ci —— REV. Ih TALHAGE. day Sermon. Subject: “Rusy ls Heaven.™ Text: “There was silences about the Space of half an hour,” —Revela- tion vili., The i place in the universe is heaven, It is the center from which all good in- fluences start. It is the goal at which sll good results arrive. The Bible represents it as active with wheels and wings and orches. tras and processions mounted or charioted, But my text describes a spacs when the wheels ceased to roll, and the trumpets to sound, and the voices to chant. The riders on the white horses reigned in their chargers. The doxologies were hushed and the processions halted. The hand ol arrest was put upon all the splendors, “Stop, heaven!” cried an omnipotent voice, and it stopped. For thirty minutes every thing celestial stood still. “There was silencs in heaven for half an hour " From all we can learn it is the only time heaven ever stopped. It does not stop as other cities for the night, for there is no night there, It does not stop for a plag Fue, for the inhabitant never says, “I am sick It does not stop for bankrupteies, for its in- babitants never fail. It does not stop for impassable streets, for there are no fallen SNOWS nor sweeping freshets, What, then, stopped 1t for thirty minutes? Grotius and Professor Stuart think it was at the time of the destruction of Jerusalem. Mr. Lord thinks it was in the year 311, between the close of the Diocletian persecution and the beginning of the wars by which Constantine gained the throne. But that was all a guess, though a learned and brilliant guess. not know when it was when it was, but of the fact that such an in- terregnum of sound took place, [ am cer- tain, an hour.” And first of all we may learn that and all heaven honored silencs, and widest dominion that ever that over which stilipess was queen. an eternity there had not been a sound. World making was a later day occupation. For unimag zinabl & ages It was a mute uni. verse, God was the only being, and as there was no one to speak to there was no utterance. But that silence has been all | broken up inte worlds, and it has bec ome a noisy universe. Worlds in upheaval, worids in congelation, worlds in conflagration, worlds ia revolution. ~and 1 believe they are-—theras has not been a moment of siience sincs this world began its travels, and the crashings, and tae splittings, and the uproar, and the hub- bub are ever in progress, But when among the supernals a voice cried, “Hush!” was still, God be longest existed is silence was honored. The full power of silence many of us bave yet to carn. We are told that woen Christ was arraigned, “Heanswered not a word.” Taat silence was louder than any thunder that ever shook the world, Ofilentimes waen we are assailed and misrepresented, the might- fest thing to say is nothing and the mightiest thing to do is nothing. Thoss pe who are always rushing into print to get themseives set right accomplish nothing but their own chagrin. Silence! Do right and leave the results with God, Among the grandest lessons the world has ever learnel are the lessons of patisnca taught by those who endured uncomplainingly personal or domestic or social or political injustica. Stronger than any bitter revengeinl answer was the patient The famous Dr, Morrison, of Chelsea, ac complished as much by his silent patience as by bis pen and tongue. He had astama that for twenty-five years brought him out of his couch at two « wk each morning. His four sons and daughters dead. The remain- ing child by sunstroke made insane. Tae afflicted man said, “At this moment thers is not an inch of ny body that is not filied with agony. Yet, he was cheerful, trinm phant, s Those who were in bis pres ence said t Lt as thouzh they were in the gates of Ob, the power of patient lus, the immortal p vet, was conden death for writing sor th ing that off mde : the people. All the p eas in his bohaif were of po avail, until bis broth neoversd the arm of the prisoner and showed that his hand had been shot off at Salamis, Toat silent pea liberated him. The loudest taing on earth is silence if it be © right kind and at the right time. T wai s guint old hymn, strie, au: once sung in the rie Pe silence, ! Exchy synod te + silence» ar u the spelied in the churches; 1504 gans, tossing Sea o! Ualiles etl most to offend Christ by ths amount of noise it made, tor He said to it, “Ba stig’ Heaven has been crowning kings and queens unto Cod jor many centuries, yet heaven never stopped a moment for any such occur. rence, but it stopped thirty misutes for the coro 3 of Slieges, ‘Thera was si ence in heaven for ball an bour.” , learn also from ney text that heaven mus be un eventinl ant active pace, from fact that it conid afford only tuirty minutes oi recess, Toers have boen events on eartn and in heaven that seemisd to demand = whole day or whole week or waole year for ceiestinl consideration, If Grotius was right and this silence occurred at the time of the destruction of Jerusalem, that scenes was so awful ani so prolonged thal the inhaditants of heaven could not save douse fastics to it in many wesks, Alter fearful begiezernent of the two for. tresses of Jerusaiem-— Antonio and Hippicas had been going on for a long waile,a Roman soldier mounted on the shoulder of anotaer soldier buried into the window of toe tem- ple a firebrand, and the temple was ail aflame, and after covering many sacrifices to the holiness of God, the building itself became a sacrifice to the rage of man. The hunger of the people in that city during the besiegement was so great that assome out- laws were passing a doorway and inhaled the odors of 100d, they burst open the door, threatening the "motoer of the household with death unless she gave them food, and she took them aside and snowed the u it was ade, tas tue ly repast. Bix bundred priests were destroyel on sand people in ons cloister were co su ned, There were one million one hundrel thou. sand dead, according to Jossptus, Grotius heaven for bail au hour. right and tus silences was during the Doce. and forty our thousand Christinns suffered death from sword and fire and banishment and exposure, way did not heaven listen throughout at least one of those awlul year.? Nol Thirty minutes! The fact is that tae celestial programma is so crowded with spec. tacle toat it can afford only one recess in all eternity anid that for a short space. While there are great choruses in which all heaven can join, each soul thers has a story of divine mercy peculiar to tell ani it must be a sow. How can heaven get through with ail its recilatives, with sil rong. with all ite grand marches, with all its victories? Eternity is too short to utter all the praise. In my text heaven spared thirty minutes, but it will never again spare one minute. In worship in earthly churches, woen thers are many to had said there was silence in heaven for thirty days, I would not have been startled at the announcement, but it indicates thirty minutes, Why, there will be so many friends to hunt up; so many of the greatly good and usetul that we will want to sea; 80 many of the inscruiable things of earth we will need explained; so many exciting earthly exper. iences we will want to talk over, and all the other spirits and all the ages will want the same that there will be no more opportunity for cessation, How busy we will be kept in havinz pointed out to us the heroes and heroines that the world never fully appreciatai-—the yellow fever and cholera doctors who died, not flying from their posts; the femals nurses who faced pestilence in the lazarettos; the railroad engineers who staid at their places in order to save the train though they themselves perished Hubert Goffin, the master miner, who, landing from the bucket at the bottom of the mine, just as he heard the waters rush in, and when one jerk of the rope would have lifted him into safety, put a blind miner who wanted to go to his sick child bucket and jer«nad the rome for him to be barst in and we are probably lost, but we will lery;” and then giving tae command to the the outside The multitudes on earth we will want to see when they get their crown in heaven. 1 toll you heaven will have no more half hours to spars, Besides that, heaven is full of children. They are in the vast majority, No child on near out that the people from could come to their rescue, quiet half an hour, and how are you to keep five hundred million of them quiet balf an hour, You know heaven is much more of a placs than it was when that recess of thirty minutes occurred. Its population going bas qadrupled, sextupled, centunlel. Heaven has more on hand, more of rapiare, more of knowldze, more of intercommunion- more of worsbiy. There 18 not x0 much dilfsrence between Brookiya seventy-five years azo, when there the East river Sands as comparad with what this great is now-—vea, not so much d Tarencs be. tween New York shen Canal street was far and now when Canal street is far down town, than there is a difference be. when my text was wr.tten and waat heaven is now, The most thrilling place we have ever been in is stupid comoared with taal, and if we now have no have no elerapity bheavea only hall an to spare, Silence In My subject alsn impress my with the im- of a hall hour Lbat naif hour meationad in my text is more widely known other period in the cilendar of None of the who.e hous of heaven Years, noae of tae millions of ares past avs to Ooms not one is especially measure | olf in the Bible, The half hour of my text is made immoral, Toe only part of eternity that wasever mosasurad by earthly timepiscs Was measurel by the minute band of my text, Ob, the half hours! Ther thing. lan not asking bat with the vears or months or fite, but what of the haif hours Tell me the history of your half bours and I will teil vou the story of your whole litle on earth and the story of your wnole file in eternity. Ube right or wrong things you can thing in thirty minules, the right or wrong things you can say in thirty minntes, the rizht or wronz things you can d in tharsy minutes are glorious or balelt il, insciring or de pars ate, Look out for the frag nents of time, They are pieces of eternity It was the half bnours brtween horses taat made Elihu Burritt the iearned blacksmith: the hall boars betwesa pro yaal Calls as a payscian thal mule Abercrombie the Christian philosssher; balf hours between duties as schoo'- master that made Salmon FF, Chase calef justice; the hall hours between shoe lasts tiaat made Heary Wilson vie» president of the United States: the half he canal boats that made James A. president, The bail hour a the bail hou the half hour a tay biasting others, had b busin the eaven. the cmturies, Of an i the millions of decide every- you will do days of your shoeing fess the Dis irs Detwesn {rarfiela day for goad bayoks or bad adayior prayer or ’ : books, joiencs, r hein others or thos ur be 4 and the hall hous arn from bus i510 ma botween the he fore you go tn» alter your ret the « Jitr enc ignoramus, betwean Lhe infidel, between the saint tween trivmph a li © neaven and bell Th things ol vour life aad half nours. Christian and the and thedemaon, b stastrophe The half hoar when in wantiry minister [ rawivel to becone a Christian then and tha hail nour waed | decded to boone a praevia” of the ball hoa: van IA son was daad: tar half boar san t Uxlord parsonage of a ther tha {yoRu» * that my I stood stieet Famiigs i on the too of a L and saw our hour in which I haif hour in which [ ascencad vary: tie haif hour in which Mars hil: the ball pour ia waica ths catory prayer of this te npie was ni wle, and avout ten or fifteen other nalf hours are toe chief times of my hife. You may forget ths name of the exact years or most of the im- portant events of your exostance, but thos ualf bours, like the half hour of my text, will be immortal, I do not query what you will do with ths Twentieth century, [do nol query what vou will do with 1832, but what wili you do with the next half bour? Upon that hinges And during that sone of you will racecve the Gospel andl make ecomoiets surrender, and during that othsrs of yw will mage final and fatal re) ction of the full and tree anil argent and impassions | offer of life eternal, Oh, that the next half YAR: 10 onlared utes of your earthly exwione, Far back in history a great geographer stood with a sailor looking at a globe that represented our planet, ani he pointed to a continent, d scoverai continent was America, thers was a new world was Martin Behaim, Columbus, ye who have been sailing up ani down the rough seas of sorrow and sin, Jet me pont world, that you may yoarssives flod a rap. turous worl l, and that is the world a half hour of which we now study. Ob, sel sail for it! Here is the ship ani here are the In other words, make this hall hour, be. ginning at twenty minutes 10 twelva by my watch, the gran fest hall hour of your ile rit. the garden at Versailies, met Mansard, ths great architect, an the architect took off "ut on your hat,” said the king, *".or the evenia z is damp and And Mansard, the architec, the rest of the evening kent on his ant. Tae dukes and marquises standing wit bars heads be- fore the King expressel their surprise at Mansard, but the king said, “I can make a duke or a marquis, but Got only can makes Manesrd > And say to you, my hearers, God y by His convincing andcinvarting grace eT ae Christian, but He is ready this very half hour to accomplish it, this masterpiece of heaven by Bt. John is more impressive when we take only thirty minutes of itat a tiwe, Now we have some- thinz that we can come nearer to grasping, and it isa quiet heaven. When wa discourse about the mulitudes of heaven it must be almost a nervous shock to those who have all their lives been crowded by many peo- pie and who want a quiet heaven, For the last thirty-five yearw I have been stich of the time in crowds and under public scrutiny and amid excitements, and I have sometimes thought for a few weoaxs after | reach heaven I would Hke to go down in some quiet part of the realm with a few friends and for some little while try com. parative solitude, Then there ars those whose hearing Is so delicate that they get no satisfaction when you describe the crash of the eternal orchestra, and they fesl like say. ing, as a good woman in Hudson, N. Y, said, after hearing me 8p sak of the mighty chorus of heaven “That must be a great but what will become of my poor Yes, this half hour of my text isa “There was silences in heaven for half an hour.” You will find the inhabitants all at home, Enter the King's Place and take utes for all heaven, “ls that Jesus? “Yes” mark of a wound made by a buuch of twisted brambles, and His foot on tae throne has on the round of His instep another marx and a scar on But wuat a What a lect hand, What a smile! What a loveliness! What overwhelming look of kindness grace! Way, He looks as (if He had redeemed a worid! But come on, for our time is short, Do you seo that row of That is the Apostolic row. Do that long reaca of architectural glories? That ts Martyr row, Do you ses that immense structure? That is the big- gest house in heaven: that is “the House of Mansions,” Po you see that wali? Shade your eyes against its burning splen- dor, for toat is the wall of heaven, jasper at the bottom anl amethyst at the top. Sea this river rolling throuza the heart of tha great metropolis? That is the river concerning which those who once lived on ths banks of the Hudson, or the Als bama, or the Rhine, or the Shannon say, “We never saw the like of this for clarity and sheen.” That is the cael river of heaven—40 bright, so wide, so deep, But you ask, “Waere are ths asyvinms for the ola¥ I answer, *“‘I'ne inuabitanis ars ad vousg” “Where are tae hospitals for the lame?’ “Thay are all azile” “Wheres are the lnfirmaries for the dea? “sey all and hear.” the palm of the YOu see blin { and “Where are toe almbouss for the ] or?" “Toey are all muitimillionaires”™ “Whers ars the ine asviuns®™ “Why, thers are no saloon & bere are the grave vards “why, they never die,” Pass down thos poulevards of goll aod a0 Der wid sapphire ani ste those interminable streets built by the Archi. tact of the universes nto homes, over the thredinil ol whic: sorrow never steps, and out of wins windows Taos once pale with earthly siciness, now rubicund with immoral bata ha, jet me go in and see tasm?” vou cannot go in, Th Wao would never cous Yousay, "Let me where they never sin, for, where they never part.” No, no! Ogr time 18 ghart, our th r minutes are aimost We inust get back to the pdf be of heavenly silence for in your mortal state you cwo- np and splendor and reso iis half hour of silences is ended, come wae You put not now. 1 am now tas dailest half Bw Ata loos YOu say. No, there i you come up. stay here in this place where they never ef. gone Come on! earth before thie breaks $0 will heaven in full Dist, only snowing you nes ven at hour of all tas eternities,. Com» on! There is something in tae cxisstial appearace» which me thiok that the half bour of si.ence Yonler ars the waits horses being hitchad to csariols, an i yoular are seraphs fingering harp: as if about to strike the n into sy nPpHOnyY, A nd you ter are conga fowa [ron the bias halls anets of victory al vel, and cannot ail ¥ DAarmoaes heave Hark! tae eZine BO Eire send ¢ CORN sey makes will soon be over. words lakiag s tra r. Wa are mort jure the ull roll cannst ealure even wiiont than hall an ywer of heaven t the hall boar is ended D sre re hour oe er a il lon ror vo your griels its aulient ya spon | ths first hall hour f your heavenly ¢lizmeiip alier youu bave in to stay? Alter your prostraton by ’ the thi in worship of Him wad made it 1 y Hf vou Yr ges ta s at thnk ” wb © por first hisid sven will bh» afin rs vd ave bern fait al bo how will v far Dae Aus 1 AN Lin te 4 rent battles; t : nal over th ORT of turasd heross ol tae army on th ros Ina nily presi; Crimean roe jal, toe sharia Cross he Waterioo eda’, In your first beaven in some way you will be honored for tas earthly struzgies in which you won the day. Stand up tetors all the royal house of heaven and receive the insignia while you are an pouancxd ae the victor over the drougats aud freshets of tue farm fisld, victor over tae te notations of the Stock Exchange, victor over professional allurements, vicior do neetic inlaiicitiag, vielor over me. chanics sho), viet" over the storehouses, victor over homs worrimsnts, viclsr over paysical distressas, victor over hereditary depresnons, victor over win ani death ani pil. Tage the badze that celsbhratas those victories thvonza our Lord Jasus Christ, Cake is in the pressoce of ad the guileries— saintly, angsic and divine! Thar sa a's in #1 this glovion war Sas ¢raqase thouga they dis They see toe triansa trom afar, ped seize iL win their eye. li ——— A Carlons Wager. A wager was made in 1800 ian the Castle Yard, York, Eazland, between Fhomas Hodxson and Samuel Whitehead ualf hour in over most singular character. Umpires On the appoiated day do lg- with bank notes of various values, his with them. Besides these he had a row legend *‘Jobn Bull.” Waiteaead came cn the scene dressed like a woman on one side, one-oalf of his face painted and a silk stocking snd slipper on one foot and leg. The other hall of his face was biackened 80 as to resemble an African on the corresponding side of his body he wore a gaudy, long tailed linen coat; his leg on that side being in- —— a —— " = The loss of flesh is a trifle. You think you need not mind it. But, if you go on losing for some time or lose a good deal in a short time, you are running down. Is that a trifle ? Get back to your healthy weight and generally you get back to health, A book on carervL LIV- inG will tell you what it is to get there, and when Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil is useful, Free. ( SoTT & Towne, homists, 132 80uth sth Avenue, Your druggist keeps Scott's Emulsion-of cod. liver oileall druggists everywhere do. $1. ELY'S CREAM BALM is worth 83500 to any MAN, WOMAN OR CHILD suffering from CATARRH. Apply Balm foto each nostril ELY BROS, 46 Warren 80, N. ¥ A single dose produces beneficial re- EP sults, giving cheerfalness of mind ro @ buoyancy of body te waleh you were before a st ng rv. They enjoy a pop. ularity nnparaiieled, ir lee, 4501, The largest quadraped of ( grizzly bear. STATR OF UNIO, LITY OF 1OLEDO, { Lucas Cousty ba.. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he senior partue: of the firmot F. J Co. doing business County and State aforesaid as wil th no! SIE for each and cane ont are inl Cannot Le use of Hall's Uatarrh ¢ ure. FRrA®K J ured Cnexsey Sworn 5 preser to before me a; sor, this Oh day of rex A. WW. I ERAL } Hall's Catarrh acts directly on the bi of the system. Send | F.J «nexgy ¢ $2 Sold by Drs re Camels can perish quickly Cure is take iRise inown's Iron Bi ria, Hiliogsnysa 3 3 vag Strength, aids | cresies appetite Motliors, Weak Wor Oregon he FITS wrapped freed Neuve Hes Marvel bottle free nee, Y Texan's ad lost an COUGHRRASD ch indgees The worst cases i 16 Dir Sat Dr. swan, Beave In France and fees are paid bot Bewcmmam's Pies Flinn be 8 they cure William Hanks has three well defi Metedwit tak Yes aler sae man b at } A Te Lard Coun “August Flower” wallis, with Dyspepsia. 1 had pit of my stomach. Scmeti deathly sickness would me. I was working for McHenry, Druggist, Allegheny City, seven years. for two weeks. trouble. dared not touch before. covery. J. D. Cox, Allegheny, i JO NES’ SCALE! |} mee 0 FULLKY WARRANTED On STon Scares $60 Freiont Par AS “JONES F Ren Arrvay pw ER . * in each OM - |: JARI; gr REELTN, fas mee Fos Ape Arithmed so, hor «vant, vv Trohsuatsy 14 oY fd Tho Clrontars Tree rynut’'s College, 457 Nain 34, |) buds, N,V The Trade Hats of Arizons, A miner near the Senator recently had a rather singular experience with trade rats, known also as wountain As the nights were i the miner took his oresack to replenish his rather hard bed, Having neg- lected to come to town for weeks his supply of beans had and he bad come of straight bacon. Considerably out of humor, he started in to pull his bed to pieces one morning, and in re moving the Wits | prised to find three pounds of beans, with a little coffee mixed, which the trade rats ha brought frown the Senator and stored in his bed. The rats are native Ame) ana very different from their imported Norway cousins, They are called trade rats because they generally leave some article in exchange for what they take away. The miner states that he never Killed a trade rat; that these rodents habitually steal from one cabin and carry their plunder into an adjoining one; that on casion he spilled a couple of quarts on the floor of his cabin and morning found the away everygrainof itin a inging upon the that the rats appendages about rth, which they keep I )» and down, cole several given sacks agrecably sur- Cans one of corn the next stored of saddle-bags hs He also caudal i eng 1 pd wall have three slates thick inches in mstantly throwing u striking the floor with movement with ti stroke of ¥ i { a musical professor marking They carry of lugs of 1 tooth-b in fact, anything whic? iW manage tine, rushes, combs and ¥ ' Lo ove. —2'resratt A FRERH stream of Lase of the great cone of he best physicians, and vent velief, MY LIFE BECAME A DURDE 8. 8.2 , and tsk eight IWEN, Alonttels jvertise wt Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cure. 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A besgye w peal, given tn the Bret persons who [ives the sorrerils Sis wor 10 tee Lodowing 1 4 thet werd Ie this Ad. veriisemeni epells © the sume Dackward | se Forward! tng Yor the Firet correct answer, kf To the Second . io the Third - - Riothe Yourth = " To each of 1ha pert Twenty, LBL each 20 en 3 Of Lis Gest 308, * BAD esch Total Prizes In Cash, $725 k A mower = murt ranch Be on or bere re April Bah 0 IRR, War wer send : Boxtal note bot or Bde, 14 «inom F Ont Queries * ne rd tour 16 pa co Lionihly Poser, ( ar A will annonace Lbs rowgll of Cre oonbest, wild bh ham and nodresees of Lhe winners, This offer is sade solely Lo adverlise ony pu vication end introduce itigio new homes, ia aiden 1 the above we en avar 100 Cholee JHanea or Rastness 13 mud Joss then £100 $000 each, Wo rhinll promptly give gil the prizes offered here, Wiriteld Tour noms and 84 Arees PlAlnIY aod cocione sul iption mon y to Piso's Nemeody for Oatarrh in the Plow, Vaeisst tna ee and (Yeapest seid by diuggwis or seni by msdl, oe. 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J fron ou money is for the - fashioned pill most disturbance — Dr. Pierce's Pleasant most good. thorough and » smallest, cheapest and They cleanse anse and reconlat t hie live A and 3 1 does Lhe ntle, but effect stomach bow is, mber of Blo CEI OPOIDOIODOUPRIICLS. © $ ® ® ® ® ® . ¢ * ® * ® v TE000000000500000000000 0000000000000 TOFINO THOOOGONO SANS nO WOT BE DECENED # od Be Ldn A pone dn Ne Br ry Hl A, wilh wi A qu Bios at bgd Pores >on a ’ ~ wwoallcde Fay As Puss anand & a Mn, sad obey poiwri Fut HS www ——— —— FY wal wad i - ~~ Crh pny # a A 8D Shad, - =. # , DD aury as, KT. Ie Somgbens I Over, commen resalts of aa esringicures Sick Hondaoheog | yestoresUamplex wnjemrest ase You don't want oer i you dont with 1 look well dressed, if you don't want the best, thea dont want the lace Back r. Yourdealerhas it be your dealer, VU» will mail a pair on reript of £1.00. Kone 8 rises! wus, X.Y ET GETS Tanenmses Bia WORLD'S CHAM PION, the 4 oI Grestest Hand Corn Sheller on The oniy Sheller that wii ro are and evparate the cob, Ehells 30 ele por hoor. Prioa $3.50. Wi Plated, Warnnnted, i # terse, “JOB Da ron Tawentot, Npaby 1h itively Cured w ct Pherae 3a en ee Topy Th hou Pye 1 E Again my text suggests a way of stud jos heaven so That we can better understand % The word ‘‘eternity” that we handle . rmuch is an immeasurable word, Kuowing that we could not understand that word tha Bible uses it only once, We say, “Forever and ever” but how long is ‘forever and ever” [am giai that os text puts under our heaven for 3h dint, As when you would ses a grea nre pu a shee of 2 ig 47 into a soroll ty Joos throm h ae, or join 10 yi took theuah th She ire between, br d the pid el taore intense, so SUR—————————— are unmarpassed in ET = 1 0 Upwerds jud ¢ ously invents dn il PPA TE re, AT -~ LIVER v and Prov so wil COE en wR AL, MNER £00, & ir AWAY, ew Yor. DUNO 8 put Suen dot sired hp i worth extra packet Fredy tol each §i - ART Lapins, rend ioe. f ra i od esta JOA Godard. apecial GG usof al artic os. C.F. Ba. OWA Dy outa atu Tow race on feeds In tok. ng ft LOATALOG r cufeivaring (a And Ag PATEN TS 8 Riek ’ Cn, ca T. Wo WOOD & SONS cased in a balf a pair of leather breecaes snd a boot with a spur, He wore a i of sky-blue braided down his back tied with yellow, red and orange colored ribbons, Une would naturally. Janet that he presented the most singular and ludicrous Apjeatince; but ue wipes Cotianta & Co 613 ¥' a Wal Seniadiiy te must have thought differently, as they | oo awarded the stakes, some $100, to ARI man. rem Hodgson. 8t. Louis Republic. : Laevasey, WF Be pra take part, we have to counsel brevity, but how will heaven get on rapidly snouth to let the one hundred and forty-four thou. snd get through each with his own story, and then the ons hundred and forty-four willion, aud then the one hundred and forty-iour billion, ani then the one huadred and forty four trillion, 1oNot only ars ail the triumphs af be commemarated, but the ii to come. Not only what we now know of God, but what we wih know of Him after everasting study of the Deific. If my text ——" BXUg ] enlth Helper GR WL 2 OPIUM Tasers oR A AN