iiii'm'm,Mim'"'"mwimib8mmm"''w'1; ". . zrr a 2 RINTER. ND STATE STIFLIEST, - - S-A-ILilEIlVr; OIEIEG-OISr. Largest Stock of LEGAL BLANKS in the State, and the BIGGEST DISCOUNT. No one can cut my rates for Printing, and keep clear of the Sheriff. Fine Printing a Specialty. Trv BOOKiH MOB'P ' Din 1 HE DEFINES HIS BELIEF. ONE WEEK'S WORK THE SUBJECT OF DR. TALMAGE'S SERMON. lie Hcllevcs In the Momiic Account of the Creation, and Hops Mot Ilenltntu to Say So -Mint Kniplnitlcall A Notable Sermon Trenched Sunday, May 84. Brooklyn, Mny 34. ThestrlklnKserinon Dr. Taltimgc delivered tills morning to ou midieiiuu which filled the new Tabernacle In every part dealt with n topic of interest to all who have watched the iII&oiismious now agitating tho churches. Wherever the question of the inspiration of tho Bible Is raised, the trust worthiness of tho Mosaic narrative of tho creation li alwayw tho point chiefly assailed. Tho fact that so prominent and eloquent a preacher as Dr. Talmage places himself clearly on record ou tho side of orthodoxy will doubtless have a marked influence on public opinion. Ilia text was Genesis i, 31, "And the evening and tho morning wero tho sixth day." From Monday morning to Saturday night gives ns a week's work. If we have filled that week with successes we aro liappy. But I am going to tell you what God did in one week. Cosmogony, geology, astronomy, ornithology, Ichthyology, bot any, anatomy aro such vast subjects that no human life is long enough to exploro or comprehend any one of them. But I have thought I might in an unusual way tell you a little of .what God did in ono week, nnd that the first week. And whether you make it a week of days or a week of ages, I care not, for I shall reach tho same prac tical result of reverence and worship. THE FIKST MONDAY MORNING. The first Monday morning found swing ing in spaco tho piled up lumber of rocks and metal and soil and water from which the earth was to be builded. God made up his mind to create a human family, and they must have a house to live in, But where? Not a roof, not a wall, not a door, not a room was fit for human occupancy Thero is not a pile of black basalt in Yel lowstone park or an extinct volcano in Honolulu so Inappropriate for human resi denco ns was this globe at that early period. Moreover, there was no human architect to draw a plan, no quarryman to blast the foundation stones, no carpenter to hew out a beam, and no mason to trowel a wall. Poor prospectl But the time was coming when a being called man was to bo con structed, and he was to have a bride; and whero he could find a homestead to which ho could take her must have been a won dcrmeut to angelic intelligences. There had been eaithquakes enough and volcanoes enough and glaciers enough, but earthquakes and volcanoes and glaciers destroy lubtead of build. A worso looking world than this never swung. It was heaped up deformities, scarifications and monstrosities. Tho Bible says it was with out form. That is, it was not round, it was not square, it was not octagonal, it was uot a rhomboid. God never did take any ono in his counsels, but if he had asked home angel about the attempt to turn this planet into a placo for human residence 4-ln ii n nnl ixniilrl linnn nri til. "Wn nn f wtr somo other, wirlJ: ilm--tiOUUiftujif i ., t --" - s; "Crevices of this -'-"Ji vJ.Irth are too deep; its crags aro tooap palling; its darkness is too thick." But Monday morning came. I think it was a Bpring morning and about half-past four o'clock. The first thing needed was l'ght. It was not needed for God to work 1y, for ho can work as well in tho dark .icss. But light may be necessary, for an gelic intelligences aro to see In its full glory tho process of world building. But where are tho candles, whero aro the can delabra, whero is the chandelier? No rising sun will roll in tho morning, for if tho sun 's already created its light will not yet reach tho earth in three days. Nor moon norstars tan brighten this darkness. Tho moon and stars aro not born yet, or if created their light wlH not reach tho earth for somo timo yet. But thero is need of immediate light. Where shall itcomo from? Desir lug to account for things in a natural way you say, nnd reasonably say, thut heat and electricity throw out light independent of thobuu, nnd that tho metallic bases throw out light independent of tho sun, and that alkalies throw, out light independent of tho sun. Oh, yes, all that is true, but I do not think that is tho way light was created. Tho record makes mo think that, stauding over this earth that spring morning, God looked upon the darkness that palled the heights of this world, and tho chasms of it, and tho awful reaches of it, and uttered, whether in the Hebrew of earth orsomelau guago celestial I know not, that word which stands for the subtle, bright, glow ing and all pervading fluid, that word which thrills and garlands and lifts every thing it touches, that word tho full mean lng of which all tho chemists of tho ages have busied themselves iu exploring, that ivord which suggests ii forco that files one hundred and ninety thousand miles in a second, and by undulations seven hundred and twenty-seven trillions In a second, that ono word that God lit tors Light! And instantly the darknoss began to shimmer, and tho thick folds of blackness to lift, and thero wert) scintillations nud coruscations and Hushes nnd a billowing up of resplendence, nnd in great sheets it spread out northward, southward, east ward, westward, and a radiauco tilled the atmosphere until it could hold no moro of tho brilliance. Light now to work by wlillosupornatur.il intelligences look on. Light, tho first chapter of tho first day of tho week. Light, tho joy of all the cent uries. Light, tho greatest blessing that over touched tho human eye. The robe of tho Almighty Is woven out of it, for h covers himself with light as with a gar ment. Oh, blessed lightl I am so glad this was tho first thlug created that week. Good thine to start every week witli is -"Sgi light. That will tnako our work easier rimt will keep our disposition moro nidi ditfesThat will hinder even our lossaa from becoming too somber. Give us more light natural light. Intellectual light, spiritual light, everlasting light. For lack o( it the body stumbles, and the soul stum bles. O thou Fathor of Lights, give iu Tho great German philosopher in his last moment said, "I want moro light," A min uter of Christ recently dying cried out in exultation, "I move into tho light!" Mr. Toplady, tho immortal hymuologist, iu his expiring momenta uxolaimed, "Light! Light!" Heaven lulf is only more light. Upon nil supersutiou, upon all ignorance, umu nil sorrow let in the light. But now the light of tho tlnt Monday U receding. Tha blaro is going out. The colore are dimming Only part of the OHrthN wir face U vUiblo- It i 0 o'clock, 7 clock. 8 o'clock; obscuration ami durkne. it U Monday night. "A-ad the eveuing hikI the inorulug were the flist tiny-' TUWAV'S WUB&. Now it is Tueada morning. A dellaate and trenieudoiw uwlertaWna k t apart for this day. There was a great nuper abundance of water. God, by the wave ol Id hand, tbU uioruiug gather part of it in suspended reservoirs, and part of it ho orders down into the rivers and lakes nnd seas. How to hang whole Atlantic oceans iu the clouds without their spilling over except in right quantities and at right times was an undertaking that no one but Omnipotence would have dhrcd. But God does It as easily as you would lift a glass of water. There he hoists two clouds, each thirty miles wide and five miles high, and balances them. Here he lifts the cirrous clouds and spreads them out in great white banks as though it had been snowing in heaven. And tho cirro-stratus clouds in long parallel lines, so straight you know an infinite geometer has drawn vthem. Clouds which aro tho armory from which thunder storms get their bayonets of fire Clouds which are oceaus on the wing. No wonder, long after this first Tuesday of creation week, Elihu confounded Job with tho question, "Dost thou know tho bal ancings of tho clouds?" Half of this Tuesday work done, the other halt is tho work of compelling the waters to lie down in their destined places. So God picks up the solid ground and packs it up into five elevations, which r.re tho continents. With his finger he makes deep depressions in them, nnd these are the lakes, whilo at the piling up of the Al leghanles and Sierra Nevadas and Pyre nees and Alps and Himalayas the rest of tho waters start by tho law of gravitation to the lower places, and in their run down hill become tho rivers, and then all around tho earth these rivers come into convention and becomo oceans beneath, as the clouds aro oceans above. How soon the rivors got to their places when God said: "Hudson and James and Amazon, down to tho At lautic; Oregon and Sacramento down to the Pacific." Threc-quarteis of the earth being water and only one-quarter being land, nothing but Almightlness could have caged tbe three-fourths so that they-could not have dovoured tho one-fourth. Thank God for water and plenty of it. What a hint that God would have tho human racoverycleau1 Three-fourths of tho world water. Pour it through the homes and make them pure. Pour It through tho prisons and make their occupants moral. Pour It through the streets and make them healthy. Thero are several thousand peoplo asleep in Green wood who but for tho filthy streets of Brooklyn and New York would have been today well and in churches. Moreover, thero never was a filthy street that re mained a moral street. How important an agency of reform water is, was illustrated by the fact that when the ancient world got outrageously wicked it was plunged into tho deluge and kept under for montlis till its iniquity was soaked out of it. But I rejoice that on tho first Tuesday of the world's existence the wuter was taught to know its place, and tho Mediterranean lay down at the feet of Europe, and tho Gulf of Mexico lay down at the feet of North America, and Geneva lay down at tho feet of the Alps, and Scroon lake fell to sleep in tho lap of the Adlrondacks. "And the evening and the morning wero the second day." THE CREATION OF VEQETATION. Now it is Wednesday morning of the .irir1 world's first week. Gardening and ..!.... ...ill 1. luwn tlntr,wIT..--J """"I" hills look, and - -. 'uwMq"cer0the ,. ii.. , --"i unattractive they seem rSartrryworth having been made. But now all the surfaces aro changing color, borne thiiiK beautiful is creeping all over them It has tho color of emerald. Ay, it is herb ago. Hail to tho greon grassl God's fa vorito color nnd God's favorite plant, as 1 judge from the fact that ho makes a larger number of them than of auything else. But look youderl Something starts out of tho ground and goes higher up, higher and higher, aud spreads out broad leaves. It is a palm tree. Yonder is another growth, aud its leavas hang far down, aud it is a willow tree. Aud yonder is a growtli with mighty sweep of branches. And here they como tho pear, and tho apple, and the peach, and tho pomegranate, and groves and orchards and forests, their shadows and their fruit girdling tho earth. Wo aro pushing agriculture and fruit culturo to great excellence in tho Nine teenth century, but we have nothing now to equal what I seo on this first Wednesday of the world's existence. I take a taste of one of tho apples this Wednesday morning, and I tell you it mingles in its juices all tho flavors of Spitzbergon and Newtown pippin nnd Khodo Island greening and Danvers Winter Sweet nnd Kosbury rus set and Hubbardston Nonesuch, but added to all, and overpowering all other flavors, is tho paradisaical juice that all the or chards of tho Nineteenth century fail to reach. I take a taste of the pear, and it has all the luxury of the three thousand varieties of the Nineteenth century; all the Seckel aud tlio Bartlett of tho pomological gardens of later times an acidity compared with it. And tho grapesl Why, this one cluster has iu it tho richness of wholo vino yards of Cntawbas and Coucords and Isa bellas. Fruits of all colors, of all odors, of all flavors. No hand of man yet made to pluck it or touguo to taste It. The banquet for tho hum an race is being spread before tho arrival of tho first guest. In tho fruit-of that garden was tho seed for tho orchards aud gardens of the hemis pheres. Notice that tho first thing that God made for food was fruit, and plenty of It. Slaughter houses nre of later invention Far am I from being a vegetarian, but an almost exclusive meat diet is depraviug Savages confl uo themselves almost esclu sively to animal food, and that is ono rea sou that they aro savages. Give your chil dren more apples and less mutton. The world will have to give dominance to the fruit diet of Paradise before it gets back to the morals of Paradise. May God's bless ing come down on the orchards and vine yards of America, and keep back the frosts and the curculio. But we must not forget that it is Wednesday evening in Eden, and upon that perfect fruit of those perfect trees let the curtain drop. "And tho even ing and tho morning wero the third day." rUTTlNO TIIISC3 TO KIC1UTS. Now it Is Thursday morning of the world's first week. Nothing will be created today. Tho hours will be passed in bontteriug fotfs and mists and vapors The atmosphere must bo swept clean. Other worlds aro to hovo In sight. Thi little ship of tho earth has seemed to havt all tho ocean of immensity to iUelf. But mightier cnift are to bo hailed today on tht high seas of space. First, the moon's whit still appears and does very well until tht sun bursts upon the scene. The light that on the previous three mornings wus struck from an especial word now gatbore in the t,uii, moon and stars. One for the day, lb other for the night. It seemed as if the) had all within twenty-four hours been ensued. Ah, this is a great time in tl world first week. Tho moon, the uearetJ neighbor to our earth Appears, her photo graph to be taken In tbe Nineteenth vent ury, whn the telescope shall brlnx l' within one hundred nud twenty miles 01 New York. And the win uow npfears, afwrwunl u ta found eij(ht hundred And eighty-eight thoiiMiid niiltw iu dUunoter, uud, pt it ju.tro,MHlHl mjoUs, to bo found to weigh tiwriy fwtr hundred thousand times hear ter thau our earth; n mighty furnace, it heat kept up by meteors pouring into it oj fuel, u world devouring other worlds with its jaws of laino. And tho stars come out, those street lamps of heaven, those keys of pearl, upon which God's fingere play the mus'c of tho spheres. How bright they look in this oriental evening! Coustclla tions! Galaxies! What a twenty-four hours of this first week solar, lunar, stellar appearancesl All this Thursday and the adjoining nightsemployed In pull ing aside tho curtain of vapor from these flushed or palo faced worlds. Enough! "And the evening nnd tho morning were tho fourth day." TIIK FISHES AND THE DIRD9. Now it is B'rlday morning in tho first week of the world's history. Water, but not n fin swimming it; nir, but not a wing flying it. It is n silent world. Can It be that it was niodo only for vegetables? But hnrkl Thero is a swirl and a sploshing in all the four rivers of Pison, Glhon, Illd dekel nnd Euphrates. They are all aswim with life, somo darting like arrows through split crystal, and others quiet in dark pools llko shadows. Everything, from spotted trout to behemoth, all colored, nil shaped, the ancestors of finny tribes that shall by their wonders of construction confound the Agassizes, tho Cuviers and tho Llnnmuses nnd the ichthyologists of the more than six thousand years following this Friday of the first week. And while I stand on tho banks of these Paradisaical rivers, watching theso finny tribes, I hear a whirr in the air and I look up and behold wings wings of larks, rob ins, doves, eagles, flamingoes, albatrosses, brown threshers. Creatures of all color blue, as if dipped in the skies; flery, as if they had flown out of tho sunsets; golden, as if they had taken their morn ing bath in buttercups. And while I am studying the colors they begin to carol and chirp and coo and twitter and run up and down tho scales of a music that they must have heard at heaven's gate. Yes, I find them in Paradise on this the first Fri day afternoon of the world's existence. And I sit down on tho bank of the Euphrates, and the murmurof tho river, together with the chant of birds in tho sky, puts me into a state of somnolence. "And the evening and the morning wero tho fifth day." BEASTS AND MEN. Now it is Saturday morning of the world's first week and witli this day tho week closes. But oh, what a climacteric day! The air has its population and tho water its population. Yet tho laud has not one inhabitant. But hero they come, by the voice of God creatcdl Horses grander than those which in nfter time Job will describe as having neck clothed with thunder. Cattle enough to cover a thousand hills Sheep shepherded by him who made for them tho green pastures. Cattle superior to the Alderneys and Ayrshlres nud Devon shires of after times. Leopards so beauti ful wo are glad they cannot chango their spots. Lions without their fierceness and all tho quadruped world so gentle, so sleek, so perfect. Look out how you treat this animal ere- ntion, whether they waIkta-Hfc V. - . . i VTiti t'lLrLll Or uivi, t lin wjitnT-fl. or - L'uriu or ..tj-fw A or ny tne air. Do you not that God gave them precedence of the human race? They were created Fri day and Saturday morning, as man was created Saturday afternoon. They havo p right to bo here. Ho who galls a horse, or exposes a cow to tho storm, or beats a dog, or mauls a cat, or gambles at the pigeon "shooting, or tortures an insect, will have to answer for it in the judgment day. you may console yourself that these creatures aro not immortal and they cannot appear against you, but the God who made these creatures aud who saw tho wrong you did them will be thero. Better look out, you stock raisers nnd railroad companies who bring tho cattle on trains without food or water for three or four days in hot weather, a long groan of agony from Omaha to New York. Better look out, you farmer riding bo hind that limping horse with a nail that tho blacksmith drove into the quick. Bet ter look out, you boys stoning bullfrogs and turning turtles upsido down, nnd rob bing birds' nests. But something is want ing in Paradjso and tho week is nlmost done. Who is thero to pluck tho flowers of this Kdenic lawn? Who is thero to command theso worlds of quadruped and fish and bird? For whom has God put back tho curtain, from tho fnco of bun and moon und star? Tho world wants an em peror nnd empress. It is Saturday after noon. No ono but tho Iord Almighty can originate a human being. In tho world where thero are in the latter part of the Nineteenth century over fourteen hundred million people, n human being is not n curiosity. But how about the first human eye that was ever kindled, the first human ear that was ever opened, tho first human lung that ever breathed, tho first human heart that ever beat, the first human life ever con structed? That needed the origination of a God. He had no model to work by. What stupendous work for a Saturday afternoonl lie must originate a style of human heart through which all tho blood in the body must pass every three minutes. He must make that heart so strong that it can, during each day, lift whnt would be equal to one hundred and twenty tons of weight, and it must bo so arranged as to beat over thirty-six million times every year. About five hundred muscles must be strung in tho right place, and at least two hundred und fifty bones constructed. Into this body must bo put at least nine million nerves. Over three thousand per spiring pores must be made for every inch of fleshly surface. The human voice must be so constructed It shall lie capable of producing seventeen trillion flvohundred nnd ninety-two billion one hundred and eighty-six million forty four thousand four hundred and fifteen sounds. But all this the most Insignificant part of the human being. The soul! Ah, the construction of that God himself would uot be equal to if ho were any the less of a God. IU understanding, its will, its mem ory, its conscience, IU capacities of enjoy meut orhUtTering, its immortalityt What a work for a Saturday afternoon! Aye! Before night thero were to b- two such human and yet immortal b'ings con structed Tbe woman as well m the man was formed Saturday afternoon. Because a deep sh-ep fell upon Adam, and by divine surgery a portiou of his side was removed for the nucleus of another creation, it has been supposed that perhaps days and night pwetl between the masouline and feminine creation. But not Adam wo not three hours unruat-l. If a phjtciaii can by anatbetics put one into a deep sleep in three minutes, God certniuly oonld have put Adam into a profound sliep iu a short while that Satur duy afternoon, and made the deep nd nidi cai excision without causing distress. B) a inanipiTTSUoii of the dust the .me Lund that molded the mountain niohhd tht foHtures. and molded the limbs, of the fa ther of the human mee. But his eyes did uot mm, HtMi uU nerve did not feel, and lib: musdan did iwt move, awl his luutfs did ut breathe, nnd his heart did not puituta A perfect form he lay along tb earth, symmetrical and of godlike eouBteuaa. ilanlflcent piece of Divine carpentry and Omnipotent sculpturing, but no vitality. A body without a soul. Then the (source of all llfo tooped to tho inanimate uontril nnd lip, and ns many a skillful anil earnest physician has put his lips to n patient in comatose state nnd breathed into his mouth nnd nostril, and at tho same time compressed the lungs, until that which was artificial res piration becamo natural respiration, so methlnks God breathed 1-ito this cold sculpture of a man tho brcat i of life, nnd the heart begins to tramp, at.d tho lungs to inhale, nnd the eyes to open, and tho en tiro form to thrill, and with the rapture of n life just conio tho prostrate being leaps to his feet a man! But the sceno of this Saturday is not yet done, and in the atmosphere, drowsy with the breath of flowers, nnd the song of bobo links and robin redbreasts, the man slum bers, and by anaesthetics, dhiuely admin istered, the slumber deepens until without the oozing of one drop of blood at tho timo or the faintest scar afterward, that portion Is removed from his side which is to bo built up the Queen of Paradise, the daugh ter of the great God, the mother of tho human race, tho benediction of nil ages, woman tho wife, afterward woman the mother. And as tho two join hands and stroll down along tho banks of the Eu phrates toward a bower of mignonette and wild roso and honeysuckle, and are listen ing to tho call of tho whip-poor-will from tho aromatic thickets, the sun sinks be neath the horizon. "And the evening nud the morning were tho sixth day." A CHEAT WEEK'S WORK. What do you think of that ono week's work? I review it not for entertainment, but because I would have you join in David's t!oology, "Great and marvelous are thy works, Lord God Almighty;" bo causo I want you to know wjiat a home stead our Father built for his children nt the start, though sin has despoiled it, aud because I want, you to know how the world will look again when Christ shall have re stored It, swinging now between two Edens; because I want you to realize home thing of what n mighty God ho is, and tho utter folly of trying to war against him; becauso I want you to make peace with this Chief of the Universe through tho Christ who mediates between offended Omnipotence and humnn rebellion; be cause I want you to know how fearfully and wonderfully you are made, your body as well as your soul an Omnipotent achievement; because I want you to real ize that order reigns throughout tho uni verse, nnd that God's watohes tick to tho second, and that his clocks striko regular ly, though they striko ouco in a thousand years. A learned man once asked an old Chris tian man who had no advantages of school ing, why ho believed thero was a God, and tho good old man, who probably had never heard an argument on the subject in nil his life, made this noble reply: "Sir, I have been hero going hard upon fiffyyears. I I witsxii""-,? " . '" ,wu? . ,.ul ' -- '"""" rl wo" "nu u " U'Pt. Tim north ttf-ni. ufnmlu u uini Ifr .111 ..-.. ..- . .. uv. uv.... . .Iu,u ,w M,w tho first tlmo I saw it; tho seven stars and Job's coffin keep on the same path in the sky and never turn out. It isn't so with man's work. He makes clocks and watches; they may run well for awhile, but they get out of fix nnd stand stock still. But the sun and moon and stars keep on this same way all the while. The heavens declare the glory of God." Yea, I preach this, be cause I want you to walk in appreciation of Addison's sublime sentiment when he writes: Tho spacious firmament on high, With all tho blue etherial sky And spangled heav'ns, a shining framo, Their Great Original procl.dm. In reason's ear they all rejoice. And utter forth a glorious voice, Forever singing, as they shine, The hand that mailo us is divine. Slio Wus Posted on Vggn. An old woman with a green bonnet and umbrella to match approached a stall at tho Center market and asked if the eggs exposed on the couuter for sale wero fresh. "We don't advertise to sell rotten ones, ma'am," said the dealer crustiy, "No, I s'poso not," rejoined tho customer. "I'd like two dozen, if you please; but I'm very partie'lar about havin' the black hens' eggs always," The merchant of produce gazed upon her with nn expression that was half indigna tion and half disgust. "How can I tell which were laid by black hens?" ho growled. "If you know just pick 'em out for yourself," Tho old woman smiled pleasantly, nnd proceeded, to faeleet from the basket those of tho eggs which she designated as the black hens', while the dealer held a bag for their reception. Ho noticed that all ol those she choso were of extra size. "The black hens seem to lay big eggs, ma'am," ho said finally, when all the largest ones in his stock had been picked out. "Oh, yes," replied tljo qld wquan, as slit paid for her purchasei "it's always so Good dayl" After she had gono the merchant rubbec' his chin thoughtfully for two or three iin utes and then remarked to himself: "By Jove! I oall that about the slickest trick I've had worked on mo for many i. day. Black hens' eggs, indeed I All she wanted was a chance to pick out the big ones, nnd she got it." With that he looked not spitefully, but admiringly, after the old woman and the green bonnef, who stood for twonty minutes at another stall nenrbynnd chaffered over the price of a terrapin, which sho insisted ought to be cheap becauso tho length of its toe nails was an infallible indication that it was old and tough. Washington Star. JIUs PepUon's Popularity, Seeing the announcement of a new book by Mary E. Denlson reminds nieof this author's two wonderfully successful books, "That Husband of Mine" and "That Wife of Mlno." The btory of theso books was recently told me by tho publisher. When Miss Donisou, a number of years ago, brought the manuscript of "That Husband of Mine" to her publishers thoy accepted it doubtfully, and did not feel warranted in printing more than f00 copies for a first edition. This was all they expected to print at all, for thoy did not detect the ele ments of popularity in it. What was their surprise, then, to receive orders amount ing to 2,000 copies on tbe day of pnbllea tioni This warned them to begin printing a large supply, but the orders poured in so fast that for three weeks they were many thousand copies behind the demand. The orders received on a single day amounted once to 14,000 copies and the total sales of tbe book reached in the end 150,000 copies. "That Wife of Mine," published not long after, did not reach the some figure, but the sale amounted to 70,000 copies, 60,000 ol which wero ordered to advance. Her other books hare none of them obtained the same anccesd, though they have all been widely read. But Miss Denison's pen has brought ber gold, and her publishers u well. Ed' Vtrd W. Bok'a Letter. How's This? We oflcr One Iluii'lred Dollars re v. ird lor any eae . oi ird for any catarrh that caiuiol ! cured by hiking Hall's t 'ntiirrli (Jure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. We; the undersigned, huvo known K.J. Cheney lor Ihe Inst lo yrnr, nud bollovo him perfectly honorable In all business trniiNnctions ""d llnnnrlally able to rnrry out any obligations made by their Arm. WtsTTliu.X, Wliolc-nlo Jmigglsts, To- WAI.UINO, KlNNF.Y A MARVIN, WhoICSal Iiruvsl1- b, Toledo, ). Hull's Catarrh Cure is taken in termilly, acting directly upon tin blood nud mucous surface of thesys teni. Testimonials sent five. Piici 75c per bottle. Bold by nil druggist Results often follow tho uso of Hood's Snisnpniill.i Severe cases of siofula, upon whnii other piep ar.itlons have been powerless, yield to tlio peculiar curative powers of tlili medicine. Dlsticsslag c.iscs of dyspepsia, exciuciat Ing complaints ot the kidneys and liver, agonizing itch en t.. ndllnorMitpgUt5 JilUUllIf UI-ifc4VW able eases ot catarrh, and aches and pains of I'.etimatlsm, a o cured by Hood's Sar- i 11 Ilia. It iutrir.es 'he blood, and at the ie tlmo tones the stnnurli, creates an !itc, and gives strength toevciy func- .1 of the body. Give it a tital. General Debility " I'or four years my wilo suffered with largo tumor bunches on tlio glands under the amis, and general debility of the wholo ey tern. She becamo so poor in health that vo wcio on tho verge of despair regarding her recovery. Physicians did nut seem to understand her case; at all events she never derived any benefit from their treatment. Slio finally concluded to try Hood's Sarsaparllla. The immediate cflVct was somaikcdand saUsfactoiyth.it she continued to take it, and till? s the -c-uIt. She has sained In v eight Fiom S4 to ill Pounds and is itrr.rtper and in better health than she hi' 1 eel 1 ir years The hunches under her ar,.is I. vc ihniluiohcd, and wo believe 11 k1 s Sarsrai ilU :i be loo much for the li-itiiiu" J.J. N:.ci:oss 22G Com mciPi ti -trrc-t, Boston, jM..ss. F;.: jd-'s SuPsaparilla Seli: ' ,i-,tj. gl; xrorji-i. Prepared by 0. 1, iluo L .- CO., Apothecaries, Low ell, Mast. ' Dosen Ono Dollar Capital National Bank SALEM OREGON. qjitmxS9' Sr-aSEx ifld.UHl Surplus, 15,001 It. S. WALLACE, - - President. W. W. MAHTIN, - Vice-President. J. U. ALUKItT Cashier. DintCTORSl W. T.Gray. W.W. Martin J. M. Martin, K. H. Wallace. Dr. W. A.CusIcU, J. H. Albert, T. MoF.Pntton. LOANS MADE ro larmers on wheat aud othei market able produce, consigned or m store either In private gmiinrlesor Ujublio warohousi s. State and County Warrants Bought at l'ar. C0MMERCIAL PAPER DIscounteJ at reasonable rates. Draft Uruwn direct on New York, Chicago. San rranelseo, Portland, London, Paris, Berlin Hong Koqg and Calcutta. SALEM OREGON. ffM. K. LADUK, President t)It. J. KKYNOLDH, - Vice Presideui TOHN MOIK, ........ Cashlei GENERAL BANKING.. ExolmiiL-o on l'oitlaml, t-nn Fianclsco New York, Loudon nnd Hong Kong bought and hold. State, County and City Hnnants bought. Farmers are eordlallj Invited to deposit tmd transact buslnest with us. Liberal advances made on wheat, wool, hops und other property pi easonabie rates. Insurance on such se curity can be obtained at the bank in most reliable companies. WILLIAMS & ENGLAND BANKING CO. CAPITAL STOCK, all Subscribed, $200,000 Transact a ganeral banking butlnessi in all its branches. iiF.O. WILLIAMS,,...,.,,,, Preslden Wji. KNHLANI)..,LT.Ivieo President 1IUUH ilcNAlty Cashlei DIUKCTOR8: Geo. Williams.Wm. Eug 'and. Dr. J. A. ItlchardRon. .1. w l!ni J. A. Halter. Buuk In new Exchange block on Com mercial street. 8:12-tf 192 SLC&. Q3te HEALTH. Le nicltan Golden Daliam No. J Curci Chancre, ant and Bfcond Btaiei Sorcion the Lcrs and Body; Sore Ear' hyca. Nom, t tc, Copper-colored Blotches BypMlitio Catarrh. dUeastd Scalp, and all primary orrai of the dlteue Renown ai Willi. Price, 5 OOr IJou"," uo ... ,...,. uuiuen UiiKniM v.o Curci-TertUry. Mercurial By piailUe Bhe'u Vi"".ratA,n.V?. " l?n.ratniln th iki ?t 11 P2ne?A r,n' ,n th S&,uLU'i,Wckl Ulcerated Sore Byphllltlo Huh, Lumps and con- r.1?' 5 ffi1- " "bi. . Head. Throat, B, ,Bvp Cor tracted whether cauacd by IndUcretlon or abuat ' wJrou',,fTlnf ,h8 blood pure and healthy. Price 85 OO per lfoitl "Sitt feV 0o,ae? i"u "mi. r.!e..'ortho ?" ' Gonorrhoea, Gleet, Irritation Gravel, and all Urlnarror dint IwrangemenU. Price $i So per tIlICn,,, aoWe" Bimnl.U In. jectlon, (oreerere caaeeot Oonorrhoii. and cranUona. Price $1 ol) per llo2 t-inC.,BU " n Plila-Nrm and Brain treatment; loai of phyalcal po rrlce 83 OO per Box, Tenlo and Nervine, '?n'c' a3-leeare" THE n!CHARDs"0RUQ C0.,ADeutt 600 Oil IttAHKKT 8T , Baa Francisco, Ou-, cimjim.c mi uiipjtiA rmm ,.. . Nationa Bank ra K50 yjmi kmw 9mt kAsg- mm mxm CAPRICE'S QeaJ Used in Millions of Homes fork Has Commencet OilST THE And with this car line in operation NO AD DITION to the City can offer as great or as many inducements as K NGLBWOO D This addition lies between the Garden Koad and Asylum Avenue; within four blocks of the Elegant Hih School Building, and ten blocks from North Salem new school building. It has long been known to possess s pe rior attractions by reason of it being the highest, heal thiest, most futile and sightly Addition to the City. The ectric will within sixty days be Tweat through the centercthis beautiful Addition itwitmntiY! snuiiutes of the Postoffice. If you arc seek- till investment iNone can bring- you greater returns than this favorite Addition. SALEM The Capital City is hound to come to the front as nn In dustrial an Educational Center. No other Capital City in the United States oners as great an opportunity to the home seekeior or investor as the "Bouquet City" of the Willamette Valley. The first city in the Northwest in educational matters and second in manufacturing industries. Situated in the heart of the Willamette Valley with untold power and material at her door waiting for the magician? wand to turn her into a city of the teeming thousands. Who of us today can predict what the next decade will bring forth. To those of you who are looking for a home Now IS f and ENGLE WOOD, the place to secure it, while you have yet the opportunity of purchasing from first hands. For the present Ave will sell a limited number of lots at our present prices when an advance ot cent will be made, osiornce H. V. MATTHEWS, Pres. SMI ATTENTION ! HaVi'!iU8t '"nc,e nrran8e"'oH with "Honest Frank." tin Citl.lt.nii,, Auctioneer, wo ure now ,)rvlmre(, t lmm0 nUof every dicrljll.oi;! Cry Public Sales ! AND DO A GENERAL AUCTION AND COMMISSION BUSINERS. Block sales a specialty. All sales ad verllsed free of charge. Wishing to Discontinue nfEr ,?0t ?n BuH,ne"i we will sell nt public a iinnli.,.?.,0?d.''.' I?tc- to '' room for our' Jtatlkrunt Ktf,lr H.nt ...'... i." .. , FARurDc.... !. "'-.:."" ""?1 WUOIII. illtiHUIIO -riHii Jrday HONEST FRANK, Auctioneer. .M uuwn K. IT. WESTAC0TT. UVKRY, Feed und Rfmnllug Stublo. K HIOl'K Of littler irnnila unl.l ...111 1 -,ia . ... tlio week, so it .. iM .i. .,?",..." "M I'""" uii.y uh eariy iu and I Saturday ' bAI,LM OIU2GON, Auction Every Monday j Bakin Pewder: 40 Years the Standard. wa running its cars every Bringing oner better onnortumties or he Time ten to twenty per. Block . T. H, BARNES, Sec. auction our ontiro stock ritoves, Tinware, Gmt's large coiiKlguuieiits of J, , MOOHB, Proprietor. JXIU - JlllaiHI r)l(l, dw .wrxcjuvczaf LADD & BUSH, Baikers, IHON DiUMUKfl, SAWM, - - - - OKIS0CN. Tmnwirt n general Imoklix buiJnB In all UtiiiurtuieiiUi, 8;1 Jni Rl I nan yfesnts LflD COMPANY, CO O Sh "J m Q -n 3 o CD p C5' 2- CO CD 0