Evening capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1888-1893, July 11, 1892, Image 4

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in1
Ki
1 . .-m aJl-lli l ' '"
ll Milllll ...... i
. (-, ,
tto&am
erman
lyrup"
i Cough'
(Croup
llclno.
For children a medi
cine should be abso
lutely reliable. A
mother must be able to
pin her faith to it as to
1irr Rihle. It must
itain nothintr violent, uncertain,
vdatigerous. It must be standard
material ana manumciurc. n
f-be plain and simple to admin-
; easy anu pleasant to urnc.
child must like it. It must be
iDt in return. Riving ltnmccii-
relicf, as childrens' troubles
- nmVt- rrmv fast, and end
itttlly or otherwise in a very short
. It must not oniy relieve qurcu
it. brine them around quick, as
lildren chafe and fret and spoil
r constitutions under long con-
:meiit. It must do its work in
toderate doses. A large quantity
medicine in a child is not clesira-
Tt- iiiinf tint- inlprfcrfi with the
Ildid's spirits, appetite or general
Ssnlk.i. Aiitw wi wk
fell as young folks, and make iJo
fciee's Gcnnan Syrup the favorite
;M . rtt
my mcuicmi;.
THE HEAVENLY HOST.
DR. TALMAGE PREACHES IN LONDON
ON THE ARMY OF THE REDEEMED.
lie Cnnnnt Acreo wllli r. Dick Thnt
Mm Will SHulyMiilliPinntlcn III Ilenireii.
tlo l.oiil' rnrwnnlto nllenvon of LIrIiI
mill Miulc, Jy mill ltrt.
Lo.NDoy, July 10. Dr. Talnwgo is
fiK-'tnling a very mwy (season in juigiunu.
Not only
onr motion! forces and put them in one represented tho good In heaven ns . CAr
cietit amy, nnd then on some swift , tying cypress braticlu. that would Iravo ?
ttced you way rido along the lino nnd meant borrow. If my text had wprc-
" . ' . .' . . i ii.i ......l...ii n. l I.. l,Avn a 4TT"in(?
QI1U lllllt uwuiliu-i Ft'IllcU UlU ufu " ." " .' ---o
aires seems iiko n ' n rriitPhmit?, miu wovuu "' '"" "
in the London churches, bnt
review tho troops;
IiiIihI linmt from nil
bfllf formed regiment compared with
tlio great array of tho redeemed.
I stood one day at WHllamsport, and
saw on tho opposite sido of tho Potoiuao
the forces coming down, regiment after
regiment, and brigade after brigade It
Fcemed ns though thcro was no end to
tho procession. But now let mo tako
tho field glass of St. John nnd look off
nnon tho Hosts oi neaven niiiusunua
IllglllPUIHIl-, UK, mv... ..- ---
lint it is a pihr branch tncyvWTy. ttl
that is vie. or Wlvrti tho tw Mw
liomo from Wk. in ohVa Uuic tho con-
nneror nxiv at thp hood of his troop. ,
and thoro wr triumphal iirvlirs, niu
tho people vunM couns out with branch
tJof theprtlm tiw nnd wave them all
tloug tho host. What n significant tyrw
this of the greeting and of the joy of th
wvimml in heavenl On earth thy
i1
RESTOMTIYE lppr
EADACHi
t mtt tnrtn. Vonrnlxlt. KnOimi. Flta. Hllt-
taUP. Uulliieillrlno,Illiic,Oplini
UII, Ilninuf miei, ':" ci,.,S',,VV,VS
Er.j'm r.KToriA'fIVll MJltVIM'.
neororodujrtlio eminent Indlnnn Kpoclallit In
CTOUI UIICIIICS. JV UUH UUI tuiitniu wyitn. w,
iilgermit druai. "IlnTO been JokliiK KB.
:ixe' HraronATi vis kgkvihi: for
illcpiy. Frpin tJepiomucrio.innuury jirub
nCTllinnTrrrlnn I iiiul nt UltBt 15 cunTuIMom,
,rt noiraltor ttuou months' uio Iuito no inorq
1 liSTOboon n nil. MINES' JtfcsTOIf.
kTt VXl M2!IIVINIMoroboatonrinontI.. l
(ljini(fatiuorollat and euro. 1 liavo tali'n It
A no iltivclt. Hurrl C. llrntlni, JIonlUYlllc I'n.
Inu Ijook oc pront ntires inn inni doiiicb ax.xi
,InrK.itt IlTirTrhcro, ornddreM
K.MILC3 MEDICAL CO., Clklmrt, ini.
.wnld by D. J. I'ry,drui.'vl(t,r5iiluia.
Art tin n new jirlnclplo
recnlato tho livor, stn'jijich
una bun li thiough tht
ntrvti Dii. JIilkv I'liiji
ipetUly cure IiIIIoueiioso,
torpid livor and ronsilpa
tlua. Smulliot, mllJoot,
atntl SpUocju3,JG eta.
Hfmnloi iroT nt itriuiiisto.
111 by D. J. Fiy, ilrugglsf, Hal'in
1 alfebvV iiiic
Br "Ilrill'rM? siSl
liki that vcty properly contains nsupplyol
ires
Root
Bee ,
Itich addj to the enjoyment of nil the
uniits.nua maiccj a picnic a mniic nv
A 35 cent package inakes5c.uloii4' i
popular uavcraije.
Don bedceflvej If a dtaltr, f..r i'
of larger profit, tells you iomr ol
U'ljuttMCOod" 'lUfale, Ol
It ai good the etnulno Ilinti'
- .ANDEN'S
lEgrmoBEii
m F-2
-fTtMr-L
fT5
-ffiW
-J1
WIITPATENT82
KQT
MEHTS.
cHI III ELECTRO-
MAGNETIC
SUSPENSORY.
Mr Wlthsat ytdletos til tWtlani fciultief from
ruutlin of fcrttla. nrf ttttt$.9itt er lfidliriUa.
i ikl tibMiUoa. drila. Uim, nrtotn dtbllli--, iltf
, liaiuer. rfcutini, klJntj, llvvr knJ tltd4r
tMllltDlf 1SSftlUIBDCia, tll)CB, IfBlfftl in okiia,
li kUetrta blt flooUtbt Y(4trtm Ivbrotf milt orr
lfrifttrt,aBdlfi k rriMtUlU lniuutljr UH j tt
kwvrornf forftU fli(U an4 Mill ctr allaf ihkVvt
4 r w TKuitic win eotM i? im mtr
elTipaia iir m pic ibuit num. au w
Bb4r4,) f teillmUl In IM o4 Trvelbtr ilttf
ritriu urmnivii Ktinwir BUi'Umnn, th.
uilWeDr6rr4t.tBio.HKKlltill.lfL1r
Bfc4fireuKirccinii4ii4niiuinuiiiovuifc7a,
vruiQiria4rtiBli)iiii,ibtiia,MftiFij, tmn Aaurtti
rxzv auiiiflOTuio ao,.
Not 172 Flmt St., PORTLAND, ORE
I0TIVE
OWE
HERCULES
Gas and Gasoline
ENGINES
ItnTB tcvetr rurtj. ami ar
tlii'n.mro Ins UlfeltMountmit
r tban any othir nui ur uiuullnf) finrtnui imw
l-l"t HiilitVUa buniu, turn lUu Htm;!, tuil It
X.ksh no 8Mi:rx on dikt.
or falto Tploiilona, in frwiuenl Willi U
uurt'imum i in,
rPlMiiltoltr It llonti dm AVotld.
i m jkti. . .1 t ..........iitu
fm vttis iiivii t.i.ti..tiMuijri
No ItuttertuiorlUortrlo RiiArlL.
IwWi tt ttenpfr Orado ot awUnii tUaa any
Oilier i:nc!mv
in tho nrovinceH enormouo crowdn hnvo I npon thotuands, ten thousand times ten w.o condrmned, and were put wi o,
StKVtoJioar tho eloquent American 'thousand, one hundred and forty and p..,,:,, circle. They had , "f
four thousana, ana tnonsntuis oi uum-. nuko unm f , """ v'"-"" .-.
enuds, mitill pnt down the field glafa'fpit spat in their faces. Thoir Iwak
and say, "I cannot estimato it a groat j c!ud with sorrow,
multitudo that no man can number." Their brow reeked with unalteviatoii
You may tas your imagination and toji. How weary thoy werct Soetiuis
torture your ingenuity and breaic down j tj10V broko tho heart of the uiidnipht in
your powers of calculation in attempt-1 110 midst of nil their nujruijh, cryiag
ing to cxpreas the multituiba of iho re- 0t( o God!" But hark now to the (
leased from earth and tho enraptured of E)lont of tho delivered captivw, s tlwy
heaven, and talk of hundreds of hnu- j jjft their arms from the shackle an I
dieds of hundreds, of thousands of thou-1 they ciy out, "Free! freer They look
eandi of thoubands, of millions of mil-1 ick upon all the trials through which ,
lions of millions, until your head aches tiloy have passed, the battlos they bnve ,
nml -onr henrt faints, and exhausted i foar-ht. the burdens they carried, the i
if. fwpi'iiirTiviBiiiKvuM arPLTTO
& RCV, MANUFAOTURERB,
rrwlm,CI.Mirrttkfir.
.... it. . . iii. nt-.t.
.readier. Tlio great &noituiicn xui;i
nacle in tho east of London, where Itev.
W. Uulf preaches, was thronged almost
to suffocation, nnd tho largo Congrega
tional church in tho Hackney district
could not hold half tho pcoplo who tried
to get into It, thoiitfh it waB on a Mon
day KViniug that Dr. Talmago preached
there. Ontaido London tho eagerness to
hear him has been quito as intense.
In Liverpool, Manchester, Notting
ham, Crowe nnd Hanloy no church
could bo found largo enough to nccom
modnto tho audiences, and Dr. Talmago
preached in tho halls in which tlio great
political conventions are hold, and tho
capacity of thct.0 was tested to tho ut
most. Sfnco liis arrival ho has preached
even times each week. Tho bonnon se
lected for publication thin week is from
the text. Revelation vii.0, 10, "After this
I behold, nnd lo! a great multitudo which
no man could number, of all nations and
Kindreds and people nnd tongnc.i, stood
beforo tho throno, and boforo tho Lamb,
clothed with white robes, and palms in
their hands, and cried with a loud voice,
saying. Salvation to our God which
sitteth upon tho throno, and unto tho
Lamb."
It is impossible to como in contact with
anything grand or beautiful in art,
natnro or religion without being profited
and olovatei. Wo go into tho art gnl
iery and our soul meets tho soul of the
painter, und wo hear tho hum of his
fore3ts and tho clash of his conilicts and
seo tho cloud blossoming of tho sky and
tho foam blossoming of tho ocean, and
wo como out from tho gallery batter
men than when vb went in. Wo go
into tho concert of music and are lifted
into enchantment; for days after our
soul seems to rock with n very tumult
of joy. as tho Bea, after n long stress of
weather, rolls nnd rocks nnd surges a
gi eat whilo boforo it comes back to its
ordinary calm.
Un tho samo principle it is profitable
to think of lieavon, nnd look off upon
that landscape of joy and light which
St. John dopicts tho rlvors of gladness,
tho trees of lifo, tho thrones of power,
tho cominiuglings of ovorlasting love.
1 wish this morning that I could bring
heaven from tho list of intangibles nnd
mako it scorn to you ns it really is tho
great fact in all history, tho depot of all
ages, tho parlor of God's universe.
THE HK.WENLV COSOKKOATIOJJ.
This account in my text gives it pic
turo of heaven as it is on n holiday.
Now if a man camo to Now York for
thoihsttiuioon tho day that Kossuth
arrived from Hungary, and ho (.aw tho
arches lifted, and tho (lowers flung in
tho btrcots, and lie heard tho gnus" boom
ing, ho would hnvo been very foolieh to
suppose that that was the ordinary tip
poaranco of tho city. While heaven is
always grand and always beautiful, 1
think my toxt apoaks of a gala day in
lieavon.
it is n timo of great colobration per
haps of the birth or tho resurrection of
Jcsns, porhaps of tho downfall of Home
despotism, perhaps becauso of tlio rush
ing in of the millennium. I know not
what, but it does seem to mo in reading
this passage as if it were a holiday in
lieaven: "After this 1 bohcld, and lo! a
gi;eat multitudo which no man could
number, of all untions nnd kindreds nnd
pcoplo nnd tongues, stood beforo tho
throno, nnd boforo tlio Lamb, clothed
with white robes, and palms in their
hands, and cried with n loud voice, say
ing. Salvation to our God which sittcth
upon tho throno, nnd unto tho Lamb.''
1 shall speak to you of tho glorified in
heaven their number, thoir nnteco
limits, their dress, their symbols and
their song. But how ehnll I begin by
telling you of tlio numbers of thoso in
heaven? 1 have bcou u curious estimate
by nn ingenious man who calculates
how long tho world was going to last,
nnd how many people tliei euro in each
generation, and then sums up tho whole
matter, nnd says ho thinks thoro will be
twenty-seven trillions of bonis in glory.
1 have no faith in his estimate. 1 hlm
ply take the plain nuuouncemeut of the
text it is "a great multitude, which no
man can number."
Every few years in this country wo
tnke n census of tlio population, and it
is very easy to toll how many people
there uro in a city or a nation; hut who
shall give the census of the great nation
of tlio saved? It is quito easy to toll how
many people there are in different de
nominations of Christians how many
Baptists nnd Methodists and Episcopa
lians and Presbyterians; of nil thu de
nominations of Christians we could
mako an estimate.
suppose they were gathered in ouo
great audienco room, how overwhelm
ing the spectacle! But it would give no
idea of the great audience room of
lieavon tho multitudes that bow down
nnd that lift up their hosannas. Why,
they come from all the chapels, from nil
tho cathedrals, from all ricots, fioni all
ages. Thoy who prayed in bplendld
liturgy, nud those who in broken sen
tences uttered the wish of broken henrts
from Grace church and Sailors' Bethel,
from under the t-hnptilcbS rafteis and
from under high sprung arch "11 great
multitude that no man can number."
THIS AKMV OF 11IK IIUDUBMIU).
Ouo of tho most impreshivo things 1
have looked upon is an army, Staudiug
upon a hillside you seo forty thousand
or tlfty thouwud men pass along. You
can hurdly imagine thu impressiou if
you have not actually felt it. But you
may take nil the armies that tho earth
has ever soon tlio legions under Sen
nacherib nud Cyrus nud Ownr, Xerxes
und Alexander and Napoleon, nud all
J. M, Neodham,
UBK PAIHT1NO, KALSO-
UNO. PAl'KR HANOI NO,
kfORAL-WOOD FINIBHINQ.
iWdm-J. iruiu', rrrof r-mltu
' ru irtwr.
Mm Mudr fur CalunU la tU
PKK, 1UUKKI I
i V6) awl Ouwinit.
I hrjMwM ot Mut Ujr mall.
,T, pajiimim, warren, lit.
... 13. 11 ,irv
4"WTZZS1M -
-rrzsp7, w
rw
9g ArtT lib Nil I
OF U3.
Tobaccos, but for
,-' - -
Mm WELL'S
-5- &(li 1 mHBNI
V' 'Cif.i'c i..3 LsZyxtieMini
t!)
'i'-jKi- .
!CV"
f . '
s'OZ i9 TOBACCO.
Si?v, n
Ti
i:
-'
i;?i. l I'm an old smoker, ana
liaw: at one tunc
or fr:other tried all
diff. rent Smoking
od vr.okc Bull Durham
'cm all.
ymm
- -A ..V
Ufc
ll-e
beats
nnd overburdened you oxclaim, "I can-
of
mtarnnrnspiitntinns thev suffered, and I
i, . 1 ,: I tf.... -M It. .. f
DeCausO lUOJ are ueinnm inu nil tuvsc
they stand beforo God waving their
palms. They come to the feet of Christ,
nud they look up into his face, aud they
remember his eorrows. and they remein-
them spok Scotch, Irish, German, Eng-, i,er jg j,aiUj ani they remember his
lifh, Italian, Spanish, Tamil, Cnoctaw, i groau3, and thy say: "Why, 1 was
Burmeso. After men have been long ia j Fave(i uy that C..rit. Ho iwrdoncd my
the land you can tell by their accentua-. sliS 10 pootheil my sorrow?, " and stand-
tion from what nationality thoy came, j,,,, there they shall be esultaut, waving
their palms.
not count them a great multitudo that
no man can number."
But my subject advances, and tells
vf.n of their antecedents, "of nil nations
im.1 kindreds and tOllKUCR." SoiUO
and I suppgsein tho great throng around
tho throno it will not be difficult to tell
from what part of tho eaith thoy came.
UATIIKIIKD OUT or ALL. NATIONS.
These leaped Sicilian wheat fields nnd
thoto picked cotton from the pods.
Tin so under blibtering skies gathered
tamarinds and yams. Those crossed
tho desert on camels, and thoso glr.nced
over the snow, diawn by Siberian dogs,
and these milked tho goats far up on
tlio Swiss crags. Theso fought the wal
rus and white bear in regions of ever
inntim minw. und thoso heard tho song
NO MORE TOIL OH SORROW.
That bund once held the implement of
toil or wielded tho sword of wnr, but
row it plucks down branches from the
tree of lifo as they stand before the
tin one waving their palms. OucoJio
was a pilgrim on earth; he crunched the
hard crusts he walked the w.ary way;
but it is all gone now; tho sin gone, the
weariness gone, the sickness gone, tho
eorrow gone. As Christ stands up be
fore the great array of the saved nnd re
counts his victories it will be like tho
A leading chamcleilslic u 1H Durham has always
been the hold which it tahesrn old nnd fastidious smokers.
What its excellence first secv red, its uniformity has always
retained, and It is, therefore, t,-day as twenty-five years ago,
the most popular Smoking Tobacco In the world.
Get the genuine. Made only by
Blackwell's Durham Tobacco Co.,
DURHAM, N. C.
a . 1 I .. .1 2.. A Vtil I
oi nery wingeo mm in ""' "- rocking and tossing of a forest in n tern-
ew. juey weiu v.mic. ; .....
black. Thoy wero red. They were cop
per color. From all lands, from ail ages.
They wero plunged into Austrian dun
geons. They passed through Spanish
inquisitions. Thoy were confined in
London Tower. They fought with
beasts in tho amphitheater. Thoy wero
Moravians. Thoy wero Waltlenses,
Tliov wero Albigenses. They
Scotch Covenanters. They were Sand
wich Islanders.
In this world men prefer different
kinds of government. The United States
want a republic. Tho Eritish govern
ment needs to be a constitutional mon
archy. Austria wants absolutism. But
when thoy como up from earth from
different nationalities thoy will prefer
one great monarchy King Jesus ruler
over it. And if that monarchy were dis
banded and it wero submitted to all tho
hosts of heaven who should rulo, then
by tho unanimous suffrages of nil tho
redeemed Christ would become tho pres
ident of tho whole universe. Magna
Chartas, bills of right, houses of bur
gesses, triumvirates, cougrebses, parlia
ments nothing in tho presence of
Christ's scepter swaying over all tho
nconlo who have onterod upon that groat
trlorv. Oh! can you imagine it? Wlint
a strange commingling of tastes, of his
tories, of nationalities, "of all nations
and kindreds tuid pcoplo nnd tongues."
My subject advances and tells ouof
tlio drobs of thoso in lieavon. Tlio ob
ject of dress in this world is not only to
veil tho body, but to adorn it. Tlio God
who dresses up tho spring morning with
bluo ribbon ot sky mound tho brow and
earrings of dowdrops hung from tree
branch and mantle of crimson cloud
flung over tlio shouldur and tlio violetted
blippers of tho grass tor her feet I know
that God does not despiso beautiful ap
parel. Well, what shall wo wear in
heaven? "I saw a great multitude
clothed in white robes." It is whitoi In
this world wo had sometimes to hnvo on
working apparel. Bright nnd lustrous
garments would bo ridiculously out of
place sweltering nmid forges, or mixing
paints, or plastering ceilings, or binding
books.
in this world wo must have tho work
ing day apparel sometimes, and wo care
not how conrso it is. It is appropriate;
but whon all tho toil of earth is pabt
and thorn is no more drudgery nnd no
moio weariness, wo shall stand boforo
tlio throno lobed in white. On o.irtli
wo sometimes had to wear mourning
apparel black scarf tor tlio arm, black
veil for the taco, black gloves for the
hands, black baud for the hat. Abra
nam mourning lor Sarah; Isaac mourn
ing for Rebecca; Rachel mourning for
lier childreu; David inonruiug for Abba
loin; Mary mourning for Lazarus.
Every second of every minute of ovory
hour of every day a heart breaks.
THE UUSUltliUCTlON.
Tho earth from zone to zouo and from
polo to pole is cleft with sepulchral rent,
and tho earth can easily afford to bloom
and blossom when it is to rich with
moldering life. Graves! graves! graves!
But when thoso bereavements hnvo nil
ptihsed, and there uro no more graves to
dig, and no more coffins to make, arid
no more sorrow to suffer, wo shall pull
hX this mourning and be robed in white.
I seo a soul going right up from all this
hcono of birr nud trouble into glory. 1
seem to hear him say:
I juUruu)' forth rujulrfut;
Frum tliU dark alu nt tenra
To Ui'uwnly Joy iuhI frtrAoiu,
IVuitt v trtltly euro nuil tYurs.
Whoa Clirlit yiy lortl limit cutlier
All liU roilcuuul tnruiu,
11U UliiKilotu tu inhvrlt
Uuuil ntiitil till tliou.
I Lour my Hu tour chIIIuki
Tlio jo ful hour liui couie;
Tho niiKel iiu&nla uro ready
Tu kuUIo mo tu our home.
Wheu Chrlit our Ixml itiall catliar
All hU rvdeniuvU agalu,
Uli klutruom tu lnherlt-
Uixxl ulcUt till then.
My subject advances, and tells you of
tho symbols they carry. If my text had
CLEAN!
If you would bo cdVnu nnd hnvo your clothes dono up
in tho noateeiand dresaiost mannor, hike them to tho
r!iRB sr::.ur LitwustY
whore all work if domi by whito labor nnd in Mio most
lr iijt iimtiipr JOLONL J, OJrSTKD.
LiLtfitv St..c
pest, as all the redeemed rise up, host
beyond host, rank beyond rank, waving
their palms.
My subject makes another advance
ment, and speaks of the song they sing.
Dr. Dick, in a very learned work,
says that among other things in heaven
he thinl:3 they will give a j.'real, deal of
wero ' t'ul tf'0 stl1(l ol" rrithuietlc and the
higher brandies or mair.emarus. i no
not believe it. It would upset my idea
of heaven if I thought so; I never liked
mathematics; and I would rather take
the representation of my test, which de
scribes the occupation of heaven as be
ing joyful psalmody. "They cried with
n loud voice, saying, Salvation onto our
God." In this world wo havo secular
bongs, nursery songs, boatmen's songs,
harvest songs, sentimental sengs: but in
heaven we will havo tasto for only one
song, and that will bo tho song of salva
tion from nn eternal death to an eternal
heaven through tho blood i.f the Lamb
that was slain.
1 seo a soul com'f ; up to join the re
deemed in heaven. As it goes through
the gates the old friends of that spirit
come around it and say, "What shall
we sing?" and the newly arrived soul
says, "Sing snivatiou; and niter nwnne
nn earthly despotism falls and a scepter
of iniquity is biiapped, and churches are
built whero once thero wero supersti
tious morques, and angel cries to angel,
"Let us sing," and tho answer is, "What
shall wo sitig?" and another voico says,
"Let us sing salvation." And after
awhile all the church on earth will rush
into the outspread anna of tlio church of
heaven, and whilo the righteous nro as
couding and tho world is burning nnd
nil things uro being wound up, tlio ques
tion will bo asked, "V hat shall wo
sing?" and there will bo n voico "like
tho voico of many waters, like tho voice
of mighty tlmudcriugs," that will re
spond, "Sing salvation."
In this world we havo plaintivo song'
songs tremulous with sorrow, songs
dirceful for tho dead; but in heaven
thero will bo no signing ot winds, no
wailing of anguish, no weeping sym
phony. Tlio tamest song will bo hal
leluiah the dullest tune a triumphnl
march. Joy among tho chorubiin! Joy
among tho heraphim! Joy among tho
ransomed! Joy forever!
On earth tlio music in churches is
of ton poor, becauso thero is no interest
in it or because tiuro is no harmony,
Some would not sing, tomo could not
sing, boino sang too high, some sang too
tow, some sang by tits and starts, but in
the great nudieneo of the redeemed on
high nil voices will bo accordant, nnd
tho rnrn who on earth could not tell a
plantation melody from tho "Dead
March in Saul" will lift an anthem that
tho Mendtdsbohus nnd Ucolhoveus and
tho Schumanns of earth novor imagined,
and you may stand through nil eternity
and listen and thero will not bo ono dis
cord in that great nnthmn that forovor
rolls up against tho gnat heart of God.
It will not bo a solo, it will not bo a duet,
it will not lio a quintet, but an in
numerable host before tlio throno, cry
iug, "Salvation unto our God and unto
the Lamb." They crowd all tho tem
ples, thoy bend over tho battlements,
thoy fill all tho heights nnd depths nnd
lengths nnd brendths of heaven with
thoir hosannas.
thk divine arxmv.
When people wero taken into tho Tem
ple of Diana it was such a brilliant room
int thoy wore always put on their
uatd. Sonio people had lost their bight
by just looking on the brilliancy of that
room, and bo tho janitor when lie brought
a stranger to tho door and let him in
would always charge hurt, "Tako heod
of your eyes."
Oh! when 1 think of the song that gooa
up nround the throne of God, so jubi
lant, many voiced, multitudinous, I feel
like sayiug, "Tako heed of your ears,"
It is so loud a song. It is so blcsed an
anthem. Thoy sing a rock song, suyiug,
"Who is ho thnt sheltered us iu tho wil
dornoss, und bhadowod us in a weary
land?" And the clwrua ivuien in, "Christ
the shadow of n rock in a we .ry land."
Theybinga star song, saing, "Who
Is ho that guided us thiough the thick
night, und when all other lights went
out nroso lu tho sky tlio morning btnr,
pouriug light ou tho soul's dnrknossi"
And tho chorus will como in, "Christ,
tho morulng star, shining on the sonl'b
darkness." Tbv-y will bingn flower soug,
sayiug, "Who is ho that brightoued nil
our way, nnd breathed sweetness npon
fur soul, and bloomed through frost and
tempest?" And tho chorus will come in,
"Christ, tho lily of the valley, blooming
through frost nnd tempest." They slug
t water song, saying, "Who is he that
imefiawvHocoaffwtccBHrwMW
nnd lightened tho dnrkest rnvrno of
trouble, nnd brought cooling to tho
temples nnd refreshment to tho lip, and
was a fountain in the midst of tho wil
derness?" and then the ciiorus will come
in, "Christ, the fountain in the midst of
tho wilderness."
My friends, will yon join that anthem?
Shall we make rehearsal this morning?
If we cannot bing that song on earth
we will not bo able to sing it irr heaven.
Can it ho that our good triends iu that
land will w..lk all through that great
throng of wuich I speak looking for us
nnd ne: finding us. Wrll they come
down to the gate and ask if we havo
passed through, and not find irs reported
ns having come? Will they look through
the folios of eternal light and find our
names unrecorded? Is all this n repre
sentation of a land we shall never see,
of n song wo shall never sirv?
AnlUlnte for Mercurlul Poisoning.
Employees in certain departments of
incandescent lamp factories, and in
other industries irr which mercury is ex
tensively employed, will rojoico in tho
discovery of an effectivo autidoto for
mercury poisoning. Mercury and its
compounds aro universally known to
havo a most injurious influence on the
human system, and tho shake, the short
ness of breath, tho sickenrng pallor, tiro
listlessness and semistupefaction of
operators who aro daily subjected to its
fumes aro sadly familiar to thoso con
nected with the pumprooms of lamp
factories. Much has been done to im
prove tho health of tho workmen by
means of ventilation and improved ma
chinery and pumps, but still the evil
exists to a serious extent. Slight cases
aro usually and quickly cured bychango
of air or of work, but if not taken rn
time tho troublo may end fatally. It is
not always, however, that a workman
can afford to take change of air or turn
his hand to a new employment, and here
tho now remedy comes in.
Some four years ago one of the part
ners in a large Parisian incundescont
lamp manufacturing firm became sali
vated while experimenting with mer
cury pumps, and ho cured himself com
pletely by means of small doses of iodido
of potassium dissolved in milk. Ho next
odministered similar doss to some
workmen iu his larup factor-, who were
suffering from mercury poisoning, and
thoy quickly and completely recovered.
In his present factory, into which ho
moved a year ago, thero has not been a
singlo case of salivation, and this ex
emption is attributed to tho fact that
doses of the iodide havo been continu
ously administered to the workmen,
Men from other factories havo been
taken on who on entering exhibited tho
characteristic signs of mercury poison
ing, and who recovorod forthwith, Tho
daily dose supplied by tho firm to each
man is .25 gram of tho crystallized
salt, dissolvod in about 400 cubic cen
timeters of milk. St. Louis Globe-
Democrat.
What a TuriHMi Can Do.
As tho steamtug Mollio Mohr was
coining up tho river from the jotties she
ran through a school of tarpon about
half a mile below tho city. Thiee of
thoso huge fish leaped clear across the
tug's forward deck, one of them nar
rowly missing Tom Ross' head; tho sec
ond struck tho cabin, near where Cap
tain Marshall and a fireman wpro stand
ing, and mado a dont as lnrgo as u man's
fist in the hard wood. Tho third struck
and bent an iron drift bolt half an inch
in diametor, and glancing off hit Wil
liam Schunfield between the shoulders,
knocking him senseless; iu fact, it was
thought for a time ho had been killed,
and it will bo sorao timo beforo he will
bo able to resume work. Captain Mar
shall says tho river for a considerable
distanco was alive with theso silver
kings, leaping around as if all tho tar
pon family had concluded to celebrate
nineteen feet of water on tho Brazos
bar. Houston Post. -
It Saves the Children.
Mr. C. D". Hlinwen, Wellsvllle,
Kan., says: "It is with pleasure
thnt I speak of the good Chamber
lain's Colic, Cliolero and Diarrhoea
Remedy has dram my family during
the last fourteen years. In the most
obstinate cases of suinnier complaint
and diarrhoea nn long my children,
it acted nsu cluirin, making it never
neces'-urv to call iu a physician. 1
can truthfully say that in my judg
ment, bused on j eai a of experience,
thero is not n medicine in tho mar
ket that Is its equal. For sale by
Geo. E. Good, druggist.
llucHlcn's AnilcnPnlve.
Tho Hest Salve in the worli for Cutr,
Bruise. tNorts, Ulcers Salt Kuiniii, Kever
Eores, Totter, (Jhnppeil llnnils Uliilulnlus,
Corns ami all hklu Kruiitlous, unit posi
tively cures l'llcs, or no pay r quired. It
lsguanoileeil to sIva parftct -nUsiucllon
or money temndei), i'rke, 2.'i cents per
box. Knrsalo by Lisn'l.f 1 ry, 2J5 Con -I.
aTh SB fiS5 . a I
Tickets
ON SALE
TO-
UMAHA
Kansas City, St, Paul
CHICAGO, ST. LOUIS,
East,
lAndSall Pulnts
North and
South,
PULLMAN SLEEPERS,
COLONIbT SLEEPERS,
RECLINING CHAIR CARS
AND DiliERS:
Steamers Portland lo 8 in Knjnt;ltcol!.very
4 Day.
TICKETS TA& EUROPE
For rales and general Information call
nn or nuuress,
A' II HU'-HUKT, At, Hon'. Pass. Agt
ilVl Wwmu'Btunm.,
1'OUll.AND, ORKSON
500 UW
P? 0 L3 Menu's
vm ".
ii fl 9 f?iizi
i. if an n tiw
.Vr III 111
--'-tm i-; muc
i m j "ii
rOAS
HEALTH.
La RIcIiau's Oolilen Haluani No. 1
Cures Cliancres, fir3i anil sci.onil stages
Sores en tho Lcrs and llodj; Sore Ears,
1
Ml
HuiiUh in UuUt'd Type for the Itlllul.
Last ye.rr alono the British nnd For
eign Blind association embossed 8,000
books iu English, French, German.
Lntin, (J reek and other languages foi
tho use of bliud readers. About 250
seeing volunteers aro, we are informed,
engaged in writing out tho first copies of
books in Braille for this aociaticn, and
noventy paid blind writers are employed
in niukin; copies. Besides theso, tho ns
socintion continues to publish its two
magazines for tho blind, Progress, start
ed by the late Dr. T. R Armitago in
1SSI, nud Play time, n magazine in nn
contracted Brnillo for children, which
made its first appearance last summer.
London News.
Tho 1'leire Tortoltu Shull.
Sometimes the flesh of tho tortoise
sholl turtle is eaten, but it is not good
for much. There nre two species the
"tortoise shell" and tho "hawhsbill"
with uot much difference between them.
Although their diet is a vegetable one,
they aro much rnoro fierco than the car
nivorous loggerhead. They bite very
severely, nnd those who catch them
sometimes receive very painful wouuda.
Interview iu Washington Star.
Chrap t:uuiib, Ctrlululy.
"I felt bo cheap during tho ceremony,"
confuted the bride to Iter dearest frreud.
"Why, my dcuil"
'Beaua m gavo me away." Detroit
gleitfitliS toia tho fiqwuing enr Fw
rrl
Sinhllis. Prlco. MOO imr Bolll...
Lo Illclinu'a Golden ll.ilsum ;'o.S
Cures Tertiary, JlcrcurlaltlyphlUtlo Rheu
matlsm. Pains In tho Bones, Pains In the
Head, back ot the Neck, Ulcerated Sort
Throat, SyphiHt'.o Hash, Lumps and con
tracted Cords, Stiffness ot thu Limbs, and
eradicates all disease from the system,
ihctlicr caused by indiscretion or abuse
ot Mercury, leaving tho blood puro and
healthy, i'rlco 55 OO per Hottlo.
XtO Klclinii's Golden SimnlsH Ami.
doto for the cure of Oonorrno, (lleet,
Irritation Gravel, and all Urlniry or Genl
tat disarrangements. Price 5a 50 nei
Bottle.
L.f Ulclmn'a Golden Spanish In.
lection, (cr severe cassof Gonorrhoea,
Inflammatory Gleet, Strlcturcs,&c. Price
81 50 per Hottlo.
.e Illclinu'a Go'.iT Olntmonl
for the eUcctlvo healing jvphllitlo fcrrts
nnd eruptions. Price. fl OO per Ilox.
lie Kichuu'3 Golden Pills Nem
and Drain treatment; loss ot physical pov?
er, excess or over-work. Prostration, eta
Prlco S3 OO per Box
Toulo and Nervine,
Sent everywhere, C. O, D, securely rjacked
per express.
THE RICHARDs"onilQ CO., Agent
06 511 BIAIUIKT ST ,
;5ftatt
rorcE
-p' s
SYMPTOMS OP UVXU DISEASE:
Loss of appotlto; bad breath j bad tasto Jn
thn mouth ; tonguo coated j pain under the
ehoulder-blado; in tho back or sido often
mistaken for rheumatism j sour stomach
with flatulency nnd water-brash; ludlues
tfon; bowels lax and costfvo by turns;
headache, with dull, heavy sensation;
restlessness, with sensation of having left
something undono which ought to have
been dono; fullness after caiing; bad
temper; blues; tired feeling; yellow ap
pcaraneo of skin and eyes ; dizziness, eto.
Not all. but always sotno of theso iudl
cato want of action of tho Liver. For
A Safe, Itoliablo Remedy
that can do no harm and has norcr been
known to fall to do good.
Take Simmons Liver Regulator
-AN KSTUCTirAL Sl'ECIl'lO TOH
Malurtu, lloiiel Complaint,
l)ypeiIn, blclt Headache,
Constipation, Uillousiiess,
JUduey Alloc I loin. Jaundice,
Mental l)epreiou, Colic,
A rilVSICIAX'S OI'INION.
"t hire been practKInff medicine for twenty
ar and hi vc no cr been atle to put up a eceta
Ue compound thit nould, hie Simmons Uver
Kegalator, promptly and effectually mote the
liver to action, and at the same lime aid (instead
orcaken) the digestive and asjimilitive powers
of the system.
L. M. Hintost, u. o , Washington, Ark.
OXI.Y OEM'IXK
lias our Z Sttap In red in frost of wrapper.
J, H. Sellin & Co., Philadelphia, Pa,
ti
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CIS
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THE ATHLETIC COLLEGE GIRL.
Bho Uiijoyn All KlinU f Hmrl Inuit I'm.l
bull to llonl Uiiwliir;.
All tlio usunl Held Bporla jioinil.
at men's collcgCH nro nlso iom! .
nmong tlio girl Btudciits ovtrnl i t
tlio wbmon'B colleges havo Hit r
(towb, nnd no ono can deny thnt t
young womoii nro good Dmiiipi-hiu
of tlio onr. Float day nt Wcllesl- .
Is n gala dny, and crowds of enthrt
n.itio spectators aro on hand to v
ness tho regatta. Iu ouo of tlio str
universities of tho west thero h
cadet company among tho yoi.
women students, who nro undr t
uamo instruction nnd nro subjec '
to tho samo regulations as tho i
ulnr cadets. Thoy aro drilled by t
government officer detailed at t
military department, and aro re
ularly rovioweu by tno governor in
staff.
Tho high complimonts thoy havo
received from tho stato exeeuti o
body nnd tlio attention they havo at
tracted iu tho community gencrall. .
to say nothing of tho admiration e
cited. must bo vory gratifying to tl
fair soldiers. Thoy havo all bei m
properly disciplined, and when occ i
sion demands will bo ready to sorvo
their country in timo of need. There
uro numerous football teams and
baseball nines managed nnd equipped
by tho women students in different
parts of tho country, and their inter
collegiate matches show that thcy
aro progressing rapidly in thoir race
for muscle.
If a girl has not all tho latest ini
provomonts at bund for her nthloti
sports she makes tho most of win
she has, particularly if sho is u Va
sar girl, and has a good tnno at nnj
vnto Who but a Vassal- frirl wouli
over havo thought of using" a barn?
stavo for a coaster? This idea ongi
nntafl tnn.or twelvo voars turo. ani.
tho practice- has been kept up re
ligiously over since. Now of court
this device is preferred to tlio con
veutioual sled, and when tho snow
tins n. Irani, sliiinerv crust tiro lar
coaster slnms down ono of thoso lout
Pougukcopsio lulls so last tnat n
fairly takes her breath away. To
bogganing cannot compare with thr
improvised coasting as far as fun
goes. Let any ono wlio does uot do
lievo thero is any tun m it just try it
onco.
Ouo class in a prominent New Eng
land college, tho name of which I
havo promised not to divulge, had
quito as much fun in coasting aw
their Vassar sisters, although thoy
used an entirely different dovico. In
place of tho barrel staves, which arc
not always so easy to obtain after
all, tho Now England collegians used
tho homely dustpans. Tho sly crea
tures only coasted dining tho oven
ings, after gymnasium hours, wheu
thoy would slip into their rooms, con
coal the dustpans under their ulsters,
slip out again to thoir favorito plaeo
of resort and slide away to their
heart's eoutont. Sometimes all tho
dustpans would bo tied togothor and
a line of girls would start from tho
top of the hill and go whizzing down
together. It wasn't so easy at first
to slide all tho way down without
losing control over tho dustpan, but
this difficult feat is soon accom
plished, and grace and dexterity
como with practice. Tho homely
household implement in tho hands of
tho frolic! ing girl was converted
into an article of supremo delight.
Tho authorities frowned upon tho
practice as establishing an uudesira
bio precedont, besides being undigni
fied and furnishing tho paragrapher
with material for a now joho on tho
collego girl. Af tor suffering the an
noyance of timo wasted by the senior
in her housework, owing to tho in
convenience of using dustpans whos"
divorced handles wero peace!: vj
slumbering a dozen rods away in the
snow, tho faculty put its fo.it down
and declared that the praetico must
bo discontinued or that tho seniors
must furnish their own materials.
Chicago Horald.
Tho Smallest Republic
San Marino, tho little republic in
closed with tho boundaries of Italy,
bears tho encyclopedic honor of Lo
mg tho smallest self governed stato
in tho world ; this, however, is a mis
tako. Const, a littlo hamlet in tho
Pyrenees, is oven more of an ideal
republic than our great United
States. It belongs to neither Franco
nor to Spain, and has not to exceed
twenty-fivo citizens, all told. They
havo no taxes or other public rates
to pay; no mayor, watchman or
other official ; each male inhabitant
of tho ago of eighteen years having
equal say in administering affairs of
state. Among them thoro is neither
rich or poor, master or servant, no
blo or churl. Truly Goust is tho
model republic. Philadelphia Press.
Intense Heat.
It is stated, in speaking of Maxim's
experiments at aeriel navigation,
that ho bos got so far with his motors
that ho has obtained steam equal to
100 horso power with ono square foo.
of grate, or rathor of the equivalent
of a grate, for ho burns liquid fuel.
Tho heat generated is so intense (hat
no boiler plate has thus far been
mode that can stand it. New York
Timos.
sifmiiic.uit.
Wife (who is without a girl) Why,
tho atmosphere of this kitchen "is
bluo. What causes it?
Husband (who has been trying to
got breakfast) I havo just burned
my fingers. Now York Weekly.
Tlio tila Thnt Suited.
A young exquisite, who thought nn
eyeglass would improve his appear
ance, went into an optician's in tho
Strand tlio other dny, and was a long
timo trying to find ono to suit him.
None of them would do; thoy wero
too strong or two woel: for his sight.
At length ho found ono that was just
right and inquired tho price. Sur
prised nt tho selection ho had rartita,
tho optima, looldug at him in blank
ostoneJmiect, ventured to ask what
number of glafcs- ho would liko for
the frame ho had picked out. Lon
dou Tit-Bits,
'v .x r V
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