How Moaile Puintlogs Are Made. In order to reproduce a painting in tists or artisans take a flat sheet of fectly fiat surface. On this the out lines of the figures are drawn. The squares, which are to be removed and graduaily replaced by as many squares of mosaic of the same size, In the holes left empty when the plaster is taken away 4 new pluster, linszed oil is poured. s After three duys this new plaster acquires the necessary censistency, and in this the artist sticks the little colored squares. When all the sur. face of the plaster is covered with these colored pieces of mosaic, the whole is washed with sand and water until it becomes quite smcoth. The colored pieces are made of mixtures of differcot minerals, like ars=»nie, lead, glass, ete. These minerals are placed in an oven, and the different colors are obtained by the different degrees of heat, and as many as 28,000 various colors can Le obtained. One sun shine, A whale devel oh power when it flops its tail, I LOST MY HEARINC As a result of catarrh in : the head and was doa! for over a year. 1 began to take Hood's Sarsapa- rilla, and found when 1 had taken three botiles that my hearing was refurning. itis now more than a year and | can hear perrectly welt” HenrMaAN Hicks, 30 Carter Street. Bochester, N. X. Hood's» Cures v 113 ficod’s Pills cure all Liver Ils Jaundice. Indivestion, Fick Headache. LUSIVNER, AAP AAA AAA AAR VAAN NAAN ¥ " & 31 Do You «leep Feacefo'ly? “Tired Nature's sweet restorer, balmy sirep! ‘He. like the world, his ready visit PRYs “Where fortune smiles —" Upon him that owns that best of bods we Pilgrim Spring Bed r Wire, is the TAAL AERA AR EA LAA VARY f high'y tempered stee! FECTION of EASE, and wii a anon wire im Hations, for y are | TL “A villisn witha smiling cheek: ‘A goodly npple rotten ant the hear; “0. what un goodly outside fainchood h th “A auicksand of deceit,” THE PILCRIM CHARMS PEACEFUL SLEEP. A CHILD CAN LIFT IT AND TURN IT OVER. Exhibited at No, #1 Warren Street, New York No. ¥ Hamilton Place, Boston For sale by ali reliabie Desiors tee Brass Tag Registered Trademark om all Genuine Pligrims, tend for Money Saving Primer, Free. Atlas Taek Corporation, Beston, THAT FIFE FT FEF IAT ET RE HAR FAR RRA A MR MAA TAA SARA ARAL ATL AA AAA RAMA MAMA AAA SAA A AA SAA WAREHOUSES — Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Baltimore, Sau Francisco, Lyna. Factomips—Taunton, mass: Fairhaven, Mase : Whitman, Mass: Duxbury, Mass: Fiymouth Mase AVAL RRR RVR VRW WWMM RRR RYMAN Sn “August Flower” '‘ I am Post Master here and keep a Store. Ihave kept August Flower for sale for some time. I think it is a splendid medicine.”” E. A. Bond, P. M., Pavilion Centre, N.Y. The stomach is the reservoir. If it fails, everything faile. The liver, the kidueys, the lungs, the heart, the bead, the blood, the nerves all go wrong. If you feel wrong, look to the stomach first. Put that right at ounce by using August Flower. It assures a good appetite and a good digestion. wo MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS CLINCH RIVETS. No tools required. Only a hammer needed to delve ond cline them easily and quiek.y, wav ng the clinch the leather nor bury tor the Kiveis. They are tough snd durable. Miions nw in use $4 eneths, uniform or assorted, put ap in voxes, Ask your desler for them, or wnd Oo in Matups of assorted sizes. Man'td by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO., WALTHAM, “MOTHER'S . FRIEND" a 3 4 Liniment and harmlote) jent Hen? every ue and in.constant use profession. It short- FEV. OR. TALMAGE Thy Emizeat Brooklyn Divine's Sua. day Sermon. Sabject: * Hight in the Evening.” Text: ‘Al evening time it shall be light.” While ‘‘night” in all languages is ths symbol for gloom and sufferipg, it is often speak not of such nights as come down with wave tossing up light from beneath—murky, seo when the pomp and magnificence of seems as though the song which the morn. of God were shouting for joy, Such nights the sailor blesses from the side, and the soldier from the tent, earthly aoste gazing upon heavenly, and shepherds guarding their flocks afield, while angel bands above them set the silver bells a-ring. ing, “Gloryto God in the highest and on earth peace ; good will toward men.” What a solemn and glorious thing is night in the wilderness! Night among the moun- tains! Night ou the ocean! Fragrant night among tropical groves! Flashine night amid arctic severities ! Calm night on Roman wampagna! Awful night among the cor dilleras! Glorious night "mid sea after a tempest! Thank God for the night! The moon and the stars waleh rule it are light. bouses on the const toward which, I hope, we are all sailing, and blind mariners are we if with 50 many beaming, burning, flaming glories to guide us we cannot find our way into the harbo My text may well suggest 80 it shall be lig in the evening of our sor- rows of old age--of 1 d's history—of the Christian life. *J r me it shall be light.’ ¥ This prophecy will be filled in the sven. is broad daylight. The sun rides high, in. pumerable activities go ahead with a thous and the pickax struck a mine, and the bat. tery made a discovery, and the investment yielded its 20 per cent. and the book came to rupled in vs ». and the sudden fortune hoisted to high position, : praised, and friends without into the family hive, and the music and steppe glowed in the wine and and all the gods of music and ens» and grati- fleation gathered around this Jupiter hoid. ing in his hands so many thundertolis of power, But every sun mu day sky was oy The lountain dried The song hushed be wolf broke Is i fam dd carried off the best lan crashing Y phonies { of disaster t) a gasaste ae family picture Will the grace of G gircumstances; Wi great muititude been 1 the whee they lie do and gnashing their fatherly chastisemes strike back? Because th a of GG treasures are § grave of their 4d will be a resurree Did they bem say, T were dead i be night of the commie upon ther onless stariess, dark and bowling, smothering sud choking their lives ut No hi. Bb No! At eventime it was light, The swift promises overtook them The eternal constellations the circ about God's throne poured down an infin Is luster Under their shining the billows of trouble took on crests and plumes of gold and jaspar and amethyst and fame. All the trees of Ife rastied in the God's *, The night blooming assuratoss ol.Christ's sympathy filled the atmos. phere with heaven The soul at every step seemed to start up irom its feet bright winged joys warbling heavenward ‘Itis good that I have been afflicted cries David The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away,” exclaims Job, “Sorrows summer air of vision. At eventime it was light. Light utgushing, everlasting light! { ing acute and the step elastic zud all out stout heart. Midlife and old age will be do { ue, but youth-we all know what that is. Those wriniles were not al for the race, or sent the ball flying sky high, ut youth will not always last, It stays ing. and an arm with which to battle our fellow it long enough will come under frown. be old, be not ashamed to be old. The grandest things in all the universe are old. Old mountains, old rivers, old seas, old ashamed to be old unless you are older than the mountains and older than the stars, How men and women will He! They say they are 40, but they are 60. They say they are 20, but they are 30. They say they are 60, but they are 80. How some people will He! Glorious old age if found in the way of righteousness! How beautiful the oid age of Jacob, leaning on the top of his staff, of John Quiney Adams falling with the harness on, of Washington Irving sitting in hand amid the scenes himself had made classioal, of John Angell James to the last proclaiming the Gospel to the masses of Birmingham, of Theodore Frelinghuysen down to feebleness and emaciation devoting his illustrious facultion to the kingdom of God, tide it was Hght ! Seo that you do honor to the aged. A philosopher stood at the corner of the street day after day sa “You will be an o 5 o'clock! 6 oeloek! The shadows fall are all hushed. It is time 10 gO to bed, ! The patriarch My text shall also find fulfillment io the It is early yot in the history of everything getting out of the eradle, The light of #Ky is but the flaming of the morning, but it shall be light, War's sword intemperance buried under 10,000 broken decanters ; the world’s impurity turning its prow heavenward for the benediction, “Blessed are the pure in heart" the last Henry Martyn's Bible { aboriginal saperst- 1 ncknowiedging David Brainerd's plety man bondage delivered through T arkson's Christianity vagrancy i back from its pollution at the eall of Ellzabet Fry's Redeemer; the mountains coming down ; the valleys going up , “holiness” in- seribved on horse's bell and stikworm's thread and manufacturers shuttle and chemist's Inhoratory and king's so and Nation's Magna Charta, Not a he , Yor there are uo wounds ; not an asyl or there are no rphans ;: not a pri r there are no eriminais ;: pot an almshouse, for there & no paupers ; not a tear, for thers are no sor. rows? The long dirge of varth's lamentation has ended the triumphal march of re deemed empires, the forest harping it o vige-strung oranches, the water chanting among the gorges, the thunders drummi it among the hills, the ocean giving it with its organs, trade winds oud keys and eurociydon's foot on the § . 1 want to see Jobn Howard when the last prisoner is reformed. 1 want tosee Fi Nightingale when the last sat stopped ting I want to Penn when the last Indian has been ized. I want to see John Huss when the last flame of persecution has been extinguished, I want to see Johr Bunyan after the last piigrim Las come to the gate of the Celestial City. Above all, 1 want to see Jesus after the last saint has his throne and begun to sirg hallelujah You bave watched th almness and the r of the evening hour, orers have me from the fi ing with an though the sun in 8h the gate after | i loaf swims | SEY. A siar in the heaven beneath a winter's dav is, and b ant do Now, my friends, Ui pter's day. The sun rises st i and death a: apart aptiam together cradiv, A Ines the grave into the } on Th f the househ and with it 1 bounded as day on oid had with biack book, reading Ashes to ashes, dust to dust But I hurl away this darkness, have you weej Thanks be giveth us the victory, at light! 1 have seen man never saw any o yes » in darkness, What if the billoy of desth do rise al our girdle who does not Jove to bathe? What thouch other Hehts & y out | the biast, what do we want of then ben all the gates of glory swing of t ! us, and from a myriad volees, 8&4 myria Arps, a myriad thrones, a myriad palaces, there dash upon us, “Hosanna! Hosanna “Throw back the shutters ani jet the sun come in.” said dying Scoville MeCollum, ons of my Sabbathechool hoys You ean see Pa putting on robes and wings of assensior a8 he exclaims: “] have fought the good fight. I have finished my course. 1 have kept the faith, Hugh MoKall went to ofie side of the scaflold of martyrdom and eried “Farewell sun, moon and stars Farewell ail earthly delights ©" Then went to the other side of the seaffold and cried : “Welcome, God and Father! Welcome, sweet Joeus Christ, the Mediator of the covenant’ Wei come death! Weaicome glory | A minister of Christ in Philadelphia, dyine, said in his last moments © “I move into the Hight I They did not po down doulting and fearing and shivering, but their battieery rang through all the caverns of the sepul chre and was echoed back from all the thrones ofheaven: “0 death! where is thy sting? O grave’ where is thy victory?’ Sing, my soul, of Joys lo come I saw a beautiful being wandering up and down the earth. She touched the aged, and they became young, Rhe touched the poor, and they became rich, Isald, “Who is this beautiful being, wandering up and dows the earth?’ They told me that her name was soe agnin' When the deal Christian begins temple Hungry men no more to hunger ; thirsty men no more to thirst : weeping men no more to weep ; dying men no mare to die. Gather ap all sweet words, all jubflant expressions, all rapturous exciamations, Bring them to me, and I will pour them upon this stupend. ous theme of the soul's disenthrallment ! Ob, the: ‘ov of the spirit as it shall mount up toward tae throne of God shouting : Free! Free! Your eyes was vazed upon the garai not seeni it. Your eye has caught harmonies uncounted and indescribable—caught them fall's dash and ocean's doxology, but the ear hath not heard it, How did those blessed ones got ap into the chains? What loom wove their robes o light? Who gave them wings? Ah, eternity not capacity enough to realize it-—-the mar vuels of redeeming love' Let the palms wave, lot the crowns glitter: let the anthems as ecend, Jet the trees of Lebanon clap their hands--they cannot tell the hall of It Archangel before the throne, thou fallest Ring on. praise on, ye hosts of the glorified And if with your seepters you eannot reach it and with your yOu cannot expres it, then let all the myriads of the saved unite in the exclamation, “Jesus! Jesus! Jesus! “The password,” They answer, "We were wanderers from God and deserved to die, but we heard the voles of Jesus.” “Aye, aye,” said the gatekeeper, ‘that is the pass. word! Lift up your feuds, yo everlasting gates, and let these people come in.” They go in and surround the throne, jubilant for- Ah! do you wonder that the last hours of the Christian on earth are jlluminated by win may be sharp, The parting may be Pn Yet light in the evening, As all the stars of night sink their anchors of pear! in lake and river and sen, so the waves of Jordan shall be illuminated with the down flashing of the glory to come, The dying “The all tears from their eyes,” Close the eves of the departed one earth would seem tame to its enchanted vision, Fold the hands life's work is ended, Ved the face; it has been trapsfigured., Mr, Toplady In his dying hour sald, “Light.” Coming vearer the expiring moment, he ex. claimed, with jlluminated "e “Light.” lo the last instancs o ing he lifted up his hands “Light! Lig! Thank Goll the evening LIGHT nAIR AND CENIUE. Appearances Would Seem to Indicate That They Two Go Together, It has long been an accented fact that the great men of this world, in war, statecraft, or the arts, have all been few exceplions—there always are, Some one has even pointed out that there are exceptions to the rule that marriage is a failure. But in general the thin wen are out of it More spurious still, according to the New York Commercial Advertiser, Is the fact that the first requisite for politi iceess is that one must be a lHight-haired or red-haired man. There may seem to be a contradiction ii the other fact that ell the me: of Mr. Cleveland's Cabinet, ba: Mr. Lamont, are dark-haired it Is mere seeming. No one they are statesmen and Mr. admits they are not politicians to the time Mr. Cleveland first down hard upon the presidential cl dark compiexi yellow and red-br 'ashington to the s under whom the DOW creaks, Lionde three dark BK the have a mascot concealed somew hers Were this woula be impossible It the red Senators are Vest, Blackburn, of Kentucky: eron, of Pennsylvania; New York and Ohio of Maine, is a blonde Governor Flower the little whiskers that li renthesis marks on either side “gr has re good-natured face. Blue-evet Sheehan, the Lieutenant ( is a man of light compiexio Senator Murphy sms IIIs sn AD. Strange Relirs Come to Light. Binge ef the Years a | ing await stafl of ih samt bearing no ext wn the others, much less to indicat it served ns a sort of urn for cast, of the mortal relics of the perscnages When this insig:s looking casket was opened the first i monitory symplom of what was comiog conmsted of a whiff of that peculiar odo which clin even to of Kings Then a of paper was perceived, with the following inventor meisucholy specimens that concealed A shoulder-brlade of Capet, a thigh-bone of Charles 'V shin-bone of Charles VI; sundry verte » cis 1.. more vertebre of Charles IX. rib of Phillippe Le Bel, ditto of Louis X11, the lower jaw-bone of Catherine de Medicis, a jaw-bone of Anne of Austria, # shin-bone of Cardinal de Reta. Opposite to each name is inscribed the (not alwaye the same) of the month of Uctober, 1703. This last piece of infor. mation supplies a clue to the whole mys tery, and, as the paper is pronounced by experts to belong without doubt to the mains. The box has, in the course of unkpown migrations, received rather sro IIIs. Cheaper Than Doctors’ Bills, Said one William Ladd in St. Louis recently: “For years 1 was a suls ferer from rheumatism. 1 tried every known remedy. At last 1 received some relief frown the application of electricity. This gave me an idea and 1 resolved to utilize the elec. tricity that is in every man's body, and give it a chance to get out. 1 had my boots made with copper wire running the length of the sole and drawn through the center of the heel, $0 «that its end Is exposed to the ground or pavement, thus making a wire to carry off the surplus fluid in the body, and since that day 1 kave never had a tinge of diamonds, We Cure Enpture, No matter of how long sanding. Write for free treatise, testimonials, ete, to 8B, J, Hollensworth & Co, Owego, Tioga Co, N. XY. Price $1; by mail, 81.15. Brown's Iron Bitters cures Dyspepsia, Ma's. Hilty, Gives Motuers, weak women and children. Fear me f s fans COWLrCS ‘Ls 1 XRown Ones, exted invites danger onoealed Conductor E. D. Loomis, Detroit, Miecl, says: “The effect of Hal's Cainrry Cure is wonderful." Write Lin about it Build by Druggists, 5c. De taken Many persons are broken down {rom ever. work or hooschold oares. Brown's [ron Bit. A Vers: Peechiam's Wales Hoeohian s~no ullier wo ULE. FISH IN BOILING WATER. L Species Discovered That Turive in That Element. One of the most remarkabl sries in the sha: ries of fish ey gent was that in 187¢ t that time he Hale & Nore and the Savage what is known When at { cident cepih had all beet which Lad the Inacce 2» portions Works, and when the water stil B temperature 128 degrees—rnit scalding hot - pany queer-ios little blood-red fish were 1 In ap; prom ptly but few no 1} ing vhe friends Has said Come extremely ondence les James member irge the gracious issue a name oot Lehi Lead ure. hight, sweet, fe yod. dyspeptics. Lovell Diamond Cycles i ah RE BL A new nnd scientific principle for mending Tin, Brass, Copper, Iron and Lead, without the use of neld or seidering ren, Une - i opr at a tf . hyo 10 . * from Ateneo = ee yii With 25 eps. adr TE TATCH FIAT A 0, 1614 Sung ann Ave, Ph Sah iphia. Pa. GOITRE CURED "iu mot ins. Tran LEMONADE.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers