In the gardens around London there
are more rpecimens of the ceJir of Le
banon than on Mount Lebaaoa itselL
'fon't Tobncio Sj-lt r Fias'ce Toar L!f
A ira r
Is th truthfu', s'.iu-fli-jp title of a .-ooi
about N'-'l'f-lJ.'V. tee 'ntnil--', sruaranteel
tobacco li.-i'jit ufth.-it liri--"ip iiiootinize t
nrve. (liir.iuat'1 ti! tiu ii'ison, makes
weak ineti alu Ftreiith. ifof an-i man
liool. Yo'i run n) j ltv-i -nl -ot financial
ri."k, no N;-To -Pi' i 'fjM ly lrn;:i;H
everywhere, mi W a i,'irirai, to '-ure or
Tuony r'-f')!i'l" 1. V.-)' k fro-. A t. Stirling
!ii"ly O . New York or Chiemjo.
Are Yon I rtnitier Atvl 1 Voii Want
Your I ro'it'ffs to Y ly Away?
You -!!. r. ! -aoiI.I-'. trout,!.-, anxi.ty
Ati'l fiaiii. aii'l oi l::!r.ly V. now li;t iiii-vott.
i;i, t i ft i'i r !'-! ti - ; - t "in.1, it t ' 1 for a
Juf'i t mi" "'i I'-'1 I ' ii f'f'ur.- h i -i' .-! 1 ) v
,,.iv iiii'l!'. Iii.ir; l. no-. li.t i- tin- ttintt.-r?
If , ... it!i 1. i !- '. i : T ' mild i-t t ' ri I -
tn.'.lu in'-.' 'I I- t !.:. i ' " ill. ir tl
Hri'l!:-r. 'I i.-r"- I - f - t - ; H ! I -. ill 'to
a ;it it t! i-i'i nt i.f v ! i ti t ' pi Hi' I !; i t r : I !.!
if v..ii H 1 : .-it. - .0 . -tit - r" r I-!.
! mi- (..'If tiy --M -Ii 'J'. ! ' -
!InItiflriir(oiiib!nrtoUrrfactirrllh
to tbe l.n?t-r liuvt. T!i revi vin j properties'
of I'arkct'V 'liriirtr T'.i.ic nvrrcurafl thy-e Ills.
From Aii'!. Ala.
I have f'llly t' if ' 'I I mrntive f'j!it e-j of
Tetteiine ii"ti v 'I i of F run of
M'lMjorti I it r i 1 1 ;- .it, I I'Hi i; O ., tl, , ... U
( I fe. t I" I : T i : I - i I l,eln-e ,;.t it
a ill i 'i re ti , ,t .t I ' in t. ( '. I. S. t in
tlii:t. M !' '-tut ' , it. -il ffi W. in fcta:i:p,.
J. 1 . Mi'ie't ill' , rt -. ; ;.i.
Out Of f-orls.
TV. it I tlx- vv yet ff! ns riMj!r rf tho
l.e'1-li '.n l.iil , iin voti itro'o" tliU mnrn-)nt-.
;t it, i...ir ,.,Ht f,-m ' ,r,i,t
- iv 1-y hkii. - C . ,.t.. Tii'-r--. tt.. tat,.Urd
I iiii ily fir .')' i-.ti - ;i j4 ., , r , o.nj.liiint.
Flffl toi iK freo lit. Kii.v.' r.nriT
NuiiVf. I'ni'i l?. No ft t ' i I ' ilri i'ny '
Mat v ! ii i ti '' i- ; I t c.'.'.'O t iWtl !
tJuJi-ft-. i'r. Klin-,":'! A r 'i .' I., I "Irla., I'i,
I!rrrnt Knm lltiif it f
to H'l Tr i u 1 1 !i cur in, a ml I l-.i-y j,rr not r'inlil".
He to .il i i n :, r-i.i -. l!n miriili i I iri-lci corns
Mi-. W i n I'i iv " , S.i. it 1 1 i ti ; S i ti (t for i liil-l i - ti
I hifi . ..It.ii. llit- ,Mit. i. ti'lni. . j nil. i in. t-
I f.n . Il.i . J. nil" Ml f - u iif I ' 'ill'-. U' ' . il l.iil ! It-
I r.iii I i "ii i iikoi'I I'i-.i'-i ('nri- f'ir Cnn
..iiiiimI I ti 'i!.;ir. fr..io A -1 Ii hi ( !;.
II 'ii.n.r.n, I I. Mm i.-l. Wi-., .M.i y I, ".').
The Foundaffon
Pure, ilich Blood
Anil the fiurnt, l'Cfit way to
jituify your bluo l in to tako
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Hood's PHisl:7Fri;?
A5K YOUR DIUKHilST TOR
The BEST
FOOD
FOR
JOHN CARLL' & SONS, New York.
HUDSON'S
BUSINESS UNIVERSITY
il MII.OT'l K. N. C.
C10 Ii,vs f"r ,"'Mltt Uiislnoss
1"? oiirs(. A-tn.il J'.usiiifss from
Mart to llni-li. Tin' only I'.iimih-.-s "olli-vr in
tli South that yttii t ;ni try l foiu jtaviug
the tuition. Si-ii'l f..r t ";it nli ;ru.
.1. liriSO, Irln.
CUKIS WHiHI- ill II (All 1
Best t'DUKh bru(. Tattcn (tiHiti. Uec
in mm. Nilil lv ilriiu7Mt
WANTED
Bright Boys and Girls
TO
Sell the New York Ledger
I:erv AVcck.
lllft ! I.r D.iltlo YVoi-ff.
'I he N v Vol U i .i'i, c Iiis lrii .. m j n v ao.
1'lu Ml hint h..!ii I .mvs .in. I ih lliioiiciiont
1h coiintiy i.iiiliiiit In m-II t!n .fn'-r y
thp et'K, .is v. i ll as Ly Mii'm i ion f'oi the
iir. m h.iM il.'ci.lt.l t .- u-!l.
inv.iU.' ouii:: iijifiiU ini xtiv t'n in the
COIlllll.V.
tV tYsinl mi ttihr Vorl.ir in
Hirry Il;n v.
1 Iiimli iiN of sniai t tioyainl t'n Is in ovi1 rv
locality lt.i st i i .i 1 1 . . 1 1 1 ' .i.u v I iiiif cavil
Wrt'k.
Ktt ntl Our lr:iu.
We w.itil jibt Mu h uiirs I twill, for us .i
littlo wlnlo .rv MiU mIIiih: ,..,, nt
r. ruts i'i h - 1 1 in i in- .. i. it ii 1 1. 1,'., i, i
inal .iti.l let M,., v ji.j,,.,- i.il,:lu,ltb
N v YoiL (..';,- r.
"c lsill tCiK.
Our yoiiii.t :i'-t nt iko ti. j i:.il,l. i jsl,-AVo8-ii.
a lo.ui.ll.-of ..;. m . iv v. i k. .in.j
t lnv Mil I h. in lil... ." ik s.i :. i rut s iai h.
r.vvry on.- wants t!i" N.w York y ...- a-)
poon ;.s ti-. I'M mi o;..oiiiiit v In -a;nine
nn.l n ail a rnpv of it. It will only he n, ,-. s
saiy tor ;ui ;t:-iit to Miow a Iik. lv n a.lot
our oil. r ol I
$1,000 in Cash Prizes to Readers
1.0 0 in iili lri . o l.rtler j
lkiiIi
An.l a r. cnlar i. a.l. r ill I s. , nr. .1 on t lie
M'ot. I' ll ac.ott lioilkl 1. .i.l . ii.'liiM-. I 'o :
t.-rinsi.t Uo Ki.mmincj, i, it I
I'llVl.i. is win. m-. th. I. I ..iiiiti.;i ,,( j
t!i mvM,,v of Mi-s rioi.n. . .n.l. ,,. I
. in I. o r 1 1 1 1 v- iiis.'i. vim,- trv . ii. in..- in
II.M . .!..,, i'..., ,, , l ,t, , Si nt. II. I'Mtill.vl
I ll M '!.. i i- .1' tl... I.... 1., il... 1 i
IVi. h a-, .,t w ill It., i n i i to l oinnVt-; for
tlu fil.DllO ia ( ,, IViv.
'l lic Cnlrr I'rrr.
If tli.' l'oslniat. r or anv r. si.on-il l.. party
Will P. ml MS I'ao l; :, ,,f ;i l,v r
pirl to si II il,,. ,,, cwi v w.-. k in" his
town. v.. wi l p;r ;ui ovtri ... ii the
njfi'iit s 1-mi. 11, .i, h vt . k.i'i I." !, In,
flif t tl - piny ; i ;...ti,li,i- tin- ;.-fHt so
lone J.s III .'.., ..t M U (I,,. , r
S-Il.l ill t!" l: in.- of .1 mii.m l ,,v or ;-i,l ;,t
omo. th. in till out tins i.'np .:, ...!
SOliil ll :;t !:!. ,-: '
t tier-!'- ncr-o t" n.-t from .'pt- acrnt f.-r the
y.fv.- ,.rk .'..,. ,.,i ,, :t t:, , ,4(!.t.f
IV "';! ",o-r m ' 'til . . ..j.v n,'M- . v ,
tl.it 1 viM iM'ii i.-l l st-r t'l.n I',.- y. r t;r
Ii v s , , ,i, ., , i,i.,.,k f ,,ril!.',... , , .
. T.' '' " !v 1 "' ii it t.i uh.
?u,;!;;.r,;''tra: "-.tr 11 u!l u:,,i,M iu
Xante
' AtUnss
j Staff
Appointed by
Itlress NEW YORK LEDGER,
William Street, New York.
l&BANUto
RILL ARP'S LETTER.
HATS, IIEES AND WOMEN PHY
LOS'OPIIICALLY IISCUSSED.
WllMam Wishes He Were a NaturalUt
Oen. Young's Crazy Quilt.
La-t nlKht whil e were all q-iietly realinff
my wife lnokc'l up an 1 rcmatk-'J: "Thro Is a
l-t in the room." A hms time ago the ued
to jump up with ala ri'j anl into another
room ati'l wait 'till I p t the lit 1 1 varmint out,
I nt aniio '!omi':i tak-fi t!i" --are out of a wo
inn an w ll ai a rnao, ao'l co now she kopi her
Ha. Til ii Is fti'l. "Hike ttie limp Into the
hall an-1 it will ko outf" l,.t n woulJn't. My
wifet-al'l, "'you loi'l I'-Tift the broom ant
kiiork it lowj, hut ilon't yon knock it this
way." I notice! that 'he hal put I he Sunny
South on her hea'l Hi-Mle fahion, anJ the Kirls
ha 1 -'V-rr'l up all l.iU th-ir -jen. Carefully
I rnouiitl t, rhir arnl l'f:an to eweep for the
httt creatine a it nMnirneil aionii.l, tut it
takf- a lotiK time anJ I lost my j (-rj'eudicular
s Ter.il titles. ' The ha', m the mtsHing link,"
tsaviil I as I pave another rtroke. "Hvems to be '
nal'I ray aile. "Ton mitM it every time. ' It
t notnn amplnbioin atiimal," Raid I. '"but T6' j
amhij;tiriiH." paid Mie. "It i chiropterons and
Tint ri tilio," raitl I as I mule another lunge
aii'l the rhair careeiied and let me down eay.
I'Ati-iiiK a while to Kit breath, I r--rnfirked that
thwe big wordu of L!imeus nie.mt haTinj? hand-
an ! flngfrs and coming ont a twilight. "Well,
do pl'-aae pet the thing ont of hero and
you cen tell im about it aft rwardij," said my
wife. The n it effort waa an accidental
kiiccm. Tie but won knocked down and
Kwept cu. Then I got the oyclopvdia and dis
covered from it how the bat w.nabird that laid
niV8, but gsve birth to it young and Ruckled
them how it ha t hand and feet and fingers
and toe nd even finder na'M and toe nails
Mow It ha'l teeth, canineR nnd moldrR; how it
wn not blind but had lifMe tiny t-ym hid in
ihehalr, even that cHiinot bear the light an I
lire entin ly ch aid wh n flyii., ar nind a lighted
ioim. nvi'-r ( xperimented with them n l
I ii' their eye out and they could Htill fly aioiin.l
and never t.-u -h a wall or a ceiling. lit n:.il
it wan oi' iiit; to their exipii-ite netme of touch
and of smell and luarin. The ancients said
(he bat had a hixfh H-iie by w hich they could
avoid eolliion with wall an ! no forth, but Cu
vi' r did not think no. They are a very ancient
little animal and I reel on ha l a place some
where in NoahV rk, but wedyn't know whether
I e put them with the birds or the bug. Moses
diclared them unclean and chm ed them with
owls nnd vultures. It R'-ems to n that it is a
poor, inigerabl" Iif.- they live, but I reckon they
' njoy it, -fjeciy when they come In the
hoiine and alarm 'he women and children.
'I hey have a nniipie and lonely place in crea
tion, there being but two or three kinds, and
tle y never croi-H or mix and have n- society.
They hiive the Ininisture hands and feet of hlt
miin ln-ingn, the le th of a dog and wings to fly
like a bird. Kven I ai win could not tell whether
iheyevolnied backward r forward.
I wich that I w.is a natui alisf. It is an ever
I vinn lnvstery t Mudy theso litil.t cr. atnies
til aionnd ns. Ib.w a fly can ho nwifily glide
upon th win. low p..e, what language tho ants
ue as th'-y pa-H mid iepas w.-c another asthev
u'i and come from their hidden ii'-nts. I wa'cli
ihem on the polm in the trelbnand they never
fail to pause for an in-taut and siiy t-oini tiling
itnd quickly j ass n. Ma bo :t is "Howdy,"
or "Are nil well?" or "I am glad to nee you
. ive my love to the chil lr. n.'' That they say
something there is no doubt Then there are
th" I'ghtiiiug bus t Ii a' won 1 1 h-a great won
'h r if they were not no common. Iid youever
observe that lin y nev r lighten cx -cpt to rise
h olier in the aii? They make no descending
light, and ho it is evi l.nt that the light they
make is not tome by, but to propel them up
wards. It is an eh ctric power a force without
hea? and our scient p h might study it and
;inalzo the wondfifiil little chemical machine
that lies hidden in its tail. I', is a power as
well as a ligh. My friend IJusxey, the beo
man of Math tt, say he tned dili;intly to
cr.s lightning bugs wi'h his bees so that the
cross could see how to work in the dark, but
he failed. I liuve gt cat icpect for Linncus
and tluvier mil Audubon and Agassiz, who
hiv - left us finch a tivusury of knowedg'i that
they gRthered fiom n dure. It do- s seem that
providence- raisiM up mcli men with a kind
MirpoHo and gives them a key to unlock
His Htorehouse. It ry once in a great
while "a great man come up to niin
s'er to our pleasure, our leanvng or
ur comfort. Thus knowledge be
comes diffus-l and the wo: Id becomes
wiHcrun' Lett r. If m;n is the best finder
woman is ihe l ihffiiserof knowledge. I
coiiiemp'ato I tin in yesterday as they worked
n a cr.- zy qu it at my house. A goo I lady,
who in a!vas at work lor the church, or tho
poor, or th- In allien, brought ever the patch
work of a qu it to be made up. She got ber
nianv trim !.s to make e:ich a square and yes
lerduy it was al stitched together and cm
br.iidered nn I the nonius pies-el down and a
iicli border put n. an I it is about as lovely as
a crazy quilt can be, for they are the most
.listra. te I things i i the wo 1 1 and nobody but
f!izv people admire them, (rereral Y'oung
liked to have b.k' ii a tit over this one before it
w is put together, and he has bought it foi t25
i. nl issuing to tike it to (lua'cmala when he
jo i h buck mil will iiiuke an efri.-ial spread of
it on his couch of Mate. r. il i. s he may wear
it on rice.iioii days like a Hunan toga or a
Spam-di niimt lh. At any la'c. th-so too l
wc ineii have been a-i crnzy as the qu 1', and all
f-r th shIic of the h. iiih..!! (' tint ae, w ho are
killi' j' up our mi-si-mare'. I hope it will be
ii. vest d in pon.hr. I never saw tho like. Ihe
1 ard"i- the tunes th- harder do tho women beg
for ino'iey for i-i -in charitable or church work.
Ahuo.it . v. ry in-.il brings an nrg. nt, plea 1 i n tr
l.-t irfrom H"iiiehere wanting a little help
for iiii-iii's ssl.e. Wi.at would tho chnnhes
l.t ' .t.iont t li-i.i? What w oil 1 the pi aver
nn etii.-s do or th" weddings or the funerals':1
I'i i.l Aup, in A'i inta Constitution. "
oric imini.ijai, picoprci s.
ItiS Figures Sho mj the ActHity in
Aiiieilciiu 3litu-s in !SS.".4.
Th - ;-.." .-i. al Survey ha .-otnpil...l a
-tat"iiiftit .f th.- mineral pr -du- ts of the
I'nite 1 Stat.- ovrim; tin- i-jih-nd.ir years
tr l t 1 -M. Th.- lan--t pr.. In. lion ,,r
I i.; iron in H '0. vh' !i it va '.'..'('.'. 70.1
I 'liot..,,. ,ilu. 'l at 1."..-J(i I. tp. Tl,.. .r.,.
do t in was r..(.".7..S ton-, valie- 1 at
'."..nn7.-27. The l.iio,..t pi odu.-tioii of i!,.r
w.i. in l-.'.'.'. wlt'-n ;:!.. '.i.O.isHi troy ..uii'-.-s
. r" r.-porle I. ..f a C"inin alu.-" .f -rs-j. .
n ' .! '. In l-'.'l tin-ll ir. s w, ,,. pi 5 ,
nn -, valued at .?'..iM,iiMi. 1 laig.t
pr.'.lu lion of -old w;i. in ls;il. wht-n'!,-'.'Io.'h'.
trov ouii.-. w. n- reported, with a
.'Ihiiil: a!;i'-of t:'.'..M,o,iMt(.
The i,' t I -irg-er-t wii.i in ls.;. wh'-n th- p.-.e-.!
i t v:i. J'sl tr..v oHti.-.-s. v ilu.-d nt
f.I.-i.lHMl.llOll. iv.i;; ,. M,t.,.r ,, ,riy
o'.m.e- v. as U-..v that in l-iJ bv ll.'.ir.'.
It.. ouii. .-., but tin- vaiue w a-ofat-r l-v
.'":-.Ini.i. Aliiniinuin -how-that tie- larst
it. -r.-a- ..f all th.- nn-tuls P-port-d. basing
n-eii Ir.mi 'js.j i mi in-.-- in .s.",.' val.ifl .ii -;.:n
t,. ...mi.ihsi ,,, , in js'ij valu.-d at
'. I'l l do.-s . ;i; j .-ar 111:1,1 l-'.il. w'l- n
1. .'-. pound - vt'- r. p. rtf.l. valu.-d nt
i:...o:.-i. A -l:::ht in. pa in tin product
and value is .-h- n to l-'.'-j. a .bs-rea.-e in
1-'". ar.d ii" n- l- p-p-.rt.-l it: 1-'.I.
Tie- l-itu'iiiM'.ii- .-o il product was lars;i -t
in 1 IJ-..5s.-,.-j:i t, T(l,.
pro In. t ia lv'l 1 11 o-T io-arlv li.0(l,(i0
t Anthra -it al al-.. had tti- larg.--t
''it flit m l-'.i.t. U-iiiir 4,.1.'.:im; bng tons,
valued at tv-..i,.7. Ln 'M the pp,,l,i,.t
was 4'..:k"s.i .,t, t-.ns. value.1 at 7.4 .
I. t. Th- pro la. ti .ii of borax was l:irrit in
l-.M. I iik :ll.iN.l iO pound-, viilu-,1 at
$i74.44.-..
The Sarc'-t value . f m-t illi.- produ -ts o!
all kind- was p-a-di-d in l'-'.i.. wh.-n it was
toU7.7H'..-j:i0. Tie- .-.i-h'. year .-h..ed tLe
Jaro t value of li.'ti-iii' talli - minerals of ail
kind-, the ani-uM N'liu j.i.Ui.'.Hii.7i3. Xb
corp-p. n-litiiT liirup-s for w,.r.. 21S -
10 ,7ss and 3"J-.4v .77l. . '
Cotton statistics for the Week.
The Liverpool wc kly cotton Mati-i. are
as foll..w.s: S iles. t 'tal tV..on.; sale-A-nri.
can Jo.ootv trad- takings 4"..(H1; a.-tual ex
ports o.tKKl; import t. tat P2.oo0; imp.ot
Ainorieau ti.tHN); Mo-k t "tai I,lv;.til; to.-k,
Ann-ri-nn 1.05f..lHN); afloat, total 21.WJ;
atb. at. Auieri au ll.tMHI; sales for Spe.-iilutHiU
3.MNI; pur-ha-es for export 4, lit).
Minv of the L.iulon clubs nre very
i :oh nn I itos-fssctl of much property
in th- M'uiitcof real estate nnd forip.
The Carlton, hss just invested S40,0'.t0
lu consols. The Carlton is the only
iuli i:i London (vhieli includes amonj;
i s iU items of cxp enditare pew rent!
v0 per annum.
"OPEN WINDOWS."
HIE TIIE3IF OF UK. TAL3IAGE
On Suclay. Opeu Your Windows To
vvard God and Ieligloa.
Teir: "Jits win lows bfin opr.a la hi3
chamb'T tOTaid J;'rusa!er!." T.ianiel vL,
Th? s -oun lr-!ly prln -cj of Ivrsbi, ur-e l
oa by rlitiei! j.-al -ii-y a.'aifj-t Iinni-I. hav
euoceeJed in c lthi' h law pass -J that who
soever pray? ti ti-) I thill tej jut undr th
law? an I teeth of tin- lion- who are la-hih!
themselves in ng; and hunz-rup an 1 down
theMone cage or putting their lower jaw
on the prouiid. b-llo.viuu- til! th.e farth
tremble. Jim t':.' b ruin" thre it did
not hinder the- devotions of I'aoiel. the
Co-urdeLion of th atrei. His cn"2ie.s
miht a well have ; lawthatthe un shoul-l
not draw water, or that th-- s, uth wind
Miould not sweeji across n erd-n of mag
noliop, or that Ood Miould b at'olish-d.
Ihey cul l not sar hi 'i with tho r-d hot
furn i .'s, and they nriot nowpenre him
with the None. Asoonai Ii.iniol bears of
this enaettneut ho h' lve.j hi offl .'-.i of secre
tary of flate, with it uphoVMery of crimson
and K'.dd. nnd ''ntii- down th" white marble
Ftep.s and goes to t'is own house, lie oen.-t
his window and p lis the s'nuttera back and
pulls the curtain nsid" so that Ir; can 1oo!j
toward th sa-red city of J.rnilem r.ud
then prays.
I suppose tho people ia the Mrer-t gathr-red
tinder and b-fore his window and said:
'Just se3 that inau m-fying the law. He
ought to be arreMe.1." An t the constabulary
of the city rush to the poliee headquarters
and report that IhinM is on his knees at the
wide open window, "i'ou are my prisoner,"
fays the officer of the law, dropping a
heavy hand on the Mioulder of the kneolinjf
Patiiet. As the con-taidea ojten the door of
the cavern to thrust in thejr prisoner they
see the glarinx eyes of the monsters. IJut
Daniel Iji-cornes tho first Hon turner, and
they lick his hand nnd fawn nt his feet, and
that night hf sleeps with the shaggy mane
of a wild beast for his pillow, while the king
that night, f-leepb ss in the palace, has on
h!m the paw and teeth of a lion h cannot
tame the lion of n remorseful conscience.
What a picture it would bo for some artist!
I)arius in the early dusk of morning not
waiting for footmen or chariot, hastening to
the den, all bushed and nervous and in dis
habille, nnd looking through the crevices of
the cage to see what had become of his prime
mini-ter. "What, no sound!" ho savs.
"Daniel is surely devoured,. Mid the lions are
fcleepiug aTter their horrid meal, the bones
of the poor man scattered across the floor of
the cavern." With trembling voice Darius
calls out: "Daniel?" No answer, for the
prophet is yet in profound rlumber. IJut a
lion mop easily awakened, advances, and
with hot breath blown through tho.-reviee
seems angrily to demand tho cause of this
interruption, and then nnother wild beast
lifts his mane from under Daniel's head, and
the prophet, waking up, come.sforth to re
port himself all unhurt an I well.
IJut our text stan Is ns at Daniel's window,
opened toward Jerinal -m. Why in that di
rection open? Jerusalem was his native
land, and all the pomp of his lJ,-ibyk,njs.h sue
ce.c.scs could not make him forget it. He
came there from Jerusalem at eighteen vears
of age, and he never visited it, though he
lived to be eighty-five years. Yet when he
wanted to am iso the deepest emotions nnd
grandest aspirations of his heart he had his
window open toward his native Jerusalem.
There are many of you to-day who under
stand that without "any exposition. This is
getting to he a Nation of foreigners. They
have come into all occupations ami profes
sions. They sit in all churches. It may
bo twenty years ago since yoii
got your naturalization papers, and
you may be thoroughly Americanized, but
you can't forget the land of vour birth, and
your warmest sympathies so" out toward it.
Your windows nm open toward Jerusalem.
Your father and mother are buried there.
It may have b -en a very humble home in
which you were born, but your memory of
ten plays around it, ami you hope some day
to go nnd see it the hill, the tree, the brook,
the house, the place so sacred, thedoor from
which you started off with parental blessing
to rnakt your own way in the world and
Ood only knows how sometimes vou have
longed t- seethe familiar places of your
childhood, and how in awful crises of lifeyou
would like to have caught a glimpse of the old
wrinkled face that bent over you as you lay
on the gentle lap twenty or forty or fifty
years ago. You may haveon this side of tho
sea risen in fortune, and like Daniel have
become great and may have come into pros
perities which you never could have reached
if you had staid there, and you may have
many windows to your hou-e bay windows
and skylight windows nnd windows of con
servatory and win lows on all sides but you
have at least one window open toward Jeru
salem. When the foreign steamer conies to the
wharf, yon see the long; line of sailors, with
shoulderel mail bags, coming down the
planks, carrying as many letters as you
might suppose to lie enough for a year's
correspondence, and this repented aainand
again during the week. Multitudes of them
are letters from home, and at all the post
nfllces of the land people will go to the win
.dow and nnxiously ask for th'-m, hundreds
of thousands of persons finding that win
dow of f..rei;n mutts the open window
toward Jerusalem. Messages that sav:
"When nre you coming home to see, us?
Uroth-r has gone into the army. Sister is
dead. Father and mot her are getting very
feeble. We are. having a greet struggle to
get on here. Would you advise us to come
to you. or will you come to us? All join in
l"V and hop- t m t you, if n.,t in this
world, then in a t eller, iioodby."
Yes. ye.-. In all 1 lies-! cities a.:,d amid tho
flowering Western prairies an on the slopes
of the l'.-i.-iib-and amid t'i I Si. i ran and on
the banks or the lagoon nnd I'D. the lam-lies
of Texas then- is an uneonted multitude
who this hour stand and sit and kn-el with
their windows open toward Jerusalem.
Home of these people played on li.e tieatln-r
of the Sotli.-h hills; some of them were
driven out by Irish famine; some of
them in early life drilb-d in the German
nrmy; some of tln-m wep- a-u-tome I at
Lyons it Marseilles or Paris to see on
the street VP-tor Hugo nnd Gambctta;
pome chased tin-chamois among the Alpine
precipices; some plucked the ripe clusters
from Italian vineyard; sm lifted their
faces under the midnight sun of Norway. It
Is no dishonor to our land that thev r-meni-ber
the place of their nativity. Mis'-reants
would they be if. while they" have some of
their windows open to take in the fre air
end the sunlight of an atmosphere whi-'h no
ktngly despot has ever breathed, thy forgot
sometimes to oj.cn the window toward
Jerusalem.
No wonder that the son of the Swiss, when
far nway from home, hearing tho National
nir of his country sung, tho mala ly of home
sickness comes on hire so powerfully as to
cause his death. You have tho example of
heroic Daniel of my text for keeping early
memories fp-sh. Forget not the old folks at
home. Write often, and if you have a sur
plus of means and they are poor make prac
tical contribution, and rejoice that America
is bound to all the world by ties of sanguin
ity as in uo otl er Nation. Who can doubt
but it is appointel for th evangelization of
other lands? What a stirring, m-'ting, gos
llizing theory that all th d ors of other
Nations are open toward us, while our win
dowsare open toward them!
Uut Daniel in the text kept this porthole
of his domestic fortress un'osel b!iu
Jerusalem was th capital of sabred inltii-onc.-s.
Then had s:n.kl the sa-riiW.
There was the holy of h dies. T!iep was the
firk of the covenant. Th -re stood th- tem
I le. We are all tempted to keep our win
dows open on the opposite side to war 1 th-!
world, that v.e n.ay s- and hear and
appropriate its advantages. What d.-s the
world say? What does the w -rid think?
What does the world do? Worshipers of
the world in-tel of worshipers of God.
Windows open towsrl IJabylou. Windows
open toward Corinth. Windows open toward
Athens. Win lows op. n toward S xl . m. Win
ib.ws open toward the flit in.- eat of win
dows op.-n toward the hills. Sid mistake, f r
this world is a g . 1 is lik somethin-r I s-, v
in the mus-Mim of strasourz. (l-nnriy-Mie
liirureora Tirgin in w oo l and iron. The
victim in olden time was brought t!i-r, ant
this figure woul I open its arms to re ;.
him. and ou.ee enf-dde,! th- llzur clol
with a hundr" ! kni : 1 ! ia e up ki h :m,
and then b-t him dr.u. 1SJ feet s'i--r do.vn'.
S theworll tlr-t e i r.ie'. s th - i 1 -.Inters,
t.ie:i c!os"., upon th-m with mh.v ti.rtnre--and
ts n l.s th-n ,!rM, .'..r- ver .!.'.-. t. Tl. -highe-t
honor tre world .muI ; .- , f.-r -ai i .
m.-ika man 11 vn.-m .:. r r. . . '
s:xty-thp-.-: :r-rs it :i: ..-'! ..;'--!
di" r'a ef.fl;y in their b :.'.
Th do-ninio i of I'ns world cr -: .-t;v-tudes
iiii'r-ateJby tneiiuru-sor coins o!
many countries. They hav their pieces of
money which they call sovereigns, crowns
and half crowns," Napoleons and half Na
poleons, Fredericks an 1 double Fredericks
and ducats and Jsatellinos, all of which
names mean not P5 niuoh usefulness aj
dominion. The most of our windows open
toward the ei?h:in?e, toward the salon of
fashion, toward the gvd of this world. In
cl !en tirm-s the length of the Enelish vard
was lis,! by the length of tin nroi of king
Henry I., and we are apt to measure thinsrs
by a variable standard and by the human
arm that in the great crises of life can give
us no help. We need, like Daniel to open
our windows toward God and religion.
Hut. mark you. that irood lin tamer is not
standing at the window, tut kneeling whil
he looks out. Most photozraphs ar taken
of thos-.! iu standing or sitting posture. I
now remttmer but one pj.-iure ol a msu
kneeling and that was Davll Livingstone,
who in the eau-e ..f God and civilization
sn rifi-ed himself, and in the heart of Africa
his servant, Majwnra. found him in thel-nt
t y the light of a caudle stuck on lhtopof
a Ik.t, his head in his bands up .-n th pil
low and i'ead on his knees. Put her-.-is a
gr-Ht lica tamer living under t!:e
dash of the lirht, an 1 his hair
dish ve!e 1 by th bjeze. praying-. The fait
is that a f-au can s.e" farther on h' fcne
than landing on tij.tr.'. .Jerusalem was about
500 stat ute n ib--' fro J3;:''yoR, and th vast
Arabian oe-nt shrte.i its san is l-'ff-ca
them. Yet tlir'.i-;!i that open window Dan
iel saw Jer'.i-a!em. .sa v all between it. saw
beyond, saw ti, tie, saw eterni'y, siw enrth
and saw heaven.
Would you 111-:-: lo see the way throuzh
your sins to par-?c-r through your trouble
to comfort, t'i:'t ;;i temptation to reseue.
throuzhd-r- -i l.ness to immortal healih,
through nii.-ht t -lay, through thinzs terres
trial to thii gs c-b-.tiHl you will not see
them till y -'i take Daniel's poslure No cap
of bone to the joints of thu fingers, no -ap pf
I.oii" . the join's of the elbow, but cap of
bono t Ihe knees, mn le so because the Go 1
of th" body was the (j,,i of the soui. nnd
especial provision for those who want lo
pray and physiological structure join? with
spiritual n-cessity in bidding us pray nd
pray and pray.
In ol b-n time the Tarl of Westmoreland
said he had no need to pray bec ui'" he had
enough pious tenants on his state to pray
for him, but all Ihe prayers of the church
universal amount to nothing unle.-s, like
Daniel, we pray for ourselves. O men and
women, bounded on one side by Shadraeh's
p-'ihot furnaen and the other sid by de
vouring1 lions, learn the secret of courage
and d'-live-au-e by looking at that IJaby-oni-h
window open toward the southwest.
"Gli." you say. ".hat is the direction of the
Aiabi-.tn d.-scrt." Yes. but on the other side
of the ib-rert is Col, is Christ, is Jerusalem,
is leaven.
The I'.rus.-els la -e is superior to all other
la-e, so b"au!iful, so multiform, so expen
sive -400 franes a pound. All the world
se- ks it. Do you know how it is made? The
spinning is ibiii" in a dark room, the only
lizht a lmitt'-d tl.rotili a smad aperture,
and that light falling direetly on the pat
tern. An I the flucft specimens of Christian
eharaefer I Iriv ievcr seen or ever expect to
see arethos - fob" f.-uTcl iulivcs all of whose
windows have been darkened by bereave
ment an I misfortune save one. but under
that one window of prayer the interlacing
of divine workmanship went on until it was
Jit to deck a throne, a celestial embroidery
which angels admried and God approved.
Jlut it is another Jerusalem toward which
we now need to opvn our windows. The exiled
evangelist of Ephesus saw it one day ns the
the surf of the Icarian Sea foamed and
splashed over the boulders at his feet, and
his vision reminded me of a weddin.g day
when the bride by sister nnd maid wns hav
ing garlands twisted for h-r hair and jewels
strung for her neck just before she puts her
betrothed hand into the hand of her
affianced, "f , John, saw the holy city. New
Jerusalem, coming down from God out of
heaven prepared as a bride adorned for her
husband." Toward that bridal Jerusalem
are our windows opened?
Wo would do well to think more of heaven.
It is not a mere annex of earth. It is not ft
desolate outpost. As Jerusalem was the care
ita! of Judea, and Babylon the capital of the
Ijabylonian monarchy, and London is the
capital of Great Britain, and Washington is
the capital of our own Republic, the New
Jerusalem is the capital of the Universe. The
King lives there, and the royal family of the
lelc euied have their palaces there, and there
is a congress of many Nations and parliament
of all the world. Yea. as Daniel had kindred
iu Jet jsalom of whom ho often thought,
though ho left home when a very younff man,
perhaps father and mother and brothers and
sisters still living, and was homesick to see
them, and they belonged to the high circles
of royalty, Daniel himself having royal blood
in his veins, so we have in the New Jerusa
lem a great many kindred, and we are some
times homesick to see them, and they are all
princes and princesses, in them the blood
imperial, and we do well to keep our windows
open toward their eternal residence.
It is a joy for us to believe that while we
are interested in them they are interested ln
us. Much thought of henven makes one
heavenly. The airs that blow through that
open window are charged with .life, and
sweep up to us aromas from gardens that
never wither, under skies that never cloud,
in a spring-tide that never terminates. Com
pared with it all other heavens are dead fail
ures. Homer's heaven was an elyslum which he
describes hs a plain at the end of the earth
or beneath, with no enow nor rainfall, and
the sun never goes down, and Bbadoman
thus, the justest of men, rules. Heslod's
heaven is what he calls the Islands of the
blessed, in the midst of the ocean, three
times a year blooming with most exquisite
llowers, and the air is tinted with purpl,
while games and music and horse races oc
cupy the time. The Scandinavian's heaven
was the hall of Walhalla, where the god
Odin gave unending wine suppers to earthly
heros and heroines. The Mohammedan's
heaven passes its disciples in over the bridge
Al-Sirat, which is liner than a hair and
sharper than a sword, and then they are let
loose into a riot of everlasting sensuality.
The American aborizines look forward to
a heaven of illimitable hunting ground,
j.artridge and deer and wild duck more thau
plentiful, and the hou mis never off the scent,
and the euns never missing fire. But th
goozrapher has followed the earth round
and found no Homer's ejysium. Vova
gers have traversal the deep & all direc
tions and found no Heslod's Islands of
the blessed. The Mohammedan's celes
tial debauchery and the Indian's eternal
hunting ground for vast multitudes
have noeharui. But here rolls in the Bible
heaven. No more sea that is. no wide sep
aration. No more night that is, no insom
nia. No more tenrs that is, no more heart
break. No more pain that i, dismissal of
lancet and bitter draft and miasma and ban
ishment of neuralgias and catalepsies and
consumptions. All colors in the wall except
gloomyla -k. Allthemusie in the major
key because ceM.rative aud jubilant.
River crystalline, gate crystalline and
ski'-s crystalline Uv-anse everything is clear
and without doubt. White robes, and that
means sinlssness. Vials full of odors, and
that means pure regalement of the sense?.
Kaiuljw, nnd that means the storm is over.
Marriage supper, and that means uladdest
festivity. Twelve manner of fruits, and that
means luscious and uuniing varietv.
Harp, trumrct, grand march, atithem,
amen an.l halleluiah in the same orches
tra. Choral meeting solo, an I overture
meeting antiphon. and strophe joining dithy
ramb, as they roll into the ooean of doxolo
gies. And you and I have all that, and have
it fop'ver through Christ if we will let Him
with the blood of one woundel hau l rub
out our sin. and withMh- other wounle l
hand swing open the shining jrtals.
Day an i night keij, vour window open to
ward that J-rusHl-m. Sing, at-out it. Pray
about it. Thl"Jt about it. Talk about it.
Dream about it. D not be inconsolable
alout your friends who haw gone into it.
D not worry if something in your heart in
dicates that y.m are not far off from its
oc.-ta-ies. I)i not think that when a Chris
tian dies l.e stops, for he go-s oa.
An ingenious man has taken the heavenly
furlongs as nr-ntion! in V. -velation and has
csl mlatel that there will I, in heaven 10)
rooms, sixteen feet s-j.uar- for earh asxD -iijsjr
foul, though this world shoabl 100,000.
000 yearly. But a:l the r oo ns of h-aven wlil
be ours, for they are f imiiy rooms, and as
no room in your nous-h too g3 1 for your
children, so a'l the rooms of all th- pala.-s
of the beavfuly J-ru-;i!-ii will be fr-eto
tills chilir-n. an I tv-n th- thr..n?r...ni
t will not I- d-uie !. ni 1 vou rt:iv ran ur ihf
Me,-., f ihe t. , rui-. and put y ..ur ban t on
the si 1- of th t-ir.v..., :t, i so" -low, - e-i lr
the hiuga-e r linz t . th j ru n , -To him
thnt ov -r.-orr.eih will I graat U sii with Me
in My throne."
llut you eajmot s jla ej.'ept as conuejrs,
Many years ago the T ". nu I Christians
were in br.tt!-. an 1 th j C'.iris'.tans were de
feated, and with thir commiader Stephen
f.-l toward a fortress where the mother of
this commander was staving. ".Then she
.it her sou and hiu army lu di3zra?elul
retreat, she lis t the pate of the wrtr&
rolled shut, and th"a from the top of the
battlement cried out to her sn, "i0U can
not enter br! exiept a conqueror.
Then Stephen raliiol his force? ani re
tumM the battle and gained the day,
20 00-3 driving bsek 2 ) ',090. I or tho?e .who
are deforce 1 ia battle with sin and death
and hell nothing but shame and contempt,
but for those who giiu tha victory througtt
our Lord Jesu Christ th gates of the New
Jerusalem will holt, and th-re shall be an
abundant entrance into the everlasting
king lorn of our Lord, toward which you do
well to keep your windows opeu.
THE MARKETS.
5ZW TORE COTTON FCTCiES.
Cotton stea.lv. middling uplands 8 X
middling z-jlf.' l-'i. Futures closed barely
steady. S lies lO.fOO Lab-?.
Septcm'-T. .." Wn-'il Jauuarv 8 1718
October 7 February 8 2J,23
Novemer .8 04 March 8 27('23
De.-embr. ..8 1011 April 83234
Mav 8 37'39
LIVRRrOOI. COTIO MARKET.
Cot ton quiet. Mi.Hiing 4 9-32. Futures
ste.TJy. Sab-s 5.0'K); Am- i '-m, 6,600.
S-pt 4 16' Jin. A Feb.. .4 13-S19
Sept. X Ovt. . .4 K s Feb.. Mar. -4 1920
O.-t. A Nov. ..4 15S-16 Mir A Apr.. 4 21 b
Nov. A Dec.. .4 1G17 Apr A May. .4 2223
Dec. A Jan.. .41718 MyAJune4 24 s
(HICAOO ORAIX AND TRODrCE.
wheat Sept.... 68 Dec. 69
corn Sept ... S2K Dec 28
oats Se. t.... l'.iM May 21
pork Oct 8 43 Jan 9 60
lard 0 ?t 5 .- Jan 6 87
bibs Oct 5 62' a Jan 5 00
HOME COTTON M ARRETS.
fUil -har- Col- Char-
ttfh. ..tle. nmt.la. leston.
Good middling 7U 71-2 615-16
Strict middling IK 1 T"
Middling 1i 7K 1Ki IS
Strict low middling.... 1 1 1
Low middling......... 7 7 3 16
Tinges 1 1(
Clean stains 7,V 1
BALTIMORE PRODCCE MARKET.
Flour WVak; Western superfine $2.253
2.50; do extra $2.G0'3.00; family 3.153.40;
winter wheat patent !j3.50fa 3.65; spring
wheat.patent t3. 45ft 3.70; do straight t3.33
3.50.
WniAT Quiet ami lower; spot and month
eiyirwe2; October 62-t(a-6tyi; lMcemlr
64613.; steamer No. 2 red bS;
Southern wheat by sample 60 03; do ou
grade bSfa 60-.
Corn Steady; spot 4040 V; September
39' ra 39; October 40 aked; the year
(5;34 1-2; January 34a3I.K; outhera white
corn 40; do yellow corn 41.
Oats Firm-, No white western 25 1-227;
No. 2 mixed western 24'5'24J9
Bye Dull; No. 2, 44f5 45.
Ha v Firm good demand jchcice Timothy
tlo.00.
CHARLOTTE TROUCCE MARKET.
Cabbage New per crate 1 50
F,xtra flour Sack , 2 t.0
Family ' 173S2 00
Mejl-bolted, id lbs. per bushel,.. f0
Oats, 32 lbs. per bushel, 40
Potatoes Irish f-OfiO
-m' Sweet 75faK0
Onions Select, per bushel fjOtii'60
Countrv Ham 10(& 11
" ' Sides 89
" Shoulders 65 7
Lard -N. C, OOrti lO
Chiekens 12U'fal8
Butter. . l5ft 20
Egga 11
RALEIOH TOBACCO 91 ARRET.
Smokers, Common 3 a 5
Good 6 a 10
'' Fine 8 a 12
Cutters. Common 10 a 16
" ' Good 16 a 20
" Fine 22 a 27
Fillers, Common Gren 2 a 4
Good 5 a 8
" Fine 10 a 15
Wrappers, Common.. 12 a 15
" Good 16 n 25
" Fine 35 a 55
Market active for all grades.
NAVAL STORKS.
Wilmington, N. C. llosin firm, strained,
1.12'; good strained. 1.17J-a'; Spirits turpen
tine, firm. 21 V" 25l;i: Tar llrm, at 1.25;
crude lurpeutiue steady, hard 1.10, soft, 1.50,
virgin, l.xo.
N-w York Bosin fpiiet; strained,
cornmon to good 1.47).'S 1.55. Turpentine
easy at 275J5j2.
Charleston Turpentine firm at 2 15a -Itosin
firm at 1. 00.fi 1.15
Cotton Skki Oil. New York Cotton
seed oil steady ; crude 24, yellow
prime 26 off grade 26.-
n ICE.
The rice market was ijuiet at Charleston.
Th quotations ar.-: Prime 5 m5'; Good
4 a V-2; Fair 3Va3i'4'; Common 2:;i'a3.
mt irs ami vf.oktam.ks.
Lemons. 3;0"s. per box 4. Mb Raisins, loose,
per box 1.75; cluster, per b..x 2.00. Mixed
nuts, per pound 10 -. Red onions, j.er
bag 2.50. Virgiiia peanuts, haiei-pi- ked. per
pound 5c; North Carolina peanut , band
picked, per bushel 1.25. White l-ar.s. j.er
bush-l 2.50. Northern pears. 2.50ft 4: North
ern potatoes. 2.2.". Northern . if. plea 2.50.
CotN TRY IRopfiK.
Country Butter Choice Tennessee 18a25c,
inetlium 12.l-'j to 15".
Cov Peas-65c and 70c. per bushel.
Poultry Grown fowls, choice 3.00 to 3.25
per dovsen. Chi' kens 2.25i2.75 per dozn,
a"corling t si.e ati'l cjuality. Ducks
Muscovy 4 a 1.50. Geese, young 4.50 per
dozen.
Kggs-F, gs 9-? to 10 ' per dozen.
Wool Washed l5e per pound; unwashed
lie. Hides lie to 12'-. Wax 25c to 27c.
TIMBKR AM) 1 VMBF.R
Merchantable- 14.00 to 16.00 tor city sawel;
12.01 to 11. no fi.r railroad ; s'piare and sound,
9.ti' to 11.00 for railroad. H.00 to 11. 0) for
raft. Dock timber 4.50 to 6.50: shipping
t.50 to 10.50. Shingles 5.00 to 7.00.
Itlclitnon l (.'ountiy I'rod'icc 3Iarkct.
IJUTTEH - Fancy dairy, 17ft 18 -. ; ch oi -o
dairy, 14ft 16-.: choice family packed,, 15
ft 17-.; choice store (pa -ke.l 14ft 15.; me
dium store (pa"k-d) llftl2-.; common
grades, 8ft 9j.
Koos In crates, near by and fresh. 12.' j
ft 13.; in crates, frch and clean, 12ft 12'e.;
i'i barrels and boves, fresh, lift 12 .
Poi ltrt-Chickens. large.per pound, 10.;
ducks, live, j-r pound, 7ft '...; h-ns, live,
pr pound, 7c.; small chickens. 10,'iftllc.;
i.-!se. live, i?, head 25ft 35c.; roosters, old,
15ft 20 apie'-e.
Liv- S roc k Calves, per pound, gross.
4ft 5,V-; sli'p. r pound, 2ft 2ls'c.t left
cows, j..r j.o io J, 2ft 3-.; heifers, per pound,
3ft 4 .; spring !mbs, choice, jn-r pound, 3ft)
4 .; i..og', -n ail, per pound. 6ft 7c.
Cot'NTRT Baon Hams, small, well-smoked
cr poen.', lift 12.; large, well-smoked. 9ft
10c.; tid.-. nieii. jrf-r pound hO--.: shoul
ders, smoked, per pound, "ft 7 1-2.
Hn.rs md TAi.ix.w-Dry flint, j-r pound.
II l-L'ft 12 1 2-'.; dry silted. j-r pound, 91-2
ft 10. ; green alte.i lf?de?. 7ft 7 1-2 .; gre-n
iii l . fa fi 1-2-.; irreen sa'te-l calf-skin C5ft
75--.: tali -w, 3 l-2ft4 1-2 '.; l-eeswax. 25-'.
Vr.ir. rABLrs Irish pf.tat'-es, per Inrrel
Jsr"-. tl. 25ft 1.50; small 50ft 75.
Fbcits Watermelons, 5ft 10.: apples, pr
barrel, 1.00ftt2. 00; pears 1.5()ftt2.0l .er
barrel; choic e peaches. Sl.25ftl.50 .er biiah
fl; common, 75ft ?1.00.
Richmond Tobacco Market.
Sun-Cured Tobacco Lugs ?2 to 4.00;
ihort leaf. 4.00 to 6.00; long leaf 7.00 to 9.00;
wrappers 10.00 to 15.00.
Brieht Tobaccos SmoWr?: Common 4.00
to 5.00; inMium. 6.00 to 7.00; fine. R.OO to
10.00; Cutters : CommoD. 10.00 to 12.00; me
dium. 16.00 to 100; fin- 22.50 to 25.00. fan
cy 27.50 to 30.00. Fill-rs: Common. 3.50 to
4.00; medium, 4.50 to 5.50: good.G.OOto ".00;
fine. 10.00 to 12.00. Wrappers: Common,
12.00 to 15.00; milium. 15.00 to 20.0); good,
25.00 to 30.00; fin, 35.00 to 40.09: fancy,
45.00 to 50.00. Wrappers. Mahogany: Com
mon: 12. to 15.: n-ediurr. 20. to 22.: good, 25.
to 32.50; fln. 35. to 40.; fancv. 45. to 50.
Dark Tobaco Lugs. 2. 'to 4.25; short
leaf. 4 50 to 6.50; loDg loaf, 6. to 8. ; selections,
12. to 15.
No Labor oa Sunday.
ThaBecreUry of the Interior, Mr. Hok
Smith, hu ruled that pay cannot b given
for work done by department clrks on Son
day. The secretary reasons that a gorani
ment cltrk haa no more rtf ht to work oa
Sunday than a grocery dark, and that tho
United 8tates oannot boeomo a Uwbreaktr
ty tUTlngracajy wptfc oa guaday.
HiShcst ?f H a Lcaycatog Powers-Latest U. S. Gov't Reporj
Chicago's Collapscil Fad.
Material of which John Brown's
lort and Abraham Lincoln's lo cabin
were made ia now stacked up in a
couple of barns in Chicago. It is n
very good thin indeed that the
amusement schemes which were re
sponsible for the moving to this city
of the two structures mentioned
failed. Neither boildinj should have
been moved from the original eite,
which along gave it interest.
After the failure of the sereral fool
ish plans of this eort originated before
the World' Fair there is reason to
hope that speculators hare quite lost
their zeal for making sideshows of tho
liictoric buildings. Chicago Evening
IV t.
A Pretty Experiment.
A aork that is lenger thia it if
broad floats upon its stomach, so to
(peak; how can we make it rlo:t upon
its head?
riace one on end upon a table an 1
around it place six other?. Siz-J
them all together and plunge them
under water, so as to moisten them
completely. Then remove yyur li inJ
aud let them take their own puiti-m
in the water, when you will find that
they will stand upright, as if support
ing one another. This is beeatuo the
water that penetrates the corks by
capillarity will make them cling to
gether. Philadelphia Times.
How'a ThUf
W offer One Hundred Dollar Reward fo
any aee of Catarrh that cannot be cared by
UalTs Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cucif rt & Co., Props., ToWlo, O.
W, the undersigned, hare known r. J . Che
ney for the last 15 years, and lielieve him per
fectly honorable in all bnninees trannartions
and financially aide to carry out any obliga
tion made by their firm.
VVasT A Tkuax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
WAtunio. KnrwAif & Marvtw, Wliolesala
Driurrista, Toledo, Ohio,
nail's Catarrh Care i taken Internally, act
ing directly upon the blood nnd lmicouw sur
faces of the nystem. Price, 7ftc. pr bottle. Sold
byall DruuTdett. Testimonials free.
It is proposed to nam one of 1be new bat
tlesli.is of th American Navy Kears.-irire, af
ter the famous ship that sunk the Alabama
nnd w;is lost two years n;i on Iloncadoi
Iteof. Central America.
Missouri has 50,421 acres planted in flax.
GREAT BOOK FREE.
When Dr. R. V. Tierce, of r.ultdo, N. Y.,
published the first edition of bis wotk. The
People's Common Sense Medical Adviser,
he announced that after 6So,oor copies had
been sold at the regular price, 5.1.50 per
copy, the profit on which would it-pay him
for the pieat amount of labor and money
expended in producing it, he would dis
tribute the next half million. As this
number of copies has already been sold, he
is now distributing, absolutely free, 500. 000
romes ot tins iuosi com
pute, interest
liable common
COI'PON
inir and val-
No.113
stnse mcd-
ical work ever
published
. v . . . 1 ----
i, rsoro.nt ntllv hPltir IfdllliTll to lliatl
to hint, at the above address, this little
COvroNwith twenty-one (21) ce nts in one
cent stamps to pay for postage and pack
ing cnlr, and the 1ook vnll be sent by mail.
It is a veritable me dical library, complete
in ne volume. It contains ovet 1000 pages
and more than 300 illustrations. The 1-tee
Edition is precisely the same as those sold
at $1.50 except only thai, the books are
bound in stroHg nianilla paper covtrs in
stead of cloth. Send now before all are
given away. They are going off xapidly.
washinf
s o)j
S ISA -
What diffeiencerdoes the ejuantity make, after all? If you
spend five cents or ten cents or a dollar for an aid to washing,
don't you want the thing that will give you the most work,
the best work, and the most certainsafety for that amount ot
money? That thing is Pearlinc. -
PJptlfl Fetif crs 4 uricrupu'-m fpcrM H! tell you this i M Coos! s
JV'"U he "me as Pearhn-." II S TALSi: Pea.line .. never peddled.
It Dn r1- . " your C700' scnd yv tLing in idare of Pr.rline, be
XJcLKtL henest tend it biik - m A.ME3 PVLE, New Yorfc
q rjxT
Exhausted Soils
are made to produce larger and better crops by the
use of Fertilizers rich in
Write for our "Farmers Guide," a 142-page iUttttrMed book. It
y is brim full of useful information for fatmeis. It w ill be sent free, and
will make and save you money. Addtess, "
CEPHAS KALI WOriCS. 9 K.m.o f-r, New VwW.
v
Yes, it's ready !
OUR
NEW
fr-Sent by ma on
receipt of 10 cents in
postage stamps
or
money.
JOHN P. LOVELL
Fo! C. S. AKnt for " STAR- AUTOMATIC PAPER FASTENER.
ino Tery poor oi ufrim re bj.
housed thin those of any otj'tr Tt
city iu tha world. Tho (5 -run. cv j,
tal is abrolntcly without 's!-:-t . v '
The Loijop K n i ii o f r fi rj n i
llsat il will Rife l,v-' rt'iion i , j.,.,
for the best form; or h r-.-'.M vewj.
cle, v "'
In lli the niclliotl nud rcslu wises
vnip ( i rigs 13 taken; it ii plaaat
nnd itfrc-sliiti"; to th', ix-ic, I acta
penily yet promptly on t!ic Ki'lt.j
IU1SC8 tile, pin.
tern cfleftuall, tlipcl.i nlN, .ni.
aches and fevers and cmta liliitual"
coi::-lipntion. fry .up tf l ia t!ic
only remedy of its Jn l ever rr
(liucd, I'lc-asing to tho tast? aiul ac
ccjlb!e to tho slonincli, pp'tuj.t in
its action aud truly I.eitoli"iid 111 i'j
c filctf, prepared only from I'le. most
Icultlty and agrccalic nilslaib'i-MU
inatiy excelkut (jtialitica coi'mic 'iJ it
to all and Lave made it tho bt
popular remedy known.
Syrup of lrigd f;r rale in r.O"
cent bellies by all lead in:: dnir;
giflp. Any reliaMo dn!":ii. wIki
U'i y r.f t Lave it on Land will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wMics to try it. Io not accept any
bubrtitute. .. ,
CAUF0RN1A FIG SYRUP CO.
SAft fNASCl'JCO, (41.
LOL'ISUUE, U. U it i Oil. H t.
JOIINftOVH C'llll.I. ANP I KfKK TtlMf
CoMs jrou 61 ertl a bolt's tf It ftrn ,
.M n 1. si.'ie'a rnt au'ieii it.?.
Wht does it c u
I-.I . I "'.ills n-l Kotsr.
Stet It I. "ii. K-ii-r
8-l TrrH' ii- K v
4'h. Million I. le Krf.
Oi. l,t.Kn Fo,,r-
ih M-..I
7th N.mi !
lt. I. (r pp.
Hony hck it imp bi.lt mi AV tnnr 4' rubul
it. A. B. (Ua-MitAC, S 11 Minn h, tit ., Vmyr i-
saw rviiLLs
CORN AM
VIMS.
Water WJioo'c and llay Prosaes.
III-.ST IN I 111. M 1 KKI
t'el.aiirb ili!l l lK. i a., Allnt.la. t.a.
I 1
F'vVk3 HAItV IJALt-AM
fP2"';nt "A-.''t..r ....I le.-. ' -
ijr.ti S Jtl"tr Fio'.k t . jo.itc orfj
tSr C''r"' ' " ''""' '" 1
K. n. r. :.7.
Which have
you an eye to,
quantity or fjuality, when you buy
something to make washing easy?
If it's quality, you want Pearlinc.
In effectiveness, in economy, 'and
above all in its absolute harmlcss-
ness, no matter how or where you
use it, there's nothing to com
pare with this, the first and only
- comnound.
jtrs r jt d o
9
o
3
Potash.
6
An elegant book for V
your table and constant
reference. Send for it
NOW.
Nice.
It's New and
CATALOGUE
brimming full of illustrations, and show
ing how the thousand-and-one things
really look. You'll like that.
There are Gf;ns, Rifles, Pistols from
all over the world, and somo of our own
make Fishing Tackle, Dog Collars and
Chains, Tennis Sets, etc., etc.
You can see our LOVELL DIAMOND
BICYCLE The Finest Wheel on Earth,
the Williams Typewriter you ought to
have one. There's lots of other things too.
ARMS CO..
iiovroy.
f At9.
1
LA