence in the track of a ship that I have
sometimes watched for a long while and have
seen nothing on the face of the deep but
blackness. The mouth of watery chasms
that looked like gaping jaws of hell. Not a
spark as big as a firefly ; not a white serol'
f surf ; not a taper to illuminate the mighty j
epuicbere of dead ships ; darkness 3000 feet j
deep, and more thousands of feet long an l
wide. That is the kind of wake that a bad
man leaves behind him as he plows through
the ocean of this life toward the vaster ocean
of the great future.
. Now, suppose a man seated in a corner
grocery or business office among clerks gives
himself to jolly skepticism. He laughs at
the Bible, makes sport of the miracles,
speaks of perdition in jokes and laughs at
revivals as a frolic, and at the passage of a
funeral procession, which always solemnizes
sensible people, says. "Boys, let's take a
drink." There is in that group a young
man who is making a great struggle against
temptation and prays night and morning and
reads his Bible and is asking God for help
day by day. But that guffaw against Chris
tiauity makes bim lose his grip of sacred
thtnss. and be gives up Sabbath and church
an I morals and goes irom bad to worse, till
he falls under disai pat ions, dies in a lazar
house an t is buried iu the potter's field.
Another younsr man who heard that jolly
skepticism ma le up his mind that "it makes
.a difference what we do or say, for we wil!
ill eo-ne out at last at the right pl.a-e." and
'ecan as a eonsequence to purloin. Pome
neney that e.i-ne into his hands for others
he applied to his own uses, thinking per
hap he would make it straight some other
time, and all would be well even if he did
not make it straight. He ends in the peni
tentiary. That scoffer who uttered the jokes
against Christianity never realized what bad
work he was doing, and he passed on through
life and out of it and into a future that I am
not now going to depict.
I do noi propose with assar?hlleht to show
the brrakt-rs of the awful coast on which that
ship is wrecked, for my busing now is to
watch the sea after the keel has plowed if.
No phosphorescence iu the wake of that ship,
but behind it two souls struggling in the
wive two young men destroy.! by reckless I
skepticism, an umllumined ocean beneath i
and on all sides of them. Blackness of dark- i
)eit. j
You know what a gloriously gool man i
Rev. John Newton w.s the most of his life.
but tiefore his conversion he was a very
wicked siilor. and on board the shin Har
wich instilled infidelity and vise into the
mind of a youn? man principles which de
stroyed hiiu. Afterward the two met, anl
Newton tried to undo his bad work, but in
va.n. The young man be-.-air-.e wor- anl
who stood by hlni in his last moments,
Better look oat what bad Influence yon
start, for yon may not be able to stop it. It
does not require very great force to ruin
others. Why was It that many Tears ago a
great flood nearly destroyed New Orleans?
A crawfish had burrowed Into tbe banks of
the river until the ground was saturated aal
the banks weakened nntil the flood burst.
But I And here a man who starts out in
life with the determination that he wilt
never see suffering but hs will try to al
leviate it, and n-ver see discouragement
but he will try to cheer it. ani never meet
with anybody but he will try to do him
good. Getting his strength from Gol.be
starts from home with high purpose of doing
all the good he can possibly do In one day.
Whether standing behind tbe counter, or
talking in the business offle with a pen be
hind his ear, or mating a bargain with a fel--low
trader, or out In the flel-1 discussing
w.th his next neighr the wisst rotation of
the crops, or In the shoemaker's 6hop pound
ing sole leather, there H something in bis
face, and in his phraso!ogy and in ht man-n-r,
that demonistrits the grace cf God In
his heart. He can ttlk on religion without
awkwardly dragging tt In by the ears. He
loves God and loves the souls of all whom he
meets and is interested In their present anl
eternal destiny.
For fifty or sixty years he lives that life,
and then gets through with it and goes Into
heaven a ransomed soul. But I am not going
to describe the port into wjieh that ship has
entered.
I ara not going to describe the Pilot who
met him outside at the "lightship." I am
not going to say anything about the crowds
of friends who met htm on the oyrstalllne
wharves up which he goie on steps of
ehrysoprass. For Go l tn His words to Job
callls me to look at the path of foam In the
wake of that ship, an 1 I tell you it is all
a-gleatn with splendors of kindness done,
and rolling with illu-nlni tears that were
wiped away, and a-dash with congratula
tions, an 1 clear out to the horizon in all di
rections is tbe sparkling, flisntng, billowing
phosphorescence of a Christian life. "He
maketh a path to shine after him."
And here I correct one of the mean no
tions which at some time takes possession of
all of us, and that Is as to the brevity of hu
man life. When I bury soma very useful
man, clerical or lay, in his thirtieth or for
tieth year. I siy : "' What a waste of ener
gies! It was hardly worth while for him to
get ready for Christian work, for he had so
soon to quit it." But the fact is that I may
insure any man or woman who does any
pood on a large or small s-?a!e for a life on
earth as long as the world lasts. Sickness,
trolley car accidents, death Itself, can no
more destroy bis life than they can tear
down one of tbe rings of Saturn. You can
start one gooi word, one kind act, one
cheerful smile, on a mission that will last
until the world becomes a bonfire, and out
of that blaze it will pass into the heavans,
never to halt as long as God lives.
There were in the seventeenth century men
and women whose names you never heard
of who are to-day influencing schools, col
leges, churches. Nations. You can no more
measure the gracious results of their life
time than you could measure the length and
breadth and depth of the phosphorescence
last night following the ship of the White
Star line 1500 miles out at sea. How the
courage and consecration of others inspire
us to follow, as a general in the American
army, ceo! amid the flying bullets, inspired
a trembling soldier, who said afterward, "I
was nearly scared to death, but I saw the
old man's white mustache over his shoulder
and went on." Aye, we are all following
somebody, either in right or wrong direc
tions. A few days ago I itood beside the gar
landed casket of a gospel minister, and in
my remarks had occasion to recall a snowy
night in a farmhouse when I was a boy and
an evangelist spending a night at my father's
house, who said something so tender and
beautiful and impresssive that it led me Into
the kingdom of God and decided my destiny
for this world and the next. You will, be
fore twenty-four hours go by, meet some man
or woman with a big pack of care aud trou
ble, and you may say something to him or
her that will endure nntil this world shall
have been so far lost in the past that nothing
but the stretch of angelic memory will be
able to realize that it ever existed at all.
I am not talking of remarkable men and
women, but of what ordinary folks can do.
I am not speaking ot the phosphorescence
in the track of a Newfoundland fishing
smack. God makes thunderbolts out of
sparks, and out of tbe small words and deeds
of a small life He can launch a power that
will flash and burn and thunder through the
eternities.
How do you like this prolongation of your
earthly life by deathless influence? Many a
babe that died at six months of age by the
anxiety created in the parent's heart to meet
that chill in realms seraphic is living yet in
the transformed heart and life of those
parents and will live on forever In the his
tory of that family. If this be the opportu
nity of ordinary souls, what is the oppor
tunity of those who have especial intellectual
or social or monetary eqnipmcnt?
Have you any arithmetic capable of esti
mating the influence of our good and gra
cious friend who a few days ago went up to
rest George W. Childs, of Philadelpjia?
From a newspaper that was printed for
thirty years without one word of defama
tion or scurrility or scandal, and putting
a chief emphasis on virtue and charity
and clean intelligence, he reaped a fortune
for himself and then distributed a vast
amount of it among the poor and struggling,
putting his invalid and aged reporters on
pensions, until his name stands everywhere
for large heartedness and sympathy and
help and highest style of Christian gentle
man. In an era which had in the chairs of its
journalism a Horace Greeley, and a Henry J.
Raymond, and a James Gordon Bennett, and
anErnstus Brooks, and a George William
Curtts, and an Irenaeus Prime, none ofthem
will be longer remembered than George W.
Childs. Staying away from the unveiling of
the monument he had rearel nt large ex
pense in our Greenwoo 1 in memory of Pro
fessor Proctor, the astronomer, lest I should
siy something in praise ot the man who bad
paid for the monument. By all acknowl
edged a representative of the highest Ameri
can journalism.
If you would calculate . his influence for
good, von must count how many sheets of
his newspapers have been published in the
last quarter of a century, and how many
people have rend them, and the effect not
only npon those readers, but upon all whom
they shall influence for all time, while you
add to all that the work of the churches he
belpe ! build and of the institutions of mercy
he helped fonn 1. B"tter give up before you
start the measuring of the phosphorescence
In the wake of that ship of the Celestial line.
Who can tel! the post mortem influence of a
Savonarola, a Winkelrled. a Gutenberg, a
Marlborough, a Decatur, a Toussaint, a Boli
var, a Clarkson. a Robert Raikes. a Harlan
Page, who had 125 Sabbath scholars, eighty
four of .whom became Christians, an 1 six of
them ministers of the gospel.
With gratitu leand penitence and worship
I mention the grandest life that was ever
lived. That ship of light was launched from
the heaver.s neirly 1900 years ago, angelic
hosts chanting, and from the celestial
wharves the ship sprang Into the roughest
sea that ever tossed. Its billows were made
up of the wrath of men and devils, Herodio
and sanhedrlnic persecutions stirrinc the
deep with red wrath, and all the hurricanes
of woo smote it until on the rocks of Golgo
tha that life struek with a resound of auonv
that appalled the earth and the heavens.
But In the wake of that life what a phospho
rescence of smiles on the cheeks of souls
pardoned, and lives reformed, and Nations
redeemed. The millennium Itself is only
one roll of that iradiateJ wave ot gladness
and benediction. In the sublimest of all
senses It may bo said ot Him, "He maketh a
path to shine after Him."
But I cannot look upon that luminosity
that follows ships without realizing how fond
the Lord is of life. That Are of the deep is
life, myriads of creatures all a-swira and a
play and a-romp in parks of marine beauty
laid out and parterred and roseated and
blossomed bv Omnipotence. What Is the nse
of thoss creatures called by tbe naturalists
"crustaceans" and "eopepods." not more
than one out of hundreds of billions of which
tre ever seen by human eye? God created
ahem for the same reason that He creates
flowers in places where no human foot ever
makea them tremble, and no human nostril
ever inhales their redolence, and no human
eye ever sees their charm. In the botanical
world they prove that God loves flowers, aa
in the marine world tbe phosphor! prove that
He loves life, and He loves life in play.life in
brilliancy of gladness, life In exuberance.
And so I am led to believe that He loves
our life if we fulfill our mission as fully as
the phosphor! f-jifill theirs. The Son of God
came that we might have life and have it
more abundantly." But I am glad to tell you
that our God is not the God sometime de
scribed as a harsh critic at the head of the
universe, or an infinite scold, or a God that
loves funerals better than weddings, or a
God that prefers tears to lau ghter. an om
nipotent Nero, a ferocious Nana Sahib, but
the loveliest Being in the universe, loving
flowers and life and play, whether of phos-
Ehori in the wake of the Majestic or of the
uman race keepings holiday.
Bnt mark you that the phosphorescence
ha a glow that the night monopolizes, and I
asc you not only what kind of influence you
ar coins to leave in the workl as you pass
through it. but what light are you going to
throw across tbe world's night of sin and
sorrow? People who arts sailing on smooth
and at noon do not need much sympathy,
but what are you going to do for people in
the night of misfortune? Wlil you droo on
them shadow, or will you" kindle for then?
pbospboresesaee?
At this moment there are mors people cry
ing than laughing, more people on the round
world this moment hungry than well fed,
more households bereft than homes un
broken. What ar yon going to do about it?
"Well," says yonder soul. "I would like to
do something toward illumining the great
ocean ot hamaa wretchedness, but I cannot
do much.'
Can you do as much as one of the phos
phor! In the middle of ths At Untie Ocean,
creatures smaller than the point of a sharp
pin? Oh. y." you say. Then do that.
Shins! Stand before the looking glass and
experiment to se If yon cannot get that
scowl off your forehead, that peevish look
out of your lips. Have at least one bright
ribbon in your bonnet. Embroider at least
one white corl somewhere in the midnight
of your apparel Do not any longer imper
sonate s funeral. Shine! Io say something
cheerful about society and about the world.
Put a few drops of heaven Into your dispo
sition. Oniieina while substitute a sweet
orange for a sour lemon.
Remember that pessimism is blasphemy
and that optimism ts Chrlstisnity. Throw
some light on the night o.m If you can
not be a lantern swinging in the rigging, be
one of the tiny phosphor! back of the keeL
Shine ! "Let your light s shine before men
that others seeing your good works may
glorify your Father which is In heavn."
Make one person happy every dav. an 1 do
that for twenty years, and you will have
made 7900 happy. You know a man who has
lost all his property by an unfortunate in
vestment or by putting his name on tbe back
of a friend's note. After you have taken a
brief nap. which every man an f woman is
entitled to on a Sun lay ateruoon. go an l
cheer up that man. You can. If Gol helps
you. say sometbln? thv wilt do him good
after both of you have been dea l a thousand
years.
Shine! You know of a family with a bad
boy who has run away from horn-. Go be
fore night and tell that father and mother
the parable of the proligal son. and that
some of the illustrious and useful mn now
in church and state had a silly p is in
their Uvea and ran a wy from home. S'line !
You know ot a family that has lost a child,
and the silence of the nursery glooms the
whole house from cellar to garret. Go tie
fore night and tell them how much that child
has happily escap-!. sin?e the most prosper
ous life on earth is a struggle.
Shine ! You know of some invalid who is
dying for lck of au appetite. She cannot
get well because 6h i cannot eat. Broil a
chicken ani take it to her before night and
cheat her poor app-tite into keen rdisb.
i'-hine! You kno.v of so.ne one who likes
you, and you like him, and he ought to be a
Christian. Go tell htm what religion has
done for you, and ask him If you can pray
for h'.m.
Shine! Oh, for a disposition so charge 1
with sweetness and light that we cannot help
but shine ! Remember if you cannot be a
leviathan lashing the ocean into fury you
can be one of the phosphori, doing your part
toward making a path of phosphores-eace.
Then I will tell you what impression you
will -leave as you pas through this life and
after you are gon. I will tell you to your
face and not leave it for the minister who of
ficiates at your obsequies.
The failure In all eulogium of thedepartei
is that they cannot hear it. All hear it ex
cept the one most interested. This, in sub
stance, is what I or some one else will sav of
you on such an occasion "We gather" for
offices of respect to this departed one. It is
Impossible to tell bow many tears be wipe!
away, how many burdens he lifted, or how
many souls he was. under Go 1. instrumen
tal in saving. His influence will ni-ver cease.
We are all better for having known him.
"That pillow of flowers on th9 casket was
presented by his Sabbath-school cla3s, all of
whom he brought to Christ. That cross of
flowers at the head was presented by the
orphan asylum which he befriended. Those
three single flowers one was sent by a poor
woman for whom he bought a ton of coal,
and one was by a waif of the street whom he
rescued through the midnight mission, and
the other was from a prison coll which he
had often visited to encourage repentance in
a young man who had done wron.
"Those three loose flowers mean quite as
much as the garlands now breathing their
nroma through this saddened home crowded
with sympathizers. 'Blessed are the dea l
who die in the Lord. They rest from their
i.nbors, and their works do follow them.' "
Or if it should be the more solemn burial
at sea, let it be after the sun has gone down,
and the captain has read the appropriate
liturgy, and the ship's bell has tolled, and
you are let down from the stern of the vessel
Into the resplendent phosphorescence at the
wake of the ship. Then let some one say, tn
the words of my text, "He maketh a path to
shine after him "
THE LABOR W(3RLD.
Tht.re ar 125 clerks' unions.
A weaves in Germany receives sixty cents
s day.
Fto-PAcxEBS in Asia Minor, if skillfu', can
make twenty cents a day.
A cowrEcnowEB in Venezuela can earn
from tl2 to tl6 per month.
Sevei milmoj persons are employed In the
cultivation of the vine in France.
The Meriden (Conn.) Cutlery Company hr.s
cut waga6 five to twenty-five per cent.
The text He congress of France has decided
to adopt a standard list of prices, as in Eng
land. Ixmates of the State Prison at Providence,
R. I., are making boots for the Brazilian sol
diers. A Nashville (Tenn.) labor leader wants
the unions to emp!oy lawyers to prosecub
people who violate labor laws.
Ax agricultural laborer in India is sup
pose 1 to receive five cents a day, but in gen
eral his wages are not so large.
The average farm laborer in America,
doesn't mnke 9 250 a year and a large pro
portion Jjve on less than 150 a year.
Mossrr (Conn.) mills have shut down, but
. n mnt will Ka ehanrod nneratfve in the
j company's houses so long as the factory i
Idle.
The Portland (Me.) Central Labor Unlor.
wants a law to prevent the employment o
children under fourteen, and an Employers'
Liability act.
Whe a boss In Luxemburg needs an em
ploye he fills out a blank and for five cent
the news is posted In all the postoffices In
Wurtemborg.
Under ihe English Employers' Liability
bill, which has pissed second reading, ths
losses will have to pay damages to men in
jured in their emp!oy.
John Bra:B and other men prominent in
Enu'lis1! labor circles are to come to this
i-ountry to confer with their brethren In the
cause on this side of the Atlantic.
The late General Maltzeff. of Persia, wrs
reported to be one of the heaviest employe;
o" he p In the world. In his twenty-nin.
min-s he gave work to 55.000 workmen.
Hii.lsbobo, New Mexico, a new mlnii:
c imp. iioasts of having no unemployed mo
Work is offered to all miners who go triers
T ie -o!d ore runs from 45 to 10S a ton.
The Master Workman of the Cooks' A?-se-riMv.
K. of L., at Omaha is a colored
! man. irn-1 tbe Worthy Foreman is a white
man. The Treasurer is white, and the Sec
retary colore!.
R. B. Fbet, of the United Iron Worker., is
In Pittsburg working up an emigration
movement to the co-operative colouy at To
poloVvnpo. Mexico. It is said that 20,000
people could prosper there..
Is Holland women and persons of either
Bex under the age of sixteen are now forbid
den to b-gin work earlier than 5 a. ro., or to
continue at work after 7 p. m.. nor can their
work exceed eleven hours a day in all.
A stboie of gooi fortune has cometotii
, Phonixville (Penn.) Iron Company in trm
shape of a contract for 50.000,000 pounds c
' iron for the construction of a railroad bridge
I more thin two miles long over tbe Missls
j sippi near New Orleans. The contract, it is
said, will keep ths works busy for two
years.
Glass globes for generating elertri-j
it v were used by Newton anl other
THE MICROSCOPE.
A careful microscopical
examination and chemical
analysis of the urine, is a
valuable aid in determining
, the nature of many chronic
disea.ru. particularly those
of tbe nervous system.
' blood, liver, kidneys, and
bl.itHer. Thsss aids make
it possible to treat suefc dis
' cscs successfully at a dis
j tance, without personal ex
i aminition rt the patient
! Tbut Bright s Disease of the
: Kidnevs. Inflammation of
tbe Biadder, Gravel, and
I other bitaeases cf the Uri
nary Oryrans are success
fully treated. Nervous De
I bility, Exhaustio-i, Dropsy,
; Liver Disease, and many
other Chroafe Maladies are
cured witoout seeing the patient. Writs for
. question blanks, treatise, and other informa-
Don, describing case, and isrclose 10 cents, in
I etarnps, tn pay pottage. ,
i Address, Wori.d'b DisrttSART Medical
; Ahmociatioi. No. fjttf Usm Street, uf-
mo. a. x.
Highest of all in Leavening Tower.- Latest U. S. Gov't Report.
Li
ABSOLUTELY PURE
roiseaed Arrewt.
Toisoned arrows have been in use
since time out of memory. We have
it on the authori'. of both Strabo and
Aristotle that the ancient Gauls poi
soned both their arrows and the shafts
of their spears with a preparation of
vegetable poison extracted from what
is now believed to have been a species
of hellebore. The Scythians went a
step farther and ned the venom of
ecrpents intermixed with the virni of
putrid blood, the latter being one of
the most active and incurable of the
poisons known even to-day.
The natives of Japan, the Ainos,
prepare their arrow poisons from a se
cretion of the bamboo, and the same
may be said of the Aborigines of Bor
neo, Java and New Guinea.
In Central and South America the
"Woorara" poison was the terror ol
the early explorers, as well as of the
modern scientific expeditions. Analyses
of several specimens of arrows rubbe I
with this poison prove it to bea mix
ture of rattlesnake venom, putrid
blood and juice from the plant or tree
which produces ths strychnine of
commerce.
Among the North American Indians
the Sionx, the Apaches, Comanches,
th- Bannocks, the Shoshones and the
Blackfeet were the chief tribes which
used poisoned war implements. Tho
Sioux obtained their supply of venom
and virus by forcing large rattlesnakes
to strike their fangs repeatedly into
the liver or kidney of a deer or buf
falo, aud then allowing the meat to
putrefy. When a war party went out,
one of their number was made barer
of this putrid, venom-soaked mass,
and whenever a battle was imminent
each brave would take turns at jab
bing his arrows into the poison.
Among the other tribes mentioned, al
though the process of obtaining the
poison supply was not always inden
tical with the above, the general mo
dus operandi and results were very
similar. St. Louis Republic
tiot ham's Smallest House.
The smallest brick house in New
York has been open for business. It
is nine feet high, fiftoen feet eight
inches deep, and was built on property
in East Houston street last week leased
from the Astor estate. The front is
four feet, four inches in width by
actual measurement, and there is a
a glass show window in the store
about ten inches in width reaching
half way down the front. Washing
ton Star.
Many persons are broken down from over
work or household cares. Brown's Iron Bit
ters rebuilds the system, aids digestion, re
move excess of bile, and cures milarla. A
splendid ionic for women and children.
Farmf.rs are establishing colonies in
Texas.
Beware of Olatmeats for Catarrh That
C'eatala Merrerv.
as mercuny will surely destroy the sens of
Fmell and completely derange tne wholesystem
when entering it through the mucons surface.
Such articles should never be nsed except on
prescript ions from reputable physicians, aa the
damage they will do is ten fold tothe good yon
can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh
Cure manufactured by F. J. C'henev A Cb.,
Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken
internally, acting directly upon the blond and
mucous surfaces of the system. In buying
Hall' Catarrh Cure be sure to get the genuine.
It is taken internally, and is made in Toledo,
Ohio, bv F. J. Cheney A Co. Testimonials free.
t"fSold by Druggists, price 75c per bottle.
Prabie fires are doing much damage In
Oklahoma.
N.I S4I-KH lKMfcHV ran lie had for f'ntlgllS
Old folds, or anv tumble of the Throat, than
. iiviV JfronWi(l Tvrhtt." l'ri-e f rents.
Si l'l .ili) ill hrm.
Twin sons of Charles J. Frost were drowned
nt Joliet, III.
Ladles needing a tonic, or children who
want building up, should take Brown's Iron
Bitters. It is pleasant to take, cures Malar a
Indlgeetion. Hilioutnens and Liver Coinp'aints,
makes the Blood rich and pure.
Thf. depression in Canada is greater than
for thirty years.
I'ifH-liam' Pills rnre indigestion and consti
pation. Bet ham's- no others. Zt cts. a box.
If lifted HI Iimi rnjnu-nlli I C Th III,,
-nVEye at-tr Urn -is's -ll at 2'c per b t
Those
n
Pimples
Are tell-tale symptoms that your blood is not lipdit full of im
purities, causing a sluggish and unsightly complexion. A few
bottles of S. S. S. will remove all foreign and impure matter,
cleanse the blood thoroughly and give a clear and rosy com
plexion. It is most effectual, and entirely harmless.
Chas. Heaton, 73 Laurel St., Phila., says: "I have had for year a humor in
my blood which made me dread to shave, as small boils or pimples wonld be cut
thus causing shaving to be a great annoyance. After faking three bottles of
i my face is all clear
splendid, sleep
from the ose of S.
I I Sei4 far TraMfee
BI4i4SkliiDMMniiMIW iFlt I Oftliirib IU, AUatlU. Ol.
Mrt I tn I O UaM...r,n. D. t. No a Ij . tee
ud-iI I Hen1 i-lital, eit Vr:e tor lnentT' Onl le
R N TT
tt. r. noroi HHOB
equaU (..lion work, rotting from
J4 tn fi, N-t vsl'ie for ' money
n inc worm. .-ame ing pint
Tiirpr n the bonom. Every
pair warranted, i ate no auofti.
Ir See lor jl papers or ff-ill
ii-w:rirnion ctf our cmnplele
TSftWATfPlrj
int l-vr lame ana wrr..
DOUCU,"---1- -V l'lrmU4 Catalog
giving In.
struct ion
snuT"" I how to or.
dee bv mail. P"taire free Vo-i ran rt the best
t jrgaint c f CraJcrt who fiih our ihoti.
$I2ti$35&
Cm m he a 4 werlt i fa r
rarue ief errna who can
I oral) a kurw mtA treJ
A WEEKs?S
throuiB th cmtr: t -am.
t BoC Mearr. A
raraocte In tiwna a el
rtOea M a n1 mo i.eu of gom! rharw-ter will Sod
tbta an nr-epimnal of.pi,rtnltT f.jr prorvtahl em
i. meet. Si axe hour mar he ne I to I aleao
tage. It. V JOHSi-MH A O.,
lllh a Mala Ktrb1. Va.
WORLD'S
FAIR
AWARDS
a"l one Tnplorria for
Ml lasaa ana a tlaaf ar.'lver
Jaa of then vehicle &
. hee-a sold Slret to t people
X. Send at on re for our coailjtrl
ryeatalugu ' Kol every kind'
LX vrklrleit hl am 111 bo?
. tw. of testimonial, tner a.re free
iXlANCE CARRIAGE $07 CINCINNATI
r- rtL? r
Baking
Powder
Modern Lifeboat.
There are mar.y kinds of lifeboat
knd many other devices for effecting
communication by lines between
wreck aud the hore. The type of
boat in most general use in our ser
vice is distinctively known as a surf
boat. It is made of white cedar upon
a white-oak frame. It is from twenty
five to twenty-seven feet in length,
with its fthcr dimensions proKrtion
"te. It is propelled by six oars, and
will carry, besides the crew, from tea
to fifteen person. The excellence of
the boats is ehowa by th record
during the eighteen years they have
been used in the hands of the life-saving
crew. They have been launched
in actual service 67:50 times, and have
safely landed fiom wrecked vessels
6733 persons. They Lave capsized
but fourteen times, aix of these acci
dents being attended with loss of life.
Of the boats' crews, twenty-seven were
drowned, being one for every 240 lives
saved.
A "self-righting lifeboat is largely
nsed in th English servioe, and in
iiur own to a limited extent by way of
experiment. This boat is constructed
Twth air-i-bamht-rs at the bow and
stern and several hundred pounds of
iron in the keel. These cause the boat
to "right"' itself when capsized by the
waves. It is of necessity heavy and
cumbersome, and the record for actual
service is ou the whole favorable to
the smaller anil lighter surfboats
adopted by our own Government. The
proportionate loss of life from capsiz
ing is considerably less with the surf
boats. The self-righting boat is four
fold heavier than the other, weighing
about 4000 pounds. Boats are being
constantly improved and perfected,
one of the latest devices being for
self bailing, by which water that may
b "shipped," or fills the boat as the
result of m capsize, is instautly ex
pelled. A boat combining nucceasfully
the propcrtii-n of self righting aud
6elf-bailing would seem to be nearest
possible approach to the ideaL Pop
ular Science Monthly.
Venezuela has 2, 100, 000 people, and
one Protestant missiouarv.
"Almost as
Palatable as Milk"
This is a fact with regard
1 to Scott's Kmulsion of Cod
Liver Oil. 'Ihe difference
between the oil, in its plain
state, is very apparent. In
Scott's Emulsion
you detect no fish-oil taste.
As it is a help to diges
tion there is no after effect
exceH rood effect. Keep in
i mind that Scott's Emulsion
is the best promoter of flesh
and strength known to
science.
Prepurrd br Srott A Bnwn. SI V All druccirt
WALTER BAKER & GO,
COCOA and
CHOCOLATE
Highest Award
I Mrdla nil Dlplamad
World's Columbian
E position.
on th following aittdsa.
name); :
ErdUHST fOfll,
rm tn i. i ( HomiTL
'.I KH1 SHUT mrtJUTE,
UMIll tniilOLlTK,
CiKIl El TUB,
rorMrntitf of mtr1fti.
ei'Tll-Mil fUror. and huii
OLD BV CROCEJte rVEBVWMERt.
WALTER BAKER & CO., DCRCHESTtR, MASS.
and smooih as it hou:c! te appetite
well ana teel like running a toot race, an
S. S.
etuirr rnrnirm en I u i e 1
BOYS
iimninr f i Bii'i ti- r-av M-Bt
AMU UIM. J wa-o.ntr.r hooi. toJ
i I I. II f'll e'.e.
! j a p a n e 3 e t o o t h : :r r--
v anallM f'T Vr. I i ; lrn , I r.ila1.-l.h'a, !.
Cfinn I llflf Sramr.lngOntSt.JAir,"-
u v U W I.UUII I
f'.iw1T l'a1 n4 eopy nt
l.iri.a Neeriiewiirk. Stanr
ainliam'a. I W. -4lftft.,W.r.
mr. ei-, m.
A A A A
Greatest cf Family Games
Progressive
America.
M
The. moat entertaicicg an j ln'nxtl
frame ol the century. It delightfully
traxhes American (fgraphy, vhlle it
la t- yosng and old aa Uaoaatiaf
at .hit. Can be p'ajed by anyeam
ber ot IjTtt Sent e f mail, poatar
prepaid. f' fifteen 2-'toiump. Ihe
Trade Company, fc-alon, Mass.
H
T T V V V
l A A A A A A A"
Ha
Jl'll'lal-m
Ceasaaptlvc sad aaopla
who h weak lungs or Aaaav
ma. so on Id Plao's Car f or
Consumption. It ha ewrad
f ttwauida. ft baa not n)or
e I on, it is not bawl to laaa.
It la IB bwteoagh arena.
Sold eTarrwaera. SAc
;r""""' if3
7M