w nmw"jnn'i vw Oil ! George, wlml Is tho mailer ilh ymi V Til, Unit Mill you turned t of HEN FOKSTNEK It tint wurii tut yet ami it lias bwu ovr a i ear. Vt'll, we will get ntintlior fr nil him. I ainnot j(Pt a new very often. -nit HUlt Go to B. FOKSTNEE & CO. for low prices. . iv TABERNACLE PULPIT. on. TALMAGE PREACHES ON BRICKS WITHOUT STRAW. Though the rimmoht of Old Key pi Hare Been Demi fur Jinny Ccntnrlc. There Are Mill .Many l'hmruoh Who Are !) mnndlng Ilrlclcs Without Straw. HltOOKDYX, Nov. 1. The Tabernacle was thronged ns usual this morning. Tlie vast odliice Oiled to Its utmost capacity with eager listeners shows how the popular preacher retains his power over tho people Although he has been preaching In Brooklyn for more than twenty four years, his audiences wore never so large as now, and although tho largest Protestant church in Amer lea has been built for him, there never was a time when so many person were turned away for lack of room The subject of this morning's sermon was "Bricks Without Straw," a continua tion of tho scries on the confirmation of Holy Scripture which Dr. Talmngo found In his journey from the Pyramids to the Acropolis. His text was Isaiah xix, 1, "Tho burden of Egypt." What Is all this excitement about in tho streets of Cairo, Egypt, this Decem ber morning in 18801 Stand back! We hear loud voices and see tho crowds of people, retreating to the sides of the street. The excitement of others bo comes our own excitement. Footmen come in eight. They have a rod in tho hand and tasseled cap on head, and their arms and feet are bare. Their garb is black to tho waist, except as threaded with gold, and tho rest is whito. They are clearing the way for on official dignitary in a chariot or car riage. They are swift and sometimes run thirty or forty miles at a stretch in front of an equipage. Make way I They are the fleetest footed men on earth, bat soon die. for tho human frame was not made for such endur ance. I asked all around mo who the man In tho carriage was, but no one seemed to know. Yet as I fell back with the rest to tho wall I said, This is tho old custom found all up and down the Bible, footmen running before tho ml ers, demanding obeisance, as in Genesis before Joseph's chariot tho people were commanded, "Bow tho knee," and as I see the swift feet of tho men, fol lowed by ttio swift feet of the horses, how those old words of Jeremiah rushed through my mind, "If thou hast run with tho footmen and thtiy have wearied thee, how canst thou contend with borsesP Now, my hearers. In this course of sermons I am only serving you as foot man, and c'caring tho way for your coming Into tho wonders of Egyptology, a subject that I would havo yon study far beyond anything that can bo said in tho brevity of pulpit utterance. Two hundred and eighty-nine times does the Biblo refer to Egypt and the Egyp tians. So wonder, for Egypt was the mother of natlous. Egypt, tho mother of Greece; Greece, tho mother of Borne; Rome, tho mother of England; England, the mother of our own bind. According to mat, tsgypt ts our great-great-granduiother. On other Sabbaths I left you study ing what they must havo been in their glory; tho Ilypostylo hall of Karnao, tho architectural miracles at Luxor, tho Colonuado of Horemhob, tho ceme teries of Memphis, the valuo of a king dom In one monument, tho Sphinx, which with lips of stono speaks loud enough to bo heard across tho centu ries, llellopolls una Z.onn, tho conun drum of arohieologists. But all that extravaganeo of palaco and temple and monument was tho cau.vo of an oppres sion high as heaven and deep as hull. Tho weight of those bliwks of stone. heavier than nny modern machinery could lift, camo down upon tho He brew slaves, and their blood mixed tho mortar for the trowels. THK UOUOH TASKMAHTKltS. We saw ngatu and again on and along tho Kilo a bo&j workman roughly smite a subordinate who did not plena him. It Is no rare occurrence to sco long linos of men under heavy burdens passing by taskmasters at short distances, lash ing thum as they go by into greater speed, and thun tlieso workmen, ex haunted with tho blasting heats of tho day, lying down upon tho bare ground, suddenly chilled with night air, crying out in prayon "Ya, Allah I" "Yn, Allah!" which means O God I O Godl But what must havo been the olden times cruelty thown by the Egyptians toward their IsraelitUh ttlavivi is indicated by a picture hi the Bail Hassan tombs, where a man Is held down on his faco by two men and an other holds up the victim's feet while tho officials beat tho bun back of the victim, every stroke, I havo no doubt, fetching tho bood. Now you wo how tho Pharaohs could afford to build such costly works. It cost them nothing for wages, nothing but the tears and blood of tho toilers, and tears and blood are a cheap drink lor devils. "Urlcks without straw" may not fciiggest so much luirdshlii until you know that tho DrloKs won un a mountain top, Meno, tuu one usually made with "crushed straw," will receive from tho Almighty a law straw crushed by tho feet of tho oxen ' that Is to bo the foundation of all good in tho thnuhlng. and, this crushed law while tiio world lasts. -When ho la straw denied to tho workmen, they had dead, God will come down on Neboiuid to pick up hero und there a piece of alone bury iuii). no man or woman or stubblo or gather rushes from the angel worthy to attend tho obsequies. WHAdralde, This ttory of the Dlblo U Tho child grows up and goo out and continued by tho fact tlut many of tbe studio tho horrors of Egyptian oppres 'brick walls of Egypt have ou tho lower ion aud suppresses hi Indignation, for layer brick made with straw, but Mm tho right tlmo has not eome. although 'higher layer of brick made out o( onco for a mlnuto ho let My, ami when rough stmw or nuues iroui uie nvei uo saw a uuniuwivr put win wiup v Uuk, tit truth U U leek of Kxodtu tb bek ot a workman who wm doing Uiaa written hi the brick .wall discov ered by the modern explfirers. That governmental outrage has al ways been a characteristic of Egyptian ruton. Taxation to the point of star ration was the Egyptian rule In the Biblo times as well as it is in our own time. A modem traveler gives the figures concerning the cultivation of toventeun acres, tho value of the yield sf the field stated in piastres: rttxloce Lfte Exi-iL-s V&H Clear produce WH TaxiM 90 Amount cleared by the farmer. 31554 Or. as my authority declares, seventy per cent, of what the Egyptian farmer uiakes is paid for taxes to the govern ment. Now, that Is not so much taxa tion as assassination. What think you of that, you who groan under heavy taxes in AmericaT I have heard that in Egypt the working people have a song liko this, "They starve us they starve us. they beat us, they beat us, but there's some one above, there's owe one above, who will pnnl-Ji them well, who will punish them well." But seventy per cent, of government tax Is a mercy as compared to what the He brew slaves suffered there In Bible tin.es. They got nothing but food hardly flt for a dog, and their clothing was of ono rag, and their roof a burn ing sky by day and the stars of heaven by night You say, "Why did they stand itT Becaue they had to stand it. You ieo. along back in the world's twilight, Jiere was a famine in Canaan, and old Jacob and his sons came to Egypt for bread. The old man's boy, Joseph, was prime minister, and Joseph I sup pose tho father and the brothera called Iiim Joe, for it does not make any dif ference how much a boy Is advanced In worldly success, his father and broth era and sisters always call him by the same name that he was called by when two years old Joseph, by Pharaoh's permission, gave to his family, who had Just arrived, the richest part of Egypt the Westchester farms or the Lancaster farms of the ancients. Jacob's descendants rapidly multi plied. After awhilo Egypt took a turn at famine, and those descendants of Jacob, the Israelites, came to a great storehouse which Joseph hod provided, and paid in money for corn. But af ter awhile the money gave out and then they paid In cattle. After awhile the cattle were all In possession of tho government, and then the Hebrews bought corn from the government by surrendering themselves as slaves. SLAVBItT UJ EGYPT. Then began slavery in Egypt. Tho government owned all tho Hebrews. And let modem lunatics, who in Amer lea propoto handing over telegraph companies and railroads and other tilings to be run by government seo tho folly of letting government get Its hand ou everything. I would rather trust tho pcoplo than ,any government tho United States ever had or will have. Woe worth tho day when legis lators and congresses and administra tions get possession of anything uioro than it is necessary for them to havo. That would bo tho revival in this land of that old Egyptian tyranny for which God has never had anything but red hot thunderbolts. But through such unwise processes Israel was cnslavod in Egypt, and the long lino of agonies began all up and down tho NIlo, Heavier and sharper fell tho lash, hungrier and ghastlier grow tho workmen, louder and longer went up tho prayer, until three millions of tho enslaved were crying: "Ya, Al lah I Ya, Allah!" O Godl O Godl Where was help to como from? Not tho throne, Pharaoh sat upon that. Not tho army, Pharaoh's officers com manded that Not surrounding na tions, Pharaoh's threat made them tremble. Not tho gods Amnion and Osiris or tho goddess Isls, for Pharaoh built tlietr temples out of tho groans of this diabolical servitude But ono hot day the Princess Thonorls, tho daughter of Pharaoh, whilo in her bathing house on tho banks of tho Ntlo, has word brought her that there Is a baby afloat on tho river iu a cradle mado out of big leaves. Of course there Is excitement all up and down tho banks, for an ordinary baby In an ordinary cradle attract smiling attention, but an Infant in a cradle of apyrus rocking on a river arouses not only admiration but curl oslty. Who mado that boat! Who mado It watertight with bitumen I Who bunched It I Reckless of tho croco diles who lay basking themselves In tho sun, tho maidens wade in und snatch up tho clUld, and first ono carries him and then another carries him, and all the way up tho bank ho runs a gantlet of caresses, till Thonorls rushes out of tho bathing house and says: "Beauti ful foundling, I will adopt you as my own. You shall yet wear tho Egyptian crown and sit on tho Egyptian throne," Not Not No I Uo U to bo tho emancipator of tho Hebrews, Tell It In all the brick kilns. Toll It among all those who aro writhing under tho lash. Tell It among all tho castles of Memphis and llellopolls and Zoau and Tnobos. Before him a sea will part his best, and liard tho poor fellow cry ami saw the blood spurt. Moes doubled up his list and struck him on the tem ple till the cruel villain rolled over in tho sand exanimate and never swung tho lash again. Served him right! GOD WITH MOSIM. But, Moses, aro you going to under take the i iipossibilitiesT You feel that you are grnng to free the Hebrews from bondage. But where is your army? Where Is your navy? Not a sword have yon, not a spoor, not a chariot, not a horse. Ah ' God was on his side and he has an nrmy of his own. The rnowstorms are on Orod s side witness the snowbanks in which tbo French army of invasion were buried on their wny back from Moscow. The rain is ou his side witness the lSth of June at Waterloo, when the tempest so satu rated the road that tho attack could not be made on Wellington's forces until eleven o'clock and he was strong enough to hold out until re-enforcements arrived. Had that battle been opened at Ave o'clock in the morning instead of at eleven, the destiny of Europe would havo been turned the wrong way. The heavy rain decided everything. So also are the winds and the waves on God's side witness the Armada with one hundred and fifty ships and twenty six hundred and fifty guns and eight thousand sailors and twenty thousand soldiers sent out by Philip II of Spain to conquer England. What became of those men aud that shipping? Ask -the wind and the waves all along the English and Irish coasts. The men and the ships all wrecked or drowned or scattered. So I expect that Moses will be helped in rescuing the Israelites by a special weaponry. To the Egyptian the Nile was a deity. Its waters were then as now very de licious. It was the finest natural bev erage of oil the earth. We have no such lovo for the Hudson, and Ger man's have no such love for the Rhine, and Russians have no such love for the sea rolled shut against the Egyptian pursuers. It was about two o'clock in the morn ing when the interlocked oiletrees of the Egyptian chariots could not move an Inch either way. But the Red sea un hitched the horses and unhelmeted the warriors and left tho proud host a wreck on the Arabian sands. 1'uea two chornes arose, and Moses led the meu In the one, and Miriam led the women in the other, and the women beat time with their feet The record says: "All tho women went out after her with timbrels and with dances. And Miriam answered them, 8mg ye to the Lord, for ho hath triumphed gloriously; the horse and his rider hath he thrown into the sea." What a thrill ing story of endurance and victory 1 Tho greatest triumph of Handel's genius was shown In his Immortal dra matic oratorio. "Israel in Etnrot" He bad given to tho world the oratorio of "Esther and Deborah" and Atliauau, but reserved for his mightiest exertion, at tho full height of his powers, the marshaling of all musical intruinents to the description in harmony of the scenes on which we this morning dwelL He gave twenty-seven days to this pro duction, with its twenty -eight choruses, enthralling his own time and all after time with his "Israel In Egypt" THK lllKDBS3 OK EGYPT. So the burden of oppression was lifted, but another burden of Egypt is made up of deserts. Indeed, Africa is a great continent for deserts, Libyan desert, Sahara desert, deserts here and there and vonder, condemning vast regions of Africa to btrrenuess, one of the deserts three thousand miles long and a thousand miles wide. But all those deserts will yet be flooded, and so made fertile. De Lesseps says it can be done, and he who planned tho Suez canal, which marries the Red sea and tho Mediterranean, knows what he is talkinz about The human race is so multiplied that it must have more cul BARK EL S H-ated land, and tuo world must abol- Vblga. as the Egyptians have love for j fh its deserts. Eight hundred millions the Nile. of the human race are now living on But ono day, when Pharaoh comes , lands not u!est w;ti, raj, but depend down to this river, Moses takes a stick i ent ou jn.j ,ation. aud we want bv Irri and whips the waters, and they turn ,. . tton to m , e room for ei 'lit hundred millions more. By irrigation the proph ecy will be ful.llled, and "the desert will blossom as the rose." So from Egypt tha burden of sand will be lifted Another burden of Egypt to bo I'ftcd Is the burden of Mohammedan ism, although there are some Into tho gore of a slaughter house, and 'hroagh tho sluices aud fish ponds tho incarnadined liquid backs up Into tho land, and the malodor whelms every thing from mud hovel to throne room. Then camo the frogs with horrible croak all over everything. Then this people, cleanly almost to fastidiousness, were Infested with insects that belong to tho filthy and unkempt, and the air buzzed and buzzed with flies, and then the distemper started cows to bellow ing and horses to neighing nnd camels to groaning, as they rolled over and ex pired. And then boils, ono of which will put a man in wretchedness, came in clus ters from the top of the head to tho sole of the foot And then the clouds dropped hail and lightning. And then locusts came in, bwarms of them, wore than tho grasshoppers ever were in Kansas. And then darkness dropped for three days, so that tho people could not see their hand before their face, i great surges of midnight covering them. ' And lost of all, on the night of tho 18th of April, about eighteen hundred years before Christ, the destroying an gel sweeps past; und hear it all night long, the flap! flap! flap 1 of his awful wings until Egypt rolled on, a great hearse, tho eldest child dead in every Egyptian home. The eldest son of Pharaoh expired that night in the pal ace and all along tho streets of Mem phis and Heliopolis and all up and down the Nile there was a funeral wall that would have rent the fold of tho unnatural darkness If it had not been impenetrable. LKD BY A TOUCH FUOJI GOD. The IsraelitUh homes, however, were untouched. But these homes were full of preparation, for now is your chance, O ye wronged Hebrews! Snatch up what pieces of food you can and to tho desert 1 Its simooms aro better than tho bondage you have suffered. Its scorpions will not sting so sharply as the wrongs that havo stung you all your lives. Awayl Tho man who was cradled in the basket of papyrus on tho Nile will lead you. Up! Up! This U tho night of your rescue. They gather together at a signal. Alexander's armies and nil tho armies of olden tlmo were led by torches on high poles, great crest of Are; and the I.ord Al mighty kindles a torch not hold by hu man hands, but by omnipotent hand. Not mado out ot straw or oil, but kindled out of tho atmosphere, such a torch as the w orld never saw before and never will seo again. It reached from the earth unto the heaven, a pll good thirms about that religion. Its dis tiples must always wash before they pray, and that is five times a day. A commendable grace is cleanliness Strong drink Is positively forbidden by Mohammedanism, and though somo may havo seen a drunken Mohamme dan, I never" saw one. It is a religion of sobriety. Tiien they aro not ashamed I of their devotions. When the call for I prayers is sounded from the minarets t tho Mohammedan immediately unrolls tho rug on the ground nnl fall3 on his knees, and crowds of spectators are to him no embarrassment reproof to many a Christian who omits his pray ers if people aro looking. But Mohammedanism, with its po lygamy, blights everything it touches. Mohammed, its founder, had four wives, and his followers ure the enemies of good womanhood. Mohammedan Urn puts its cur.se on all Egypt, and by setting up a sinful Arab higher than tho immaculate Christ, Is an over whelming bl.iphemy. May God help tho bravo and consecrated missionaries , who are spending their lives in combat ing it. But before I forget it I must put J more emphas upon tho fact that the i last outrago that resulted in tho libera tion of the Hebrews was their being ' compelled to make brieks without I straw. That .was the last straw that i broke tho camel's back. God would I allow the despotism against his people to go no further. Making bricks with ' out btraw ! I Tliat oppiessiou still goes ou. De mand of your wife appropriate ward robe aud bountiful table without pro viding the means neccssury bricks without straw. Cities demanding in the public school faithful and success ful Instruction without giving tho teach ers competent livelihood bricks with out btraw. United States government demanding of senators and congress men at Washington full nttendanco to tho Interests of the people, but on com pensation wli'eh may have done well enough when twenty-five cents went as far as a dollar now. but In these times not sufficient to preerve their Influence and respectability bricks without str.vw. In many parU of ihe land churches demanding of p.istors vigorous sermons ai" ..-nw' f If Pnwt,i?Uy "V; ' ini mpathenc service on starvation Int7! "Tills wnrl Miiroh tlilj u-nr ..... . o- ...v . .. ...... ...v , . Hninrv. sanctin-Hl Ulcernt. i.n four linn. un mat supernatural uamoeau more than a million refugees Fet their oyes. Moses and Aaron load on. Then como tho families of Israel. Then como tho herds and flocks moving on across tho sands to what is the beach of waters now called Bolir-el-Kulzum, but called In tho Biblo the Bed sea. And when I dipped my hands In Us bluo waters the heroics of tho Mosalo passage rolled over mo. After three days' march tho Israel Itlsli refugees encamped for tho uighl on the bank of the Red sea. As tin Bhodows begin to fall, In tho dlstanct Is seen tho host ot Pharaoh in pursuit There were six hundred Hnest war char lots followed by common chariots roll Ing at full speed. Aud the glittering of tho wheels and tho curse ot infuri atcd Egyptians camo down with tin darkness. But the Lord opened tin crystal gates of BahwMvulzuui and the enslaved Israelites passed Into lib orty, and then the crystal gates of thi drod dollars a year. Brieki without straw. That Is ono reason why there aro so many poor brio':s. Iu all de partments, bricks not even, or bricks that crumble, or bricks that are not bricks at all. Work adequately paid for is worth more than work not paid for. More straw and then better bricks. PIIA11AOU3 OF TODAY. But In all departments there are Pharaohs. Sometimes Capital a Pha raoh and sometimes Labor a Pharaoh. When Cupltal prospers and makes largo percentage on Its Investment aud do cl.nes to consider tho needs of tho op eratives and treats them as so many human machines, their nerves no more than the bands on tho factory wheel thou Capital Is a Phanioli. On tho other hand, when workmen, not re garding the anxieties and business strug gles of tho Arm employing them, and at a time when tho firm ore doing their best to meet an Important contract and OLDEST HOXJSB In tlie State. WATCHES, CLOCKS AND JEWELRY. ., i. ... .prloea aud Goods always reliable, Specialty mado of Spectacles and Eye Glasses. All defects of the eye measured aud ntted rrreoUy, W. W. MARTIN, $tate Street. OF MOKE) Mav be Saved f BY HUYING CLOTHING, FLANNELS, BLANKETS, WOOL HOSE, ETC WOOLEN MILL STORE, 299 ComUt. YOU GET BETTER GOODS AT LOWER PRICES. need ml hsniU but- to iu-coMpl)sli it at suf 1 a time to have his employees Egypt, all ye who are What Christ did for us yet enslavea. he will do for make a srnae und put their employers ' you. "ExodusI" Is the word. Exodus! Instead ol tne Dries Kuns 01 r.gypi- come into the empurpled vineyards of God, where one cluster of grapes is bigger than the ono that the spies brought to tho Israelites by tho Brook. EshcoL though that cluster was so' large that it was borne "between two' upon a stall." Welcome all by sin oppressed, Welcome to his sacred rest; Nothing brought him bom above. Nothing bat redeeming love. Into evtieme perplexity and severe loss I then Labor becomes n Pharaoh of the worst oppression, und must look oat for the judgments of God. When In December of 18S9, at tho museum at Boulac, Eg pt I looked at the mummies of the Pharaohs, the very miscreants who diabolizcd centuries, and I saw their teeth and hair and fin ger nails and the flesh drawn tight over their cheek bones, the sarcophagi of tlieso dead monarclis side by side, and I was so fascinated I could only with difficulty get away from the spot, I was not looking upon the last of tho Pharaohs. All over the world old merchants playing tho Pharaoh over young merchants, old lawyers playing the Pharaoh over young lawyers, old doctors playing the Pharaoh over young doctors, old artists playing the Pharaoh over young artists, old min isters playing tho Pharaoh over young ministers. Let all oppressors, whether In homes, in churches, in stores, in offices, in fac tories, in social life or political life, in private life or publio life know that God hates oppressors, and they will all come to grief here or hereafter. Pha raoh thought ho did a fine thing, a cun ning thing, a decisive thing when for the complete extinction of tlie Hebrews In Egypt he ordered all the Hebrew boys massacred, but he did not And it so fine a thing when his own first born that night of the destroying angel dropped dead on Hie mosaic floor at the foot of the porphyry pillar of the palace. Let all the Pharaohs take warning. Some of the worst of them aro. on a small scale in households as when a man, because his arm is strong and his voice loud, dominates his poor wife into u domestic slavery. There are thousands of such cases where the wife. is a lifetime serf, her opinion disregarded, her tastes insulted, and her existenco a wretchedness, though the world may not know it. It is a Pharaoh that sits at the liead of that table, and a Pharaoh thnt tyran nizes that home. There is no more ab horrent Pharaoh than a domestic Pha raoh. There are thousands of women to whom death is passage from Egypt to Canaan, because they get rid of n cruel taskmaster. What an accursed monster is that man who keeps his wife in dread about family expenses, and must be cautious how sho introduces an nrticle of mil linery or womanly wardrobe without humiliating consultation and apology. Who Is that man acting so? For six months in order to win that woman's heart, he sent her every few days n bouquet wound with white ribbon, and an endearing couplet, and took her to concerts and theaters, and helped her Into carriages as though she were a princess, and ran across tho room to pick up her pocket handkerchief with tho speed of an antelope, and on the marriago day promised all that the lit urgy required, saying, "I will?" with an emphasis that excited the admira tion of nil spectators. But now he begrudges her two cents for a postage stamp, and wonders why sho rides across Brooklyn bridge when tho foot pa&jago costs nothing. He thinks now she is awful plain, and ho acts liko tho devil, while he thunders eut: "Where did you got that now hat from? That's where my money goes. Where's my breakfast) Do you call that coffee? Didn't I tell you to sow on that button? Want to seo your niomer, aoyoui lou are always go ing to see your mother I What ore you whimpering about? Hurry up, now and get my slippers 1 Where's tho newspaper?" The tone, the look, tho Impatience tho cruelty of a Pharaoh That Is what gives so many women a cowed down look. Pharaoh, you had better take your iron heel off that wom an's neck, or God will help you remove your heeL She says nothing. For tho sako of avoiding a scandal she keeps silent; but her tears and wrongs havo gono Into a record that you will have to meet as corulnly as Pharaoh had to meet hail and lightning and darkness and tho death augol. God never yet gavo to any man tho right to tyraunizo a woman, ami wnat a sneak you are to tako advantage of the marriase vow. and bocaue sho cannot help herself, and under the shelter of your own homo out-Pharaoh tho Egyptian oppressor. There is something awfully wrong In a household where tho woman Is not con sidered of as muoh Importance as tho man. No room in this world for any more Pharaohs! SIX HAS HKKN OUU TASKMASTER But It rolls over on mo with great power the thought that wo have all been slaves down In Egypt, and sin has been our taskmaster, and again and again we have felt its lash. But Clirist lias been our Moseu to lead us out of bondage, and wo are forever free. Tho Rd sea of a Saviour's sacriflee rolls deep and wide between us and our aforetime bondage, and though there may be desert yet for us to erosa wo are on tho way to tho Promised Land. Thanks be nntn firvi n. n.i. cmanclnatinff Gosnell rvm m .t .. - -' " yi "August Flower" How does he feel ? He feels blue, a deep, dark, unfading, dyed-in-the-wool, eternal blue, and he makes everybody feel the same way 'August Flower the Remedy. How does he feel? He feels a headache, generally dull and con stant, but sometimes excruciating August Flower tho Remedy. How does he feel? He feels a violent hiccoughing or jumping of the stomach after a meal, raising bitter-tasting matter or what he has eaten or drunk August Flower tho Remedy. How does he feol? He feels the gradual decay of vital power; he feels miserable, melancholy, hopeless, and longs for death and peace August Flower tho Rem edy. How does he feel ? He feels so full after eating a meal that he can hardly walk August Flowor tho Remedy. G. G. GREEX, Sole Manufacturer, Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. A. (mmj co.:G'-. Portlaml, Oreson. A. P. Aruistruntr. 1'iln. Branch silioel: C'iriTiL Bis. CuLLrai-, Silwn. Orrjon Mnme courses of study, same rate ui tuition, Business. Shorthand, Typewriting, Penrami.lp, ami Erglnh Dtfiartmtnts fitTIn Fission throughout the car Sttidrnis julriit- ted nt any time Catalogue fro:u eit'wr school, free Ask Your Deals? Fos TBAOtHARK. "WHIP, FEATIlEItnOVE Is matin fmm Vt,-.,,',..T Uullla nature's own, touclie.it, and stroafs; elastlo material. Best weiring vblpi znude I?.r ?.Cc.,'T,0c ,'7ScJ bl.OO, SJ.PG ami ol.OO. All atvlea fnr lincirr. I'urt. 'IVic Team and Hiding. Bo CCS VSSe?8riH'" cure aud usk for a 5 t A f O fc is O U 0 Ei E. S. LAMPORT, SALEM, OREGON. A POPULAIt TAMIL,. JKS'MF.: "How is It. Kato, tln.t jom nlwtijs seem to' catch ou' to tlic-ltist ,.-v thins? 1).. wlrit I may, jou utwujs teem to (jot uheaJ of mo." Kate: "I don't knetv: I cortnlnlvdo not make any exertion in tlmt 'liitxti. n." Je.nme: " Well, dunn-t to 1 tst tu7mnntlis, for example, jou hau tuiieu up painting. without nay teacher ; you camo to the weue wnen Miss LaUrtjo doorted hi.rDelNirtfci.bM eo suilJenly, and cortainh we aro all iiu. it. v. in? in jrmce under jriuriutrut.t.i n; I hcurd you telling Tommy liime um ecnln- how Ills club mode mistakes in i ayiuy 1 ait 1 all, yon seem to be up on all tho latiti fads,' ami Uuow Just what to douniler all ciruum6uuc: jou entertain iieautilul month oulmo imprtm ou entertain beautilully; and l.i the lust uiuuuijuu iiaoimiroeUM you tell me, to your physmit nero do jou L-ct jiB of your uiforii.aiim lciruum6Uuc: and hi the luei Mln hdtlth.owiiiK. 'U culture eioixUos. from in this little out-of tlie ai plate? for Kate; "Why, Jennie, you will rnnko m vain. 1 nave only ono soui oe or information, but it 14 surprising how it meou hit wants. 1 very seldom hoar of anything 1 1 w but hat the next few iU) brinjr me full iufrmtk.u on tho subject. Maun-? Not MagnsJiM! And a (Trout treasure It U to us all, for It really furnihes the read!.! for the wUete heiuenuld: rather IkurIwu U hUmajnulne that be has taken for oar, h I o f I lib one irtves more and Untir luforsuatjou on the ubwu of the daj ; ami mother wjs tlut it . U that that make he. .-h a faiD u houtekeepur. In fact, wo nil nsm-o that it it theonb really pamiiy roi tbiSw iuiblibcd. and find that ono u all for men. another ail t'KiuSSf1 nua "WKtor tor ihsMreit only, while Uiui itc uiiu eery ouo of u; so wa only ift a eir. Ptriiaps jcu think t aw to.i U lb iu my traie; but I win let you st !u,cVwJUjr ?"" '"' ' SpK llher. . Jenntogs Denonr. 1J East Ttah streeNNow York, for R hhi to tatSitiXl shall alwy$ owwW tfcet 1 IwJiotWlSw a trrftrtt favor; and way lie) on w..l WMuif.oii m out, as jou say w hate th rtum.iYaI being the W Informed f,uU' In tiST If M dSoHu'' ""'re-' JW Masixlue GEO, C. WILL, W Will Bro... AUstB aiM, o,, P&MS,0nu u4MMltos swic. v . mi tx 4 KOj-4 RttPmitD AKn CWANRD -At Your l -Br . Aarceicf) snj,w,tlns r.,., , Txu -1-i4 rw p.,,. kt?,, , .VarU.JS 9 fTIi II o C o ID (I) if 0) W F 3 & & c OO 02 CX3 nto.ONALCAiiM SoSsii?Ml! HubiocV.WSSSlBi33l strcU1WniISegoni'nmcrel'i4 JH?..A- CAHVJN. M, " . "n l. K BONHAM. w JO Olllceln UiisiriillcVuitS und Court, ou ( omUbt bUet& ' J MIAW. ,7T w ii pnvrr-w.Hcsj nw.l'HA'fl illU.ST i.. TbVe.MWC-Vfe UllAW ;ulem, 'piLUO.V FORD, attorney? U o.iuiielorVatiaH1,','?fWtt the supremo com, nJatu'ft ? iieut win uceno pn,i,n,t ,,? " . . - -"vdirufj, .cm, uregon. oiilu. hou ?,' .k . I W4p. in. ii. om e 155 ( o jh VirSS at ti,i.on sn tn to LZ ?JI ciiiuiK-n. yi Dti. .M 1NTA K A. 1W VIb tfla Oh. ui. to II n in; Up M, r?H nay or nicht rails pr.!ii Lt,r it "BJ: special intention cier, inA?;! - . ... . - ' "! iroai 1 1 m euunucuiiureu tjffl.eln . it, ,.,;, 1 lonuueriiai kiuu htiaino; uit I .A13 the hltr comer, Court und taJ iiiciviiu nn re it DIt. T. C. SMITH, Dentist,! Slate m iMilcin, Ol. Fir.Iftifd dciittl orm lions ofeery(l(.rlption. Fauueoio i vu n jn; I'll t,J . XT D.l'UOH. ArohlleiL I'lass-Stril . tlcatlont. and btipeniilcn(erjoe ttl all washes of buildings. Olllte JHlCtatl iifrciai m., up stuirs. 0. S. ilcNAIJA'.ArcLIlect, ten Ed I lire) man block. l'laUMiud triful nuns oi an cias-ies oi oi uuiiuidcs ontmri no tlie. &uicrlntendfceoforKproipttJ uuncuaiiLi, in I f?i J. MclAllMliAM),0llB.iDltirftf m. uja.iiui.i r,t!Kii-er. u. . utjfli i.iutra! iurMycr my Biirvrycnifl otlit r rklniiBt lllock.Milfcin (.ppt lllMNhS CAKbv P I OK A RUSH, IiUcltBIiiims ail Util iii rfiiairiniraiiiiiiirri iKcgn mihvi lu our empio Artuuruiot,ttnii uorsecnoer. t.leubatiai. i it in i mis- KN'IHHT. 11 ocksnillb. I! rj shoelugitiul repairlrnjasptciawl ,. t titu ftt t,r l lt,r tt kttf-t. KrjLn tA 1 c.uo IUU.U. ..-... j -j,. V KM JIaiiuftutB't' 1 fchop 45 btate street, v. 1 t ,Tt X I t . bludsorehIeles. KtpaUlBi . n v-MiTtr a rn.. rontrsttor1. r A t..n . r...nt QtrtAtrnlk. klUT&fl c.vi Ail otz promptly toie, SiJl i tti t nrnp l iili Fnipjin Brcs i. 9 nAUPET-LAYING.-I make ,4S I MiMt.wvutii and lyC.!l taken up and relaidwltbrf".01"' cleaning. U a t oiiUrs wli 'ft, orDuien. roru J.G LlHio' JOHN GUAY.-Contractor f) Klneinbide nnlihlnga5r1"'" Commercial Mreet, balem Otegoo riIM.HpyRItorbci.ndHWgl t i ntnorft. riuwiw"'" Commercial bteel, halem. I 111 i V 11 ll d.c.shbrmanI . U, M, r?MlMilBd(j5fJ MIX (, 11 tQl, ur w --,-. O "!' Vrlte for b'arK. t INSURE IN YOUR HOME CflBJ "Tl-ie States !.... n.. asn.000 Ds'it G1.0.M.BhElWS! ,,i.,i..,..ttnr Mario"'1' ,Ult iiirt;ii nviv. to w ' lie r mi., "y S500 Hb4 mtimw HEALTH. Bill te nicliua'n Coldf" B"Sa Care Chancres, nnt. J-!r (at Z I Sorc.cn th. . Utt SL H Eyes, No. ft. i , w 'rTs. Bywua.icv.r.-"rdijeJ- n prunary xo; i. 00 r Cures-Tertiary. "JS'SSf ff """j ?? r-i WMsi oi v.tr i...r".ir3u fr - (i eradicate an "'fIiir.as T, whether caused pjxi rT ?Hj!rviresfT, dote for Ui tf'JnVlui lection, 'orf"rcSSrA4, iBninmutoryCleu8w17(; SKSSWl&tf.'S vnd eruption. ". Ft1ii ptrexprcM. lA - ,..enCDRUf: -war nw"" I , nil PIN IB III III I - f - ,t-. i -Jijfa.t,. &&.