ritaM FjssaV '" -t&mmmim WmV HV.WMP 'Mi wc y i SSSS5S3S5 rjnnMimviMi i, Jf Newton, 111. SjHflK From 1863 to 1885 about ,jtilBJHil 22 years I suffered with rhcu matism of the hip. I was cured by the use of St. Jacobs Oil. T. C. DODD. "ALL RIGHT I ST. JACOBS OIL DID IT." allytnro:fr 1. Wen neenr tomed to pray in p iMic .u groat c(-iiiiKsuro bko dorm tumor eiuotlon. i'lte. ieoplj wore In tears. There were soln and silences and solemnities of Btich unnaunl power that the worshipers looked Into each other's faces, aa much us to say, "What does all this mean?" And when the fol lowing Sablmth cntne, nlthongh we were I k VALUABLE LESSON. EXTRACTED FROM A TEXT APPAR ENTLY BARREN OF SUGGESTIONS. W ..... Jr. Talmnge Gitc a Fresh Display or f'HU Ability to Be. Eloquent and Karnrat f W Morel Lines of riilplt uratory. Beookltn, May 29. Dr. Talnirttfo gie a fresh illustration this moriiing of too power no possesses of extracting valuable leesons from text which preachers have generally neglected as barren gronnd. His 6ennon was based a K on the test realms txxxi, i, "i answered I li thee in the secret placo of thunder." ft-"1 T.? Tf r wiaf nit1i?frlifr rtml frr nVlrtMr iti S'th morning, far enough from sunset , CV and sunriso to make tho darkness very 'i thick, and tho Egyptian army in pursuit : 4 of tho escanincr Israelites nrn en the bo!- r I torn of the Red sea, its waters having papphiro, for God can malio a wall aa - solid out of water as out of granite, and the trowels with which theso two walls f55ro built were nono tue less powerful U8o invisiDio. aucn wans nau never jire been lifted. yhen I saw the watora of tho Bod sea agtnrougntuoauez canai tuey woro and beautiful and flowing like .waters, but tonight, as tho Egyp- Flobk up to them built into walls, 6n ono sido and now on tho other, must have been frowning watars, "it was probablo that tho same power fc lifted, them np might suddenly fling pm prostrate. A great lantern of cloud Ant? nvnr tliln clinam hot.wpon tlio twn alls. Tho door of that lantern w.is JJ- jponed toward tho Israelites ahead, fciv K jtijr them light, and the back of the lan jjiern was toward tho Egj'ptians, and it jfgrOwled and rumbled and j.irred with ?thunder; not thunder like t.hat which J cheera tho earth after a drought, promis ing tue refreshing shower, but charged and surcharged with threats of doom. The Egyptian captains loot their pies ctico of mind, and tho horses reared and Buoried and would not answer to their iiito, and tho chariot wliools got inter locked and torn off, and tho charioteers wero hurled headlong, and tho Red sea fell on all tho host. Tho confusing and confounding thundor was in answer to (ho prayor of tho Israelites. With their backs cut by the lash, and their feet bleeding, and their bodies decrepit with ? the suffering of whole generations, they had asked Almighty God to ousopulcher their Egyptian pursuers in ono great f earcophagus, and tho splash nnd tho $ roar of tho Red sea as it dropped to its j natural bod wero only tho shutting of "tfee sarcophagus on a dead host. That I is tho meaning of tho text when God says, "I answered theoin tho secret placo I of thundor." I r A POWKR AND A MTBTEKY. ' Now thunder, all tip and down tho LjHble, is tho symbol of power. Tho Egyp- tiaa plaguo of hail was accompanied t with this full diapason of tho heavens, j While Samuol and his men wero mailing j i a burnt offering of a lfcmb, and the Phil ) istines wero about to attack them, it was j by terrorising thundor thoy woro dis I icomfitod. Job, who was a combination of tho Dantesquo and tho Miltonic, was , leolemnized on this rovorberation of tho , jbeavons, and cried, "Tho thunder of his t jower, who can understand?" and ho challenges tho universe by sayiug,"Canst I thou thundor with a voico llko him?" and ho throws Rosa Bonhour's "Horeo i 'Fair" into tho ahado by tho Biblo photo- graph of a warhorso, when he describes 1 hie Beck as "olothod with thundor. Bo- cause of tho power of James and John, they wero called "tho sons of thunder." The law given on tho basaltic crags of Mount Sinai was emphasised, with this cloudy ebullition. Tho skies all around about St, John at Patmos woro full of ttfce thunder of war, and tho thunder of Chrktly triumph, and tlio thunder of rewirrection, and tho thunder of eternity. Bat1 when my text says, "I answered i'tine in tho secret placo of thunder," it 0geta thero is somo mystery about )Mm' thundor. To tho ancients tho causo t this bombarding tho earth with loud J 9ad must havo been more of a mys- .WKyiuaii n u w us, xno ugnuungs, "which were io them wild monsters Bging tbrough tho sldos, in our timo iavo been domostlcated. Wo harness Jieetricity to vehicles and wo pago it in jkHBps,and every schoolboy knows some- ming about tho faot that it is tho possago jot electricity from cloud to oloud that wakes the heavenly racket which wo ;cJl thundor, But, after all that choin IWlry has taught tho world, Uiero aro 3ytrio3 about this skyey resonanco, lwd my text, truo in tho time of the SPiMlBinH.is truo now and always will bo jfcnM, that thero is somo tecrct about tho j4C9 of thunder. To one thing known nbout tho thun jier thero aro a hundred things not (known, After all tho soioutiiio batteries ave been doing their work for a thou- years to come and learned men discoursed to tho utmost about erio. electricity nnd magnotio city and galvanic electricity and tic olectricity and frlctional olec- ,y and poaitivo electricity nnd nega eloctricitv mv text will bo as suir- jpwtivo as it is today, when it speaks of Mm secret placo of thundor, J RBS0LT OV X WOUAN'S rOAYEBS. l Jfow right along by a natural law hfre is always a spiritual law. As Hkire is a secret place of natural thun fimr, thero is a secrot place of uioral jmmuct, m oinor worn, iuo rongious that you see abroad in tho church world has a hiding place, and in cea it Is never discovered at iill, I tm a slmUitttdo, I cau give only Mm oatllae of ,a particular case, for or tho remarkabio ctrcumstancea kve forgotten. Many years ago thero mrgo church. It was character- 1mA Vy stnwgo and unaccotuitable con :, mmiom. There wero bo grout revivals, Mri sdividiul caces of spiritual urcat 'tM InuwfortBAtlou. A, yotwf raa sat in one of tho front He was a graduate of Yale, bril- m Urn north star and notoriously mm. m very way www mm aaut 5ve !ioph m i 'fWWHT 7 Zmm w IMSAj t T iMH. &tMNMBI Mb r W jtmiaiitr, mi i$mi ' his moral errantry. To plrato nis par cnta ho was every Sabbath morning in church. One day thero was a ringingof tho doorbell of tho pastor of that church, and that young man, whelmed with re pentance, implored prayer and advico, and passed into comploto reformation of heart and life. All tho noighboihood was astonished and asked, "Why was this?" His father and mother had said nothing to him about his soul's welfnrc. On another aislo of tho samo church sat an old misor. He paid his iov rent, but was hard on tho poor, and had no in terest in any philanthropy. Piles of money! And people said, "What a strug gle he will have when ho quits this lifo to part with his bonds nnd mortgages." Ono day ho wrote to his minister: "Pleaso to call immediately. I have a matter of great importance about which I want to seo you." When tho pastor camo in tho man could not spoak for emotion, but after awhilo ho gathered self control enough to say: "I havo lived for this world too long. I want to know if you think I can bo saved, and, if bo, I wish you would tell mo how." Upon his soul tho light soon dawned, aud tho old miser, not only revolutionized in heart but in lifo, began to scatter bene factions, and toward all tho groat chari ties of tho day he becamo a cheerful and bountiful almoner. What was the causo of this change? everybody asked, and no ono was capable of giving an intelligent answer. In another part of tho church sat, Sab bath by Sabbath, a beautiful and talented woman, who was a great society leader. She went to church becauso that was a respectable thing to do, and in tlio neigh borhood whero sho lived it was hardly resectable not to go. Worldly was she to tho last degree, and all her family worldly. Sho had at her house tho iinest germaus that wero ever danced, and tho co3tlio3t favors that wero over givon, and though sho attended church sho novor liked to hear any story of pathos, and as to religions emotion of any kind, sho thought it positively vulgar. Wines, cards, theaters, rounds of costly gnyoty were to hor tho highest satisfaction. Ono day a neighbor sent in a siting card, and this lady camo down thtystairs in tears and told tho wholo story of how she had not slept for sovoral nights, and sho feared sho was going to loso her soul, and she wondered if somo ono would not como around and pray with hor. From that timo hor ontiro domcanor was changed, and though sho was not called upon to sacrifico any of her amenities of lifo, sho consecrated hor beauty, hor social position, hor family, hor all to God and the church aud usefulness. Every body said in regard to hor, "Havo you noticed tho change, and what in tho world caused it?" aud no ono could mako satisfactory explanation. In tho courso of two years, though thero was no general awakening in that church, many such isolated cases of such unexpected and unaccountablo conver sions took place. The vory pooplo whom no one thought would bo affected by such considerations wero converted. Tlio pastor and tho officers of tho church wore on tho lookout for the solution of this religious phenomenon. ' Whero is it," thoy said, "and who is it nnd what is it?" At last tho discovory was raado and all was explained. A poor old Christian woman i tending inthovesti bulo of tho church ouo Sunday morning, trying to got hor breath again boforo Bho wont up stairs to tho gallery, hoard tho inquiry and told tho secrot. For years sho had boon in tho habit of concentrating all her prayers for par ticular persons in that church. Sho would soo somo man or somo woman present, and, though sho might not know tho porson's name, sho would pray for that person until ho or she was con verted to God. All hor prayers woro for that ono person just that ono. Sho waited aud wuitod for communion days to soo when tho candidates for member ship stood up whothor hor prayers had been effectual. It turned out that theso marvolous instances of conversion wero tho result of that old woman's prayers as sho sat in tlio gallery Sabbath by Sabbath, bont and wizened and poor nnd unnoticed. A littlo cloud of consecrated humani ty hovering in tho gallories. That was tho secret placo of tho thundor. Thero is somo hiddon, unknown, mysterious sourco of almost all tho moral aud reli gious power demonstrated. Not ouo out of a million not ono out of ten mil lionprayers ever strikes a human ear. On pnblio occasions a minister of reli gion voices tho supplications of an as semblage, but tho prayers of all tho congregation are in silonco. Thero is not a second In a century when prayers are not asconding, bnt myriads of them aro not oven as loud as a whisper, for God hears a thought as plainly as a vo calization. That silence of supplication hemispheric nud iorpetual is tho so crot placo of thunder. TUB BECKUT I'lJlCK OF THUNDKU, In tho winter of 1675 wo wore worship ing in tho Brooklyn Academy of Muslo in tlio interregnum of churches. Wo had tho usual great audionces, but I was oppressod beyond moasuro by tho faot that conversions were not ;noro numer ous. One Tuesday I invited to ray honso ftvo old, consecrutod Cliristian men all of them gone now, except Father Pear son, aud no, in uimunoss ana oia ago, waiting for tho Master's call to coroo up higher. Those old men came, not knowing why I had invited them. I took them to tho top room of my house. I said to thorns "I have called you horo for spe cial prayor. I am iu an agon) for a great turning to God of Uio people. We have vast multitude) in attendance and thoy aro attentive and respectful, but 1 cannot boo that they ore saved. Let us kneel down aud each ono pray and not leave this room until wo are all assured that the blessing will como and has come." It was a most intense crying unto God. I said, "Brethren, let this mooting bo a secret," aud they said it would bo. That Tuesday night special servioo ended, On tho following Friday night oc curred tho usual prayer mooting. No oao kiwwsf what had occurred on Too. 4y nirtt. Wt Mm vmti&s wu wwa in a secular place, over lour uunurea nroso for prayers, and a religious awaken ing took place that mado that winter memorable for timo and for eternity. Thero may 1)0 in this building many who wero brought to God during that great ingathering, but fow of them know that tho upper room in my house on Quincy street, whero those fivo old Christian men poured out their bouIs before God, was tho secret place of thunder. Tho day will come God hasten it when people will find out tho velocity, the majesty, tho mnltipotencoof prayer. Wo brag about our limited express trains which put ns down a thousand miles away in twenty-four hours, but hero is something by which in a mo ment wo may confront jteople fivo thou sand miles away. We brag about our telephones, but hero is something that boats tho tolephono in utterance and re ply, for God says, "Beforo thoy call, IJ will hear." Wo brag about tho phono graph, in which a man can speak, and his words nnd tho tones of his voico can be kept for ages, and by the turning of a crank tho words may como forth upon tho oars of another century, bnt prayor allows us to speak words into the ears of 6 vei lasting romombrance, and on tho Behold I othor sido of all eternities they will bo J thunder, minutM nt thi village graveyard and boo the tomb- ii.r'3 of tlio parents. Yes, the one was iM uty-four years of ago nnd the other was soventy-t wo, and tbo epi taph Ni s !. .t "aft r a useful life thoy died a 'hr.lian death." How appro priately t.it' ric ture passage cut on tho mother's ton 'stono, "Sho hath done what she xuid." And how beautiful tho passogo cut on the fatlior'a tomb stone. "Blessed are tho dead who die in tho Lord, for they rest from their labors and their works do follow them." On over the country road wo ride j looked in vain for him, nnd arterwanl through an uudorgro.uid passage, far out m tlio fields, he came out iu tho open air. So this im, rial power of spiritual influence hai . hiding place, a secrot placo which f w know, nnd it comes forth somct ii's in strange nnd mys terious wi rs nnd far from tho placo where it vu hiddon you cau find it only by diligent MKircliing. Bnt yon may find it, nnd lon.e of jou will find it, and I wish you might all find it tlio secret place of thunder. Dlt TAUT ACE GOINO ABROAD. tho road a little rough, for tho snrin2 At nine o'clock Wednesday morning. wenthcr is not quite settled, and onco Juno J." next, on tho steamer City of heard. Oh, ya who aro wasting your breath, and wasting your brains, and wasting your nerves, and wasting your lungs wishing for this good and that good for tho church and the world, why do you not go into tho secret placo ef thunder. "But," says somo ono, "that is a beau tiful theory, yet it does not werl: in my cafe, for I am in a cloud of trouble, or a cloud of sickness, or a cloud of persecu tion, or a cloud of poverty, or a cloud of bereavement, or a cloud of perplexity." How glad I am that you told mo that. That is exactly tho placo to which my text refers. It was from a cloud that God answered Israel the cloud over tho chasm cut through tho Rod sea tho cloud that was light to tho Israelites and darkness to tho Egyptians. It was from u cloud, a tremendous cloud, that God mado reply. It was a cloud that was tho secret placo of thunder. So you cannot get away from the consola tion of my text by talking that way. Let all tho people under a cloud hear it. "Iansweied thee in tho secret place of thunder." INFLUENCE OF THE OLD HOJIE. This subject helps mo to explain somo things you havo not understood about men nnd women, and there aro multi tudes of them, and the multitude is mul tiplying by the minute. Many of them have, not a superabundance of educa tion. If you had their brain in a post mortem examination, and you could weigh it, it would not weigh any heav ier than tho average. They have not nnything especially impressive in per sonal appearance. They are not very fluent of tongue. They protend to noth ing unusual in mental faculty or social inflnenco, but you feel thoir power; you are olovated iu thoir presenco; you aro a better man or a better woman, having confronted them. You know that in in tellectual endowment you aro their su perior, while in tho matter of moral and religious influence thoy aro vastly your suporior. Why is this? To find tho revelation of this Becret you must go back thirty or forty or perhaps sixty years to the homestead where this man was brought up. It is a winter morning, and tho tallow candlo is lighted, and tho fires aro kindled, sometimes the shavings hardly enough to start tho wood. Tho mother is pro paring tho breakfast, tho bluo edged dishes aro on tho tables, and tho lid of tho kcttlo on tho hearth begins to rattlo with tho steam, and tho shadow of tho iudnstrious woman by the flickering flam o on tho hearth is moved up and down tho wall. Tho father is at tho barn feeding tho stock tho oats thrown into tho horses' bin and tho cattlo craunching tho corn. Tho childron, ear lior than thoy would liko and af tor be ing called twico, aro gathered at tho table. Tho blessing of God is naked on tho food, nnd, tho meal over, tho family Biblo is put upon tho white tablecloth and a chapter is read and, a prayer mado, which includes nil tho interests for this world and tlio uoxt. Tlio children pay not much attention to tho prayer, for it is nbout tho samo thing day after dny, but it puts upou thoin an impression that ten thousand years will only mnko moro vivid and tremendous. As long as tho old folks livo their piayer is for their children nnd their children's childron. D.iyiu nnd day out, mouth iu nnd mouth out, year in and year out, decado in nnd decado out tho sons and daughters of that family aro remembered in earnest prayer, and thoy know it, nnd thoy fool it, and they cannot get away from it. Two funerals nfter awhile not moro than two years apart, for it is seldom that thoro is more than that lapse of timo botwoen fathor's goiug and moth er's going two funerals put out of sight tho old folks. But whore aro tho chil dren? Tho daughters are in homes wlioro thoy aro incarnations of good sonso, industry and piety. Tho sons, perhaps ouo a fnrinor, nnothcr a mer chant, nuotlier a mechanic, another a phyaician, another a minister of the Gospel, useful, consistent, admired, hou ored. What a powor for good thoso sovon sous aud daughters! Wlioro did thoy get tho power? From the schools, and tho seminaries, nnd tho colleges? Oh, no, though theso may Iiuyo helped. From thoir superior montnl endowment? No, I do not think thoy had unusual raontal calibor. From accidental cir cumstances? No, they had nothing of what is called astounding good luck. THE FOUNTAIN OF H0U3 INFLUENCE. I think wo will tako a train nnd ride to tho depot nearest to the homestead from whioh thone men and women start ed. Tho train halts. Let us stop a few down in a rut it is hard to get tbo whetls out again without breaking tlio shafts. But at last wo come to tho lane in front of tho farmhouse. Let mo get out of the wagon and open tho gate while you drivo'through. Hero Is the nrbor under which thoso boys and girls many years ago used to play. But it is quite out of order now, for tho proporty is in other hands. Yonder is tho orchard where thoy used to thrash tho trees for apples, sometimes beforo thoy wero quite ripe. There is the mow where they hunted for eggs beforo EastoT. There is tho doorsill upon which they used to sit There is tho room in which they had family prayers aud where they all knolt tho father there, the mother thero and tho boys and girls there. Wo liave got to tho fountain of pious and gracious influences at last. That is the place that decided thoso seven earth ly nnd immortal destinies. Behold! That is tho secret place of Boys are seldom more than their fathers will let them bo. Girls aro seldom more than their mothers will let them be. But thero como times when it seems that parents cjvnnot con trol their children. There come times in a boy's lifo when ho thinks ho knows moro than his father does, and I remem ber now that I know moro at fifteen years of ago than I havo ever known since. Thero como times in a girl's lifo when sho thinks her mother is notional and does not understand what is proper and best, and tho sweet child sa)s, "Oh, pshaw!" and sho longs for tho timo when sho will not have to bo dictated to, and sho goes out of the door or goe3 to bed with pouting Iip3, and these mothers re member for themselves that they knew more at fourteen years of age than they have ever known since. But, father and mother, do not think you havo lost your influence over your child. You havo a resource of prayer that puts tho sympa thetic and omnipotent God into your parental undertaking. Do not wasto your time in reading flimsy books about the best ways to bring up children. Go into tho secret pl3co of thunder. PRAY FOR THE PREACHERS. The reason that we ministers do not accomplish moro is because others do not pray enough for us and we do not pray enough for ourselves. Every min ister could tell you a thrilling story of sormous sermons hasty and impromptu because of funerals and sickbeds and annoyances in tho parish, yet thoso ser mons harvesting many souls for God. And then of sermons prepared with great care and research and toil uninterrupted, yet those sermons falling flat or power less, or of tho same sermon mightily blessed on ono occasion and useless on another. How well I remember a ser mon I preached at a great outdoor meet ing in tho upper part of this state. For sevoral days in that placo prayers had been offered for the success of the serv ico, aud 1 had myself been unusually prayerful, aud wo had a Pentecostal blessing while I was preaching it. That afternoon I took the train for a great outdoor meeting in Ohio. I said to myself, "This sermon was blessed to day and it is fresh in my mind, and I will preach it tomorrow in Onio." And I did preach it, but not in as prayerful a Bpirit, and I think no ono else had been praying about it, and it turned into tho most inuno and profitle&a discourse that I over delivered. It was practically tlio samo sermon, but on Wednesday it had on it a powor that comes from tho secret place of thunder, and on Thursday it had on it no such power at all. Oil, pray for us! Poor sermons in tho pidpit aro tho curso of God on a prayer less parish. People say: ""W hat is tho matter with tho ministers in our timo? So many of them seem dissatisfied with the Biblo and they are trying to help Mosos and Paul and Christ out of in consistencies nnd contradictions by fix ing up tho Bible." As well lot tho mu sicians go to work to fix up JIadyn's "Creation," or Handel's "Israel in Egypt," or lot tho painters go to fixing up Raphael's "TransLjuration," or archi tects go to fixing up Christopher Wren's St Paul's. But I will tell jouwhatis tho matter. Thoro aio too muny uncon verted ministers. Their hrarts have never boon changed by tho grace of God. A mere intellectual ministry is tho deadest failure this sido of perdition. Alas for tho Gospol of icicles! From apologetics and hormeneutics and dog matics, good Lord deliver us! They aro trying to get from transcendental the ology, or from profound exegesis, or from tho art of splitting hairs between north and northwest side instead of get ting their power from tho secret placo of thunder. Wo want the power a man gets when ho is nlouo, tho door locked; on his knees; nt midnight; with Bueha burden of souls upon him that makes him cry out, first in lamentation and then in raptures. Lot all tho Sabbath school teachers and Biblo class instructors aud all re formers and all evangelists and all min isters know that diplomas and diction aries and encyclopedias aud treatises and libraries are uot the source of moral and spiritual achievement, but New York, I expect to sail for Liverpool, to bo gono until September. It is in ac ceptance of many invitations that I am going on a preaching tour. I expect to devote my timo to preaching tho Gospel in England, Scotland, Ireland and Sweden. I want to seo how many souls I can gather for tho kingdom of God. Those countries havo for manyyears be longed to my parish, and I go to speak to them nud shako hands with them. I waut to visit more thoroughly thun be foro thoso regions from which my an c&jtord came, Wales and Scotland. But who i3 sufficient for tho work I undertake? I call upon you who havo long been my coadjutors to go into tho secret placo of the Almighty, and every day from now until my work is dono on the other sido of the sea, to havo mo in your prayers. In proportion to the in tensity and continuance and faith of tho prayers, yours and mine, will bo tho re sults. If you remember mo in the do votionnl circle, that will bo well, but what I most want is your importuning, your wrestling supplication in tho secret placo of thunder. God und you alone may mako mo the humblo instrumentality in tho redemp tion of thousands of souls. I shall preach in churches, in chapels and in tho fields. I will make it a campaign for God and eternity, and I hope to get during this absence a baptism of power that v;ill mako mo of moro service to you wiien I return than I ever yet havo been. For, brethren and sisters in Christ, our opportunity for usefulness will soon bo gono, and wo shall havo our faces uplifted to the throne of judg ment, befoio which wo must give ac count. That day thero will be no 6ecret placo of thunder, for all tho thunders will bo out. There will be tho thunder' of tho tumbling rocks. Thero will bo tho thunder of tho bursting waves. Thero will be the thunder of the de scending chariots. There will be tho thunder of tho parting heavens. Boom! Boom! But all that din and uproar and crash will find us unaffrighted, and will leave us undismayed, if wo have made Christ our confidence, and as after an August shower, when tho whole heavens have been an unlimbered battery cannonad ing tho earth, tho fields are moro green, and tho sunrise is the more radiant, nnd tho waters aro the more opalino, so the thunders of the last day will make the trees of lifo appear moro emorald, and tho carbunclo of tho wall moro crimson, and tho sapphiro seas the more shimmer ing, and the sunriso of eternal gladness the moro empurpled. The thunders of dissolving nature will be followed by a celestial psalmody the sound of which St. John on Patmos described, when ho 6aid, "I heard a voice like the voice of mighty thunderings!" Amen! Spiders That Sail Ilalloous. There aro two minute animals, usual ly called insects, which produce gos samer. These are tho gossamer spiders, and therefore, according to the later zo ological classification, thoy aro not. strictly speaking, insects, but form part of a distinct class of animals called the arachnida. Tho ascent of the gossamer balloons made by theso 6piders only takes placo in bright, terene weather, and is invariably preceded by a produc tion of gossamer on tho ground. When impelled by a desiro of traversing the air, tlio gossamer spiders climb to tho summit of various objects, and thence emit the viscous threads in such a man nor as that they may be drawn out to a great length and fineness and when sufficiently acted upon by the ascending current, they quit hold of the objects on which thoy rested and commence their aerial flight by floating away, tho gos samer acting exactly in the same way as a balloon. The threads of gossamer are so deli cate that a singlo ono cannot bo seen unless tho sun shines on it. The viscid fluid is ejected by the spider with great force, becoming a thread, and several such threads aro produced at onco in a radiating form, which facilitates their being caught by tho current of heated air and borne upward, carrying the spider along with them. The spider is said oven to have tho power, to somo exteut, of guiding in the air tlio balloon liko web by which it is wafted up. London Tit-Bits. Haiti Heads rulialied. "Do you want your skull polished?' asked tho barber of the bald headed man. "Skull? How much?" demanded tho latter. "I havo here," said tho barber, "a French preparation which has just come on the market, and which puts a beau tiful shine on bald heads. The polish lasts three or four days and is not re moved by water. It wears off or cor- ! rodea eventually by the action of tbo atmosphere, nnd then another applica tion can be made. "Some men object to the shine on paid heads, and in Germany they take it off with a dilute acid. But in France the vvowning glory of a well dressed bald head is an immaculate polish which reflects the light like a dazzling dia- "German SvruD Martinsville, N.J., Methodist Tad sonage. " My acquaintance with your remedy, Boschee's German Syrup, was made about fourteen years ago, when I contracted a Cold which resulted in a Hoarseness aud a Cough which disabled me from filling my pulpit for a number of Sabbaths. After trying a Physician, without obtaining relief I cannot say now what remedy he prescribed I saw the advertisement of your remedy and obtained a bottle. I received such quick and permanent help from it that whenever we have had Throat or Bronchial troubles since in our family, Boschee's Ger man Syrup has been our favorite remedy and always with favorable results. I have never hesitated to report my experience of its use to others when I have found them troubled in like manner." llBV. V. H. Hagoarty, of the Newark, New j Safe Jersey, M.E. Confer ence, April 25, 'go. Remedy. & G. G. GREEN, Sole Man'fr.Woodbury.N.J. Dn.KII.ES Wk 1Heart il8lf CURE. W31irW? fr Tfad Wsttjy HEART DISEASE! 1'ja.w.g .'MU Statistics rtiowthnt ono In four lias a weak ordlsented Uoart. Tho first pjmiptoms ors liort breath, oppression, fluttering, fhtnt find hungry spells.pHtn Iu slue, t hen amotherlnir, anrollen ankles, dropsy (uml clcutli.) tor which UK. MILKS' JEW IIEA11T CtTKK Ian marvelous remedy. "I have been troubled with heart dlBcase for rears, cir left pulo wns Terr weak, could at times re trcclr feel It, tho smallest excitement would ulwayB weaken tar ncircs and heart end n rear of Impending death stared mo In tho face for hour. ItJZ. Mll.r.S' JVT.nVlMJ nnd NEW liEAKT CUKE Is tbo only rnedlclno that has proved of r.ny bene fit and cured rue. L. M. Dyer, Clorerdalo, lid. Jr. Miles' Z.lTerIllli are a euro remedy for lSlltousnees nnd Torpid Xlrer. HO Hoses CO cents. Flno book on Iloatt Disease, wltk wonderful cures l'reo at drustlsts, or address) OR. MILES' MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Inde Bold by D. J. Fry, druggist,Ralem. LOOSES lljrjf IISOTfiSUVffiFlUS Act on niiew principle ruguiaio ma uvor, eromacn and bowels through (hi nervfs. Dn. Hilks' I'ilui ipeedity aire blliotumeeo, torpid liror and constipa tion. Si tallest, mildest, enri'.itl 60dOB8B,25otB. Srmoks iiee at lru(rciflt8. C- .u Esi. Co., ElUiiit. lad. Sold by D. J. Fry, druggist, Salem The Last Drop Is as good as the first. No dregs. All pure and whole some. The most popular drink of the day. Ires'K. A perfect thirst quencher. Don't bs deceived If a dealer, for the tike of larpcr profit, tells )ou some other Kind Is "just a good "'tis false. No imiution is as good as the genuine limes'. Jm W3 lMi $& -I J...O.V t , , , . , w ' FT ,JZx.Z; fcssra 'iy. I.oa' jou 1, u-U.u 1, debility, fs iaj uannoo', und general wesL sit, brought im by early ' ful. I -s, o.i.0 -a ton si.rt excesses, ' can uOt, rv. I. Doa'tft disconr- 1 i,o1. Vii Imvo cured hundreds awuoiruu' .vaHyniimircaiiucufe Your cas2 will be dlagno.oJ free. Writo to-day. No cost to leam your condition. mm:m mmm Fi W T r Ian W&iiZ 'power I43r4 4 ) 8 Hi lrP ituM sJaSJ2S&alidteli3 UaM, StoUdon and Ellis Sit, SAN FRANCISCO, CAU 377T CLEAN! If you would bo dean nnd haye your clothes done up in tho neatest and dressiest manner, take them to the S1LEM STEAX LAUNDRY wlioro rII work is done by white labor nnd in tho most prompt manner. COLONEL J, OLMSTED. Liberty Stteat thut tho room of prayor, where no onoimona- -Aeff 1 one iioraia. but God i presrtit and no 0110 but Gd I hears, is the Eecrot place of thunder, j ' Keptiies Tbn rurmrriy. Becret? Ah, yesl So secret that com- The variety of forms which reptilian parntircly fow ever find it. life now pretests is esi&H indeed qmb- At Boscobel, Englaud, we visited a ' pared with what existed darns tost honso whero a king was once hid. No rat period of time -alticls jurruw3 ono, unless it was pointed out to hint, 1 befroen the goal forsst&ouat f &e ou&l could find tho door in the floor through j deposit sad tfee lormuiui of ifee yity which the king entered bis biding place. ) vthiek cxhu4(4 tb ir-jn.'a tM bvii When there hidden the armed nonmerd 1 imwia of RugfaaJL Qesrtir ritw. IBFiCULES Sas and Gasoliai ENGINES ITava fewer part, and ara Of CrtleT tbafl an V rithP i u.a rtr srhASillnj. rt1n nK fcaiiu Jjit Ufbi tL turuer. turn Om wleL acd U rati tH dsy. MAKES SO SJCEU. OK DIET.. Xo 6oGZt or Ulst npytott.io trvptnl wSbtbii iWttatir a tuts, Cb&mbHiU' Ctork fmAy a oUolateJy tb Utt" vj Mr, F. B. Kemp,iwMaW tciim mang-rof the YMHsptovs, Ohf, DIIy TVl. ram 0Brf the moat inflaentlal nnd valuable newspaper In the Buokeye state. Mr. Kemp also ya: "I have fouml It a certain cure for the cough usually following an attack of the grippe, and always keep a bottle of it lu the bouse." 60 cent bottlea for Wlo by G. E, Good, Druggist, Tor Bbsplicit it Beat tho TVortd. It OH liir .Aolomfttlcally, y KttrU or 23ctrl Bparlc 21 real vxx sClnuf Cni of OxttHam thao mar iJvantimrxnkccuLxaAm.r-n PALMER & REY, MawofactujuuUJ la f raao, IU ci Fofesi, tt. Columbia Poultry Yards, J. M. BRENTS, Mjmager. Lck Box 1210, Seattle, Wash Breeder ot Thoroughbred Poultry of fol lowing; varlttte 1 B. O, White Leghorn, B, C. Brown Leg hern, White 1'lyieontU Kooka, Barred Mymouth Hock, tit Oitnieo, Wm.k.J ang ihanu. (Light: Brauatnaa, Buff Cochins, Psutrldge Oochlni iuronie Turkey. Btu tot Circular and Woo Wt; H-T- r rssJ tS3 8 o w o a a i-i c. p 0 0-1 I S! m O p o H j! v? w T.05 P- 3 v -5 re in cui p p- Q! a s o o 03 P OP- P 5 p- p o & P a i: 3 1 '-fq re 5? -re n cn cf O 3 re re re CI. ct- er1 re to re - re re P. 2 ?r S5 r e -Qsr r1 v-' et 3 re re re 3. cn w p p- re m e- tn w ! O 3 re W! p - 3 CO p re S- re CO el- W O m O 3 P- P re P- P. re c 3 re p w 3- W: 3 to p 3 P- P ct- P- POT? 3 O P-2 ct- p 0 sr jf a; O u O S re 1 w a 9 VI p a- fi C S fcr. 3 re 32-3 3 03 t" C3 IT1 1: pj a re ci 3 co - J. H;-5 re s s; o re o 05-S ET 1-3 CD O re -t re 5 3 CO ct- o B re - in, cf ct re re 3 S3 O P ? o p- t-t re P CO o 3 a- re P- j-j 03 , CO 1-3 tare t 3 LCU GO 00 00 a ! 1 i I " - cr ' O-JSXUBI t THE WILLAMETTE, SALEM, OREGON. Hntra, $2.50 to$5.00 per Day. Tho best hotel between Portlnnd nuiUViii PrnnoUoo. Klrst-claM in all Its appoint, merits. Its table are served Willi tlio Choicest Fruits drown In tho Willamette Vnllejr. A. I, WAGNER, Prop. ritOFKSHIONAI. CARDS. T J.SHAW, M. W. HUNT. BFTAV, O , HUNT, attorneys nt law. Ufflcoov t Capital National bank, Bnlom, Oregon GEO. II. BUKNBTT, Attorney at U Huleni, Orcgan. Otllco over Lndil n. Bush's bank. Q T. H1CUAHDBON, Attorney nt 1h , O, olllce up stairs In front rooms of 11 , ITiiHli block, corner Commercial and Co'i 1 strecU, hiilein, Oregon. JOHN A. CAltTON, Attorney at Iw Booms 3 and 4, Lndd & Bush's b.. it building, Salem, Oregcu, Hlljt B. K. BONUAM. W. II. HOLM1 -. BONHAM A Hot.mkH. Attorneys at ll . Ulllcolu Bush's block, between 8U.U and Court, on (,'om'l at. nilliMON KOItU, attorney ut law, Bak 1 X Oregon. Otllco uptulrs In 1'altou 1 block. BH. BBAD31IAW, I'llYfilCIAN AM , Burgeon, bulom. Oregon. Otllco i-. tiarldge block, upitnlrs oer Williams Knglaud's bank. Residence corner bt-i. and H. K. corner inter street. WH. YOUNG, iM. D.. Otllco formu , occupied by Dr. llowliind, com 1 Court and Liberty streets. Telephone I 45. Olllce heurs: 8 a m. to 12; 2 to i p. i: und 7 to tf p. m. Residence Hth street electric car line. Telephone No. 9. MoAKEK. fc BROOKS. I'hyslclft.. nnd surgeons, Murphy blclc, a stairs, Commercial street, bnlem. Or. R. V. B. MO XT, physician nnd su, L'eon. Otllco In Lldrldge Block, t era, Oregon. Olllce hours 10 to 12u. m 2 to lp. iu. EB. lMIlLBROOK.M.IMlomcopathh.: , Ofllco 155 Court street; Residence S High street. General practice. bpcUu attention given to diseases of Womoii uu i children. DR. MINTA B. A. DAVIS. Office honw tf a. m. to 11 a. m.; 2 p. m. to 5 p. n. uay or night calls promptly attended V Special attention given to diseases of wju eu aud children. Otllco in New Bank iiltt 805 Commercial strict. iicMdenco saii fR. T. 0. SMXTU, l)cntlst,W 8talo stx er XJ Hulem, Or. luihhcd dental oj-i tlons of every description. I'alulessopoi.t tlons a specialty. w. all cla 1). l'UGH, Architect, Plans, Sl'" llcatlons aud sunenntendenco io classes of butldlucs. Olllce 2U0 Co i uiercial bt., up stairs. (7 J. JIcOAUSTLAND.Clvll Sanitary kui Jl, Hydraulic Knglneer. U. S. lleput' mineral surveyor, tlty surveyors otlici Cottle-Parkhurst Block. Salem, Oiegou. n A. ROBKRT, Architect, room 421, Mo j, quaui building, Poitlaud, Oregon, UUSINKSS U.UtDS. HOKYK A MILLS, Proprietors tho I'oi to lnln BathandHhavlngl'mlors, Ha- tne only Porcelain Bath Tubs In tho city. 2UU Commercial street, Salem, Oregon. C1PRAGUK A ALLEN. Blacksmiths in. ' O horeshoelng and repairing. Onlyth best workmen emplojed. Opposite bta o Insurance building 4B. SMITH t CO., Contractors, Sewci -, ing, Cement Sidewalks, Excavating, : AH work promptly done, Bnlem, Or. Leave orders with Duzau Bros. 4:16-lm CAKPET-LAYING I make a specialty oi cuiiei-huulug nnd laying; carie'-i taken up and relaid with great care. Ilm.-s cleaning. Leave orders with .). H. Lu. j or Buien A Son. J. G. LUURMAN. JOHN KNIGHT, Blacksmith. Horsa shoeing and repairing a specialty. Shot' at the foot of Liberty street, Salem. Oroon. Z20tf PJ. liARBEN & CO,, Manufacture of all , kludsof vehicles. Repairing a peclal ty. Shop 11 StHto street. 500 mMm. mwwft Al t-r $ 0" L9 ESeliatt'fl w -. -, eininnn I .WiCAM Qte UAS HEALTH. Lo Rlcliaa'a Golden Balsam No. J Cures Chancres, tlrst and second sta'es Sores on tho Lees and Bsdyj Sore Ka's, Eyes, Noso, etc., Copper-colorcd Blotchei, SyphlUtlo 04 tarrh, diseased Scalp, ard all primary form of the dlseaso known a! Sjphilis. Price, S5 OO per Ilottlu. Le Rlclinu's Golilun Rulsinu No. 8 Cures Tertiary. Mercurlaigyphllitie Rhcu matism, Pains in tho Bones, Pains in tht Head, back of tho Nk, Ulcerated Sort Throat, SyphlUtlo Rash, Lumps and con. traded Cords, Stiffness ot the Limbs, an 1 eradicates all disease from the sjstem, whether caused by indiscretion or abusf ot Mercury, leaving tho blood pure anu healthy. Price $5 00 per Bottle. IjO lllclinu's Golden Huanltli Anil. doto for tho cure of Gonorrhoja, Gleet, Irritation Gravel, and all Urinary or Ger.l tal dlsarrangemsnta. Price 9'i SO nor Dottle. Ia Hicltau's Golden Spanish In jection, for severe oases of Gonorrhoea, Inflammatory Gleet, Strictures,4c Price 61 50 per Bottle. Lo Itlchnu'a Golden Ointment for the ellcctlve heallngof Syphilitic Sc re and eruptions. Price 31 00 per Box. Le Kichnn'D Golden Pills Nrn and Brain treatment; loss ot physical pov r. excess or over-work. Prostration, eta Prloe 83 00 per Boxs. Tonlo and Nervine, Bent everywhere, 0,OiD, Boourelr packed per express. THE RICHARDslmUS CO.,Agcui? 09 511 BTAURET ST., Sjm nrrasseie, Civ,, THE YAnjJINA ROUTE, OREGON TACIFIC RAILROAD And Oregon Development compir v'f stramshlp line. 223 miles shorter, 20 houw I8 time than by any otbet joule. KIiti class through passenger and freight Bn from Portland and all nnlnfji In thnWIi. Umette vnllov to and lrom Bau r'rnnoli TIME SCHEDULE, (Kxcept Bundays). Leave AIDauy 1:00 PM Leave Corvall Is 1.-J0PM Arrive Ynqulna S.-'WPM Leave Yaqulna 6:-." V M l.ive Corvalli letf'SA?! Arrive Albany 1L10A M O. A 0. train b connect at Albany and Corvallts. The above trainB connect at YAftUIN V with the Oregon Development Cors Ur JfStenrnshlpsbi'tweiin Yanulna and Ba Franplsco N. II. Passengers lrora Portland and all Willamette Valley points can make close connection with the trains of th VAOUINA lUlliTRat Alhanv nr(!orVftllifl I sndlf destined to San Francisco, should arrange mj arrive at equina tne evening before date of sailing. . ruienrrr sal Prelgst Katti Always U Uwrst. For lnformatlun apply to Messrs HULMAN & Co., Freight and Ticket Agenu 200 and 202 Front at.. Portland, Or. o.a uoquk Ao't aeni rn. P;us. AgL, Oregon Paclflo R. R. Co., Corvallls,Or (J.H.HABWtaAJr.Gen'l Frt; A fWM. AgL Oregon Development Co,, 9ii Montgomrry iL; mf mm ?qHmmmmmmtit nn urn (I 1 "iCT"T 9M'IM., I. " X