REV. DR. TALMAGK niK BROOKLYN DIVINK'S SLN TAY SERMON'. Subject; "The Human Face. Text: ''.t manMirintloni mn.k"f ha far. fi thin, nnd r7 fWi't. of his fm'e a:l V ihanqful, or an it m'y rrwlw, soumn nf kin fane shall l rr-plijV-Krcleainste-t viif., 1. Thus a Httto fh.m?ft fn our English trans lation brines out th btt.T m:antiir of tif t'xt. wb.irb.8Hts forth that the character of thn n (a Ie"i'ivi by the fharr.ctr of th houl. Thf main fo.it nrs of ouronntonan wore dpciw) by th Almiirhtr. nnl w oan not Winn;:' tlim, hut unlT ("io 1 .?W.Ih whot hr W' hnvn count 'nan' b- iilnnnt nr halofu!. sour or swpf, wrntbfiil or f-iiia', h''nfV)lfut or mD, honest or H'oini'!r-l!y, i'lipu h nt or moJMr, cotira ous or oov.:r My, fr ink or srakin-r. It all tho vorlis of Go. thM m nothing more 'Ton'lrri'u! t'inn the buman ooiint:iian e. Though th.? !nrit fai is lss than twelve loch- from th" hair line of th for-'ha 1 to the hf r.j n (e f h hin anl trm bro.tr1.-t fa ii I-? than ci:!it from fh.!c !nn to oh-fc honf, yt in that small compel OoJ ha- wrought sn-h liiiT'Tnoes that the ,f ). OOi). 0 m of the liU nan ra-e may he tinyui-l;rtl from oa-;h othr by tho?r fa ;ai aprto.irin--. The f.t or linari!' the in b'X of Wnr . tr. It is th" thr-m- of the emotion1. It N the battl'-.l-l ! of the pnion. It is tho OMta!o'-n of oharaotor. It if the map of the rnin,. It i thf u'orapiiy of tho soul. An-! while tii J,or.l nVei-los before our bin u whothf-r we stiall l e lianlome or Lo:n!y, wean by the Wiuni'tT ve form de-i.bu whothor our oounton;inre shall be pleasant or di-a rro.-aL.Io. Titin in so inutrh so t i.it pom1 of the most beautiful fa-r- are unritt r t -tivn ltt.ausH of their arroir.tv;e or t f i r ' -oi'it fuinnas, ari'l some of the mo-t ru.' -'l an-1 irrt'uuhir feature nre attra-tive fii-- i'i the kui'iii' that s:iin"S throuii tiin. A"fi-lnt or iekn S4 or t, 'arlih-ation u-ry v-il the f'-e j that it shall not cxnnu the sutil, but in the majority of o ios ive nie a tllil'ratn 1c at a man ''utit'ii'ine an 1 I will t"!l you whethor tie is a oynie or an optiriii-t, whi'ther he is a niis'-r r a hilant hrrtp:--, wijother he i- tionle or ii;no!iii:ii'iUf( whfth-r he is trol or la!. (Mir i!r-t imt'T-'s-ilon oT a nnn (r woman i. ir--r illy the n.-ur.:te ir.i T-'-sioii. Vou at th M;--, -ian t? m :ke up vour ru n I that some ! in iiwx'.Ti'nv o! y.ur fn. ii i- chip, hut n :'i jut into in! j TA-.ir i, by ir.-ti r,:ui -n b "iu j'..-.-ifiiation r;tii h n, vou ) hi.ii an 1 trj-t Jum. Y.-t Mtay ',1 top cii'iii h, ari-l ynj will eoin i r -l:irn to your irfkiu'fcl ''timat1 of ..! r, Mit it will be niter ho has h:- ''-; I you our of cvrythin:; he ou' I lay li .s I !? :s on. It or" (io l's H,-r-y that w i have t h-se "tiMi.le iriiex-H Or .-h.ira-t-r. ri'r-Mi"loLy is oar- in'i'X, :ml whi! it may i'" ' -arrio I to an al ir 1 fxl ",t tii're is iw il' t f h it nn ju ! ro-n.-wnt f a .ira 't-T ! v the i.tj. f h!-i ha !. i'.il 'i . ry is anrtt ;i;t in h-x, nn -.v. ir n. . v l t.o.I :'m th i r.- I '' ihT-t ;-h ..f han I I : i, tr.i:-. i I ft .1 ;rii" III th. til I it : V I' Ml" l.V , iii ! while 'tv s i;iii' ilty. .vfer t ' curve vr,l, an I o no to a rer. If it W;.0-1 to t im.'S rn -I 'olcin.: ii t : bp 1 -i r j i ii u i i.r-a I t i the loa'u TM. Ill's f- ii. -t an 1 . i; I v i . ): y v J m i 1 i:: Lie t i r w will a ''oil- tnd r- ,;al an 1 i:il ; o p d - r.-rns. 1'ro one ti I ol ;'r t :i -re is n s 'i- i -i at o;' piivs1 4no nv, -m 1 'I rh'v t::k"ii tor 1 h- s.,.d t- tf in- i-ure I". p m;.s rl iht a -( ' f d.us Christ. " .!.' th- ",i-( of o! ,h, th- -fa.-' f'li.vng .;. of lo -."' ' of J'ii a ra- h.M t he ash" Katio'i, t:i" re-urretiou- -e of I lie fle;t l e!:i.. th a : I l;eir fa-, an 1 in my ar- s, V n, w s lo -i 'i ne. ;in 1 t sourness w -tt'ii. - t." If the J!ib:. i p';'- -i mOTnv. w- n -x: 1 a- ti in t:;i p- '1 tie l-r.i ';t:T on :,yo- t the pM BfiA'th his : his fa'" ;; i.,s so :.i;.''i i r' t A' ! '! i '.y -fM n t! ."' I h - mn ! It a Ia vain ho I'til-- h I'.. r. in tii y v.-h:p 1 phy-- ot i it. i-d -it :.r.lor.-l .::' :t'0-io u-i . tWlt SMI (V It. n 1 .lob"- a I !!(:. r an ! Arb-ilo an 1 iiavo (';, :r wh-Mt a i. ;h;s t;i ti,". -! it u i .;ii-" : v. i ! I'.Mi :v s an I -! I'Wto I tt hi n I a i'.v (vs u i .loshna d ii s of 'i ' n :iu 1 i 1 Lavat-r ,,, .jbrris t; a ve i ' i -rr.al .- I a n -o-:ot r. . o -ii'i-i.ni .my ii-tv-r -ii it;.!iy, 'is writes, '-in Wl M 'l, ;i ne.; we-a a."' yet th b-riu -v:ll iW, W;i I.I I : . ' ' I n to 1 . o ;v I ' i : t w ' i ! . fir i' :ir ' i h.,1 t .-. j it'n : sr :hv b. k :tii trhi'1 Ii ill is V 't til,"" ' : :nra 't'T -i' ?':'s" lh" f;t"" w-.ii 1-1 li!;- t'. i in Al-'ibia'b -. have br.n m :o b.-n-i.-t .! mvi 'h upon it in 1 C!:n-! inn K ery m m I i app'Nirari'. in would iiKe i n ; in wcauwant ' Ol U 'f-S '.e'.en lS SO :i -i ler ir important an ! Woman to 1 Tar "loa -h. the s .f e.-ir how he ! '. eoii.o-i.ent jijr w.-o h-i-, t.) ttirow a :; as ,vi! a ; i rd ;ir : like wd 1 t r y "i. -in ,..iiit, b- e ;...) i:K n ,,r -at 1 f..r as . a v.-n, t o..k-, a J-'MPli" q;lM.- t :rimm ! .ast " ,ili -oin1'' (V- on ii l :) u a r. Now. r ue t- :t "f t i I, uuvr.i-i I. :r. a hin-tra 'iVM.-Ii I Hi - s :.ow w :niv, ;n V i.t U:tX' rna.e our".vs r'' t'. "A n;'fi s W:s noil i:i'ik--tii hi fa r - ' : n, nn 1 t hu --'"ii rr' ss of fa shall be -wi t t'-a.i.'' Wliar I s'iy may oomo too late I r rc'iiiv. 'i'i: -ir nitil i-nHne may by ! n f ifij of liar !n"-M b : i v ; j bon fro"..-n itr.o :ol . i ;ty. or bv loM4 yo ;r-. ol --ruel tnha,-io- tii-'V may hay II-to I i-.U t ii ma"hin -ry nf pi pr 'fislon, or by loii y.'iis of avarire tii'-y may haw be-u Suyio ke I u?itil thoir fa"e is us ij.'ir.l tit pr" -ioiis rn''talthiv are hoar-1-iiu. I'tit I am ii: Ti-iieto help nm'titU'b? if .li'! I.or t will, 'i tt i i possible to o-er-i":i:e (lisa iv..:!'!'1- of physiognomy wns in t , is count ry iniL.-nt i!y iilu-n ratoii by one w;;oe life r '!!! iy .-ln-o-1 aft-c having "TV 1 ia trie I'ri s"-l-nt tal oal-in -t it Wafsblnirf'n. I'.. a--.'il-nt of lire in rail Ihoo 1 Ins ia.-. ha l boon more pitoons!y ine 1 th-ri a'iv 'iirn in v.s-i,'e tliat I vr a t. i'.v !'-ir i : u ly h- ar - trom bem j a poor 1. .y t ! v ry h-'iirht i ; '--ion. an : f ii.Ti an Attorn til" ie V (1 u ::.! pr.,. ral f-.r r- I tli.i : n ; 'n St: t'-s wis n -o 'e i he f-n! ; Y - . . n ia! i: i 1 1 -r . Wn:it a I riua u. .-y.-l In I .'o not v t'Tin v H a I ' ; i . i r- .T.r-I to '.Si's T j .n V. l;r.-ft . a- n I w:.- a b: v-l .'hil.l. I k. ib"l 1 III' 'III T l"!'! nil With V. K 1 I r.n i i '''Hir'-r'Hr.ii i'i u I.- i in th- s- vf.u was :i i"'m;ifi-.l !' is !-c.';lli-. my . 1 in i vr w (.ii he. I w ti 1 1 : I !' -'.hi s i o : i : l I'.- Ml I 1-. il. s :t Ii biv.r.i I's c'ci'r ( ., ! I ,' '". "J. 'nx:u' ! "T4 .an ! ::i"-t morions I n pr" I t ! in 1 . .m! ri!i w '. M . tii" .V ' 1 . I VWM f r.'S.."n l.y I 1 !l.s : .'ill I s - r-i is.'.l nn 1 1 .'i ' i I " W is - i a s-e t I i.f Hi n. "His I ni :mv m m." a : ii th" iiul- nrr K. y. V ti." .' ir-vl ;:it t" i"-r w i a s.-;-rr '! ! n v I a n l-" ':i..c.:s tll;it w-.ir I. i t '11 of po-rft o? ' (! i!.:-?u:-ati'.u or J .iti'n of t!ie lui iiin counfea.ia e. On t'.C.s. T.i it o' tl: ' s'":irpesf n-ld nvist destra 'trve o s nf t'i" ,-. tj :it'n in is i'l'ii.-ju n. s Mirs tne vlisjini! ion ai. i t h-'ti s..i;t- (i fa"". Ir '.:iv"s a eoiitoTii.tiinus curl lo the lin. it cruvs ,!..wn t!'e ..,,rii"rs oT t';ent'-ulii fin 1 md it-- tii" to.trd as w;t!i a main !or. W! it '''vi 1 s sl. m h ist" tliwy ! in tle-ir ileim-r-:.:::. "A 'I :n."i lire llai?." ev-rythin is ir.i. ip ; t . rM.'i. AH n a .-.n-1 w : -n .t? had or ar.- ir. ;!c; to be. So.-i"T v nu 1 the " i-lr.'!i :im oa th ! .y-i ..t.i I". Tell them of an a of I "n 1 ". iV "t" , an I th"y fiy h iriv that to n iv -r t.i.r. if. Tnev do hd liko the pr s. at t..s -i n of hats for women or o' .-o.-its l-r inca. 'J'h -v are oppo-.e,l to th" reliv.in s t "it ion. mu'p -ipul and State an I .'it:oii tl. K --,iei,iv lo-) I ib" not ta-te as it n I to. nnd tliey wonder why ther . are no po-ts or iT-ito-? or fir-' 'hers as wiem t!ey were tov. Solomon, crii of the wis-st and Hi oiia V.niii on of tii3 worst ot i' i, M's into the p"ss;;n!-tii? moo 1 nn 1 ' i s ont in tlio t-xe'iy-flrt chapter of Pro- , . r ,y. -v,ho etn find a virtuous woman." .1 hi ha I I - iiave 1 hini"lf better and kept In c.i . i nssr.;! itKins. iiew.111.1 not iiayrt written hut interrogation point i-niilyin'"h''S?aroity of poo l womatkaoo.i. " Cyniolsm, if a Hatlf7 as it is with tem ot thoasands of people, writes itoelf all over the features : heuea po rrior sour visa ires all tip ru.i Jfcwn the treet, all np and down the churn and tho worhll One good way to mau.ethe world worse is to say it is wone. Let a depressed ui 1 foreboding opinion of everything take 3os!?saion of you for twenty years, and yoa irili le a iht to bohohL It is te chastise ment of God that when a man allows bii heart to be cursed with cynicism his face be comes if loomed and cowled and Iachrymosed and blasted with the eame midnight. Cut lt Chritian ehor-r-'ulnevi try its chisel npon a man's ooimrrnine. Feelins? that alii things are for hw ooil. and that God rales,, an! that the fciuio biin true tile world' floraliz Litijr wucn imsl u4 eiio. u ai;joOn an 1 dlstle lery and bombshell and rifle pit seventy-four poitnders and roulette tank's and oorrupt' coofc and sntanie printing press will have. Suit work, the brightness that comes frora su;h anticipation not only jrives zest to his work, but shlnos in his eyes and plows in his ntire countenanoe. Thoe are the faets I look for in an audience. Thoseeountenanees ire sections of millennial glory. Theyara noaven im person at eiL Tbey are the soulp curlu of Ood's ri?ht hand. They are ho wnnita in human neeh. They are halleluiahs lighted They are Christ reincarnated. I 1o n-t care what yonr features areor whether vou look like your father or your mother or took like no one under the heavens, to God and man you are beautlfn'. Miehael Am,'elo( the sou'ptor, visiting Florive, some one showe. him in a back vird a piee of marble that was so shapolens tnat it seemed of no us and An?lo was isned if he could make auythinir out of It. wi lifso was t ild he could own it. The irtiir took the marble, and for nine months hut himself np to work, first trying to make f ir a statue of J)avid with hU foot on G iiath, but the marble was not quite lonif moah at the base to make the prostrate por:n of the jrtant, and so the artist fashioned ;he imrlile into another figure that is 83 fa nous f.r all time becuuse of its expressive i -o-". A critic came in and w;i3 asked by neio for his criticism, and he said it was -e;tutlfiil, but the nose of the statute ws :iot of riht shape. . Ancfolo picked up from the floor some a:id and tossed it about the fac ol the statue pretend ing htt wa usin his rliiset to make the t'tiprovem-nt sujstod by the critie. "What do you think of it now?" siht tho tr;Ur. VVondor'uily improve!,' sail tho ritie. "Well." said the artist, "I have not handed it nt all' My friends, the i:race ot (Io 1 comes to the h-art of a mm or woman and then attempts to ch;in ;e a forbidding ind prejudicial iae into attraetiveness. Per haps The face is irit unpromising for the P. vine Soulptor. Jlut having channel the b' irt it leirins to work on the countenance with celestial eids -1, and into nil the linea ments f the fa puts a gladness and an ex-po-'tation that chants it from ?lory to ffiory, .in I tuouih earthly criticism may disapprove of this or that in tho appearance oT the facs Christ says of the newly created countenance that which Pilate said of Him, iehold the man ! Here is another mihtly cliisel for the countenance, an ! you may call it revenue or hiite or malevolence. This spirit having talv-n pos-esion of the heirt, it encamps .won iio-.i!s under the eyei r WS. It puts oruelty into tite compri'ssiiuj of the lip3. Y ..-ii can tU from the man's looUs that he is t'Ur-s jm some ono an 1 trying to get even i w.th him. Ti;re ar suir stious of Nero j and Ko!."pit-rre an 1 DiooJeiiau and thumo-R-rews and r.i 'ks all and down the feat J uros. iiitomal artists wth murderers' da ) tom have been cutting away at that visa?e. j Th" ravenefn! heart has built its p-r lttioii I in the r-'veneful o jUiite:iancJ. Disliri l on of lii.i'.oiic pission! lint here corne-j another chisel to sunn the ; ooun!enance( and it is fcindnss. There j came a tnovuii? day, and into her sou! moved the whole family of Christian grace, with ! nil tlieir children and Grandchildren, andthe ' comin and has come forth from the heavens . t fiat tiiat woman's face shall be made to cor respond with her superb soul. Her entire ! f.ve from ear to ear becomes tho canvas on whih all the best artists of heaven begin to , put their finest strokes, and on the small compass of that lacs are put pictures of sun- rise over the sea. and angels of mercy coin- , up and down ladders alt aflash, and mouut ' h:is ol transmigration and noonday in h-Mven. Kni'hiHs.s It i the most masrniM ; ('nut seulpfor that over touched human c Kintetian'. i No one cuuld won-bT at the unucuil t-niaiity inthe face of William Windom, Soc '. r -iary of the Treasury of the United States, ' a t r seeing bi n at the New York banquet , just before he dropped d"ai, turning his winelris tipide ilown, saying. 'I may by doinir this oiTend some, but ty not doinir it I j iniht damage many.' lie kind to your friends. Be kind to your enemies. It i kin I to the younsr. lie kind to the old. lie kind to your rulers. Be kind to your servinis. j kind to your superiors, lie kind to your inferiors. Ue kind to your horse. Be "kind : to your do. Be kind to your cat. Morn ; inj, noon and nii;ht be kind, and the oiTects ; of it Will be written in the lauifiiatjo of your faee. Tliat is the compel of physiognomv. j A"Bayoune merdiant was in the south of Kurope fur his health, and sitting on the t-r-' ra'c one morniu iu his invalidism he saw a ! rider flung from a horse into a river, and without thinking of his own weakness the ' merchant flung oiT his invalid's gown and ' swam to the drowning man, and clutchin him as he was about to go down the las time bore him in safety to the bank, when gtnoing into tho face ot the resetted rinn he cried. 'Mv (iod. I have save 1 my own son V All kindness comes back to us in one way or another: if not in nuv other war, then in yonr own face. Kindness! Show it to others, for the time may come when you will need it yourself. Teode laughed at the luui been use he pared the mouse that ran ov-r liirn when by one motion of his paw the m-jii-Pter could have crushed tt'e insignitieant turber. But it was well that the lion ha J merey on the mouse, for one day the li-.n was oauht in a trap and roared fe.ir'u! ty be i-e be was beUl fat bv ropes. 1 .wn tne m i:e ! knaw"d off the ropes and M the lion iro You may consider yourself u liun( bu; yo t j cannot afford to despite a mo-is-. j When Abraham Lin -otu pardoned a youn ! Foldier at tho reipi -st of his mother, t motherwort down the ta;rs of t;: W . f Ifoue saving: 4rhy hav b-d uhout t;i--; President's being home i if-j ;s the h;:rt ! 1 eomost man I ever saw.'' AM over that Pr -:- dent g rugged face was written the kin In whi 'h ho so w 1 i!-'ir.ite whn he sal 1( "Som of our v ir. -ra!s o t i:n thatlinv p air di? -ipMn ' ;r, 1 v:i liuation in 1'n ii!-:nv by my pT'.o-.; i i 1 r s;i:.t but it ma';es me r ! I arter a h:;r I dny's work V. 1 o in tin i -i'l'T' -To i 1 ox-ii-'-" r sfiving a man's lire, an 1 I go to ! 1 hap.er as I think how jovoiM the sinin o; r.w n i ne will make him an 1 h; fa'ni'y.'' K:n:n 's! It make tho fa -ihin-' wi:(e !i "e l'i-t 4 an I after death puts a mi inner suus-t bet At'oti the still lifts an lthe Ktioi'tfi d L.rr that makes me say f!im 't:'n s r;t O '-e-piics, She eeoms too beauiii 1 1 to 1 ur." But h -r:" -rt n s another el;lsel( and It n an;e is r.v,.o Ty. C:;r;st, with one terriik strode ui 'f-s ser'.i.tn on the mount iiseribed this eh:i; ;eter. " .Vnell y 1'"."t'. bo not a tho hvp i -riles, of - mi 1 eo:i'::e(i :n -.-t for thuv '1 .si ':ir 1 m:T i :n'r I" --s " ir f..- s tV f vsr." H .if th- co iV .t tv-y rtciy npj'.-ir I'Ocrisy li-iv.n t:ll- "1 it i'::n'.'.-i;Ll"!v uri- in : i'oi;i:;"ns i:n. They in th "'r :: is n trKin-r a '.v. vs fc.' I'MV -VT l-l w:i'"i ili'.r.1 t:l"ir pr.iy-': I'arrv s,, -. "T'i :ir; ,r u at i n I in :!i ". ,m:--:i ili 'ir br Miu an 1 i-r.ii u:.i..ss that Vv dis- hrl'.'e SIK'h en irmt ycun rth"ni in on. pi. with reriTn. W..:,'don f nivi'liuri.h';. Whea li ei- r.-t-,', ! ;i!wavs i!cr! -.t tho low stnto ot nn t w'.n hft prav i n ii ':!n-r n"oph it u.is -in at:a -k orLvst.'ri-!. nn 1 Ii'.' went int' .1 t irn-cvs n of oiis und a'n tint -si?nii?il t It.nianii r"suitation. lb. w 'lit on iu that v:y wtirii wo brO to expfl him fro:n tin? 'hutvii ior si".i!iii' tic- pr irwr..y intru-te-1 to !ii:n ks administrator nn 1 f.ir other vi'?es Ui it I will not m"ntini, an 1 ho wrot mt i.'v 'ral l"tt"rsn t at 'ill ' 'vi.p,lifn"nii:r from t'i'i '"st, pnvin- tb'it le w is daily nr ivinir 1 1'ir ny everlasting 'l".triii'tion. A ncin can- not Imvo hvpo.T sy in h.a h-nrt without som Low lMi!i; it in his faw. All intclli'-ent pt'op'.o who witn '.si it know it is nothing but ,,,'.,,, r-..-rt m, ' -.i.t. -l T rant that you hav known f.-n-es so mtnftin vi 1 iaipr.'ssive that, thoa'i th"7 vanish.;l I'ki.-V1. tlK-y still hold vou witii a holy Ho.r 1'"U'X sin-" your t-liil l went? ' We!!." you sa v, "if s!i had lived she wou! t have tifcc tn years old now, or twenty or :h:rty yars." But don not that infant's fa.-' st ill iiavrt tender supri'mii'V ovr your j'-ntir. nature? Ilarin tn'iny an even!ilo !- if lot loots at you? Want a s ;n -tify:n. I haihv.vjn inllueueo it his l,e-n iu your I if.. I Vou o.in say in tho words of t'ei j.-j-t, "Un it, r to have loved nn I lost than never lo I havf loved at nil." Or it may liavi t h"ea sister's fa". P.-rliups s'- wis ' i e iuvalid of th; family. IVriiaps b!io : never went out except cn "ry clear 'lays, and then s'm ha ! to l-i carried down toe stairs to the (i:zior for a short ride, but she was so puti"nt and cheerful ' under It all. As that faee looks nt you throurb. the years with wh.it an elevated and heavenly emotion vou aro Hll"d. Orwnsit 1 father's face? The storms of life had j 6omewhat roubene 1 it. A irood deal of ths iTiirhtnees of theeve had b-en lut-'ri r!!"-!, nn 1 the ear was turned with thu luind behind it in order to near at an. isut you reaiBinber thnt face so vividly that if vou were an artist you could put It on canvas, and It would mean to yo-i more than any face that , llainbrandt ever sketched. Thnt face. J though loner ago veiled from human sight, J as plain ln your memory as tnousli you th moment saw It moving fienJuT f'Jrwajl find BioYwjt?! In tUm "rocVInz-cnalr bytBe- ttova in the old farmhouse. Or was tt your mother's fa?e? A good mother's face is never homely to her boys and g r!.'. It is a "M i lonna" in the picture gallery of the memory. What a sympathetic face it wis! Did you sver have a joy and that lace did not respond :oit? Did you ever have a grief and no tears trickle down that maternal check? DM you ever do a bad thing and a shadow did not ;ros3 It ? Oh. It was a s wet-t face ? The spec tacles with large, round glasses through which she looked at you, how sacredly they aave been kept in bureau or closet ! Your aiotber'8 face, your mother's smile, your another s tears I What an overpowering uemory ! Though you have come on to mld ife or old age, how you would like just once nore to bnry your face in her lap and have a jood cry ! But I can tell yon of a more sympathetic ind more tender and more loving faoe than iny of the faces I have mentioned. 'No, you ?annot, says some one. I can, and 1 wilt, ft is the face of Jesus Christ as He was oa iarth and is now in heaven. When prepar ing my life of Christ, emitted "From Man ner to Throne, I ransacked the art galler ies and portfolios of the world to find a pic ture of our Saviour's face that might be most expressive, and I saw it as Francesco Francia painted it in the sixteenth century, and as the emerald intaglio of the sixth century presented It, and as a fresco in the catacombs near Home preserved it, and s Leonardo da Vinci showed it in "The I.at Supper," and I looked in the Louvre, and tho Luxembourg, and the Vatican, and the Dresden, and the Berlin, and Neapolitan and London gallerief tor tne most inspiring facs of Christ, and many of the presentations were wonderful for p-hns and majesty and power and exe cution, but although I selected that by Axy Scheffer as in some respects the most expres sive I felt as we all fei that our Christ ha never yet been presented either in sculpture or painting, and that wo will have to wait until we rise to th- upper palace, where wa shall see Him as He is. What a gentle face it must Lave teen ,to induce the bales to struggle out of their mother's arms inte H-s arms ! What an ex pressive face it must have uen when one re proving look of it threw stalwart Peter Into a tit of tears ( W hat a pleading face it must have been te lea l the psa'mist iu prayer to say ot it, Loofe upon the face of thine aniointed I" What a svmpathetio face it mit have been to encourage the sick woman who was beyond any help froin the doctors to touch the hem of His garment I What a suffering fae it must have been when sus pended on the perpendicular and horizontal pieces of tho wood of martyrdom, and His antagonist slapped the pallid cheek with their rough hands on 1 befouled it with tho saliva of their blasphemous lips I What a tremendous facre it must have been to load St. John to describe it in tho coming judg ment as scattering tut u uv-rse nru ne says, "From whose faco tne earth and tht heaven fled away.' U Christ I Once tho Xaaironf but now the celestial I Once of cross, but now of throne 1 Onco crowned with stinging bramble, but now coroneted with the jewels of ransomed empire I Turn on Thy pardoning face and forgive us. Thy sympathetic face and console us. Thy suffering face and have Thy atone ment avail for us, Thy omnipotent face and rescue us. Oh, what a face ! So scarred, so lacerated, so resplendent, so overwhelming ly glorious that the seraphim put wing to wing an I with their conjoined pinions keep off some of the luster that is too mighty evea for eyes cherubic or angelic, and yet this morning turning upon us with a sheathed splendor like that with which Ho ap peared when He said to the mother bashful about presenting their children, "Suffer them to come," and to tho poor waif of tho street, ''Neither do I condemn thee, and to the eyes of the blind beggar of the wiystde, "Be opened.' I think my brother John, the returned foreign mission ary, dying summer before last at Bound Brook," caught a glimpse of that face of Christ when in his dying hour my brother said : "I shall be satislled when I awaken in His like ness." And now unto Him that loved us and washed us from our sins in His own blood and hath made us kings and priests unto God au l His Father, to Him be glory and domin ion for ever and ever. Amen and amea ! Amen and amen ! WITCH DOCTORS' YRTIM3. Fancies Increasinjr Among the Striiii" Negroes of Tennessee. Mary Harper, a negro w oman, died recently in Tennessee of fright eiiii-e.P l.y witclicialt, although the pliy-ieian s ,',i-ti tn ct.itoa tli.it- tlui ilti.l i.t ii.'i'. vnus exliaution. The facts as relat by one of her neighbor-, with w horn lie was very intimate, are as follow: The deceased and a woman naim d Watson were rivals for the hand of a negro man named Tlmiiip-oii, who eeined tif t to prefer one and then the oilier, being exceedingly variable i.t hi-mood. Several quarrels took plaeo between the women; none, however, wit h serious consequences. Some few weeks ago the Wat-on woman told tlie Harper woman that if she did in I leave Thompson alone she was going in ii'' her. bv which if was meant th it he was o-oii'i" to reort to wilchcrafi . i iiis weighed heavily on the woman's mind, and within two or three he became too weal, to work, and wa routined to her bed. The sheets were found to be pinned together with a ru-ly needle, and after this discovery the woman grew mm e feeble everv dav and died us stated. The physician was unable to liud any di-ea-e, and the presumption is there lore irresistible that 6he died from the etl'ects of sheer fright. Whitchcraft among the negroes i on the increase in this section, and a num ber of notable instances have occurr. d within the last few months. The ca e of Claib Franklin has become a in .1 d one. Afflicted with heartburn, stom ach troubles, with icy feeling in (!,: back, he sought relief from a regular witch doctor, who is well known here, going about the streets w ith a nt:t ! crooked stick, w ith which it is sup posed she controls the elemenl-. ."!: cupped the man wilh a horn, then emptied the horn, w hich contained live frogs mid bugs which she said came from the man's side. He then became better and the operation has been i" peated several times until now he i- ii a dangerous condition from cxiiau-Mo:i and loss of blood. A short time ago Mary Chrisi-ian was 'conjured'' by a rival, who pla 1 ball of red flannel and i-ticks tied with ' a white string, to the other end of which was a load, under the v.'otinu". . , . , . . uoo,sie.,. mis so woiKCi upo, ner iiiinu mat sne at once negan oai Kin like a dog- and it was md cxpccied that she would live. She has now recovered physically, but is iu-ane ami is re garded as incurable. A rare case of epilepsy, in v hieh i!ie woman wandered away from her home and remained two days without the slighlest recollection of wlirir !.i: was. is regarded bv the negroes as an in -tance of witchcraft. A man named Oarclner poisoned bis wife wilh love powder given to him by a witch doctor, who prescribed lln-m for the purpose of winning back the wife's affection, she being cstrangia' from her lm-bainl. There are several we'I-kn..,-. n uitel, doctors in this city, and the belief in chann and poliiioiis is becoming more general every lay, and. unless rt..p; d in some way, will oon rival ti i . . : v days of Sew Fuglaud. .v. .(.;. O'obe-Jh in ff i'ii f. if you wisli for unytliing which belongs to another yoa lose thr.t which is your own. " j Honor and intelligence should be ' considered tho bull: of wealth. : Mix with Tonr grave deMcris" a little pleasure, ' ' i m- . i i . 1 wo souls with but a single tnoiicht wuut that thoupbt doubled. j The stars arc the puuctua'ion marks jn the poetry of the Leavens. Mcst men would prefer to bo re member as knnves than as foo'.'. Covelonsncss is both t'.e beginning and end of tho (level's alphabet; the first vice in corrnpt nature tUr.t moves, and the lust which dieu Hociety, if good, is a better refiner of tie spirits tb.au ordinary books. A SUPREME AMERICAN. Abraham Lincoln unit the H II1K In Our HUtory. A Calendar of Great Americans is the title of an article contributed to the current Korum by Wood row Wil lon. lo it he very Intere-tinply dis cussed Lincoln's lireatnes-i. Lincoln, lie says, more tlian Jackson, was tho lupreiue Amencan of our history, 'i'lie most singular thin about his wonderful career is trie way in which lie steadi y rew l.-ito a national Mature, lie beujn an amorphous, unlicKed cub l.red in the rudest of human lairs: bur, as he irrew, eyery thini: funned. infonneJ, transformed him. Ti.; j r icess was slow but un broken, lie was not fit to be Presi dent until he actually became President- He was tit then because, learning everything as be went, he had found out how much tiiere was IU ll.Ui 11, SHU .!-.. Llll t.U IIIIIUIVC ... 1 n-icitv fur lcnriiifi! The ouipr, vnlrp I or ten I mien i unu iue murmurs 01 1 resoUition that went whispering' thrmiyh the land, his enr always caught, when others could hear n.tli- ing Kill Lneir t.wa worus ne n.ver Ceased to be a Common man, that wai his FOUrce of Strength. liut ItO was a common man with genius, a genius for tilings American, for insight into the common thought, for mastery of the fundament il thing of politics that inhere in hu . an nature and cast hariiy more than their shadows on constitut ons for the practi l niceties of aTa'rs, for judging men and assessing argumrnts. Jackso i had no social imagination; no un:a- miliar ccfnmunity made any iui prossion on him. His whole Bbre stiffened young, and nothing after ward could modify or even Ueep'y af feet iu liut Lincoln was always; a-making; he would have died untlo ished if the terrible storms of the war had not stung him to learn iu ' those four years what no other twenty j could have taught him. And, as be stands there in his complete man hno l, at the most perilous helm ia i lii isiciidum, what a marvelous com posite figure he is! The who'.e coun-' try is summed up iu him: the rudo Western strength, tempered with shrewdness and a broad and humane wit; the Eastern cmss. ratlstn, re gardful of law and devoted to tlxej 1 standards of duty. Jit even under stco 1 the South, as no other ortn-rn man of his goneration d iL He re spectp.l, l.o ause he comprehendo I. though h! could not hold, its view of the constitution: he at p-ec a ted tho inexorable cnin: ulsions of its past i:i respect to slavery; he would ha-. e c c;red it OD'-e more, anl speeddy if possible, in its right of self-govi-rn- f .linn M... tiriit ir ia fi.n ihl . nf To the Eastern politicians he mse.uul iise an accident; but to history bo must sc. m like a proviJcace. Arranging Home Tableaux. To get to the actual working details the rjrst thing to do Is to select your, room, writes Edith Townseni Everett , ; I 1:1 an article on ' Help in Arrang 114 j Tableaux ' 10 the LuUits JlOBie Jour-. - i . , , , , ,.. r.al. One that connects bf folding! ' 110 ITS Wltil the One 10 Serve as and- jitor uru is the b. st t: chose. Let the itntire space occup ed by the d-jors be mIeJ ' with black gau-.e stret hid top lights placed behind it. This ananirement pro lure the ef!e:t of i ln iu )lllsl ntu enough to be easily ,een thiougli, and vet softening th.i 1 rtctk'i ii ouu.nes ami urinuiuu out iti'j 1 i noints of tho D ctire at the back r, nil .a clearness t bat is wondcrfull. This gau. e Is one of t be iuur.u iiiipui L.iiib features In tao'eaux, an I should no noner I c disregarded than arraug -jnent of the s;agn. Of course my readers understand th it 1 am dealing only with such an cr.t: rt:iinnie;it as can be given in eithor a city draw- lng-roonj or the f pa cutis rojtns of a country mansion. cry few peo iiie. no matter bow mjch tbev may cu ov tiieati ica's ari l tablca'it, ta 1 arlord to set apirt a :oom or bail for such puriioses, Ci.neiiently preiara- lions must be made wheuever any such festivities are contemplated Little Ilamstede. A kindly, honest ant simple little man was Frederick William 'am stede, originally a city clerk of Lon don, and a versifier who co.xocted worthless doggerel, fort love aud not teward, at a rate which would sur .1 nrlae most, i o -I asters. Yet h is claim to lememberance lies now in the fact ' A lBke "f boiling mud. two miles in that Thackeray called him "dear circumference, exist m the island of little Ilamstede," aud loved and pro- Jav:1- '"':,r ol. Masses of soft, hot tect d him from banter with a strange "d continually arise and fall, and touching chivalry. huge mud bubbles explode like bal If anyone laughed at the great loons, with reports like gnus, at the rovelist's attachment to so lnsignill- rate of three a minute, cant a porteiie, TLakeray would ex-! " ciaitn: "No oue .ball say a word against litt'e ilamstede in my hearing! I Jove little Hamstede, and as for h s veies over which you have been mak ing merry, all I care to say is that I tuke more pleasure in reading bis poetry than I do in reading your prcse." I large-hearted The secret of this protection was tlOt far to seek. Ham-' LasuelS per acre. He oilers potato oslowas Itede was a dwarf and a hunt-hcadr.; ' t a barrel. nd the best potat planter Id the he had been crippled by falling ' w irid for bat :. from a nurse's arms lnjnlancy, and' i voc will cei this our and sesd it rttt. Could not get about Without a cane. 8u postage to tho John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Thackeray, the giant, loved him for : -''. w, y-u w a receive free his iam the suTerings he had undergone. I owt i potato ctaioeueaud a Packs of six- Iuiterflioi Outnumber tho Dudes. Ward ycAUister is alarmed over ' tViik A. ft'lrlnnnu fit mirrl i.rn il.ln I tllV VA 1 VMOanv J a tlj It I IllgVliUlt UIC1I jn Ulc j,jur IIund!Ccl. Last ear there were ninety-seven enutantes while only nineteen males were added to the fashionable circle. Lvcry year , sees an increasing number of de butantes and a decreasing number of eligible men. No wonder the coach man is called in occasionally to equal ize somewhat the disparity between the married and the single. There is less marrying in Kew York's ultra fashionable contingent than in any corresponding number of the other trades of society. in Uoutl ft asUlon. 1 KS I r ri ather Why, daughter! Why I have you on a riding habit? You baven t a horse! Daughtr-I rp going j down to,wn to horse-whip Bill John- son- nn'1 want t0 be ln Good form' 'prl,,ii i A Wis- Httrxlar. Burg'ar Your money or your life Inventor I have nothing in the world but m great invention which I jut comp'eted to-day. Take that. B..rglar f retiring 1 don't want it. I'm out for der dust not trouble. Puck. A rosebud of a girl sometime) turns out to be a thorn of a woman. iUi Mrs. O. C Beebo Solon. N. Y. All Run Down i Headache Waek Stomach, Etc. Strength Imparted and System Built Cp by Hood's SarsaparUIa. "C. I. Hood & Co.. Lowell. Ms.: "Iear tir : I nn recommend Hood's Srapa- fiarillii to all my fri.nds srnl acqunlncea as one . ot the b, ,Qnk, to 9tr,.glht.n ,ni bllild np th 'ijrstem lirn una feel all run down. For year ' 1 uffrred wllh yery iever Hcdchnd stom.rh Tr.abu. Thee spells would unfit me for work and left me in a very wrsk condition. I commem-ed taking Uood s .Str-ai nnlln and it helped nie greatly. I can truthfully say 1 received more benefit and relief from Hood's Sarsaparilla than Hood's5 Cures fumi any oi hi-r .ourt'e or niedu'ine 1 have ever ukn. i am iiin.?ihv Htxve statement .huuM be published for the benefit ot other sufferer." MB. O. E. liKtHt, Solon, N. Y. Hood's Pills cure liver 11 i s, constipation, blliouiness. jaundice, eii-k headache. Indigestion STi Hurrah t Vokes The men who c.itne through the war without being wounded have much to be thankful for. Carsou Yes, iudeed! Being in good health they can enjoy their per. ious fully. Puck. How Those f.lrln Love Una Anol her. Clara I don't think that he knows enough to proDose. Maude What if you should hoar that he and I were en -airerl? dura Wi'll. rnv on ni.n wuiid still be the same. Truth Ee3t of all To e'eanse the sysltiu in a gentle and truly I sneiii-ial manner, wluni tiie ! nngtiine coiups, use the true and perk-el rcnu'dy. Syrup nf Figs. One lx it lie -vi'l Answer for all the family and costs uiily f0 cents; the lar,'e sizt- f 1. r' " i,lud '? l''f:lsd Lie California 1-ig v: Manufitcturod l.y run Co. only. I The oldest New Li. point of use as a rc'K Hingliam, Mass. i;biid Ctmrch, iu inns chtice, is at . 7,ow Th,'" t, We oflVr Onf II ini'lretl I r,,lurs Reward fot ,nyrlwr fatarru tuat c:.u..t lwcured by Halla' alarm uro. F. J.Uni:M:r & (:., T'ro;!s., Toledo, O. Wr. the undefined, have km.n F. J. Cbe. "cy for IHi la-t 15ye.ir, ami believe him jK-r- ltcili unitnra;)iu lit a.11 uuiiiea i ruiiiw i 111119 and flnanc ally a'-l to carry out any oblig-a-f ';n mid l,v tii- r Arm. Wnar Thcax. Wh .ieaale Drureists, Toledo, O'lio. Vai..ii-o, Kixan A Marvix, Wholesale O I Iniriiit . T'lledo. Oil.". Ha i -I'Hlurrn l'i:re i. t iken Jnternall y, act hi c d.rei'tly H;Hn tnei:ifMt an 1 iriucoua Mir-liu-w. f tne sy-.tem. Pri.-, VV-. wr t'ollltt. bold by ail Uru.'jiaia. IcoluatUiiUa 1. s:l-. ' Il.iron Il.dler, a German p'et, when a young man risked his life to save his manus-ript poems from a burning huiUling. lie laul tliem awav, and a few years later, sitting down to read them over, was so dignsled with them that he thrcT them all into tbe fire. Kidney Difficulty and Indigestion. Mr. YeMer Yate, f Bandall, N. Y., writing to C. I. liotKi ifc Co., I well, Mass., proprietors of Hood's Ssrsapariils, makes the following stati r.ient: "It is wi.h pleasure that 1 send vvu a brief statement "f how Hood's Sarsapariila has helped my wife. Hie lia.l suffered some years with knlney jdiHicuHy w hen she beg.ir. to use Hood's Sarsa pari ia. After a siiort time she be gan to experience eonsiderabierelief and is now quite well. Sne has also suf fered from indigestion, but is much better now, which she attributes to the use of Hood's SarsHpiiriila." lll Bus. retatoes l'er Acre. I Th's astlshinf yield was reported by Abr. Hali-i, of VViso vuin, but Salzsr'a rolatoe always tt thers. The editor of the l:ural w Torkar ra.nrs i yield of TJ8 busbeU an.lS 1 lUa Is per acrd f roji one o Balzsi''a early po tato?. Abavj U1J bushels are from Salzer's new seta. in - nu lure l-ioiu. ruj new early potat-a, Lightninj ErpreM, Las a reoord of 800 j tctu-day "Jot There, Ell,' radish. Tannins; with Palmetto Leaves. Tanning is usually done with nak r r riTrilrvlr Kurlr U , , . nn I . - . .. . w . . . ix. . u u uun iu uae iienn found thut tv ..,im.oni... i erlll,,iiv SP,vieeabi for .eh m.mn Kr,r several nionl hs a tannery at. Mar. I low, near Savannah, Oa., has been wT-Uiug with this material, and the leatoer turned out has been largely usi?J for making harness. A lot weighing abta :ooi) pounds was s- nl to Baltimore last month, and was sold as "oa'c tanned." This cuther is said to be strong, pliable, : i.d bright in color: Us weight is normal and satisfactory, and the Dew ustrinrent performs Its work ia such : -.ray as to make rapid fanning do i siiable. Time-saving in some of the : old processes was attained at a sacri ! lice of Quality. I It Is the leaves and stems of the palmetto, ani cot the bark, which : are thus used. Two crops a year may ' be taken, and it seems that the cut .ting stimulates erowtii and improves tflA Cnnditlnn nf th nhnl A oAn. tributor to the Manufacturers Record says that a fraotioa oyer two pounds of salted hide, at 2 cents a pound, is 'needed for one pound of leather. . ' 1 ' h O Inbnr rn iJ ni-ail nr,cla A Anfa Timr.in, .k. nt. ,nitin,.fni,i v. cents and iO cents a pouml. The leather sold for J 7 cents. After pay- j,ig lrelhfc and commission trw - trein ana commission, tne profit was .0 per cent. Having done duty in thn vat, the palmetto fiber an l e sold again for use In cheap mattresses, a factor not introduced into the foregoing calculation; and under better management It is thought that palmetto tanning can 1 e rendered less exriensive than at present. lere is a new and very promising Industry for the South. Kew York Trihunu. . ONLY TWO EVER FOUND. Bare Inst Whlrh Derorri the I.eTe of Books. r-,a f ia r.rast. Insects Is thl Oook worm, a creatura hated by tha J lover of books, fur It eats mo af which thy are composed, boring ihrough it In every direction. Hut two specimens of this curious Insect s wort have ever been discovered ia this country, one In s private llbiary at Philadelphia, the otliT more re cently ii 'ew York. This second was a copy of Seneca published In London In 1675 and now owned by W. E. I enjaniin. and in the book two worms were discovered. A hen found the worm was motionless. I roti tiling over the edge of the leaves and to the tail of the worm was a conical cocoon. One worm be gan at the ecd of Seneca to eat for ward, while the otr.cr b gan at the front and worked toward the end. The worm eating in tin front of the took was about thrtc eighths of an inch lonfT an I one-eig ith of an .nh In diameter. Its hi ad ended bluntlv, wlil a i:s tail tapered to a sharp water point. It was mu coior u. mixed with oatmeal. Being A BOOK-WOBM (JJ ATS IHIl ) id sturbd by one of the many who 'saw it, the cocoon was torn from the 1 paper. The worm raised itself sud denly, but almost instantly resumed its formed position, deep in the ! TV tTOJ - When the co oon was examined under a microsc'ipo it appeared to have s x legs or cases, and a white medium line, barely perceptible, on its under side. At the end from whit h the worm had emerged were MnA hn.ns. thinner than silk ' thread. There were five rings around ; Hie tail. The structure of the shell was so thin that one could easily see ! th ough it. No shell was found with j the worm in the back of the bo.'k. loathe third day one of the worms del. The other gave up the task of 'consuming the "Seaeca" twa days "a;er. What the Angelun Means. Ml'leCs great picture, "The Ange - 1 us," has tiecomo familiar lrom tbej i.,n,,,oral,lo rnnlps pn pvervwhere. i and lately ths noble Turk shows It on the rugs Iu offers for sale on near- 1 .vorir rr.rtinr In San Francisco. says a Sail i- raueisro contemporary. . The origin of the term Is given by a -.hureli coutemp rary as follows: "The angelus. or be 1 rung abcut b o'clock in the Catholic churches of: this country. Is a survival of the cur- few be'.l. Iu many parts of Europe , It Is knjwn as the 'prayer bell.'j Pope John XXIII. about the year. 1410, fenring deposition ,-.t the hands I of his people, among whom be w as ' unpopular, ordered all Christian peo ple to repeat three Aves to avert the misfortune. He was aflerwards de posed, but the custom continued. The noonday bell was first instituted by Pope Calixtus III. about 1455, at a time when the contemporaneous In vas'ons of Europe ty the Turks and the apfe.irance of a grat comet teemed t threaten the whole C'hriv laa world with extermination." Italiiin soldiers are given cigars every day, but have to pay for their under clothing, washing and all toilet articles. To tiet nt tur Farts lleennlins lined Sur-.iiuirilla, ask the people B liotake this niedieiue. or read tlie testimonials often published in this paper. They will con vince you that llooli s e l ns. Hood's Pliu cure constipation. The register of a country hotel in Maine one d.ty recently contained names of M mgolians, Russians, Prus sians, Palians, Turks, Creeks, Can adian, French and Germans, each written in tlie asn i's laiigiuw. Vou don't luce to 'o'." i. it guiilltyid Onbhies' Kte"tri fo' of yiinr If Mii . r. and let 1 ft'iri next .l.j.e.rv. ud b" r ,,-, fur the cMd sill', .lust grt ,.f 1-11 lull tlx oirn iruvern..,) I,,' thut flo'td 'tf b'ltl. Ii'euieiiiber il 'i. J.'hrl'i U: ' A. B. Myers, of Hanover, Tenn., lost both his " hands in an sccident years ago. H, was recen-ly married, and signed his marriage" eerti.'i.-ate wilh a pen h.id in his teeth. His penmanship is line. The Tliront. 'let dili i-tly i,n th .V .' it Hmnrhiul Trochet" uitniis of the voice. Thtv have an extrHoi'liiuirv licet in all disorders of t.he Tliror.i. X Se- t'lioolniaster wishes to ,'lnii.,, his little datighter, aged eleven, for a boy of similar ago," was and old adver tisement in the Kentish Mercury. Eng land, recently. " " ' Japanese Toe! A lar;re box mai'c I Iov.ler. ieiiuiue. for 10 cent-. l.ai"i Dratr Oc., I'liliadelpliia, 1 a. Byron wrote his first t-oem of conse quence when he was eighteen, and at twenty-eight published' the poem of "Childe Harold," on which his fame chiefly rests. If 3 11! icted with soreeyes ue I r. Isaac Tliom on aLye.water.Di uKitistssell atiic. pet uoille. A woman ln Tortland, Me., de posited ?b00 in a savings bank in 1804 and has seen the amount grow to 18 by the accumulation of interest. rJi-ei'liam's rilb instead of sln-hv mineral water-. Heecham's no others. l''i rts. a box. Xtw York has the biggest ga3 tank in the world. It towers high above the buildings in W est Sixty-fifth street, and holds 4,000,000 feet. To build up both solid flo3h and strength after grip, pneumonia, levers and other proatratinj disease, there U nothing- to equal Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Ducovery PS33TF..TIG3 F8LLSW1H3 EH!?. Mr. RxE! GAitarr-r. King Oeorae c. H.. Va., writes: I was taken wltn arrip which finally resulted la pneumonia. Wiu prostrate for three tnoatka, Ba a terrthl. eu(jh and was emaoiateil and very weak. Vs faiit di-i hint Inte "oulck con umptlon." The doctor (rave me medicines all thetinie. I (rew weaker. He advised pad liver oil emulsion, f teek two bottles or it wlekout any fi"fV 1 ,h"d P"l ln aT Mrs. Garrett. .. Buuujiier ape oack. I wrote vou, aad you prracrilMvd yeur -Golden I tftlr rtn 1 tr Ar.. k.a-s.i. a. Modieal Discovery.- fore I felt better. After two hnttir, I oeuld ittt up. and felt I had been saved from the Srave! I loereaaed rapldlv in tiesh and atrnrh H1" Married Laiie j "n??Zti needs it. LADIX3 EMt-QRiOM St. Louis. Mi Q21SB14.,V iBaaalaSBBaisBBB1saJiirietmrF,. u feii BCSt eiuh Syrup. Tomts Good. Cse M . ST. JAUUiS UJUL Curos Permanently RHEUMAJJ HIE MATKIMOXIAI. . . .--'i., frr a lriv- I took my oa. --- ,ov(,. just such i .n.f-' - in(, the in0on l7"nt :i .be .k, above, Th.V.". alSrcreaturc. know!) v ' I bfr .f .bc to dHv;; tn You know w acil her waUt, Sb- b-lJ in "', ..rh.:, l nt'jd: I pre Asked, liua.iy. if be would wed. Well we've been marrle.1 jit-t a year; Pd like the single track again ; For Hlnce sl.e took the rein lj t ulbt. Fl-v. never got mM. rr. Best place to hold the Woi-M'- FiP -light around the w ast. - Boston Herald. Mary (practkal)-A beautiful ring, .i i-nii irive for it.' Ill , . Eleanor (poetical) .uysen. a-.-" Businesslike Young Sprigs "-Alr; worth j0,0t)0 and I Bidquick, I am lovo 1t,i..r " Mr. 1-liiqiiid fVd auier)-"Sold."-Chica- go Jnbune. She Sir, what do you moan by put ting your arm around my waist? He Do you object ? She Mr. Arthur Gordon, 1 II invo you just five hours to remove your arm. Beacon. Country man Can I sell you a wagon load of ap-, les this morning? Proprietor (in astonishment) o, sir This is a cider factory.. (Miarply to clerk) Jacobs, show this man out. Trn.11I10 Iudelv I think t.ic term grass w idow is very-deceiving. j Friend How so? 1 Dil.lelv Because they are no' green nt nil. Oin; of them says she is going to sue me for $10,000. Sam .'i.lin-ing Hull, did vou n ii s,.n :iv (bit w boebber had bear toie his pumpkins would go tcr lie bad place? .liin Webster He-all! heali! nln t I ' glad ! didn't eteal nullin but cabbages. I "Oil, Edward, why are you so late? ' 1 have been so frightened." I Edward (who has "taken in" cham pagne sunperj l oriam oioiuso, dear." "Wouldn't il keep till to-morrow?" "Xo love; not after corksli drawn." Life. "You shouldn't have taken 'Xo' for nn answer so readily, Charley," said his more ertierienced friend. "Don't vou uudeistand that a girl's 'Xo often means 'Yes?' " 'She didn't say Xo,' Jack," re sponded Charley, utterly without hope. She said -Xaw."' Bostoti Beacon. Chicago Cirl Oh, auntie, we've just been out shooting at the target. Creat sport, 1 tell you. Boston girl Yes, indeed: 1 fully coincide with Belinda, allhough the diversion is somew hat arduou. I succeeded in perforating the bovine optic three times in succes sion. Kearney Eiuerprise. Close Call May Charlie, yon must be careful and not .;. yourself. You were- out in nil that rain l.it ni 'ht. Charlie Xo. i wa-u'l. Wiial made you think so? May Why, papa came home and said he- met you coming from the lodge, and that yon were thoroughly soaked. Kearney (Neb.) Enterprise. He Where are you going, my prcttr maid? Siit- I am going after 19-cent rib bon, 2!-cent stockings, fill-cent c.i-h- mere, 4'J-cent silks, ftj-cont velvet, cent gloves, T'.l-cetit hats, S'.'-i shawls, !H-cent umbrella, and ail other bargains in tiie paper, sir, said. Munsey's Weekly. '!- she A shriek cHine frjm ihe piri the mother i'iis:,.-l into ll.e I or, nnd ooni in great agitation. 'What is it, mv i ni .'lilei ?" she ex claimed. "Has t!.i 1 his person from Xew York been nub: or uncivil?"' "Xot intentionally, manime," fnid the young Boston nudil, faintly. "But it was a painful shock. He siiid -hippopotamuses' instead of 'hippopota mi.' "Chicago Tribune. First been?" Suit "Where have you Second Suit "Laid up." Friend What are you doing all day iu the Cooper Union Library? Newspaper Humorist You see, one of my jokes has been published in a Xew York paper and 1 nm watching the people reading the papers to see it" somebody don't laugh over it. A fel low almost giggled yesterday. Amateur Humorist (to bowlegged boy) "Do you always w alk like that, sonny?" !"" "Xaw. I sometimes run." Philadelphia Inquirer. First Citizen "What are you doing out in the rain without your coat?" Second Citizen (finding his breath) "I just escaped the storm." First Citizen - What do vou mean?" Second Citizen "My wi'fo let her week's washing fall in tho mud. and 1 got out the front way before the blow camo." Philadelphia Inquirer France is fortunate ia posiRssin ' mineral sprinrrs. of whi:. 1fi' 1102 turned to account, and Aleeria Las fortv are kven in use. Of the total ia Prance 310 n, sulphurous, like that of Araelie-ies-iJwns; 331 ere alkaline, such as Vicliv: ldo are ferruginous, for instance Orez ta, aud 213 Ur of varioas sorts, some contaiBing common salt, others sulphate o'umeUm' aa1 " grUp au,Phal' A duke during the middle ages was an independent sovereign. tt --"ifn1 in ii II - IL . t tes s a. d BmTTT-MMn na inai ncrxs fcassiy Works SuscssshHy.5' 'In vsiji Easy to Clean Kcuss Wlih srvi. i CAKKIAGE. yHTrm s I a. . A T f lised l.y V. ,vq f i::nt; 1 ., C'.tf :i.UIlt .m:o.j..r'h. the tort si.e,,,;, Car.1,.t,.l.MWjll. t.icu. Pl.vrsU.r,r toll..:., rr.utlrir.i child. 0!d ,.,! iniircisis. SeitL, of i me. si,, ; bottU-.cr,! .. sJeH lot H Bd.l .iftmet.a), i o T. 1 mmt tm mu mt a r . ,MXr er f JVC OK Ora2.KW, IUK WXt, .LL M.M firUuj.il! VlltitlH Only " '-' to w r. ,.ri-,n i Arao4rw.,to tnithirr '.-r nd.il! dnefroroth dell 'l n il i-.r, e.Ir.l, ir-l Cjn.r. lh ira t.., r Wixe .nl Stl Tiltliif low,, li.v in w,,..'- Tlt.l.nt wliKh tii ..imMcr (.it.-..,. I. hilt rial.ontxinc. c.C m4 "' "' " ( U..-.rl.. Wt s. I' ri,.-! I '' iairi.'ii.i.i;tn n.l -I r."'0" l - I .' . n-iinsr ..trit:. ..fce.s ' ''. ln Ih..r .nl .l,i- tn'. f th din.lin.ll s:d rlni W. them t r,-.ln..S -U: t h. FsJ 'ne..r. - l r'.' Wl.,' Hi. ... T'tiM TM.1.S OR Ti, IS AIOFurisEITf r-i IfeTITilil'ill mhT -lii;l for ni'C.Mt il inl. cipi. of Ih-. i'i pit P'l. .-.I ,.i Hi, 1 TmV. i w-ii '"'' .-"i r.: ' iiiii u 1..1HH rr.,-, of tsquir.ro.nt wt'.h (I will l- r.-b.-.!- ... . Th. Ihiiit .-1ft,eir.:t :Q ll.lt..:.., ?. . , v.. i S.w ..i-l 1'r.ri. -ta .-. i .,s.. " u t; , '- 5:.. o ti r ci in',. fSltrfcl r l'(IL B". - i r mi. fun. n:i1 V.f7 iwnen !, ru-r ' IK! 1.11 I. 1,1. i,i. ft, t"ii iirirs ii.iii'eo as iruu rT s. In l.s-.t.'i-. s h.rt . nn i.r.l .rs to ifct; : c . . ia r.rt , . . ... ir T i- ' UkM than ffotn tti m -i:f .1 tr.i',?s t' t Be-la sn unrmos itl''i,i in rt tfrrs It plrDa tWI (ei(ti ! (fa C;'". Hal prist I aXlJ. ia (fea ttalr eilrs. ot i- i e..tiii..rif '"V dijrm, 2 1-i I I 2 i. triat Will u4 ' it in t'i C"iii?r flie -ft wh-p.(. Forth 16 t w-u- 44 vf AtAcI fn-f Tswrrs. nM-rnllt! 4b t . r u atse litr4 -t or nLt, f i-irv f"J t..r-fiai yr u j i th-v ar fr B-ft , I'i ft , and .n f-t rra ! !'' iirr Aph .h Iu: f.ris i .1 i r ' f c.vsta tustra evu n.taiuiVi a e w.Ii e f..r 'J4 T .-j Arrtii.it.r Co rrotwti to difr:' v.' STOo 1$ fill M Prll.t'"for tt btsl nwyi written I li.e .'- ' t c ,' tr f i fi"ir Of ti'tr f lniiVi I ' r B H fillUI LD I I 11 At liluM'U T " i - i it.f .-.n;pwt.t.n ant imo .- K T. 1 r. r.- i- . f r - t . !. u ti:rir W tb ro -tor -'.i , Ci.u , I i Tra-i- szo, k"aryW CiTT, l.'tir.- ti. K-' , " . , 1 i u r.-iol , B-ifftlo. r-r M "ark l.c N" k ' ' . - t S f am at. J Uare 1 ynct. 1 1 -1 . ' i C JKipittitU. dwiiTrrt-i f t un rar a; ': a; : i ;.flu i -r., T.w-btr, at f - icrt -r ; i.cm 8-ft. $25. I 2-ft. S20. I C-ft. ; 1 25. bW.ll!.-.) I -o patting BEST in Mir P.u-T IN' riT. Ctr is w r.Ai-.N j CJl. -VI Hi. - i i Le rtair "i :.-,i 10 k ft v rs exu-uJ- a u-vl- ...t'i r ilnn n liilt.t- ,-l. t.ii'T.iL- . '.-? - !. his the 1 t I,. .1 ,-a .-f. : --- and ui i.bvr Larj .' i' Al J3 A3K VI TK I'I l l-ii . lent lilE.'i, If?n.l d.-ui-t be pi:t inferior k w ia. Colchester Rubber Cc. WOBLD'3 FA If? AWiKr-C TWO HUii ' A bnu. A..iO. . a crsdf. 14.. c"Z-T&y anrt niploma for (teant.v. ; I ,V Mlrenalh n;,rt s ueapnesn.. f t't1 veli.rirs h--Id dirrct io iU pM-iiif. Si-nii at niire ior OliT cSt-plrt.1 fuTHlfjiie V. f of ev.-ry kind nf lPhlflO hltl'Sl fVavSa.K I s.O In ia: A" rda BISt. tt-AliUiUDkiials. l',rv aro f ALLIANCE CARRIAGE CO.. CiNCtNMATL O. HARD TIMES To movt th" I rm-ii' IImi iI Titiir o 11 I miiifr" will - -U 1 t "i liiiv: :vf i - ifo -tt iVrl tit-:s r t;.e fi-t-l..viit,; lo.t.'!ti va.ieiiO FTliIIern for r rn Un ati'l iMMai-uln at i -l..i. FERTILIZERS I r r rd lizrrt tor tib. g.aj Wend iwt i-rni trni fd jK.tti hi 1 4. poi HlHUiy lorj I-rrlii.zfm for t-irrHlnr. Iran I mil .($15 prr Ion. V. b. I'owell Co., Fertilizer Hfrs.. it&.Uiuoif. !i. RHfk, h a spr.ty ami Krule u ill i.-n-.-. v.t. : r. latiouaul hral tii tt-H.Hi ni'-tiilir.-Ki.-. --r. r'uts l-'St'il lift or FTa-np. f.-r a - t - T 1. t Sfnhury I'tarmirnl V. r!i I'i ov i-Iciit c, "fi!rnj!E"a,,'f.1,.'!rt. .:"t3Sj:rV equ;ils custom wcrk, ro.:i:;.' ' i I, best Vill'.iC ir tl:'' i;. : xvori,!. N.nne a.: d ::.'e I i in me worn . r Iv-iiM'Ti. I. erf O0nA'!ne,-.Pair wan-anted. '1 .up r.o f CdMCfii lutf-. See l.K-al r.ti.. rs t rf.:i (TrT-jiU7TTr,fc -V. description of o.,r , . -r:-je -'itfnilMiCKm, fc linri for l..,l- u- i tlcmen or ;:. i f r J.- lutrled C .. - i ' t iv. i n- t-.frt;?- UTii'i ; ' . .j, -.t. isa. -' LA1tT aT1wL? !" ' " I. ,-. , . , j-. der bv mail. Post ace free. You nn t i:.c b:t bargains of dealers who ptiih our sliucb. FOR FIFTY YEARS! MRS. WINSLOW'S 5 SOOTHING SYRUP has Ntq red br ??il!inrm nf d br MiMtor.ft nf :orb"r; MrfD Wl.iM 'U":i;":t; f. . ' 5 It 0"thc thect.iM. ". t.s all r'n, c:tr - v m .1 a. . L.J. fiirv leant. ib iiic sc r-mrtiv for .tla: r "a. frcutr-hid Cc;.is a BSKSiORS-lVil?.:',;.'..' Saccessfiifly Prosecute-? g Lte rriuctpvl ExAmiiitsr L 8 hr!i,s.on 3 sniu ia-9t war, liadjutUcalu.ijt.iaiiAia, mi . ikitii hi n d k. Ttfr-s,. r r,.tf.riofi,t, BRAD FIELD REGULATOB CO.. Atlanta. g il 11. .. Tk. i-1. I u .- ti,. l ,.wa .-.I h-.. '! - OIL f, .N, t- Kl "III- I' IU1 tMI l , ( Xi'ViV ( ("''" ( I II I tO AS iKOU UMUai,i Xi"-rV"XT ,-t sp;-:. In l.s-.t.'i-. sh.rt . rmn ir. ( r,.ft ..ti.iii ia r.rt !. : f. r y. . ;.. " e-5ev w w"l , r:'. .it- tCf .rjl r I I f:i! , . Akia r.i. ...... Jterril. ". 1 .l tM,'l fi ,( , : r. r (ttrvi.T7tUSt ! t" f ( 1 1 m PR'IIL. ii..J "H I V'.hUu ti ;ie m-.r!s, :: , ..e , r, , IS UC fi jt-t. 1 -,'- . t f.e.'i ln.irtlei ' "J f - r Ltit j t" t., Al'.i. . ' v. . iore ,! ft 'i - . .: . t uam: r it ( :;!! . - , t .m)t :) n : .ift it , i I. , I -f.-f .1 IT.litS t' III f , T r . - n . '.. ; r--' .1 .f o.;- s ":s J H. miv.-- & Boot. ket w w i-2 f- 2?5.,i??S'"rkryf hard tla.r K yj'-' - "of 1-arm Bj.pil.i'iilhsirr.r-u. Ulrs'.fc " foru. In l dvri.ni.,1 alrF . ..'.- J "
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers