g.-.. ' .-rtJ '.tfrfes ui.WW'v,W',.f' '" '" -sSSfo '-'j t BYENI2TGI-. CA1PITAI JOXTBiTAIi MONDAY,! FEBItUAItY 27, 1893. A WiOTECTltJ-WING-; REV. DR. TALMAGE'S SERMON ON THE HEN AND CHICKENS. Wlir Christ Selected the Homely Compari son Some Fmnlllar Stories The World Is Just What Wo Make It A Great Kc sponslbllity. Brooklyn, Fob. SO. Previous to tho sermon in tho Brooklyn Tabernacle this morning Rev. Dr. TtilmaRo, in giving out a number of notices, dwelt upon tho fact that certain picture makers of Brooklyn had used hi3 name as a refer ence in their advertisements and circu lars without his authority. Thousands of letters of complaint havo come to him in this respect, and ho wanted it distinct ly understood that he know nothing of theso people or their business methods. The tost selected for tho morning sermon was Matthew xxiii, 87, "As a hen gath creth her chickens under her wings, and yo would not." Jerusalem was in sight as Christ came to to tho crest of Mount Olivet, a height of 700 feet. Tho splendors of tho reli gious capital of the wholo earth irradi ated the landscape. There is tho tem ple. Yonder is tho king's palace. Spread, out beore his eyes are tho pomp, the wealth, the wickedness and tho com ing destruction of Jerusalem, and he bursts into tears at tho thought of tho obduracy of a placo that ho would gladly have saved, and apostrophizes, saying, "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, how often would I havo gathered thy children to gether, even as a hen gathoreth her chickens under her wings, and yo would not." Why did Christ select hen and chick ens as a simile? Next to tho apposito nes3 of tho comparison I think it was to help all public teachers in tho matter of illustration to get down off their stilts and uso comparisons that all can under stand. Tho plainest bird on oarth is tho barnyard fowl. Its only adornments nro tho rod comb in its headdress and tho wattles under the throat. It has no grandeur of genealogy. All we know is that its ancestors came from India, some of them from a height of 4,000 feet on the sides of tho Himalayas. It has no pretension of nest like tho eagle's eyrie. It has no luster of plumage like tho gold finch. Possessing anatomy tnat allows flight, yet about tho last thing it wants to do is to fly, and in retreat uses foot almost as much as wing. Musicians have written out in musical scale tho song of lark and robin red breast and nightingale, yet tho hen of my test hath nothing that could bo taken for a song, but only cluck and cackle. Yet Christ in tho text uttered, while looking upon doomed Jerusalem, declares that what ho had wished for that city was like what the hen does for herchick ens. Christ was thus simple in his teach ings, and yet how hard it is for us, who aro Sunday school instructors and editors and preachers and reformers, and those who would gain the ears of audiences, to attain that heavenly and divine art of simplicity. We, havo to run a course of literary disorders as childron a course of phys ical disorders. We come out of school and college loaded down with Greek mythologies and out of the theological seminary weighed down with what the learned fathers said, and wo fly with Wings of eagles and flamingoes and alba trosses, and it takes.A good while before wo can come down to Christ's simili tudes, the candle under, tho bushel, the salt that has lost its savor, the net thrown into tho sea, the spittle on tho eyes of tho blind man and the hen and chickens. There is not much poetry about this winged, creature of God mentioned in my text, but, she .is moro practical and more motherly .and more suggestivoof good things' than many that fly higher and wear brighter colors. She is not a prima donna of tho sides nor a strut of beauty in tho aisle of the .forest. She does not cut a circlo under the sun liko tho Rocky mountain eagle, but stays at home to look after family affairs. She does not swoop liko tho condor of tho Cordilleras to transport a rabbit from the valley to tho top of tho crags, but just scratches for a living. How vigor' ously with her claws she pulls away tho ground to bring up what is hidden bo neathl When tho breakfast or dining hour arrives, sho begins to prepare the repast and calls all her young to partake. UNDEH OLD DOMINICK'B WINDS. I am in sympathy with tho unpreten tious old fashioned hen, because, like most of us, sho has to scratch for a liv ing, Sho knows at the start tho lesson which most people of good sense are slow to learn that tho gaining of a live lihood implies work, and that successes do not lie on the surface, but are to be upturned by positive and continuous ef fort. The reason that society, and the church, and tho world aro so full of fail ures, so full of loafers, so full of dead beats, is because people are ,not wiso enough to take tho lesson which any hen would teach them that if they would find for themselves and for those de pendent upon them anything worth hav ing they must scratch for it. ' Solomon said, "Go to the ant, thon Bluggard." I say, "Go to tho hen, thou sluggard." In the Old Testament God compares himself to an eagle stirring up her nest, and in the New Testament tho Holy Spirit is compared to a descending dove, but Christ, in a sermon that begins with cutting sarcasm for hypocrites and ends with the paroxysm of pathos in the text, compares himself to a hen. Ono day in tho country we saw sud den consternation in the behavior of old Dominick. Why tho hen should be bo disturbed we could not understand. We looked about to see if a neighbor's dog were invading tho farm. We looked up to see if a stormcloud were hovering. We could see nothing on the ground that could terrorize, and we could see nothing in tho air to ruffle the feathers of the hen, but the loud, wild, affrighted cluck which brought all her brood at full run under her feathers made ua look again around. us and above us, when we saw that high S!!a"lnLlTni8::.V stood in tho shadow it came nearer and lower until wo saw its beak was curved from baso to tip, and it had two flames of firo for eyes, and it was a hawk. But all tho chickens woro under old Dominick's wing, and either tho bird of prey caught a glimpse of us, or not ablo to find the brood huddled under wing darted back into tho clouds. So Christ calls with great earnestness to tho young. Why, what is tho inat, ter? It is bright sunlight, and thero can bo no danger. Health is, theirs. A good homo is theirs. Plenty of food is theirs. Prospect of long lifois theirs. But Christ continues to call, calls with moro em phasis and urges haste and says not a second ought to bo lost. Oh, do tell us what is tho matter I All, now I see. Thero aro hawks of temptation in the air; thero aro vultures wheeling for their prey; there aro beaks of death ready to plunge; thero aro claws of allurement ready to clutch. Now I seo tho peril Now I understand tho urgency. Now I seo tho only safety. Would that Christ might this day take our sons and daughters into his shelter, "as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wing." The fact is that the most of them will never find tho shelter unless while they aro chickens. It is a simple matter of inexorable statistics that most, of those who do not come to Christ in youth nevor come at all. What chanco is thero for tho young without divine protection? Thero aro tho grog shops. Thero are tho gambling hells. There aro tho infideli ties and immoralities of spiritualism. Thero aro bad books. There are tho im purities. Thero aro tho business rascali ties. And so numerous aro these assail monts that it is a wonder that honesty and virtuo aro not lost arts. Tho birds of prey, diurnal and noctur nal, of tho natural world are ever on tho alert. They are tho assassins of tho sky. They havo varieties of taste. The eagle prefers the flesh of tho living ani mal. Tho vulture prefers tho. carcass. Tho falcon Mils with ono' Btroke, while other styles of beak give prolongation of torture. And so the temptations of tikis life aro various. Some make quick work of death, and others agonize the mind and body for many years, and some liko tho living blood of great souls, and others prefer those already gangrened. But for every style of youth thero is a swooping wing and a sharp beak and a cruel claw, and what tho rising generation needs is a wing of protection. EABLY SALVATION UHOED. Fathers, mothers, older brothers and sisters and Sabbath school teachers, be quick and earnest and prayerful and im portunate and get the chickens under wing. May tho Sabbath schools of Amer ica and Great Britain within the next three months sweep all their scholars into tho kingdom. Whom they havo now under charge is uncertain. Con cerning that scrawny, puny child that lay in the cradle many' years ago, the father dead, many remarked, "What a mercy if tho Lord would take tho child!" and tho mother really thought so too. But what a good thing that God spared that child, for it became world renowned in Christian literature and one of God's most illustrious servants John Todd. Remember, your children will remain children only a little while. What you do for them as children you must do quickly or never do at all. "Why have you never written a book?" said some ono to a talented woman. Sho replied: "I am writing two and havo been engaged on one work 10 years and on tho other five years my two children. They aro my life work." When the houso of John Wesley's father burned, and they got tho eight children out, John Wesley tho last before the roof fell in, the father said: "Let us kneel down and thank God. The children are all saved; let tho rest of tho place go." My hearers, if we securo the present and everlasting welfare of our children, most other things belonging to us aro of but little comparative importance Alex ander the Great allowed his soldiers to take their families with them to war, and ho accounted for tho bravery of his men by the fact that many of them were born in camp and were used to warliko scenes from tho start. Would God that all tho children of our day might be born into tho army of tho Lord I No need of letting them go a long wuy on tho wrong road beforo they turnaround nnd go on the right road. Tho only time to get chickens under wing is while they are chickens. Hannah Whitall Smith, the ovangolist, took her little child at 2 years of ago when ill out of. the crib and told her plainly of Christ, and tho child believed and gave evidence of joyful trust, which grew with her growth into womanhood. Two years are not too young. The time will como when by the faith of parents children will bo born into this world and born into tile bosom of Christ at tho samo time. Soon we parents will have to go and leave our children. Wo fight their battles now, and we stand between them and harm, but our arm will after awhile get weak, and wo cannot fight for them, and our tongue will bo palsied, and wo cannot speak for them. Are we going to leave them out in tho cold world to take their chances, or aro we doing all we can to get them under the wing of eternal safety? SHELTER FROM LIFE'S TEMPESTS. But wo all need the protecting wing. If you had known when you entered upon manhood and womanhood what was ahead of you, would you have dared to undertako life? How much you havo been through I With most lifo has been a disappointment; they tell me 60. They havo not attained that which they ex pected to attain. They have not had tho physical and mental vigor they expected, or they havo met with rebuffs which they did not anticipate. You aro not at 40 or 60 or 00 or 70 or 60 years of ago where you thought you would be. I do not know any one except myself to whom life has been a happy surprise. I never ex pected anything, and so when anything camo in the shape of human favor or comfortable position or widening field of work it was to mo a surprise. I was told in tho theological seminary by wine of my fellow student that I (preach unless I changed my style, bo tliat when I found that Bomo people did como to hear mo it was a happy surprise But most peoplo, according to their own statement, have found lifo a disappoint ment. Indeed wo all need shelter from Its tompesta. About 8 o'clock on a hot August afternoon you havo heard a rum blo that you first took for a wagon cross ing a bridge, but afterward thero was a louder rumbling, and you said, "Why, that is thunder!" And suro enough the clouds wero being convoked for a full diapason. A wholo park of artillery went rolling down tho heavens, and tho blinds of tho windows in tho sky wero closed. But tho sounds abovo wero not moro certain than the sounds benculli. Tho cattlo camo to tho bars and moaned for them to bo. let down that' they might como homo to shelter, and tho fowl, whether dark Brahma or Hamburg or Leghorn or Dominick, began to call to its young, "Clucki;' "Cluckl" "Cluck!" and tnko them under .tho wagon houso or shed, and had them all hid under tho soft feathers by tho tlmo that tho first plash of rain struck tho roof. So ,thoro are .sudden tempests for our souls,and;oh! how. dark it gots.and threat ening clouds of bankruptcy or sickness or persecution or bereavement gather and thicken and, blacken, and some run for shelter to a bank, but it is poor shelter, and others run to friendly advisers, and they fail to help, and others fly nowhero simply because .they know not where to go, and they polish in the blast, but others hear a divino call saying, "Come, for all things aro now ready." "Tho spirit and tho bride say como." And whilo tho heavens aro thundering terror tho divino voice proffers mercy, and tho soul comes under tho brooding core of tho Almighty "as a hen gathereth her ohickens under her wing." DANGER OF ICY FORMALITY. The wings of my text suggest warmth, and that is what most folks want. The fact is that this is a cold world whether you take it literally or figuratively. We havo a big fireplace called the sun, and it has a very hot fire, and tho stokers keep tho coals well stirred up, but much of tho year wo cannot get near enough to this fireplace to get warmed. The world's extremities aro cold all tho time. Forget not that it is colder at the south pole than at the north pole, and that tho Arc tic is not so destructive as tho Antarotic. Once in awhilo the Arctic will let ex plorers come back, but tho Antarctic hardly over. When at the south polo a ship sails in, the door of ice is almost sure to be shut against its return. So life to many millions of people at the south and many millions of people at the north is a prolonged shiver, but when I say that this is a cold world I chiefly mean figuratively. If you want to know what is the meaning of the ordi nary term of receiving tho "cold shoul der," get out of money and try to bor row. The conversation may havo been almost tropical for luxurianco of thought and speech, but suggest your necessities and bco tho thermometer drop to 50 de grees below zero, and in that which till a moment before had been a warm room. Tako what is an unpopular position on some publio question and seo your friends fly as chaff before a windmill. As far as myself is concerned, I havo no word of complaint, but I look off day by day and seo communities freezing out men and women of whom tho world is not worthy. Now, it takes after ono and now after another. It becomes popular to depreciate and defame and execrate and lie about some people. This is tho best world I ever got into, but it is tho mean est world that some people ever got into. The. worst thing that ever happened to them was their cradle, and tho best thing that will ever happen to them will be their grave. What peoplo want is warmth. Many years ago a man was floating down on the ice of tho Mexrimac, and great efforts wero mado to rescuo him Twice ho got hold of a plank thrown to him and twice ho slipped away from it, because that end of the plank was cov ered with ice, and ho cried out, "For God's sake, give mo tho wooden end of tho plank this time," and this dono ho was hauled to shore Tho trouble is that in our efforts' to savo tho soul thero is too much coldness and icy formality, and so tho imperiled ono slips off and floats down. Give it the other end of tho plank warmth of sympathy, warmth of kindly association, warmth of genial sur roundings. The world declines to give it, and in many cases has no power to givo it, and hero is where Christ comes in, and, as on a cold day, the ram beating and tho at mosphere full of sleet, the hen clucks her cliickens under her wings, and the warmth of her own breast puts warmth into tho wot feathers and the chilled feet of the infant group of the barnyard, so Christ says to those sick and frosted and disgusted and frozen of tho world, Come in out of the March winds of the world's criticism; como in out of tho sleet of- tho world's assault; como in ont of a world that does not understand you and does not want to understand you; I will com fort and I will sootho and I will bo your warmth, ' a hen gathereth her chick ens under her wing." Oh, the warm heart of God is ready for all those to whom tho world has given tho cold shoulder. SACRIFICE UNTO DEATH. But notice that somo one must take the storm for the chickens. Ah I tho hen takes tho storm. I havo watched her under the pelting rain. I have seen her in tho pinching frosts almost frozen to death or almost strangled in the water? and what a fight she makes for the you? j: under wing if a dog or a hawk or a man comes too near! And so the brooding Christ takes tho storm for us. What flood of anguish and tears that did not dash upon his holy soul! What beak of torture did not pierce his vitals! What barking Cerberus of hell was not let out upon him from the hennels! What he endured, oh, who can tell. To tare our eoula from death nnd hell! Yes, the hen took the storm for the chickens, and Christ takes the etorm for us. Once the tempest rose so suddenly the hen could not get with her young back from the new wound to the bars, and there ahe is under the fence half. dead. And WW the rata tra to ow, ind it is an awful night, nnd in tho mora ng Iho whiteness about tho gills and tho seakdown in tho mud show'hat tho nother is dead, nnd the young ones como )ut and cannot understand why tho Mother does not scratch for them some thing to cat, nnd they walk over her wings and call with their tiny voices, but thero is no answering cluck. Sho look tho storm for others and perished. Poor thing! Self sacrificing oven unto icathl And does it not mako you think of him tvho endured all for us? So tho wines under which wo como for spiritual safety iro blood spattered wings, aro night shat tered wings, aro tempest torn wings, fa tho Mo of Wight I saw tho gravo of Princess Elizabeth, who died whilo a prisoner at Carisbrook castle, her finger Dn an open Biblo and pointing to tho words, "Como unto mo all yo that labor and aro heavy laden, and I will givo you rost." Oh, come under tho wingsl But now tho summer day is almost passed, nnd tho shadows of tho houso and barn and wagon shod havo length ened. Tho farmer, with scytho or hoo on shoulder, io returning from the fields. The oxen aro unyoked. Tho horses aro crunching tho oats at tho full bin. Tho air is bewitched of honeysucklo and wild brier. Tho millnnan, pail in hand, is approaching tho barnyard. Tho fowls, kooping early hours, aro collecting their young, "Cluckl" ''Cluck!" "Cluck!" and loon all the oyes of that f eathored nursery aro closed. Tho bachelors of tho winged tribo havo ascended to their perch, but the hens, in a motherhood divinely appointed, toko all the risk of a slumber on tho ground, and all night long tho wings will stay outspread, and tho little ones will not utter a sound. Thus, at sundown, lov ingly,, safely, completely, tho hen broods her young. So, if we aro tho Lord's, tho evening of .our life will como. Tho heats of tho day will havo passod. Thero will be shadows, and we cannot boo as far. Tho, work of lifo wfll bo about onded. Tho. hawks of temptation that hovered In tho sky will have gono to the woods and folded their wings. Sweot silences will come down. The nir will bo redo lent with tho breath of wholo arbors of promises sweeter than jasmino or even ing primrose Tho air may bo a littlo chill, but Christ will call us, and wo will know tho voice and heed tho call, and wo will como under tho wings for tho night tho strong wings, tho soft wings, tho warm wings and without fear and in full, sense , of safety, and then wo will rest from sundown, to sunrise, "as a hen gathereth her chickens under her whuj;" Dear mo, how many souls tho Lord hath thus brooded! ' Mothers, after watching over, sick cra dles and then watching afterward over wayward eons and daughters, at last themselves taken caro of by a motherly God. Business mon, after a lifetimo struggling with the uncertainties of money markets, and the change of tariffs, and the underselling of men who bo cause of their dishonesties can afford to undersell, and years of disappointment and struggle, at last under wings whoro nothing can perturb them any moro than a bird of prey which is 10 miles.off dis turbs a chick at midnight brooded in a barnyard. TRUSTING IN DIVINE SHELTER. My text has its strongest application for peoplo who wero born in tho country, whorover you may' now live, and that is tho majority of you. You cannot hear my text without having all the rustio scones of tho old farmhouse- como back to you. Good old days they woro. You know nothing much of tho world, fpr you had not seen tho world. By law of association you cannot recall the brooding hen and her chickens with out seeing also tho barn, and tho hay mow, and the wagon shod, and tho house, and tho room whoro you played, and the fireside with tho big backlog beforo which you sat, and tho neighbors, and tho burial, and tho wedding, and tho deop snowbanks, and hear tho vil lage bell that called you to worship, and seeing the horses which, after pulling you to church, stood around tho, old clap boarded meeting houso, and thoso who sat at either end of tho church pow, and indeed all tho scenes of tho first 14 years, and you think of what you woro then and of what you aro now, and all these thoughts are aroused by tho sight of the old hencoop. Somo of you had better go back and start again. In thought roturn, to that placo and hear tho cluck and see tho outspread feathers and come under tho winor and mako tho Lord your portion and shelter 'and warmth, proparing for everything that may come, and so avoid being classed among thoso described by1 tho closing words of my text, "as a hen gathoreth her chickens under her wing, and yo would not." Ah, that throws tho responsibility upon us! "Ye would not." Alas, for the "would nots!" If tho wandering broods of tho farm hoed not their mother's call and risk tho nawk ana dare tne irosuet and expose themselyes to tho frost and storm, sure ly their calamities are not their moth er's fault'. "Yo would not!" God would, but how many would not I When a good man asked a young wom an who had abandoned her home and who was deploring her wretchedness why sho did not return, tho reply was: "I dare not go home. My father is so provoked ho would not receive mo home." "Then,' tald tho Christian man, "J will test this.'' And so he wrote to tho father, and the reply came back and in a letter marked outside "Immediate," and inside saying, "Let her como at once; all is forgiven." God's Invitation for you is marked "Immediate" on tho outsido, and inside it U written, "Ho will abundantly pardon." Ob, ye wanderers from God and hap piness and homo nnd heaven, come under the. sheltering wing. Under this call I lee you turning from your old way to the new way, the living way, tho gospel way. A vessel in the Bristol channel was nearlng the rocks called the "Steep Holmes." Under the tempest the veseel was unmanageable, and the only hope was that the tide would change before the struck the rocks and and weatdowri, and so the captain stood on the deck, watch in haad. Captain and crew and fwmgvn were pallid with terror, TJf be Mother leok M hj vftok mi, other look at tho sea ho shouted i "Thank God, wo nro saved! Tho tido hns turned! Ono minute moro and wo would havo struck tho rocks." Somo of you havo been a long whilo drifting in tho tempest of sin nnd sor row and havo been making for tho break ers. Thank God, tho tido has turned, Do you not fcol tho lift of tho billow? Tho graco of God that bringoth salva tion hns nppenred to your soul, nnd in tho words of Bonz to Ruth I commend you to "tho Lord God of Israel, under whoso wings thou hast como to trust." An Intoreatlne Tlotiao Clock. Darius L. Goff of Pawtuckot, R. L, n man who has always humored a natural bent in tho diroction of mechanical curi osities, is tho proud ownor of, a clock that novcr "runs down." An ingenious contrivance attached to tho front door of tho Goff mansion keeps tho wonderful timopioco constantly wound up, tho sim ple act of opening nnd closing tho door serving in placo of a koy. But this is not all by a good deal. Electrical appli ances, operated by this perpotual, nover tiring clock, light tho gas jet in tho hall at dusk nnd promptly put it out at 10:80 p. m. Another liandy attachment rings an "early rising" boll for tho serv ants. Half an hour later tho samo auto matio lovor drops, and a boll is rung for tho family, followed in another half hour by a "breakfast boll." Wires and electrometer attachments run all over tho houso and play all sorts of pranks. Besides performing tho wonders abovo mentioned (which the reader must con fess is a fine thing for a family who aro so punctual that everything is dono by clockwork), a wiro attachment of the clock is connected to queer little musio boxes in each chamber. Thoso boxes play tho orthodox cathedral chimes overy timo tho clock strikes, filling tho entiro houso with sweet musio at least 12 times overy day. St. Louis Republic. An Unexpected Windfall. In 1888 1 alady hamod" Burch,thon liv ing in Kensington, went, liko n thousand others, to see the fine ladies pass on thoir way to attend a drawing room at Buck ingham palace Whilo gazing at tho show, which, though not democratic, is an exceedingly protty ono, sho noticed an old gentleman, faint and confused with tho pressure of tho crowd, which, being composed of Englishmen, pronounced him drunk, piscorning with better in sight that ho, was, not .drunk, but vory 111 Miss Burch lod him tq a seat, found him somewhere a glass of water and in a few minutes restored his scattered energies. Ho thanked her warmly, asked her name and departed to bo heard of no. moro till a few days ago, whon a, solicitor called to inform Miss Burch that tho old gentleman had bequeathed hor tho im mense reward for such a servico of 150, 000. That story if it is true, which wo seo no reason to doubt is tho most etriking instanco wo can remember of tho truo and perfect windfall which all men, it is said, expect in thoir hearts, but which so rarely occurs to any one. London Spec tator. Shutting On n Brother. "I think I did a protty neat thing just beforo I left homo," said Rodorick Cher rill, a Chicago traveling man, in tho Lindell yestordav. "I'vo got n young brother, and ho is just tho dearest littlo chap in tho world. His only fault is that whon I am homo ho is continually 'touching1, mo, and it costs mo considera ble in the courso of a year. Won, Satur day night ho camo with his usual request a, quarter. 'Now, Fred,' said I, 'hero s a half dollar, and your futuro success as a solicitor of alms dopends upon tho way you uso this money,' "Tho boy took it with a sort of mysti fied air, and bidding mo goodby loft. Now, horo is my scheme Tho 'half 1 gave him was one of tho World's fair souvenir half dollars. If ho keeps it (as ho ought to), ho will always havo monoy and novcr need any, If he doesn't keep a valuablo coin liko that (as ho surely won't), why, ho never deserves to havo anothor cent, and I quit winner both wavs." St. Louis GloboiDemocrnt. Dr. Powell Reeves & Co., The Old Reliable Specialists, lte of New York Hospital. Graduate with High Ilonon. Twenty years' experience m I'rofeuor, Lecturer. Author and Specialist In Chroulo Diseases, Catarrh, Bronchitis, Cough and Ditfioultyoi Breathing Successful ly treated withspeclf lo romedioB thoroughly tested and proved by tne OLD DOCTOR Who la one of nature's noblemen, thoroughly devoted to his profession and oyer ready to help tho afQlotod. IERYQUS DEBIUTI &!?. MJffi middle-aged men. The awlul effect or early in discretion, producing weakness, IjOBT MAN HOOD, nignt emissions, exhausting drains, bosblulness, loss of energy, weakness of both body and brain, unfitting one for study, buslncM and marriage, treatod with never falling success. Get cured and be a man. BLOOD AID SKI JlirWSiWMSE sypbllltio taint, rheumatism, eruptions, eta, of all kinds, blood poison from any cause whatever, cured promptly, leaving the system pore and healthful. KIDNEY AMD URIIARI "WS&St der, sediment In urine, brick dust or white: pain while urinating, frequency of; llrlght'a disease and all dUeaseaof the bladder of both sexes. tnroat, lungs, iiver.ayspepsia, inai VAIAHJIU gestlon, and all diseases affecting tsuon, ana an aiseasa anccting umacb, etc.! diarrhoea, dseutery, me boweis, iwjuiaco, eic.j uiarrnues, urseuiery, etc. Troubles of this character relieved at once; cures etfteud as soon as nosslble. DBIV1TB dlaee. gleet, gonorrhoea, trphllb, rHUAlu hydrocele, farloeele. tenderness, swellings, weakness of organs, and piles, fistula, rupture, quickly cured without any pala or ! Hit Ion from buunea. WDtTft your troubles If living away from tbo HUB elty. Thousands cured at home by correspondence and raedlajue aeat seeur from observation. Kueiote W cunts In stamp for book on &UU11 BtrM. Address, M, POWELL REEVES I CO., Vif Uaid at 2 Cp'i St, Stl Both Sides of theuestfoin 3B$f Sides of the should !be looked Into. the Intelligent smoker uses BLACKWELL'S BULL DURHAM SjVIOKING TOBACCO. 3LAC KWELL'S DURHAM TOBACCO CO., Durham. N. C. i AJLJtoads Load to Chicago. TI .CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE ft ST. PADL RT LEADSTHEVAN. . Excursion pates to tlio World's Fair. Ed., C. Cross, ..JSKBttk Uco Meats. 1 TiliM UKSKlkC 1SSTABLISHED 1870. WILLIAM NlLES Los Angeles, California. AND EXPORTERS OF CIvKAN. If you would be clean and have youjrdotj. done up in the neatest and dressiest manner, tako them to the SALEM STEAM LAUNDRY whero all vorl$ is dono by white labor and in tho most prompt manner. A. B. SMITH, Dealer in- Sand, Gravel, Wood, Sewer Pipe anj, Tiling- GENERAL, CONTRACTOR, Street Work, Sewering, Excavating, etc, ,A.ll work promptly dono. 123 BTATB BT., - BALEM, OREGON. SASH AND DOOR FACTORY, Front Street, Salem, Oregon. Tho beat class of work in our lino at pricos to competo with the lowest. Only tho best material used. H. F. BROBR, -Proprietor DEPOT SASH AND DOOR FACTORY. All house-flnliibliiK material made to order at tbo lowest Portland prices, Bco tin before you buy, O. N. CHURCHILL. T. B. BURROUGHS cirunqniLii & burroughs. Tinners, Plumbers, Gas and Steam Fitters; SHEET METAL WORKERS. AfcenU for the celebrated economic foroe ud lift pump, 100 Cbeo.eket Btreet. F. T. HART, 247 COMMERCIAL BTRM8T, And when this Is done Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Fresh, Salt and Smoked Bf eats, of allHlads OS Court and 110 State Streets, INCORPORATED 1891. & CO., FINE CATTLE, HOGS,; fOULTRY. Berkshire k Poland-China Pks a Specialty. Fancy Poultry, All Varieties. Egg for Hutching. Incubators, Nllca Paclflo Coast Poultry and Btock, llustra ted, 60 ceutg by mall. B-BEND FOR OIRqiJLA,RH. COLOJN.UL J. UL.MSTJSD, Liberty 3.treot. of the- LEADING MEROHAJSfl TAILOR. -! M up and far away tbere wm a rafMtosa priw)mllf toa mi tern 4j Mfw wcmW r WW VY "r '- ","ii. r" r-7ry vt r?!Vt"-t"''!Tf' e- icrr i if" ;, r v"f-"T- F V. sfc, "nil'' 1 ' f.'ii' ' '.'! tMtm lVvO,. .5