A King's Dreadful Deed. Not long ago there was terrible ex- citement at the royal court of An- nam. The King, Thanh-Tai, who is gow 14 years old, was missing! Et quette requires that the Annamese King shall vever leave the royal grounds. He is a kingly prisoner. And that the King should not only ve absent from the pa ace, but that no one should know where he was, constituted an event of such direful consequence that the whole court was in dismay, But the young potentate was not hard to find. Though he was a king, be was a boy; and it is natural for a boy, when he has some money in his pocket, to want to go out and spend it. That was exactly what the King of Annam had done. Entirely alone, he had started on a “shopping” expe- dition through the streets of Hue. Of course no one knew him, because he had never shown his face in pub lie. He was simply a boy, like any he wanted. But he was treated with great re seemed to have plenty of money. seemed to attract him most was a per, und when the frightened nobles In his possession. No doubt he tended to amuse himself by shearing the heads of all his dependents. attempt to experiment with it on the heads of several small street boys who were proving rebellious subjects, when the courtiers approached him, prostratiog themselves upon the ground and making alarmed outcries. Thanh-Tai was restored to the palace, but the aged regents of the kingdom at once sent in thelr resig- nations. They could no longer serve a mona:ch who had so disgraced him- self. It was with the utmost dif- culty that M. de Lanessan, the French resident and real ruler of the der at the court. The King no longer goes out shop- as a souvenir of a happy day of free- dom with the street boys. — Youth's Companion. rn ss se sss, Sheep-Shearing Maciaines, So many trials of sheep-shearing ma. chines have resulted in failure that the belief has become fixed that shearing by machinery is entirely impracticable, This idea sec as machines operated are in successful operation snd in Australia. It said that » flock of 200 sheep will warrant tw purchase of one of these machines — New York World. .- ms to be a mistaken one, by hose power in England 18 To tho Right Spot . ome to pn | began to take Marsapariiia. | bad cough for years after the Every seemed two on tried physicians, to the Hot Arkansas, no goewl i of Hood's Narsapavilla and it a gave me rel of at once 6 took si stirs know 1s aay x Dexter Curtis. i anid ht top Dextran Ate RIT: MIU t Cuonris, Madison, y Hood's**Cures Hood s Fills cure all Live ‘August Flower” * Iam ready to testify under oath that if it had not been for August Flower I should have died before this. Eight years ago I was taken sick, and suffered as no one but a dyspeptic can, I employed three of our best doctors and received no benefit. They told me that I had heart, kidney, and liver trouble. Everything I ate distressed me so that I had to throw it up. August Flower cured me. There is no med- icine equal to it.” Lorknzo F. 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Address The Resk Physician, 11-72 Baxter Court, Kashville, Teun, GOITRE CURED J" ish oe aeny: REV. DR. TALHAGE The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun. day Sermon. Subject: “Week-Day Religion.’ Text: “In all thy ways acknowledge Him.” Proverbs iil, 6. There has been a tendency in all lands and ages to set apart certain days, places and oo easions for especial religious servies, and to think that they formed the realm in which re. ligion was chiefly tonot. Now. while holy days and holy places have their use, they can never be a substitute for continuous exercise of faith and prayer, In other words, a man cannot be so goola a worldling all the week, get to Southampton? man will get to hesven who sails on the S8ab- bath day toward that which is good, and the other six days of the week sails toward the world, the flesh and the devil, You cannot now cold until until your bones marches on steadily up now hot Genuine religion its eve ever on the sveriasting hills crowned with the castles of the blessed, I propose, so far a8 God may help me, to show you how woe may bring our religion in- to ordinary life and practice it in common hings —yesterday, to-day, to-morrow. And, in the first piace, I remark, we ought A dam breaks, nnd two or three vil. lages are submerged, a South American earthquake swallows a city, and people be. rsation think they are service when thers have noticed life, and in that cony engaging in religious death and epi- it funerals and tomistones shallow men talk ab beds and bhearses and taphs, { n man have the religion of the gospel in its full power in his soul, he will talk chiefly about this world and the eternal world and very little eo cant pass vis and that, seldom it is that the religion of Christ Is & 1 If s man full of the gospel a redigi and be ered things, snd things A sun sore and chirp and carol, chorus of bird harmonies, every orehestrs, i a hawk appears in are hushed, so 1 hays al eirole that profosse a Christian silenond by the apg » great thems of God and Yet how of Christ goes to Mis olrcie gins to talk ¢ it ss versation is hushed, ecodingly awkward, the fors st full of As on mighty branch an the SXv, all the volors ® stimes Sean a so i t TAD CY roidion. e the religion ot Out it In baad bofors olher al that's sn!’ var the Oh, yes the religion of Jesus Christ nething to be groaned ale i to talk about and sin Ihe trouble is tow 7 faith of the gospel are inconsistent that they are atraid their con- versation will not harmonins with We cannot talk the gospel 1 os we live the gospel, You will often foe af whos ene tire life is nsisencies Alling his conversation with such expressions as, are miserable ' “The Lord “The Lord ble interiarding conversation 184] 3 pt oN, whi oanting, an i : he worst Kind is bout, bstit * ROOUL, yo ERE £5 nen pe ¢ fear fowair tha often se their life full of ine “We help us, \g their HH Are mers wave the grace of in his hear talk religion, aod it wil 3 ts i be at, he can yak the thing coin] att Main eared the Lord oyments, “Oh” wy for a man wi who has great is a grand but in my t th i450 business, great estate—4t and for shippers in my trim my insignificant work of | you apply those grand gospis principles told you Do you not Know that a faded leaf ona brook’s surface attracts Go ls attention as ceriainly as the path of a bias ing sun, and that the nioss that creeps up the gids of the rock attracts God's attention a= certainly as the waviag tops ot Oregon pine nent, in cannot 5 Vb that? and “Old Hundred” are not worth much if we do not sing all the week, A sermon is of little nccount {f we cannot carey it behind the counter and behind the plow, The Sab. bath day is of no value if it last only 24 hours, “Oh,” says some one, *‘if I had a great sphere, I would do that. If I could have | had some great and resounding work to do, | then I should put into application all that say." { you | and knight errantry have gone out of life, | into smithies, The classic mansion at Ash. {land has been cut up into walking sticks, | The muses have retreatsd before the emi- | grart's ax and the trapper's gun, and a Ver- Rocky mountains and see neither an Oread nor a Syiph, | The groves where the gods used to dwall | have been out up for firewood, nnd the man who is looking for great spheres an‘ great not find them, And yet there are Alps to seale and thers gre | Hellesponts to swim, and they are fn eom- {| mon lie, It is absurd for you to say that you {| would serve God if you had a great sphere, { If you do not serve Him on 1 small scale, you would not on a large seale, If vou eannot | seenes for action will { dure the breath of a basilisk? Our national government does not think it belittling to put a tax on pins and a tax on The individual amount to much, but in the { buckles and a tax on shoes, taxes do not And I would have you, oh Christian man, put a high tariff on every ann wanes and vexa. tion that comes through yoursoul, This might not amount to much in single eases, but in the aggregate it would be a great revenue of spiritual strength and satisfaction, A bee oan suck honsy even out of a notile, Gold in your heart you can got sweetness out of that whieh would otherwise irritate and annoy | A returned missionary told me that a » pany of adventurers, rowing up the Ganges, were stung to death by flies that infest that { region al certain seasons, I have seen the { earth strewn with the carcasses of men by inssct annoyances, prepared for the great troubles | conquer theses small troubles, Supposs a soldier shold say, “This is only Ww ens walt until [ get | engagement : would be a If a» man does not country in a skirmish, he will not Waterioo., And if you are not faithinl g out against the single-handed misfortunes of this life you would not be faithful when reat disasters with their thundering artiiiery eame rolling down over the soul This brings to another point, ought to bring the religion of into our trials, If we we lose our fortune Fie siain Fhe only way to get iifo is to of some grost general man is a coward and ! me We Josus Christ have a bereavement, ROMS rest 8 20 te * Bitle anno trouble (aod for banking he ort? You did n is, vou need to i Jesus Christ your life, YX you have vo ir vyexalions “ha, rnaractar Ming PEN iT AnXietios « I have iat I was” ® AnnBOYAnoMssE of ar disp My ar You say, With his liek. aliok, yin slr Oe son Ip yan 10 i mpreesion made goon and yet the work is going on don't you strike harder?" said shatter the ake It in this wa eoatingms on we . Broke hy £ An nn r man that enters the inrrest eal gta rvistian character | vymetimes entirely ¥ thems an ‘ lepictions the religion of in fittle that anything your oh Jeans Annoy is 190 sr act or # , § len Ons jusifer A queen a poisoned 0 A mMIpouny IL IaW, Colambus, #1 ani a drink ransiscan convent, eame to new world. And thers is a i between trifles and nothings and every nail by y of hire ol the im- »vey under a cow's hoof sounds as in God's ear as the soap of a world's and that the most insignifi- of an a ily jmp conflagration, tance to attract the attant of the On My brother, yon cannot be called todo any will help you will init, Ii you are a fisherman, Christ dragged Gennesaret, Are you a drawer of water? He will be with you as at the well wion talking with the Samaritan woman, Are you a custom house officer? hard dollars, And yet thers ars men who their ments, Theres are in the churches of this day men who seem ver are far from that during the week, rofesses roligion, but has no grace in his eart, The country merchant is swindled, He is too exhausted to go home that week | he tarries in town. On Sabbath he goes to some church for consolation, and what is his amazement to find that the man who carries around the poor box is the very one who swindled him, Butnever mind, Thedeacon has his black cont on now and looks solemn and goes home talking about that blessed sermon ! Christians on Sanday. Worldings during the woek, That man does not realize that God knows evary dishonest dollar he has in his Joka, that God is looking right through the fron wall of his money safe, and that the day of t is coming, and that ‘‘as the pare tide ita on and hatcheth them not, 80 that riches and not by right shall leave in the midst of his days, and nt his end shall be a fool.” But how many there are who do not bring the religion of Christ into their wvaryday cosupation, They think religion is for Sundays. Suppose you wer to go out to fight for your country in some great contest, would go to do the hailing at Troy or at Boringneld? No, you wo 50. Shard to get your swords and muskets, you woold out in the face of the enemy and contend for try. BN paaby the Sabbnth you not suppose tha! Gol eares for your insignificant sorrows’ Way, my friands, there js nothing lasignifieant in your life How dare you take the responsibility of say- ing that there js? the whole universe 8 not ashamed to take are of one violet? say: “What are you doing down there in tne grass, poor little violet? Nobody knows you are hers, Are you not alrald nights? You will die with thirst, Nobody eares for you. You will su Ter ; you will perish.” “No,” sars a star, “I'll watch over it to-night.” “No the olouad, “I'll give it drink.” “Neo.” the sun, “I'll warm #8 in my bosom.’ then the wind rises and comm down the grain and psalm through the forest, “Whither away, 0 wind, wing?’ ; | the cheek of that violet.” And then [ see pulieys at work in the sky, and the clouds AYR bending sounding and say, | doing there, O clouds?” They say, “We are {drawing water for that violet," And thea 1 look down into the grass, and I say, “Can it | be that God takes onre of a poor thing like you?’ and the answasr comes up, "Yes, | never forgotten ms, & poor violet, Oh, my friends, if the heavens bend down to sun in. willing to bend down to your oars, since He is just as earaful about the construstion of a spider's eyo as He is in the conformation of flaming galaxies, Plato had a fable which I have now nearly forgotten, but it ran something like this: He said spirits of the other world camo bask to this world to find a body and find a sphere of work, Onespirit came and took the body of n king and did his work. Anotherspirit came and took the body of a post and did his work, After awhile Ulysses came, and he said: “Why, all the fine bodies are taken, and ali the grand work istaken., There is nothing loft for me." And some one “Ah, the best one has been left for you.” Ulysses sold, “What's that?” And the reply was, “The body of a common man, doing a com mon work and for a common reward.” A good inde for the world and just as good a for thi eh again ought tobring th t, , We " religion of Jesus Ohrist into our ordinary blessings, of | blessings you will never think of mentioning before God, We must see a blind man led along by his to have one's eyesight, We {eal energies. Wo must ses some smpty contsleeve pinned up, before we learn sil our physical faculties, In other words, we are so stupid that nothing but the misfor- elation of our common bhlemsings, ton and come to i= off Norwalk nnd bridge, orash' goss the out, Wo escape, train, KO many perished, But to for Boston. You eross that brides walk ; you cross all the other bridges : you get to Boston in safety, Then vou home, Not an accident, not an alarm, thanks, you sll get off and you have no alarm at all, tude js somewhat selfish : in the other it more lke what it ought to be. Oh, these common mercies, in blessings, how little we Appreciate them and how soon we forget them! Like the ox grazing, with the clover up to fis eyes. Hie the bird ploking the worm out of the furrow ~nover thinking to thank God, who makes the grass grow and who gives ifs to every living thing from the animaleulm in the sod to the seraph on the throna, Thanksgiving on the 27th of November, in the antumn of the year, but blessings hour by hour and day by day and no thanks at atl, I compared our but 1 wronged the brute, know but that among its other in may have an instinet by which It recognizes the divine Rand that feeds 1. I do not kn but that God is through #t holding commu- nication with what we tion.” The cow that stands low by the water sourse chewing its cud ke very thankful, and who ean tell how much a bird means by its song? The aromas of the Hike incense, and the the river i Hike the sacrilios, Ob, thst we indifference fo the brute, Ido not tines it perhaps eall “irrational erea under the wil. + io flowers » from neil mist arising YER nor nsive | thrigty an sked me 1 1 gave yo { water, your 1 is of thankin » wall, joamis in Lng roe i the Aas. Mittering in in He sen th Who ¥ Hy 1 intain £4 t ho t a8 if ' the fo the p re a Tr aay; i their and the feet. and rain fi under our s and wos would aenri 8 and sie » earth, and the whole become & place of skal Oh, y Iriends, iet us wake up fn of the common life, every day be a Bablath, every meal 4 sacra. rua holy of | We all have burdens to ied ¥ Dear then Wea all have atti iragoeousiy fight the If we want mercies of fot ment, every r hice us cheerful ww bear : dit MENS “w wt us } Ge right, mie and attend I will go home and attend sphere of duties X wirnol x i cannat do work Negligenod and indolencs will win the & of ing scorn, while faithfulness will gariands and wave ite scepirs and fx thr world ne have 100 go hie ities your 4% ever Father wit and One alter the elernal avs AN anh begun I. Mummies as Brie.a-brae, It is estimated that the number of bodies embalmed in Egypt from B. C 2000, when mummification is supposed to have been first practised, to A. D. 700, when it ceased, amonnts to 420, . 000,000. Egyptologists, who extend the beginning of the art to a much earlier date, estimate the ber of mummies at 741,000,000. These mummies are very productive to the Egyptians The modern traveler is not content to collect merely beads and faneral statues and such small game. He must Lrisg home an ancient Egyptian. The amount of business done of late years in this grim kind of bric-a-brac has been very considerable. Mammies, however, Some num- are pensive wealthy. From $300 to 8500 waa at was asked i EE ——— ea China's Literary Prodigy. The marvelous child mentioned in old, was able to recite the 360 verses of the T'ang poetry as well as the Ancient Book of Odes, has been eclipsed by an infant prodigy of the same age, i as a candidate for literary honors, The P'anyn Chehsien personally ex- essay on the subject that had been given him, although, of course in an infantile scrawl. It is observed by a only for the Literary Chancellor to “pass” the prodigy ere he oan be styled as “having entered the portals of the Dragon's gates” that is, ob- tained the degree of “‘Siu-ta’al,” or licentiate. — London News, bn IN SN, Queen Victoria leads a busy sife, de spite the number of ministers and ser. vants she has. During the summer she drives down from Windsor Oastle about 9 o'clock and broakfasts at Frog: more, usually ina tent on thelawn. After ast the Queen does her morning's work in another tent, all di letters and boxes coming down to her from the castle. During the morning two mounted grooms are kept riding between Frogmore snd the castle with messages and letters, about 1.30 the Queen drives back time for luncheon ROYAL a pure cream of tartar “The Royal Baking Powder is undoubtedly fered to the public.” Government Chemist, 106 WALL ET. a ————— Gets Ideas from His Feet, Various are the ways of starting a picture, but surely none more curious than that of a New York artist wher he starts batch of wales colors. He takes a long strip of per, wets it, surfaces as large as a dollar walks it ina sa bots, wooden has rambled around it for a tims mixing and distributing the color subjects will suggest themse.ves out accidental blots of green, bl brown and yellow, and he w the paper into various len elaborate these suguest.ons plete pictures es Is Youx police gigned beciuse the oon wanted him to sacrifice inches of his mustache. to paint a pa- daubs color upon it in and the: pair of Fren i After he over ar shines of A New missioners Bix How's This! We offer One Hun b any case of Catarrh that cant Hall's Untars ¥.i.Cns We, the ur i bnve k ney for the last 15 years, i brissh toes reed Cn, Prog: ow 3 bejieve him rasan t ans {ion made by ther firm Weer & Tuvax, Whoissale Druggista, Orin, Warmmsa, Kinean & oT, i Whe # re Manwvix, fire sila, ial Sarbat a Ew * “ wat 5, Jo, pe Testimonials {r sus of Rhodes oe and fitted 10 (ether. 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