YjY wj-; H. 8. BKLLK, Tim mm. Mmmsw. II. It LEAI10, Secretary T DEI 33 XLX.j9l03EI. ABSOLUTE X.KADER8 IN STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOODS, Laces, Lace Curtains, Ribbons, Hosiery, Ladies' Underwear, Etc . LADIES' MISSES' AND CHILDREN'S CLOAKS. r SalJ Agents for Laird, Schoder moncn uy mail, oenu TEB FINGEB OF GOD, A ELOQUENT SERMON FROM THE TABERNACLE PULPIT. Or. Talmnge Selects i Text frohi Exodus J am! Preaches n Fovcrfnl Discourse A Peroration of Wonderful Force and Beauty of Expression. f BnooKLYN, Oct. 23. Tlio cnpnclty of the Tabernaclo was tested this morning " A . ''7 iho vas crowd thnt filled it in every part as Boon as tbo doors wore opened. After reading and commenting on mv- if - f ral passages of Scripture illustrative of God's providential dealings, Dr. Tul mage gave out tho hymn beginning God moves in a mysterious way Ilk wanders to porfofpn. . His florinon was on the text Exodus viii, I 10, "Tho Finger of God." Pharaoh was sulking in bis mnrblo thronoroom at Memphis. Plaguo lifter plagne had come, and sometimes tho '" KTPtian monarch was disposed to do better, but at the lifting of each plnguo he was as bad as lioforo. The necro mancers of tho palace, however, were t, compelled to recognize the divine move ment, and after one of tho most cans- perating plagues of all the series they n' cried out in the words of my text, s . "This is tho fingor of God" not tho first ,"" nor, the last timo when bad people sitid n good thing. An old Philadelphia friend 1 ' visiting mo the other day asked ma if 1 ' had ever noticed this passage of S rip- ture from which I today speak. I told . him no, and I said right away, "That is a good text for a sermon." s 5( We all recognizo tho hand of God and , ait know it is a mighty hand. You havo seen a man keep two or threo rubber balls flying in tho air, catching and ' pitching them so that nono of them fell to the floor, and do this for several min utes, and you havo admired his dextcr- , ity. But havo you thought how tho hand of God'keeps millions and millions i- of round worlds, vastly larger than our world, flying for conturies without lot ting ono fall? Wondrous power and Bklll of God's hand! But about that 1 r' am not to discourse. My text lead mo to speak of less than a fifth of the divino hand. "This is tho finger of God." i Only in two othor places doos tho Biblo refer to this division of tho omnipotent hand. Tho rocks on Mount Sinai aro basalt and very hard stono. Do yon imagino it was a chisel that cut tho ten commandments in that basalt? No; in . Exodus we read that tho tables of r.tono wero "written with the finger of God." . Christ says that ho cast out devils with "the finger of God," The only inslanco s that Christ wrote a word ho wroto no't with pen on parchment, but with his linger on the ground. Yet, though bo seldom roference is mado in tho Biblo to a part of God's hand, if you And r keop our eyes open and our heart right wo will be compollod often to cry out, "This is tho finger of God." It is mj intontion bofore long to begin a series of sermons on "Tho Astronomy of tho Bi blo, or God Among tho Stars;" "Tho Ornithology of the Biblo, or God Among tho Birds;" "Tho Pomology of tho Biblo, or God Among tho Orchards;" "Tho Ichthyology of tho Bible, or God Among the Fishes;" "Tho Geology of tho Biblo, or God Among the Rocks;" "Tho Wa ters of tho Biblo, or God Among tho Boas;" "Tho Zoology of tho Biblo, or God Among tho Beasts;" "Tho Precious Stones of tho Biblo, or God Among tho AraethyBts;" "Tho Conchology of tho Biblo, or God Among tho Shells;" "The Botany of tho Biblo, or God Among tho Flowers;" "Tho Chronology of tho Bi blo, or God Among tho Centuries," and J want this coming winter to got you and got myself into tho habit of sooing tho finger of God ovorywhero utuf in ovorythingj but this morning I want to induce you to look for tho fingor of God in your personal affairs. (KOVIDENTIAIi CIKSTUKES. To most of us gesticulation is natural. If astrunger accost you on tho street and ask you tho vfay to somo place, it is as natural us to breatho for you to level your forofliigor this way or that. Not ono out of n thousand of yoa would stand with your hands by your sido uud make no motion with your finger. What ever you may Buy with your lips is em phasized and re-enforced nud translated by your finger. Now God in tho dear old Book says to us iumunorublo things by tho way of direction. Ho plainly tolls us tho way to go, But in evory exigoucy of our life, if wu will only look, wo will find a providential gosturo and n provi dential pointing, bo thai wo may confi dently say, "This is tho finger of God." Two or threo times in my lifo, whon perplexed on epilations of duty after earnest prayer, I havo cast lots as to what I should do. In olden times tho Lord's people ciibt lots, Tho land of Causun was divided by lot. Tito cities were divided among tho priests and Levltea by lot. Matthias was chosen to the apostleship by lot. Now casting loU U about tho most solemn thing you can do. It should never bo done, except with a solemnity liko that of tho last judgment. It is a direct appeal to tho Almighty. If after earnust prayer you do not mui to get the divine direction, I think you might without sin wrlto upon one slip of iwper "Yes," and upon iothr "No," or somo other decisive words appropriate to the case, aud thou, obHtwratteg from your talnd tho idtmtity of the slip of paper, draw tho decision and act upon it. In that case I think yoa have a right to tako that indication m tke flutter of God. But do not do that moapt as the last resort and with a 4VMituM that leaves absolutely all wtthOod. for Mueh that concerns us we have no raepoiwIUUty, aud we twed not xaake appeal to the Lord for direction. Wo ajr not romumslUe for nwet of our sur rrnimHntff. We are not roponeibie for the oooaky of oar birth, nor for whether we ate Ainerioaiw, or Norweyietu, or BootqhmaM, or Iiihuwt or KaglWh men. We are Kt rttepoatiMe for the age fai which we live. W are uet re for owe lewperamem, ue ic or mi m hi in i in immmm or a- jnlatv Hftt Stfafi tffc u-al Jaj. qui & Mitchell, FINE FOOTWEAR. Pattern sheets free ctvory, your uuiuw u,uu jjcu uuc, features, be they homely or beautiful, Wo are not responsible for tho height r Binttllnoss of our staruro. We are not responsible for tlie fact that wo nro men tally dull or brilliant. For tho most of our environments ye have no moro re sponsibility than wo havo for tho mol lusks at tho bottom of tho Atlantic ocean. Oh, I am so glad that there aro nbont fivo hundred thousand things that wo ore not responsible fori Do not blame us for being in our manner cold as nn iceberg or nervous as a cat amid a pack of Fourth of July firecrackers. If you uro determined to blamo somebody blamo our great-grandfathers or great grandmothers who died boforotho Revo lutionary war, and who may have had habits depressing and ruinous. Thcro aro wrong things about ns all which make mo think that one hundred and (if ty years ago thero was somo terriblo srank in our ancestral line Realize that and it will be a relief semi-infinite. Lot us tako ourselves as we aro this mo ment, and then ask "which way?" Got nil tho direction you can from careful und constant study of tho Biblo, and then look up and look out and look around and seo if you can find the finger of God. LINCOIJJ'S WISE DELAY. It is a remarkablo thing that some times no ono can seo that finger but yourself. A year before Abraham Lin coln signed tho proclamation of emanci pation tho White Housowas thronged with committees and associations, minis ters and laymen, advising tho president to make that proclamation. But ho wait ed and waited, amid scoff and anathema, becauso he did not himself seo the finger of God. After awhile, and ut just tho right timo, ho saw tho divino pointing and signed tho proclamation. Tho dis tinguished Confederates, MaRon and Slidell. were taken off nn English vessel by the United States government. "Don'H give thorn np," shouted all the nortnoni states. "Let ns have war with Englund rather than surrender them," was tho nl most unanimous cry of tho north. But William H. Sownrd saw tho fingor of God leading in just tho opposito direc tion, and tho Confederates wero given up and wo avoided a war with England, which at that time would havo boon tho demolition of tho United States govern ment. In other words, tho finger of God ns it dirocts you may bo invisible to everybody else. Follow the divino point ing as you seo it, although tho world may call you a fool. Thero has never been a man or a woman who amounted to uny thiug that has not sometimes boon called a fool. Nearly ull tho mistakes that yon and I have mado liavo -como from our following tho pointing of some othor fin ger Instead of tho finger of God. But, now, suppose nil forms of disaster cloie In upon a man. Suppose his business collapses. Suppose ho buys goods and ccnuot sell them. Suppose by a cow in vention . thors can furnish tho same goods at less price. Suppose a cold Kpriug or a lato autumn or tho coming of an opideWlo corners a man, and hi" notes como duo and ho cannot ineot thorn, and his ront must bo paid and thero is nothing with which to pay it, and tho wages of tho employees are duo and thoro is nothing with which to meet that obligation, and tho bank will not discount, and tho business frlonds to whom ho goes for nccommodutlon aro in tho samo predienment, nud ho boars up aud struggles on until, nftor awhilo, crash goes tho whole concern. hetteu TitnASunKS than money. IIo stands wandering and saying: "I do not seo tho meaning of all this. I havo dono tho best I could. God knows 1 would pay my dobts if I could, but hero 1 urn hodgod in and stopped." What should that man do in that case? Go to tho Scriptures and read tho promise about all things working to gether for good and kindred passages? That is woll. But ho needs to do Bomo thing bosidos rend tho Scriptures. IIo needs to look for tho finger of God that is pointing toward bettor treasures; that is pointiug toward otornal release; that is urging him to higher realms. No human finger ovor polntod to tho oast or west or north or south so cortainly as tho finger of God is pointing that troubled iniin to higher and hotter spiritual re sources than ho has over enjoyed. Tljero aro mon of vast wealth who aro as rich for heaven us thoy uro for this world, but thoy uro exceptions. If a mnn grows in grace it is generally boforo ho gets $100,000 or utter ho loses It. If a man has plenty of rnilroiul securities and has applied to his banker for moro; if tho lots ho bought havo gone up fifty por cont. in vuluoj If ho hud hard work to got tho door of hls'flreproof safe shut bocauso of a now roll of securities ho put lu thoro just boforo lockiug up at night; if ho bo speculating in a falling market or n rising market and things Huio for him a right turn, ho doos not grow in graco very much thnt wcolc. Do you know what mado tho great revival of 1857, whon moro peoplo wero con verted to God, probably, than in any year slnco Christ was born? It was tho defalcations und bankruptcy that Bwopt American prosperity so fiat that it could full no Hatter. I inn speaking of whole souled men. Such men uro so broken by calamity that thoy aro humbled und Hy to God for relief. Men who havo no bplrlt and uover expect anything aro not much affected by financial changes. iThoy are as apt to go into tho kingdom undurono sot of circumstances ns an other. They uro deadbeats wherovcr they are. Tho only way to get rid of thorn U to lend them a dollar and you will never seo them again. 1 havo tried that plan and it "works woll. But I am speaking of tho effect of misfortnnoon high spirited meu. Nothiug but trial will turn such nieu from earth to heaven. It i only through clouds and darkness aud whirlwind of disaster such a man can ee the finger of God. UBKCtKH NOT ACCIDENTS, A most interesting as well as a most Hcful study is to watch the pointing of the ttttf er of Ood. In the Seventeenth oetttary South Carolina wns yielding tyein awl tivrpontlnoand tar as her chief productfoaa. But ThowiM) Smith noticed" that tho grvuad near hi houoo in CharUwtew ws very uck like the placet in MmhHUwmr where, he k4 raited rice, 307 Com'l Street. and somo of tho Madagascar rice was sown there and grew bo rapidly that South Carolina was lod to make rico.hor chief production. Can yon not seo the finger of God in that incident? Rev. John Fletcher, of England, mosy will know, was ono of tho useful ministers of tho Gospel who over preached. Bo foro conversion ho joined the army and hail bought his ticket on tho ship foi South America. Tho morning ho was to sail Eomo one spilled on him a kettle of water, and ho was soFcalded ho could not go. Ho was very much disappoint ed, but tho ship ho was going to sail ru went out and was nevor heard of again. Who can doubt that God Was arranging tho lifo of John Fletcher? Was it merely accidental that Richard Rodda, a Cornish miner, who was on his knees praying, remained unhurt, though heavy stones foil boforo him and behind him, nnd on either sido" of him, and onothei fell on top of these so as to inako a root over him? A missionary in Jamaica lost hi3 way, aud in tho night was wandering about, when a firefly flashed njid revealed a precipice over which in a moment more ho would havo been dashed. F. W. Robertson, tho groat preacher of Brigh ton, England, had his life work decided by tho barking of his dog. A neighboi whose daughter was ill was disturbed by tho barking of that dog ono night. This brought tho neighbor into commu nication with Robertson. That acquaint anceship kept him from joining the dragoons and going to India and spend ing his lifo in military service, and re served him for a pulpit the influence ot which for Gospolization will resound foi ull time and all eternity. Why did not Columbus sink when in early manhood he was afloat six milei from the beach with nothing to sustain him till ho could swim to laud but a boat's oar? 1 wonder if his preservation had anything to do with America? Had tho storm that diverted tho Mayflower from tho mouth of tho Hudson for which it was sailing and sent it nshoro at Cupe Cod no divino supervisal? Does nn archy rule this world, or God? St. Felix escaped martyrdom by crawl ing through a hole in the wall across which tho spiders immediately afterward wovo u web. His persecutors saw iie hole in tho wall, but tho spider's web put them off tho track. A boy was lost by his drunken father and could not foi years find his way homo. Nearly grown ho went into a Fulton street prayer meeting and asked for prayora that ho might find his parents. His mother wa in tho room and roso and recognized Lor long lost son. Do you say that these things "only happened bo?" Te.ll that to thoso who do not bolievo in a God, and havo no faith in tho Biblo. Do not tell it to mo. I said to an aged minister of much oxperienco: "All tho ovonts of my lifo seem to havo been divinely con nected. Do you suppose it is so in all lives?" H6 answored, "Yes, but most peoplo do not notico tho divine leadings.' I stand here this morning to say from my own experience that tho tafest thing in all the world to do is to trust tje Lord. Inovor had a misfortune or a persecution or a trial or a disappoint ment, however excruciating at tho time, that God did not make turn out for my good. My ono wish is to follow tho divino loading. I want to watch the finger of God. A NATIONAL APPLICATION. Nations also would do well to watch for tho fingor of God. What does the cholera scaro in America mean? Somo say it means that tho plaguo will sweep our laud next summer. I do not boliovo a word of it. Thoro will bo no cholera horo uoxt summer. Four or fivo sum mers ngo thoro wero those, who Bnid it would sutoly bo hero tho following sum mer becauso it was on tho way. But it did not come. The sanitary precautions established hero will makonoxt summer unusually healthful. Cholera never starts from whero it stopped tho be.ison boforo, but nlwayj starts in tho filth of Asia, and if it starts next summer'it will start thero again it will not start from Now York quarantine. But it 's evident to mo that tho finger of God is in this cholera scaro, aud that ho is point ing this nation to something higher and letter. It has been demonstrated as never boforo that we are in tho hands of God, IIo allowed tho plaguo to como to our very gates, und then halted It. Tho quarantine was right und necessary, but oh, how easily tho plaguo could have leaped tho barriers lifted nguinst HI Thanhs to tho president of tho United States, uud thanks to tho health officers, and thanks to tho Thirteenth regimeut, and thanks to nil who stood between this evil uud our national health, but moro than all and higher than all thanks to Godl Out of that solemnity wo ought to pass np to something better than any thing that has over yet characterized us as u nation. Wo ought to quit our na tional sins, our Sabbath breaking, and our druukenness.und our impurities, aud our corruptions of nil forts as n people. Tho tendency Is in solf gratulation atour prosperity to Jorgat tho mercy of God that has kept us from being blotted out for our ctimes, und that sUll multiplies our temporal piosperities. Forward and upward! Seo you not tho fingor of God lu this protecting mercy? I rejoice that thero uro many encour aging signs for our nation, aud ono is that this presidential campaign has less malignity und abuse thau any presiden tial campaigu sincu wo have Wen a na tion. Turn over to tho pictorials wul tho columns of tho political sheets of tho presidential excitements all the way buck nud seo what contumely Wushing ton und JoiTcrson uud MadUouuud Mou imo aud Jnckbou went through. Now seo tho almost entire ubwnco of all that Tho polltlcnl orators, I notice, this year aro apt to Ix-sin by eulogizing the hon esty and good indentions of the opposing candidate, nnd tny that he is bettor than his party. Instead of vitriol, camomile flowers. That we seen to have escaped tho degradation of the usual quadrennial blllingfgato U aneucourngiugfaot. Per hnits this leUuiweut may have somewhat mulled from tho edu hovering over tho home of one of the candidate, a sad In whkh tWe whole nation eywa thi, Fwhaj yre ve Ww to ah- sorbed in paying honors to Christopher Columbus that wo havo forgotten to anathematize the prominent men of the present. No man in thiscountryls fully honored until he is dead. Whatever be tho reason, this nation has escaped many of the horrors that ordinarily accompany the presidential contest. But let us not pause too long in hilarity about the pres ent and forget tho fuct that there are not only temporal possibilities far great er than those attained, bat higher moral nnd religious possibilities. Tho God of our fathers is the God of their children, , id iiis fingor points ns to a higher na tional ireer than many havo yet sus pected, i or our churches, our schools, our colleges, our institutions of mercy, the best days aro yet to come; ONWAUD THE WATCnWORD. But notice that this finger of God al most always and in almost everything points forward and not backward. All tho way through tho Bible the lamb and pigeon on the altar, the pillar of fire poised above tho wilderness, peace offer ing, sin offering, trespass offering, fin gers of Joseph and Isaac and Joshua and David and Isaiah and Micah and Ezekiel, all together made tho one finger of God pointing to tho human, tho divine, the gracious, the glorious, the omnipotent, tho gentle, the pardoning and suffering and atoning Christ. And now tho same finger of God is pointing the world up ward to tho eam Redeemer nnd for ward to the timo of his universal domi nation. My hearers, get out of the habit of looking back and looking down, nnd look up and look forward. It is useful onco in awhile to look back, but you had hotter for tho most part of your time stop remiiiiscenco and begin anticipa tion. We have none of us hardly bo gnn yet. If wo lovo the Lord and trust him and yon may all love him and trust him from this moment on wo no moro understand the good things ahead of us than a child at school studying his A B C can understand what that has to do with his reading John Ruskin's "Seven Lamps of Architecture" or Dante's "Di vina Commedia." The satisfactions and joys wo havo as yet had are like the music a boy raukeB with his first lesson on tho violin compared with what was ovoked from his great orchestra by my dear and illustrious and transcondent but now departed friend, Patrick Gil more, whon ho lifted his baton and all tho strings vibrated, and all tho trum pets pealed forth, and all tho flutes car oled, und all the drums rolled, and all the hoofs of the cavulry charge which ho imitated were in full beat. Look ahead! Tho fingor of God points for ward. "Oh, but," says somo one, "I am get ting old, and I havo a touch of rheuma tism in that foot, and I beliovo something is tho matter with my heart, aud I ca. -not stand as much ns I used to." Well, 1 congratulate you, for that shows you are getting nearer to the timo when you aro going to enter immortal youth and bo strong enough to hurl off tho battle mouts of heaven any bandit who by un heard of burglary might break into tho Golden City. "B'lt," says soino one, "I feel so lonely. Tho most of my friends aro gone, nnd tho bereavements of life have multiplied until this world that wus onco so bright to mo has lost its charm." I congratulnto you, for when you go thero will'be fewer hero to hold you back and more thero to pull you in. Look ahead! Tho fingor of God is point ing forward. Wo sit hero in church, and by hymn nnd prayer nnd sermon and Christian association we try to get into a frame of mind that will bo accept ablo to God and pleasant to ourselves. But what a stupid thing it all is com pared with what it will bo when wo have gone beyond psalmbook nnd sermon nnd Biblo, and wo stand, our last imperfec tion gone, in the presence of that charm of tho universe tho blessed Christ and havo him look in our face and say: "I havo been watching you and sympathiz ing with you nnd helping you nil these yeurs, and now you aro here. Go whero you plcaso and nevor know a sorrow and never shed it tear. Thero is your mother now she is coming to greet yon and thero is your father, nnd thoro aro your children. Sit down under this treo of life, and on tho hanks of this river talk It all over." I tell you thoro will be more joy in ono minute of that than in fifty years of earthly exultation. Look nhendt Look at the finest housoon earth nnd know that yon will havo a finer one in Jieaven. Look up the healthiest pei son yon can find nnd know you will yet bo healthier. Look np tho ono who has the best eyesight of any onoyou have evor heard of, und know you will havo better vision. Listen to tho sweetest primn donna that over trod tho platform, and know that in heaven you will liftamore enrapturing song than ever onchauted earthly unditorium, A VISION OF Sl'IXNUOlt. My friends, I do not know how wo aro going to stand it I meau tho full lurush of that Bplendor. , Last summer I saw Moscow, In somo respecU tho most splendid city under the sun. The em peror afterward usked mo If I had seon it, for Moscow is the prldo of Russia. I told him yes, aud that I had Been Mos cow bum. I will tell you what I meant. After examining niuo hundred brass cannons which wero picked oat of tho snow ufter Napoleon retreated from Moscow, oach cannon deep cut with the lotter "N," I ascended tho tower of-somo two hundred uud fifty feet, just bofore suuset, uud on each platform there wero bells, largo and small, and I climbed up among tho bells, and then as I reached tho top nil tho bells underneath mo beguu to ring, und they wore joined by tho bells of fourteen hundred towers and domes uud turrets. Some of tho bells seut out n fulnt tiuklo of sound, a sweet tintinnabulation that seemed to bubble in the air, and others thundered forth boom after boom, boom after boom, until ft seemed to shake the earth and (ill the heavens sounds so weird, to sweet, so awful, so grand, so charm ing, so tremendous, so soft, to rippling, so reverberating and they eeemed to wreathe aud whirl uud ro4 uud sink aud bunt und roll uud mount aud die. When Napoleon saw Moscow Vara it oould nothao been uidre brilliant than "wha I WW itU the fourteen hHaired turrets aflame with the sunset, roofs ot gold and waili of malachite, and archi tecture of all colore mingling the brown of autumnal forests and the bluo oi summer heavens, and the conflagration of morning skies, and the green of rich meadows, and the foam of tossing seas. Tho mingling of bo many colors with so many sounds was an enhancement almost too much for human nerves or human eyes or human ears. I expect to Bee nothing to cqnal it until you nnd 1 seo heaven. But thnt will surpass it and mako tho memory of what I saw that July evening In Moscow almost tame and insipid. AH heaven aglow and all heaven a-ring not in tho sunset, but in tho sunrise. Voices of our own kindred i mingling with the dosologies of empires. ; Organs of eternal worship responding to tho trumpPtB t! at have wakened the dead. Nations ia white. Centuries in coronation. Anthems liko the voice oi many waters. Circlo of martyrs. Circle of apostles. Circlo of prophets. Thrones of cherubim. Thrones of seraphim. Throne of archangel. Throue of Clirist. Throne of God. Thrones! Thrones! Thrones! The finger of God points that way- Stop not until you reach that place. Through the atoning Christ all I speak of mid more may bo yours and mine. Do you not now hear tho chime of tho bells of that metropolis' of tho uni verse? Do you not see the shimmering of the towers? Good morning. Neither or Them Got Licked. Dan Mocdy was a raftsman on the Susqnehauna river, and it was his boast that ho tould lick any man on tho river from tho mouth of tho Chemung to Havre do Grace. Dan li ved nt Towanda, Jn Bradford county, and finally grow old and rheumatic. In his old age "tho boys" used to put a stranger up to ques tion Dan about his many fightn, nnd after the old man got thoroughly interested and was boasting freely of his youthful exploits this question was sprung on him: "But, Uncle Dan, didn't anybody over lick you?" "No, sir, never got licked in my en durin lifo." Tho next question was: "But, Uncle Dan, you camo near getting licked once, didn't you? Seems to mo I've heard that you came awful near getting licked just once. Tell us about that, won't you?" The old man had to be pressed to get the story out of him, but he would tell it occasionally, and hero it is: "Once I was haulin a load of boards along the road from a mill up on Sugar creek. It was an awful hot day, and goin past a piece of woods when tho shade only came half way across the road I met u feller in a buggy. 'Turn out,' says he. 'Turn out yourself,' says I. 'See yo fur ther first,' says he; 'drive out into the sun yerself.' Well, I didn't drive out, and I did tell him what 1 thought of him, and bimeby wo kem to blows. 1 jumped down offen tho load and ho got outen his buggy, nnd w j went at it, und wo fit nnd fit and fit, lmt neither of us seemed to get the beat of it," Horo tho old man would pause a moment until he was asked: "But whicli of you turned out, Uncle Dan?" Thuu he wonld reply: "Oh, I did; wo fit 60 long that the sun went down, so that ihero was shade clear across the road, and I turned out. I didn't care then, of course, and that's the nearest I ever came to getting licked." St. Louis Republic. do Itail United It. Tominio's mother had left him to entertain Johnnie, his younger brother, while sho went out to do an hour's shopping. When sho returned Thomas was on hand with nn im portant question. "Does little boys about Johnnie's sizo, mamma, have hair on tho in eidoofthem?" "Of course they don't," sho ex claimed. "Why do you ask that?" "Oh, nothiu," ho said, starting off, "only I guess I'vo wasted a bottle of hair oil in Johnnie." Detroit Free Press. STARTLING FACTS! The American people aro rarldlr becoming a roco of nerrous irrocka, and the following iurrccU thebcBtromcdrt AlphonsoIIempllmff.of Butler, reswears that whon bis son was spoeehlus from St. Vitus Uuco, Dr. Miles' Croat Roatorntlva Nervine cured him. Alr. J.H.llltlr,or Vilpnr also.lml , J. I). Taylor, ot Loftansport, Ind., each gained Jtf pounds from taking It. Mrs. II. A. Gard ner, o( Viitula, Ind., iras cured of mofO conrul slonsn dr, ana much hcadacbe, dlulnces, back scne, ana ctrroui prostration, by ono bottle. Daniel Myers, Urooilrn. Mich., says bis dauchtcr was cured of Insanity of ten years' staodlns. Trial bottles and flue book of marvelous cures, FHUK at drusa lts This remedy contains no opiates. Dr.MI!os'ModlcalCo.,Elkhnrt,lnd. fmiLVL BOTZXE FREE. Bold by D. J.Fry, druggist,Salcin. Act on a new principle recalato tho liter, ctoui&ch anil bowels throuiK ttie nerttt. Db. HarV I'tuji tpttdilv curt fclllocrciegs, torpid liver and co&3iip& Won. Smallr.it, raiidcit, eurcetl GOdooas.U&cts. 6(.mrln treo t iru -Hta. ' ej .its i , vutatl. I-ft, eold by D. J. Fry, druggist, Baleui ELEbiiiyeBElT .VAHt mrmm UTSTPATENTSgiagTi-TH EUCTK0 BtSl SiKSs KACNETIC SUSPEKSCSV. SWbii VUeeit Mtlkliu iTHulnn rtnlUat mn c.eruitUc ot bnU, t liraMimm sr lolUoril. u At MU aaaiUs. dralai. hwi iuihi d.ktiit .i. Uuaeu. Uiiu, rknatUM, kMur, Unr ul tl.SJ.r .wlHu,li U.k. luttai, MUUii. stswtl IU-imIis. Ultkn,t4li a orrtaltau l IwUxUr Itllkrn vnx ut biftu ,. t m tiicf et i dl. w r. Itiuul. k Imm r4 St UL ur it i(Misa aiur all mW nulki fulUJ, t lli k&ii4 tt UtMuoiteU liUiiut nr Mir iuit. ur"ijk larttutM autcinc Wkor. it. fTwuwiMs mm afui Mt aiB,rau mtM SLL ML a Km!U uiTlmu Mftuta MiatAt M uttnl.t! t t tw utM.-M ruiffkm, wM, him, tm. a J mjjxxor xxjiCTXio oo, tto,m Hr sK.iFTUUt, Mb 0. HUES YflliliirH Restorative VKEBVINE. Slif tnosE$rrJr kKwvJYi'VVvv ,'i lWXftBsaaasaasaaaa for Bnfants and "Catoria is so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription amoirn to me." H. A. Ancmta, M. D., Ill So, Oxford EL, Brooklyn, H. T. "The use ot ' Castoria ' is so universal and Its merits bo well known that it seems a wort of supererocatlon to endorse it. Fowarethe intelligent families who do not keep Castoria Cablos Mahttw, D-.Dm New York City. Late Pastor Bloomingdalo BoXonned Church. Tmt Ciktaoti Compawt, 77 Mcniar Btbiugt, Nnr Yonx. Choice Earlj Strawberry NOW IS THE TIME TO PLANT THEM. Dozen. Per 100, Bubach No. 5 and Crawford, fertilize each other, and best combination for large, early berries for home market. Matteson, only a few hundred left; earli est berry in Salem market for several years Warfield, early, a great bearer and most beautiful fruit Pearl, early and "a pearl." Oregon everbearing TT.n.vfi manv other varieties. above .as especially early varieties, . '- . . a next few weeks on well prepared year. Jouy early stocK. "Why grow late berries that low prices'? Plants are carefully tor mail or expiess. Must De sola in next ie-w weeus. ftSCall next door to P. O. or at residence, North Salem. gBttmaiiswmiBWsig u a 0 o-i bJ5 H W 0 A -p 0 Z cd 00 a cd a 0 H -P 0 CD u a COKaSMBl CLEAN!- Ir you would be clean and have your clothes done up in tho neatest and dressiest manner, take them to the SALEM STEAM where all work iVdoue by white labor and in the most prompt manner. COLONEL J. OLMSTEP. Liberty Sf.rWl E.M.Waite Printing Co. Largest establishment in tne.cltr. OVER BUSH'S BANK, SAJbKM, ... OREGON, w. VM K. K. HALL, Paper Hangorand Decorator. OstMitr-iu n.1 .un. uim... . trtJJMIrsjniL H"Hv swe, New J munis'. Children Cswtorla enres Colic, Constipation, BourStomach,Dlarrhcoa.EructaUon, Kills Worm, gives sleep, and promote d Wliout injurious medication. " For .several years I have recommendec. your Castoria. ' and shall alwaya continue to do so as It has Invariably produced beneficial results." Edwin F. Parsm, M. D., "Tho Winthrop," 125th Btreet and 7th Ave., New York CHtT. PI 25cts $2 00 50" 3 00 25 2 50 2 50 3 00 . 25 " 25 " Can recommend any of i-N.1 lit . I fcnouia be put out m soil to get crop next only glut the market at trimmed and well put up E. HOFER, Salem. T3 C I u r-t cd -p 3 u o 0 CO u cd 0 r g 8 k a o O O 6 (Z). CO CO - 0 fe S w 3 I-l cd vA 0 P k p2 a (0 Ui o iH a u . H . 0 H I I o Oh cd cd O w 0 0 -H fi 0- cd tli 0 0 - U 0 0 V ants LAUKDKY Wood Saw. Gvervbodr trotn f!hnri. nniiM. .... SCi."1 "a utler." Orderi at 27 VMQCU White's No. 60; SALEM'S FINEST TRUUK, read v tar i tv areAil wyk i ' v" I I m J m o en CD CO o 3 CD CD I I VrV MW -. STJV