The Weekly Chroniele. THI DALLI8, OREGON FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1891 LOCAL AND PERSONAL. H. T. Johnston the postmaster Dufar was in the city Saturday. Of Miss Georgia Smith - of Hood River made a flying visit to the city to-day, A very large quantity of merchandise was discharged from cars at the depot to-day. Unas. JS. Bayard left Jvnday morn . ing lor Seattle where be expects to re main for some time. Miss Minnie Garrison of East Port land is visiting at the home of her grand mother Mrs. Garrison. B. S. Huntington went to Canyon City Saturday, to attend court, which is " in session at that place. So far this season, the run of salmon has hardly commenced, which is an un usual thing at this time of year. A wagon load of fat hogs owned by C M. Van Duyn were sold Thursday at five and one-fourth cents, on foot. C. M. VanDuyn sold two cars of beef . cattle to Mr. Lewis of Portland, last 'Friday. : . Hon. Robert Mays has returned from his ranch at Antelope where he has been for the past few weeks. The regular meeting of the Eastern Oregon , Pomelogical society was held Saturday in the council chamber in this city. " " - James Fulton, Jr., of Lower Ten Mile was in town. He says they had a fine rain at his place and the grain is looking splendid.. . Herman Raster formerly of Kingsley now ' of Kings valley, .Benton county came up on the noon train Friday on visit to his old ranch at Kingsley. The Columbia river at this point had a raise of one foot yesterday and is on stand at about eleven feet above low water mark. The musical jingle of the bell on the lead horses of the . six and eight horse freight teams from the country is Jaeing heard on the streets. - Stock In specter Rice is so far recovered from his sickness as to be able to go out to bis father's ranch on Fifteen Mile to spend a short time for a change of air. Potatoes seem to be a drug in this market. We saw two persons from the country Friday who could not dispose of some they had brought into town, at any price. . Twenty cars of cattle, a whole train, were fed Saturday at the stock yards. They belong in part to Reynolds Sc. Chil ders and part to Kirkahaw & Coolege and are for the Sound market. Edgar Pratt of Wamic, A. J. Wall of Eight Mile, C. P. Balch of Dofur, Alex. 8trachan of Dufar, Frank Gabel of Wap- initia and Wm. Holder, state lecturer of the grange from Grass Valley, were in town Friday. Thi following statement from Mr. W. . B. Denny, a well known dairyman of New Lexington, Ohio, will be of interest to persons troubled witb ' Kheumatism. 'He says: "I have used Chamberlain's . -Pain Balm for nearly two years, four bottles in all, and there is nothing I have ever used that gave me as much relief for rheumatism. . We always keep a bot tle of it in the house." For sale by Snipes it Kinersly. ' The land contest case on hearing for the past three or . four days between ." Richard Sigman and Robert Bradley of Dufnr was settled by the mutual agree ment -of the parties, Friday. The ' contest involved 80 acres of railroad land which the parties agreed to divide. A. J. Wall bought a fine trotter from C, P. Balch of Dufnr Friday morning. Wall says the price paid was $300, and that the animal can trot in 3 minutes, The Chboniclb is privately informed that under favorable circumstances on " -. good track she might make a mile in 10 minutes. ..Mr. William O'Dell of Hood Rir er who has been under the medical care of Dr. vanaerpooi at JJarur lor some time was moved to this city Thursday last and is the - guest - of superintendent - Shelley - Mr, O'Dell stood the journey from Dufur . better than was expected. He will pro ceed to his home as soon as it is thought ' prudent. ---'- 'He wants it .known. Mr. J. H -Straub, a well known German citizen, of ' Fort Madison, Iowa, was terribly afflicted witn inflammatory rneumatism wben Mr. J. F. Salmon, a prominent druggist there, adviBed him to use Chamberlain's Pain Balm. One bottle of it cured him. Hie cam was a very severe one.. He suf ' fared a gssat deal' and now wants others w similarly afflicted' to know what cured him. 50 cent bottles for sale by Snipes Kinersly.' This is a plain and truthful utterance, made to. an Oregonian reporter by E. B. Dufur, of .The Dalles: "Eastern Oregon is with Portland, heart and soul, in its efforts to build a portage road, between The Dalles and Celilo. Every man, woman and child endorses the scheme ' ; adopted at the Portland convention. I am satisfied that oar section of the state : will pat np its portion of the amount needed, . If Portland does not get the river opened its Eastern Oregon trade . will surely . go over the . mountain to Paget sound." So the state militia is to go into camp In a couple of months and for the time conduct themselves as real soldiers. The state has shown how proud it is of t the boys by making an appropriation so exceedingly liberal that six overcoats will be loaned oat to each company of 60 men for the men on guard duty. The boys will be permitted to furnish their .. own bed and bedding; if they indulge in . .the luxury of target practice they can blow off their own ammunition for tne state won't furnish any, and besides all these privileges and emoluments they are paid a wage of $1.50 a day. You see it's a fat job this. Xet as all join. The-only sisterof Mr. J. M. Patterson, of this city, Mrs. G. W. Browne, died at Spokane this morning from the effects of la grippe. Mrs. Blanche Patterson was at her bedside at the time of her death, f. and will bring her body down here and, being1 joined by her husband, will go through to Salem, where the funeral will take place. The deceased lady leaves a child of her own and the infant child of Mr. Patterson's older sister who died last fall, and for which she has - been caring. Mrs. Browne was a woman of lovely character and her loss will be sadly felt. . 1 From our Wmmie Correspondent. Wamic, Or., April 23. 1891 Editor Chronicle : Dear sir, I sent you a few items from here last week bat as I did not find them in your columns I presume they found their way to your waste basket. I won't let you off so easy I'll bore you with this one anyway. We are increasing very fast this spring, for a daughter was born to the wife of A. C. Sanford, April 9th, and a daughter to the wife of Orange Brittian, April 13th, a son to the wife of S. H. Douglas, Aprill 19th, a daughter to the wife of W H. Patison, April 19th and a son to the wife of Rufus McCorkle, April 23. That is all we have heared of lately, hut the deuce only knows how many more there are in this locality. Jas. Patison and family left here for Fossil last Monday where his wife will visit her sister while he is shearing sheep. Tne ground is very dry and many were compelled to let their summer fal low ground lay idle this season from that cause. All grain that is sowed looks nicely and will raise a fair crop, without any rain, but rain is needed yery badly. Wishing your paper'success, and hop ing to always have the oppertunity to pick up the Chronicle at all spare moments to tret the correct news I am very respectfully, Ought. ANOTHER SURVEY. Bat a Usual the Matter is Shrouded in Mystery. Evening Telegram. It is understood that in a few davs a party of engineers will start out from here to eo over the line of the old Hunt system on the north side of the Columbia. Just what the object is cannot be learned, nor can it be learned whom the engineers represent. It is supposed they want to ascertain the actual, value of the right-of-way and franchise in general. There is no longer any hope that the Northern Pacific will build the line, hence the actions of the engineers are all the more mysterious. Ground Selected. Mr. Joseph Paquet who has the con tract for building the boat for The Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation Com pany was in tins city batnrday and chose the grounds and selected the location on which he is going to build the boat. It will be at the foot of Wash ington street. The contractor has all arrangements made for the work and will have the lumber and men here on Monday next and will then begin oper ations and push the boat through to completion inside of three months. The Government Slow hut Sure. Our townsman Marshall Hill this morning received from the government at Washington the sum of $57.03. There is nothing particularly strange in that, but from "the circumstance that it was in payment for services rendered by Mr, Hill when he was a lad not then twenty' one years of age. He is now fifty-four years old. . Mr Hill thinks the United States government a slow paymaster but a sure one. Notice to tax Payers. All state and county taxes, become delinquent April 1st. Taxpayers are here by requested to pay the same before that date in order to avoid going on tne de linquent list. The county court has ordered the sale of all property in which the taxes have not been paid. Please call and settle before the time mentioned and save costs. D. L. Gates, Sheriff of Wasco County NOTICE. R. E. French has for sale a number of improved ranches and unimproved landajn. the Grass Valley neighborhood in Sherman county. They will be sold very cheap and on reasonable terms Mr. r rench can locate settlers on some good unsettled claims in the same neigh oornood. a is address is trrass valley. Sherman county, Oregon. FOR SALE. ' A choice lot of brood mares : also number of geldings and fillies by "Rock- wood Jr.," "Planter," "Oregon Wilkes," and "Idaho Chief," same standard bred Also three fine young stallions by "Kockwood Jr." out of nrst class mares, For prices and terms call on or address either J. W. Condon, or J. H. Larsen, The Dalles, Oregon. Merino Sheep for Sale. I have a fine band of thorough bred Merino sheep consisting oi 07 bucks, about 340 ewes and about Ai young lambs, which I will sell at a low price and upon easy terms. Address, - D. M. French, - The Dalles, Or. Stock Strayed. Three 3-year-old fillies (2 sorrels and one bay.) two 2-year-olds (both bays) all branded i on the left shoulder. - I will give $5 apiece for the recovery of the same. J. W. Rogers.' Boyd, Or. City Treasurer's Notice. All City Warrants registered prior to July 6, 1889 are now due and payable. interest ceases on and alter date. J. S. Fish. February 7, 1891. City Treas. Lost. Pair of gold bowed eye glasses in case. The finder will be rewarded by leaving at this omce. Horsemen Attention. The spring rodero for horses will meet at Bake Oven on the first day of May. it. XSOOTEK, Chas. W. Haight, J. N. Burgess. Lone Ward offers for sale one of the best farms of its size in Sherman county. It consists of 240 acres of deeded land at Erskinville. There is a . never-failing spring of living water capable of water ing five hundred head of stock dailv. Tne house, which is a large store build ing with ten rooms attached alone cost $1700. A blacksmith shop and other buildings and the whole surrounded by a good wire fence. Will be sold cheap and on easy terms. Apply by letter or other wise to tne editor of the Chronicle or to the owner, W. L. Ward, Boyd, Wasco county, Oregon. The temperance lecture of Major Scott last Thursday evening was one of the finest of the kind ever heard here. For over an hour he held a large audi ence as not one out of a hundred public speakers could do. His language, though pointed and strong, was not calculated to arouse antagonism. It was excellent seed sown in good ground and will pro duce rich fruit, though it may not re form any who are already drunkards or debased tipplers. Polk County Itemizer. Dr. J.' B. Mahama, the inventor of the single rail railway, is a citizen of Union, Oregon, but is constructing his first rail way in Vermont, from Rutland to Mont- pelier, a distance of seventy miles, on aJ subsidy of $3,000 per mile, and twenty carloads through freight pe'Say, per annum. . f Uncle Tom's Cabin Co., under a canvass will appear in The Dalles in a few days. It is spoken, very highly of and a rare treat Is in -prospect. A PLAGUE OF UNBELIEF. THE MOVING CAUSE OF ALL THE PLAGUES OF CITIES. Dr. Talin age's Masterly Contrast of the Effects of Christianity and Agnosticism. The Glorious Results of a LiTing Faith. What Has Infidelity Done? New York, April B. Continuing his course of sermons on "The Ten Plagues of the Cities," Rev. Dr. Talmage today took for his subject "The Plague of Infidelity." The discourse was delivered to large and appreciative audiences at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in the forenoon and the New York Academy of Music m the even ing. The text was Romans iii, 4, "Let God be true, but every man a liar." That is if God says one thing and the whole human race says the opposite, Paul would accept the Divine veracity. But there are many in our time who have dared arraign the Almighty for falsehood. In fidelity is not only a plague, but it is the mother of plagues. It Seems from what we hear on all sides that the Christian religion is a huge blun der; that the Mosaic account of the creation is an absurdity large enough to throw all nations into rollicking guffaw; that Adam and Eve never existed; that the ancient flood and Noah's ark were impossibilities; that there never was a miracle; that the Bible is the friend of cruelty, of murder, of polygamy, of all forms of base crime; that the Christian religion is woman's tyrant and man's stultification; that the Bible from lid to lid is a fable, a cruelty, a hum bug, a sham, a lie; that the martyrs who died for its truth were miserable dupes; that the church of Jesus Christ is properly gazetted as a fool; that wben Thomas Caxlyle. the skeptic, said. "The Bible is a noble book," he was dropping into imbecility; that when Theodore Parker declared in Music hall, Boston. "Never a boy or girl in all Christendom but was profited by that great book," he was be coming very weak minded; that it is some thing to bring a blush to the cheek of every patriot that John Adams, the father of American independence, declared, "The Bible is the best book in all the world;" and that lion hearted Andrew Jackson turned into a sniveling coward when he said, "That book, sir, is the rock on which our republic rests;" and that Daniel Web ster abdicated the throne of his intellectual power and resigned his logic, and from being the great expounder of the constitu tion and the great lawyer of bis age turned into an idiot when he said, "My heart as sures and reassures me that the gospel of Jesus Christ must be a divine reality. From the time that at my mother's feet or on my father s Knee 1 nrst learned to lisp verses from the sacred writings they have been my daily study and vigilant con templation, and if there is anything in my style or thought to be commended the credit is due to my kind parents in instill ing into my mind an early love of the Scriptures;" and that William H. Seward, the diplomatist of the century, only showed his puerility when he declared, "The whole nope of human progress is suspended on the ever growing influences of the Bible;" and that it is wisest for us to take that book from the throne in the affections of uncounted multitudes and put it under oar feet, to be trampled upon oy ha tred and hissing contempt; and that your old .father was hoodwinked and cajoled and cheated and befooled when he leaned on this as a staff after his hair grew gray, and his hands were tremulous, and his steps shortened as he came up to the verge of the grave; and that your mother sat with a pack of lies on her lap while reading of the better country, and of the endmg of all her aches and pains, and reunion not only with those of you who stood around her, but with the chil dren she had buried with infinite heart ache, so that she could read no more until she took off her spectacles and wiped from them the heavy mist of many tears. Alas! that for forty and fifty years they should have walked under this delusion and had it ondor their pillow when they laya-dying in the back room, and asked that some words from the vile page might be cut upon the tombstone under the shadow of the old country meeting house where they sleep today waiting for a resurrection that will never come. This book, having deceived them, and having ' deceived the mighty intellects of the past, must not be allowed to deceive our larger, mightier, vaster, more stupen dons intellects. And so out with the book from the court room, where it is used in the solemnization of testimony. Oat with it from Under the foundation of church and asylum. Out with it from the domes tic circle. Gather together all the Bibles the children's Bibles, the family Bibles, those newly bound, and those with lid nearly worn out and pages almost obliter ated by the fingers long ago turned to dost bring them all together, and let as make a bonfire of them, and by it warm our cold criticism, and after that turn un der with the plowshare of public indigna tion the polluted ashes of that loathsome, adulterous, obscene, cruel and deathful book which is so antagonistic to man's liberty, and woman's honor, and the world's happiness. AGNOSTICS ATTACK THE VERT UKE. Now that is the substance of what infi delity proposes and declares, and the at tack on the Bible is accompanied by great jocosity, and there is hardly any subject about which more mirth is kindled than about the Bible. I like fun; no man was ever built with a keener appreciation of it. There is health in laughter instead of harm physical health, mental health, moral health, spiritual health provided you laugh at the right thing. The morning is jocund. The Indian with its own mist bap tizes the cataract Minnrthaha, or "cg Water. You have not kept your eyes open or your ears alert if you have not seen the sea. smile, or heard the forests eiap their finia or the orchards in blossom week glee witb redolence. Bat there is a laugh ter which is dnaUinil, there la a laughter which has the rebound of despair. It is not healthy to giggle about God or chuckle about eternity or smirk about the things of the immortal aooL. You know what caused the accident years ago on the Hudson tuver railroad. It was an tntoxtcatea man who lor a joze polled, the string of the air brake and stopped the train at the most dangerous point of the journey. But the lightning train, not knowing there was any impedi ment in the way, came down, groaning out of the mangled victims the immortal souls that went speeding instantly to God and judgment. It was only a joke. He thought U would be such run to stop tne train, lie stopped it. And so infidelity is chiefly anxious to stop the long train of the ihble, and the long train of the churches, and the long train of Christian influences, while coming down upon ns are death, judgment and eternity, coming a thousand miles a minute, coming with more force than all the avalanches that ever slipped from the Alps, coming with more strength than all the lightning express trains that ever whis tled or shrieked or thundered across the continent. Now in this jocularity of infidel thinkers I cannot join, and I propose to give you some reasons why I cannot be an Infidel, and so I will try to help out of this present condition any who may have been struck with the awful plague of skepticism. First, I cannot be an infidel because in fidelity has no good substitute for the con solation it proposes to take away. Yon hnow there are millions of people who get their chief consolation from this book. What would yon think of a crusade of this sort?' Suppose a man should resoive that he would organize a conspiracy to destroy all the medicines from all the apothecaries and from all the hospitals of the earth. The work is done. The medicines are taken, and they are thrown into the riven, or the lake, or the sea. - A pattest wakes up at mhuzzht in a nar- exyam of distress, antJTTants an anodyne. "UV aaya tne n-Sse. "the anodynes are all destrojs'i"; we have no drops to give you. bT iruUA&d of that I'll read vou a PZK on the absurdities of morphine and on the absurdities of all remedies." But the man continues to writhe in pain, and the nurse aaya: Til continue to read you some discourses on anodynes, the cruelties of anodynes, the indecencies of anodynes, the absurdities of anodynes. For yoor (roan 111 give you a laugh." ALAS! FOB THE SORSOWTKO. Her in th hospital is a patient baring a gangrened Umb amputated, m. for ether! Oh, for chloroform!" The doc tors say: "Why, they are all destroyed; we dont have any more chloroform or ether, but I have got something a great deal bet ter. I'll read you a pamphlet against James Y. Simpson, the discoverer of chloro form as an anaesthetic, and against Drs. Agnew and Hamilton and Hosack and Mott and Harvey and Abernethy." "But." says the man, "I must have some anaes thetics." "No," say the doctors, "they are all destroyed, but we have got something a great deal better." "What is that?" "Fun.'.' Fun about medicines. Lie down, all ye patients in Bellevue hospital, and stop your groaning; all ye broken hearted of all the cities, and quit your crying; we have the catholicon at last! Here is a dose of wit, here is a strength ening plaster of sarcasm, here is a bottle of ribaldry that you are to keep well shaken np and take a spoonful of it after each meal, and if that does not cure you here is a solution of blasphemy in which you may bathe, and here is a tincture of derision. Tickle the skeleton of death with a repar tee! Make the Bang of Terrors cackle! For all the agonies of all the ages a joke! Millions of people willing with uplifted hand toward heaven to affirm that the goepel of Jesus Christ is full of consolation for them, and yet infidelity proposes to take it away, giving nothing absolutely nothing, except fun. Is there any greater height or depth or length or breadth or im mensity of meanness in all God's universe t Infidelity is a religion of "Don't know." Is there a God? Don't know! Is the soul immortal? Don't know! If we should meet each other in the future world will we recognize each other? Don't know! A re ligion of "don't know" for the religion of "I know," "I know in whom I have be lieved," "I know that my Redeemer liv- eth." Infidelity proposes to substitute religion of awful negatives for our religion of glorious positives, showing right before ns a world of reunion and ecstasy and high companionship and glorious worship and stupendous victory, the mightiest joy of earth not high enough to reach to the base of the Himalaya of uplifted splendor awaiting all those who on wing of Chris tian faith will soar toward it. - Have you heard of the conspiracy to put out all the lighthouses on the coast? Do you know that on a certain night of next month, Eddystone lighthouse, Bell Bock lighthouse, Sherryvore lighthouse, Mon tank lighthouse, Hatteras lighthouse, New London lighthouse,. Barnegat lighthouse, and the 640 lighthouses on the Atlantic and Pacific coasts are to be extinguished? "Oh," you say, "what will become of the ships on that night? What will be the fate of the one million sailors following the sea? What will be the doom of the mil lions of passengers? Who will arise to put down Buch a conspiracy?" Every man, wo man and child in America and the world. But that is only a fable. That is what in fidelity is trying to do put out all the lighthouses on the coast of eternity, letting the soul go up the "Narrows" of death with no light, no comfort, no peace ell that coast covered with the blackness of darkness. Instead of the great lighthouse, a glowworm of wit, a firefly of jocosity. Which do you like the better, O voyager for eternity, the firefly or the lighthouse? What a mission infidelity has started on! The extinguishment of lighthouses, the breaking up of lifeboats, the dismissal of all the pilots, the turning of the inscrip tion on yonr child's grave into a farce and a lie. Walter Scott's "Old Mortality," chisel in hand, went through the land to cut out into plainer letters the half obliter ated inscriptions on the tombstones, and it was a beautiful mission; but infidelity spends its time with hammer and chisel trying to cut out from the tombstones of your dead all the story of resurrection and heaven. It is the iconoclast of every vill age graveyard and of every city cemetery and of Westminster Abbey. T" of Christian consolatiou for the dying, a freez ing sneer. Instead of prayer a gran ace. Instead of Paul's triumphant defiance of death, a going out you know not where, to stop you know not when, to do you know not what. That is infidelity. THB FALSE PLEAS OF arFHkXLHT. Furthermore: I cannot be an Infidel, be cause of the false charges infidelity is all the time making against the Bible. Per haps the slander that has made the most impression and that some Christians have not been intelligent enough to deny is that the Bible favors polygamy. Does the God of the Bible uphold polygamy, or did he? How many wives did God make for Adam? He made one wife. Does not your common sense tell you when God started the mar riage institution he started it as he want ed it to continue? If God bad favored polygamy he could have created for Adam five wives or ten wives or twenty wives just as easily as he made one. At the very first of the Bible God shows hlmaalf in favor of monogamy and antago nistic to polygamy. Genesis ii, 24, "There fore shall a man leave his father and mother, and shall cleave onto his wife." Not his wives, but his wife. How many wives did God spare for Noah in the ark? Two and two the birds; two and two the cattle; two and two the lions; two and two the human race. If the God of the Bible had favored a multiplicity of wives he would have spared a plurality of wives. When God first launched the homaji race he gave Adam one wife. At the second launching of the human race he spares for Noah one wife, for Ham one wife, for Shem one wife, for Japhet one wife. Does that look as though God favored polygamy? In Leviticus xviii, 18, God thunders his prohibition of more than one wife. God permitted polygamy. Yes; Just as he permits today's murder and theft and arson and all kinds of crime. He permits these things, as you well know, but he does not sanction them. Who would dare to say he sanctions them? Because the presidents of the United States have per mitted polygamy in Utah, you are not, therefore, to conclude that they patronized it, that they approved it, when, on the contrary, they denounced it. All of God's ancient Israel knew that the God of the Bible was against polygamy, for in the four hundred and thirty years of their stay in Egypt -there is only one case of polygamy recorded only one. All the mighty men of the Bible stood aloof from polygamy except those who, falling into the crime, were chastised within an inch of their lives. Adam. Aaron, Noah, Jo seph, Joshua, Samuel, monogamists. But you say, "Didnt David and Solomon favor polygamy?" Yes; and did they not get well punished for it? Bead the lives of those two men and yon will come to the conclusion that all the attributes of God's nature were against their behavior. David- suffered for his crimes in the caverns of Adullam and Mas sad a, in the wilderness of Mahanaim, in the bereavements of Ziklag. The Bedouins after him, sickness after him, Absalom af ter him, Ahithopel after him, Adonijah af ter him, the Edomites after him, tee Sy rians after him, the Moabites after him, death after him, the Lord God Almighty after him. The poorest peasant in all the empire married to the plainest Jewess was happier than the king in his marital mis behavior. How did Solomon get along with polygamy? Bead his warnings in Proverbs; read his self disgust in Kodesi- astes. He throws up his hands in loath ing and cries out, "Vanity of vanities, all is vanity." His 'seven hundred wives nearly pestered the life out of him. Solo- omon got well paid tor bis crimes well paid. I repeat that all the mighty men of the Scriptures were aloof from polygamy, save as they were pounded and flailed and co to pieces for their iunult to holy marriage. II tue BiDie is tue iriena oi poi;my why is it that in all the land Tuere the Bible predominates polygw-Vy is forbidden, and in the lands nre there is no Bible it is """j- foiygamy an over unina, an O.VfTindia, all over Africa, all over Persia, all over heathendom, save a the mission aries have done their work while polyg amy does not exist in England and the United States except in defiance of law. The Bible abroad, God honored monogamy. The Bible not abroad, God abhorred polyg amy. , THE GLORY OF CHRISTIAN WOMANHOOD. Another false charge which infidelity has made against the Bible is that it is antago nistic to woman, that it enjoins ber degra dation and belittles her mission. Under this impression many women have been overcome of this plague of infidelity. Is the Bible the enemy of woman? Come into the picture gallery, the Louvre, the Luxembourg of the Bible, and see which pictures are the more honored. Here is Eve, a perfect woman; as perfect a woman as could be made by a perfect God. Here is Deborah, with her womanly arm hurling a host into battle. Here is Miriam, lead ing the Israeli tish orchestra on the banks of the Red sea. Here is motherly Hannah, with her own loving hand replenish! the wardrobe of her son Samuel, the prophet. Here is Abigail, kneeling at the foot of the mountain until the four hun dred wrathful men, at the sight of - her beauty and prowess halt, halt a hurricane stopped at the sight of a water lily, a dew drop dashing back Niagara. Here is Buth putting to shame all the modern slang about mothers-in-law as she turns her back on her home and her country, and faces wild beasts and exile and death that she may be with Naomi, her husband's mother. -Bath, the queen of the harvest fields. Buth. the grandmother of David. Ruth, the ancestress of Jesus Christ. The story of her virtues and her life sacrifice is the most beautiful pastoral ever written. Here is Vashti defying the bacchanal of a thousand drunken lords, and Esther will ing to throw her life away that she may deliver her people. And here is Dorcas, the sunlight of eternal fame gilding her philanthropic needle, and the woman with perfume in a box made from the hills of Alabastron, pouring the holy chrism on the head of Christ, the aroma lingering all down the corridor of the centuries. Here is Lydia, the merchantess of Tyrian purple immortalized for her Christian behavior. Here is the widow with two mites, more famous than the Peabodys and the Len oxes of all the ages, while here comes in slow of gait and with careful attendants and with especial honor and high favor, leaning on the arm of inspiration, one who is the joy and pride of any home so rarely fortunate as to have one, an old Christian grandmother, Grandmother Lois. Who has more worshipers today than any being that ever lived on earth except Jesus Christ? Mary; For what purpose did Christ perform his first miracle upon earth To relieve the embarrassment of a woman ly housekeeper at the falling short of beverage. Why did. Christ break up the silence of the tomb, and tear off the shroud, and rip up the rocks? It was to stop the bereavement of the two Bethany sisters. For whose comfort was Christ most anx ious in the hour of dying excruciation? For a woman; an old woman, a wrinkle faced woman, a woman who in other days had held him in her arms, his first friend. his last friend, as it is very apt to be, his mother. All the pathos of the ages com pressed into one utterance, "Behold thy mother. Does the Bible antagonize wom an? A CALL FOB THE WITHX8SES. If the Bible is so antagonistic to woman how do you account for the difference in woman's condition in China and Central Africa, and her condition in England and America? There is no difference except that which the Bible makes. In lands where there is no Bible she is hitched like a beast of burden to the plows, she carries the hod, she submits to indescribable in dignities. She must be kept in a private apartment, and if she come forth she must be carefully hooded and religiously veiled as though it were a shame to be a woman. Do you not know that the very first thing the Bible does when it comes into a new country is to strike off the shackles of woman's serfdom? woman, where are your chains today? Hold np both your arms and let us see yonr handcuffs. Oh, we see the handcuffs. They are bracelets of gold bestowed by husbandly or fatherly or brotherly or sis terly or loverly affection. Unloosen the warm robe from your neck, O woman, and let us see the yoke of your bondage. Oh, I find the yoke a carcenet of silver, or a string of cornelians, or a cluster of pearls, that must gall you very much. How bad you must all have it. Since you put the Bible on your stand in the sitting room, has the Bible been to you, O woman, a curse or a blessing? Why is It that a woman when she is troubled will go to her worst enemy, the Bible? Why do you not go for comfort to some of the great infidel books, Spinoza's "Ethics," or Hume's "Natural History of Religion," or Paine's "Age of Reason," or Dedro's Dramas, or any one of the.260 volumes of Voltaire? No, the silly, deluded woman per sists in hanging about the Bible verseo, "Let not your heart be troubled," "Ail things work together for good," "Weeping may endure for a night," "I am the resur rection," "Peace, be still." Furthermore, rather than invite I resist this plague of infidelity because it has wrought no positive good for the world and is always a hindrance. I ask you to mention the names of the merciful and the educational institutions whieh infidelity founded and is supporting, and has sup ported all the way through institutions pronounced against God and the Christian religion, and yet pronounced in behalf of suffering humanity. What are the names of them? Certainly not the United States Christian commission, or the sanitary com mission, for Christian George H. Stuart was the president of the one, and Christian Henry W. Bellows was the president of the other. COMPASS THE HOSPITALS AND COLLEGES. Where are the asylums and merciful in stitutions founded by infidelity and sup ported by infidelity, pronounced against God and the Bible, and yet doing work for the alleviation of suffering? Infidelity is so very load la its braggadocio it most have some to mention. Certainly, if yoa eome to speak of educational institutions it is not Yale, it is not Harvard, it is not Prince ton, it is not Middletown, it is not Cam bridge or Oxford, it is not any institution from which a diploma would not be a dis grace. Do yoa point to the German uni versities as exceptions? 1 nave to tell you that all the German universities to-day are under positive Christian influences, except the University of Heidelberg, where the ruffianly students cat and maul and man gle and murder each other as a matter of pride instead of infamy. Do yoa mention Girard college, Philadelphia, as an excep tion, that college established by the will of Mr. Girard which forbade religious in struction and the entrance of clergymen within its gates. My reply is that I lived for seven years near that college and knew many of its professors to be Christian in structors, and no better Christian influ ences are to be found in any college than in Girard college. - There stands Christianity. There stands Infidelity. Compare what they have done. Compare their resources. There is Chris tianity, a prayer on her lip; a benediction on ber brow; both hands full of help for all who want help; the mother of thou sands of colleges; the mother of thousands of asylums for the oppressed, the blind, the sick, the lame, the imbecile; the mother of missions for the bringing back of the out cast; the mother of thousands of reforma tory institutions for the saving of the lost; the mother of innumerable Sabbath schools bringing millions of children under a drill to prepare them for respectability and use fulness, to say nothing of the great future. That is Christianity. Here is infidelity: no prayer on ber lips, no benediction on her brow, both bands clenched what for? To fight Christian ity. That is the entire business. The com plete mission of Infidelity to fight Chris tianity. Where are her schools, ber col leges, her asylums of mercy? Let fne throw yoa down a whole ream of foolscap paper that yoa may fiUaU of it with the e of ber beneficent institutions, the colleges, and Ah asylums, the institutions of mep7'ahd of learning, founded by ln fifJTty and supported alone by infidelity, pronounced against God and the Christian religion, and yet in favor of making the world better. "Oh," you say, "a ream of paper is too much for the names of those institutions." "Well, then, I throw yoa a quire of paper. Fill it all np now. I will wait until yoa get all the names down. "Oh," you say, "that is too much." Well, then, I will just hand yoa a sheet of letter payer. Just fill up the four sides while we are ig of this matter with the names of the merciful institutions and the educa tional institutions founded by infidelity and supported all along by infidelity, pro nounced against God and the Christian religion, yet in favor of humanity. WHERE ABE YOCB FBIJTT8, AGNOSTICS? "Oh," yoa say, "that is too much room. We don't want a whole sheet of paper to write down the names." Perhaps I had better tear oat one leaf from my memoran dum book and ask you fill np both sides of it with the names of such institu tions. "Oh," yoa say, "that would be too much room. I wouldn't want to mucn room as that. .i, then, sup pose you count them on your ten fin fiers. "Oh," you say, "not quite so much as that." Well, then, count them on the fingers of one hand. "Ob," you say, "we don't want quite so much room as that. Suppose, then, you halt and count on one finger the name of any institution founded by infidelity, supported entirely by infidel ity, pronounced against God and the Chris tian religion, yet toiling to make the world better. Not one! Not one! Is infidelity so poor, so starveling, mean, so useless? Get out, you miserable pauper of the universe! Crawl into some rathole of everlasting nothingness. In fidelity standing today amid the suffering, groaning, dying nations, and yet doing ab solutely nothing save trying to impedi those who are toiling until they fall ex hausted into their graves in trying to make the world better, bather up all the work, all the merciful work, that infidelity has ever done, add it all together, and there is not so much nobility in it as in the small est bead of that sister of charity who last night went up the dark alley of the town, put a jar of jelly for an invalid appetite on a broken stand, and then knelt on the bare floor praying the mercy of Christ upon the dying soul. Infidelity scrapes no lint for the wound ed, bakes no bread for the hungry, Bhakes up no pillow for the sick, rouses no com fort for the bereft, gilds no grave for the dead. While Christ, our Christ, our wounded Christ, our risen Christ, the Christ of this old fashioned Bible blessed be his glorious name forever! our Christ stands this hour pointing to the hospital. or to the asylum, saying: "I was sick and ye gave me a couch, I was lame and ye gave me a crutch, I was blind and ye phy- sicianed my eyesight, 1 was orphaned and ye mothered my soul, I was lest on the mountains and ye brought me home; inas asmuch as ye did it to one of the least oi these, ye did it to me." But I thank God that this plague of in fidelity will be stayed. Many of those who hear me now by the Holy Ghost upon their hearts will cease to be scoffers and will be come disciples, and the day will arrive when all nations will accept the Scriptures. The book is going to keep right on until the fires of the last day are kindled. Some of them will begin on one side and some on the ether side of the old book. They will not find a bundle of loose manuscripts eas ily consumed like tinder thrown into the Are. When the fires of the last day are kindled, some will burn on this side, from Genesis toward Revelation, and others will burn on this side, from Revelation toward Genesis, and iu all their way they will not find a single chapter or a single verse out of place. That will be the first time we can afford to do without the Bible. Whpt will be the use of the book of Gen esis, descriptive of how the world i made, when the world is destroyed ? What will be the use of the prophecies when thev are all fulfilled? What will be the use of the evangelistic or Pauline description of Jesus Christ when we see him face to face? What will be the use of his photograph when we have- met him in glory? What will be the use of the book of Revelation standing as you will with yourfoot on the glassy sea, and your hand on the ringing harp, and your forehead chapleted with eternal coronation, amid the amethystine and twelve gated glories of heaven? The emerald dashing its green against the beryl, and the beryl dashing its blue against the sapphire, and the sapphire throwing its light ion the jacinth, and the jacinth dashing its fire against the chrysopraaus, and you and I standing in the glories of ten thousand sunsets. That Lorely Narcissus. Narcissus was a mythological young person who had so much beauty that was in the way. He was interrupted during office hoars by people who want ed to admire nun, and a case went on record of a woman's thinking so much of him that she would always keep still until he got clear through talking. At last he got a good look at himself in mirror, and he said he couldn't blame them. He felt that he was a menace to society, arid history says that he drowned himself. Bat he didn't. He went and got a pair of voluminous trousers, decorated his eye with a large piece of glass, took the fit oat of the back of bis coat, shoved his chin out of place with his collar, and went about his business satisfied that he had restored their peaces of mind to the feminine members of his acquaintance. Bat was in vain. And he is obliged to de vote large portions of his time in fact, nearly all of it to the search for im provements that will make his garments effective for their true purpose. In the meantime he is obliged to go on bother- somely beloved. Washington Post. Clothing of th F.sqnlninOT. Clothing for men consists of knee breeches, belted at the loins, a loose fitting cloak trimmed around the bot tom, and the hood with wolf or wolverine, or a blending of both, a pair of stockings and a short legged pair of boots with sealskin soles. In winter two salts are worn, the inner suit with the hair next the body and the outer with the hair turned out. The difference between the dress of men and women is that the latter have their boots, stockings and pantaloons all in one "garment. The cloaks of all fe males have at the back of the neck a fullness for carrying infants. These cloaks come down below the knees and are gored out at the sides op to the hips, making the front look like an apron. Exchange. An Englishman Couldn't Mo n. Little Marshall P. Wilder, the famous merrymaker, is perennial, and has a hu morous skit for evoYy hoar of the day, This is one of his latest, illustrative of an Englishman's appreciation of humor: I have been in England, and I have studied Bngrigh humor. Its fundamen tal principles are not related to the American article that raiaes a cyclone of laughter. An Englishman was dining at a swell hotel out west, and after he finished his regular dinner he asked for sweets. A waiter from the Bowery had gone west for employment, and was waiting on the particular table at which the F-"g''Kf"T"" sat. 'And phwat is sweets, sar?" asked the waiter. The Englishman finally explained that be meant dessert, padding, etc 'We 'ave apple and mmce pie," said the Bowery man. "Give me mmce pie. "What's der matter wid der apple pie?" asked the waiter m a hard, l-dont-care-a-cotttinental tone of voice. Many heard the remark and laughed.- An hour later I hanneaied to meet the English- xnsji, and he asked me if I heard the waiter ask him what was the matter with the apple pie. I said Tea.' Then the Englishman naively asked me; "Well, what was the matter with the apple pie?" New York World. A Dreadful Threat. A poet having loaned a small amount to a friend found it very difficult to collect the same, as his friend failed to recollect the incident. Meeting his friend in need the poet said: "If you donT pay me that fi7 wnicn yoa owe me I shall have to resort to ex treme measures." "And what may they be?" ril dedicate my "next poem in your honor." The friend turned pale and shelled oat abruptly. Texas Sifttnga. Dlffn "What was your lawyer's fee in that case, Dimling?' "It wasn't a fee, Totting; it was aa honorarium." "What's the difference?" "Well, an honorarirun is about ten tiraea as roach as tea em Removal H. Herbring's DRV GOODS STORE Has removed to 177 Second street (French's Block) nearly opposite his former stand, where he will be pleased to see his former customers and friends. He carries now a much larger stock than before and every Department is filled with the Latest Novelties of the Season. riOlTH DflLiLiES, Wash. Situated at the Head of Navigation. Destined to be , Best Manufacturing Center In the Inland Empire. Best Selling Property of the Season in the Northwest. 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