Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 10, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 April 1888 — Page 2

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THE INDIANA STATE ATE SEXTIXJ3L; -WEDNESDAY -MORNING, APRIL 11, 1888-

COMFOHT TO GOD'S PEOPLE.

A GREAT SERMON BY SPURGEON. Th9 Sanctuary a Tlace of Kefnje, Worship . and Mercy The Colttue of the World avu Occasion for Oosl's Teuderuea Iii Loving Kindness. "Therefore say, Th as saith the Lord God; Although I hare cast them far oH' among the heathen, and although 1 have scattered them among the countries, yet ill 1 be to t hem as a little sanctuary la tb countries where they shall come." ttL xi:l&. The text begins with "therefore." There was a reason for lion's speaking in this ni'. It is profitable to trace the why and the wherefore of the gracious words of the Lord. The way by which a promise comes usually shines' with a trail of light.- Upon reading the connection we observe that those w ho had been carried captive were insulted by those who tarried at Jerusalem. They "spoke in a very cruel - manner to those with whom they should have sympathized. How often do prosperous brothers look with scorn on the unfortunate I Many a time the cruel word of man Las been the cause of a tender word from (Jod. Because of the unkindness of tht-; people, therefore God, in loving kindness, addn.-fc.sed in words of tender grace those whom they despised. As in our Saviour's days the opposition of the l'hariees acted ujnjn the Savior like a Fteel to the tlint, s;iid fetched bright sparks of truth out of Iliiu, bo the wickedness of man has often been the cause why the grace of Jod lias been ruore fully revealed. Offences, therefore, will come. But why should we fret unduly under this trial when we perceive that out of opiosition to the cause oi God occasions arise for the grandest displays of God's love and power? If from the showers we gain our harvests, we will not mourn when the heavens gather blackness and the rain pours down. Now to proceed at once to our text, seeing 1. Where God's people may be. First, they may be under chastisement. If you will remember, in the Book of Deuteronomy, God threatened Israel that if they, as a nation, sinned against Him, they should be rattered among the nations and cast far off among tho heathen. Many a time thev so sinned. The Lord was slow to fu ltilf His utmost threatening1, but put forth His utmost patience, till there was no more room tor long-suffering. At last the threatened chastisement fell upon them, and fierce nations carried them away in bonds to the tar-on" lands of their dread. They were not utterly destroyed; their Wing scattered among the people showed that they still existed. Though they were scattered and peeled, yet they were a people, even as at this day. The "instructed among them knew that their being in exile was tlie fruit of the transgressions of their fathers and the remit of their own offenses against God. And yet, though they were under chastisement, God loved them, and had a choice word for them. JJelovcd, you and I may lie under the rod of God," and wo may smart sorely because of our iniquities, even as David did ; and yet we may be the children of God tovrani whom He has thoughts of grace. "We may be in great spiritual darkness, nd may be compelled to confess that our own sins have procured this unto ourselves. And yet, lor all that, the Lord mar have sent the chastisement in love, and in nothing else but love; and He may intend by it, not our destruction, but the destruction of the Lesh ; not our rejection, but our refining; not our curse, but our cleansing. Let us take comfort, seeing that God has a word to say to His mourners and to His afillcted, and that word in th; text is as "yet" which serves to show that there is a clear limit to Hi anger. But, secondly, win reever they are, whether they are und.rr chastisemt nt or not, thev are whore tho Ijrd has put them. The Lord's hand was in their banishment and dispersion; Jehovah himself inflicted the chastisement for sin. You say to me, "Wly, it was Nebuchadnezzar who carried them away ; the BabyIniar,8 and the Chaldeans tool; them cap-!-." Yes, I know it was so; but t lit .'-ord regards these as instrumenta ii His Ju'iirJ, and he says "I have done it," just Jub when the Chal leans and the '..: eans had swept away his property, and lib children bad "been distrjyed thtoogh the agency of satan, yet said, Tlif Lord gave and the Lord hath tskeu awaj.' The Ioid was truly in tlie. taking away as He was in the giving. It is well io look beyond all second causes and instrumentalities. Do not get aujry w ith those who are the nearer agents, but look to the first cause Note next that the people of God iny dwell in places of great discomfort. The Jews were a home-lovinz people who settled each one upon his own patch of rround, and sat down under his vine and figtree, none making him afraid. Their Lord had driven them into a foreign country, where everything was different from their ways where all the customs of the people were strange and singular. They would be mark'd and despised peonle, nobody would fraternize with them, but all would pass them by in scorn. It must nave been a rcat discomfort to God's people to dwell among idolaters, and to be forced to witness obscene rites and revolting practices. God's own faTored ones in these days may be living where they are as much out of place as lamb among wovles or doves among hawks. Do not imagine that God makes a nest of down for all His eagles. Whv, they would never take to flying if He did not put thorns under them and stir up . their nest that they may take to their wings and learn the heavenward flight to which they are predestinated! And so be often puts us where we are very uncomfortable. Some of God's servants feel this in a very peculiar manner, for their so als are among lions and they dwell among those whose tongues are set on fire of bell. We are not kept apart from the wicked bv high walls or guards of heavenly soldiery. Even our ljrd did not pray that we should be t.iken out of tlie world. Grace builds neither monasteries nor nunneries. Our education lor eternity may necessitate tribulation, and UToavVment frOIJl visible comforts. To be weaned from all reliance outward means may lo for our Rood, that we may lie driven in upon the Lord, and made to know that lie is all in all. Worse still, the Lord's chosen may be under oppression through surrounding ungodliness and sin. Is it not still true of u, as well as of our Savior, "Out of Kgvpt have I called my son?" L"xject stilf to meet with opposition and oppression w hile you ere passing to tho land where the need shall sxwws the heritage. Are you in dillicuit places? Be not dismayed, for this way runs the road to glory.' high not for the dove's wing to hurry "to your rest, f ut take the apjmintcd path ; the footstep of the lyjrd are there. 2. I hasten at oner into the sweet part of tbe subject, which consists of what God will be to His people when they g t into these circumstances. "Yet will 1 be to them as a little sanctuary in the countries where they shall come." Brethren, the great sanctuary stood on ML Zion, "Ix-autiful for situation, the joy of the whole earth." That glorious place which Solomon had builded wa the shrine to which the Hebrew turned his eyi; he prayed with his window open toward JeniMalem. Alas! when the tribes w re carriM away c aptive, they could not carry the holy and beautiful house with them; neither could tlity set up iu like within

the brazen gates of the haughty city. "Now," says tin Lord God in inrinite condescension, "I will be a'traveling temple to them. I will be as a little sanctuary to each one of them. They shall carry "my temple about with them. ; Wherever they are, I will be, as it were, a holy place to them." In using the word "little," the gracious God would seem to say, "I will condescend to them, and I will be as they are. I will bow down to their littleness, and I will beto each little one of them a little sanctuary." A sanctuary was a place of refuge. You know how Joab fled to the horns of the altar to escape from Solomon's armed men ; he ran to the temple, hoping to find sanctuary there. In past ages, churches and abbevs and altars have been used as places of" sanctuary to which men have tied when in danger of their lives. Take that sense and couple it with the cities of refuge which were set up throughout all Israel, to which the man who killed another by misadventure might flee to hide himself from the man-slayer. Now, beloved fellow-believer, wherever you are," wherever you dwell, God will be to you a constant place of refuge. You shall flee from sin to God in Christ Jesus. Next, a sanctuary signifies also a place of worship. - It is a place- where the divine presence is peculiarly manifested a holy place. It usually means a place where ?od dwells, a place where God has promised to meet with his people, a place of acceptance where prayers and praises and ollerings come up with acceptance to His altar. .Now, notiee, God says to His people when they are far away from the temple and Jerusalem, "I will be to them as a little sanctuary." Whenever you go to sea, God in your cabin shall be to you a little sanctuary. When you travel by railway, the carriage shall, through the Lord's presence, be a little sanctuary Now, go a little further. Our God is to us a place of stillness. What repose one might enjoy who could dwell in the secret place of the Most High ! How one sighs lor stillness! Those who live in the wear and tear of city lite and it is an awful wear and tear might well pav down untold gold to be still for awhile. What would we not give for quiet, absolute quiet, when everything should be still, and the whirling wheels of care should cease to revolve lor at least a little while? I sometimes propose to myself to wait upon God and be still. AlasI There is the bell! Who is this? Somebody who will chatter for a quarter of an hour about nothing. Well, that intruder has gone; let us pray. We are on our knees. What is this? A telegram! One is halffrightened at the very sight of it; it is opened, and it calls you away to matters which are the reverse of quieting. Where is stillness to be had ? The only prescription I can give to them is this promise: "I will be to them as a little sanctuary." The sanctuary was a plate of mercy. God was not there in power to destroy, nor in subtle wisdom to discover folly; he was there in mercy, waiting to forgive. When rncn have no mercy on you, go to God. When you have no mercy on yourself and sometimes you have not run away to God. Draw near to hira and he will be to you as a little sanctuary. Go a stage further. That sanctuary was a place of great holiness. It was the holiest place that could be. The world is an unholy place, and at times it is most grievously "so. You mix up with people who defile you; how can you help it; Your daily business calls you to see and hear many things which are defiling. When these things are more than ordinarily glaring, you say to yourself, "Ofora lodge in some vast wilderness, that I rni.ht get away from the very sight of men !" Here is the promise ; the text means this "1 will be to them as a little sanctuary a little holy of holies." Lastly, God will be to us a place of communion and of revelation. In the holy place was the ark: God is to us the ark of the covenant. He baa entered into covenant with man, toward us. He has a throne of grace, and there He meets us, even in Christ Jesus, who is our propitiation. O brethren, if you want anything, if you want everything, go to God "for it! Ho will bo to you as a little sanctuary: that is to say, lie will bring to vou everything which was inside that holy place. Ii, at this time, vou have lost" many of the comforts of this lif. and seem bereaved of friends, then find .God in your "little sanctuary." Go home to your chamber with holy faith and humble love, and He will be all in all to you. The Lord has ways of weaning us "from the visible andthe tangible.and bringing us to live upon the invisible and the real, in order to prepare us for the, next stage, t.'iat better life, that higher place, where we shall really deal with the eternal things only. God blows out our candles and makes us find our light in Him, to prepare us for that place in which they need no candle, for the glory of God is their light; and where the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple thereof. Oh that God would gradually lilt us above all the outward, above all the visible, and briiifj us more and more into the inward and unseen! For Christ's sake, we ask it. Amen! THE RELIGIOUS WORLD.

The terra "Roman catholic" was not formally adopted until the council of Trent. The episcopal church of Scotland claims a membership of nearly 70,0A with -JO churches, 5 clergymen and seven bishops. The fact that the number of converts in China has more than doubled within ten years, and now exceeds 3O,0UO, is proof that Christian work is eminently successful there, and should act as a stimulus to more abuudaat labors. The (Jeeiiieut, Ziih Francisco. To the Israelites in Germany the life of Emperor Frederick HI is of far greater momcut than was the death of Kaiser William. German anti-semitism is the stain on the escutcheon of the latter, which he could hare ijed out with a word of his mouth. He did not do it, however. The Jf wish Voice. When lh methodist church ceases to make its power felt against the more popular and reductive forms of sin. it will no longer be denounced us narrow, illiberal ami retrogressive. And when that time comes another ecclesiastical corpse will he ready for burial. Christian A'lrucate (Mt(holül), Siitltfille. Tfie report of the -tnistion of Our Lady of Pary lor the protection of iunuigrant girls at Castle Garden, which has just been Issued, hi that du rim; mat riul ö,'5tti girls were car.'d for, besides a large number of men. women ml children, who were maintained until iht-ir friend came. H'omau's ,Wigtixine The receipts of our missionary treasurer, exelusive of lepcies and rnt'cial?, from &jt. I to Feb. 1, were f'.slxVI oil. For the käme pciiod of the lat-t liseui jfr the -receipt were f!,;5'A A g;iiuof flö,4.;i W ii encouraging, and if the proportion of increase shall continue it will 1 very grvtifriu. 'J'he Living Church .ISCtlJMlf.) The congrecrational publisldn? tocictyjeut its firt iiiisMoiiMi ies intoihe iicld in January, 1SSJ. Jitiriii' the four yearn previous to jvi the net pun iti congregational fcumlay school ;ts, IU,. fc.17. During the four vtars following 1.N33 (he net gain wu 07,00-1. Poring the six months from .May 1, 117. the minion. iri- of the society planted '.Ml iitiiuy (N-hools and assisted others to plant f-i fc li'ioU. The total enrollment of new mcmher pithcrcd in six months was oit-r 11,000. 'I be society durinvr the same lime aided by grants of literaturr l,tJki Sunday schools. Would it not sound well lo (he American people to hare it said that in the United Stales of America, in ihe year 1M, our mi-i.iiaries were imprisoned for reading tlie IJildetoa heathen tribe of Indians who lived remote from civilization, the crime of it (ein? that it was read in Ihe only language which they could understand. 7 he A merit an MUnini try. The late Dr. W. II. I'.yder of Chicago bequeathed fJ-VOO lo the imi verxu'.i-t convention of Chicago; fl'UM to Ixnnbard university, i.desbiir;r, I51.;4lO,0) to St. Paul' church, Chicago ;1(,(X) to tlie old people's home: $I0,(M) to tlie woman's hospital ; 10,000 to the Chit bgo free library j to the free moral lecturehip; 1D,"J00 to Ihe Illinois tiniveralit convention, and !K',"0 to iL uuiversulist society, Province town, liana.

ELECTRICITY OR THE ROPE?

DR. HAMMOND PREFERS HANGING. 'ew Yorli Physicians on the Best Method - of Inflicting Capital -Punishment The Oucttlon Debated (n the Legislature at Albauy. The proposed employment of some more humane agent than the rope in the infliction of capital punishment, to whien Tue Sunday Sentinel has devoted considerable space, continues to attract attention all over the country. In the New York legislature the bill substituting electricity for the gallows, which was proposed by the commission of which Klbridge T. Gerry was chairman, is still pending. A recent debate on the measure in the assembly is thus described in an Albany telegram to the .New York 1'rcst: In the assembly chamber to-night there was a strange anJ memorable conlroTersy. The various shades of religions opinion were shed u pun it, and it took Tarring thicfcneni of intelligence as various minds grirpeil or fell short of the subject. Tbe assembly was considering, as a special order, the lull which will, if passed, bubstittite electricity for the jrallurs as tbe means of indicting capital punishDient, Youn, hut gray-hatred Mr. Saxton, as chairman of the judiciary committee, had reported the bill, and to-night he stimd upon the tioor a t lie champion of an advance step in civilization. Bv his side sat tlbriilge T. Gerry, who is at the head oi the commission that for t wo years has been studying all methods of capital pmishnienl, and which had at lust prepared the bill which commanded the closest attention of members and scctators. Judge tiruen of Orange, could not Indorse the provision that surrendered the murderer b dy lo a hospital or a college for dissection, lie moved lo strikeout that provision, and .Mr. ' Sax ton accepted the amendment. Then arose ihhy Mr. Lontfh-y of Kins county, with a skull capon his heal and premature tears of sympathy wiih his own words welting his lower eyelids. "I more to amend," he naid, "that friends "or relatives may rtdaiia tue body of the executed man." "One word," put in Mr. S.ixton. "When a man by his crime forfeits his life to the state, tlie Male has the undoubted ruht to di-o-c of the murderer's corpse aj public policy may direct. What comfort c:;n Iks n Horded tboe who had lored tlie criminal by viewing tho remains which in lite had tailed ot self rcscct, and which iu deat!i bears the stamp of the stale's righteous desecration "iu t hicao the bodies of executed criminals were exposed to iclatives and the public, and peojile oi that city were brought very close to an insiirrec' ion and a revolution. 1'uMic policy would hare been better served had the provisions oi tili bill been ojierative there." Mr. Lousier then in pathetic tones and tearful iutonations described the tender scenes of fathers, mothers and siMt rs over the forms of their dead in peace, and esjecially when the war was soiii on. Mr. axtoii, who was a union soldier, witi his face as white as his hair, aroo and with quivering vou-e, a.skcd: "1m'S the p-Dtleman mean to compare the sacred sorrow of the dead soldier wnb the pa.s.-i.n of regret over thejeorpse of an executed murderer?" Mr. Longley said he did not, but urged that the entimeiit of human love aud tcudcruess was involved in each ca-e. Assemblyman Uoesch of New York urged that where relatives claimed the remains the stale had no ritiht to retain them; that property existed in human liodies, and, besides, the bill took away the right of burial in consecrated ground. - "Consecrated ground."' exclaimed Saxton. "Is the plea here made that hardship follows retention of a crlniiiial corp-M! from consecrated ground? The criminal who in life woold not respect the tlesh protected by the law he broke, may not 1b death have demanded for it that which hiuielf had forfeited." "But," khouted Mr. Uoesch. "was not the body of Christ stamped with tbe law's desecration, and was it not attorded decent burial?" Saxton was a moment silent, and then, in reverent tone, replied: "I will not stand here to answer a question, based upon the coupling of the Holy javior's memory with that of men execute i by the state of New York lor murder." A hul followed, and Mr. KoescU subsided. The bill progressed after Mr. Saxton had accepted amendments providing tbe bodies of executed murderers may be claimed by relatives, that rtligiois services may be privately had In the prisou and liiut dissection by colleges .shall not be had. Dr. Willinm A. Hammond, ex-surgeon general of the army, is in favor of hanging, and so are many eminent physicians in New York. At a recent meeting of the society of medical jurisprudence arid state medicine in that city, Dr. Hammond read a paper on the "Superiority of Hanging as a Method of Execution." Dr. Hammond began with a history of the methods of execution from the "earliest times, showing that the ancient Jews tied a rope around the criminal's neck, which was pulled ft by Ftrong men until strangulation resulted"; the Turks, Persians and Egyptians used the bowstring, while the Spaniards formerly strangled their criminals with a rope, but later substituted a steel band armed with a sharp f oint that pierced the medulla oblongata, n England the criminal was pushed oil' a ladder or placed in a wagon, which was moved from under hiin after the rope had been adjusted. All these methods were designed simply for strangulation, and the etiort to bring about a dislocation of the neck, a method largely practiced in this country, was of modern origin. It was a mistake that the dislocation of the neck lessend the agony. "Death is produced just as certainly!" continued the doctor, "by hanging without breaking the neck, and the custom of jerking the subject into the air bv means of a heavy weight is apt to result in dislocating the spinal column. Originally hanging was designed for strangulation only, and this death, when the rop is projieriv adjusted, is absolutely painless. It is onlv on account of the clumsiness and unskillfulncss of the executioner that we are called upon to witness ami to read of so many horrible scenes at executions. A man in England who was known as 'Halfhanged Smith,' because he was pardoned alter he had been swinging in the air for half ft minute or so, said tliat he felt no pain, and cursed those who revived him tor not allowing him to die a painless death. Physicians who had made experiments notably Dr. Graham Hammond-diad found that the sensations were first a preat weight on the limbs, then a tingling all over the body, a loud roaring in the ears, Hashes of brilliant li.edit before the eyes and sounds of ravishing music. At "no time wr.3 there any sense of positive pain. The contortions of the face that are witnessed at executions where a cap 'm not drawn over it, and the convulsions of the limbs and the trunk, are not evidences of pain. They are the same symptoms as those exhibited by an epileptic no more, no less. They are not evidences of sensibility. The method of hanging known in this country as 'lynching' is the proper one. Lynchers never fail. Sometimes they nhoot bullet holes into the dangling bady. but that is not a necessary part of the ceremony. Their victim is thrown upon tlie ground, a rope adjusted around hii neck, and then Ftrong hands haul him up to the limb of a tree and the thing is done. 'Jx'pl executioners might take a lewon' from the lynchers. The criminal should be placed in a, chair, the roK carefully and accurately placed around bis neck, and then he should bo deliberately hauled np-by means of a pulley. lie would then die w ithin seven or eight minutes and absolutely without pain.", Dr. Hammond after quoting from numerous medical works in proof of his assertion that hanging is painless, dissected tho rejoi t of the committee recommending the use of electricity, and pronounced the auirunient used in it the weakest he had ever M'cn in an oflicial paper. Hanging, be said, was certain mm well ns merciful, and the stigma attaching to it was a matter of history; Dr. Nathan E. Drill did not agree with Dr. Hammond as to tho painlessness of banging, claiming that the pressure of the ropecouid not cause sullicicnt congestion of the brain to deaden sensibility. Dr. Hammond o He red to prove hi assertion by a demonstrationonthecarotldaitery of the gentleman whodixputcd its accuracy. Dr. llrill instantly agreed to this proj osition, and the extraordinary jwene of n personal demonstration of a medical fact was witnessed by the ' members of the socuty. Dr. "Drill, who is a young man of rather more than the average height, placed himself in front of the professor, and the latter, turning vp his sleeves to give his orui free play, placed a thumb under the

angle of the jaw on cither side and began to press heavily inward. Dr. Drill stood the test with wonderful stoicism, but those who stood near enough to watch him closely saw that his eyes bulged out considerably, and that his face was very pale. A slight gurgle that seemed to come from Dr. Drill's throat' was heard," and Prof. Hammond removed his thumbs. His opponent had not been rendered insensible, for be nt once protested that the pressure had not in the least affected him. After the miding of Dr. Hammond's aper there was a discussion, in which Dr. iiill, Drs. E. G. Spitzka, Wood, Quimby and Irwin - joined.' Dr. Brill knew of nothing more humane than instantaneous death. If electricity could be scientiiieallv applied it would be very. rapid and efiicaclous, but he was in. favör of the guillotine. Its action was instantaneous and as near absolute painlessness as anything that had ever been devised. Dr. Irwin said that the whole discussion reminded him of '"Much Ado 'About Nothing." He objected to the words ''humane" and "merciful" as applied to the execution of malefactors. He thought it might be necessary at times to devise new means of torturing" criminals. Dr. Quimby held that hanging was as painless a mode of execution as could be devised. If it were possible he would like to see all murderers compelled to work for the remainder of their lives for the support of the families of their victim1?. " ' '. Mr. C. II. Ketchell held that no punishment could be devised that would reduce crime, but was opposed to public executions, which had a tendency to demoralize the witnesses. A resolution protesting against the substitution of electricity tor - hanging was adopted, Dr. Drill casting the only negative voti THE BRIDE OF JESUS. Something About Ihe Strance. Sect Whose Kii Lives Near Kockford, Illinois. The Dcekmanite sect was founded in 1S77 by a 'woman calling' hr-rseif Pma Beekman, says a Bockford (111.) special to t he Chicago TrUnuw. he was a native ot Maine, and after having married and reared a family of children, it was then in her mature age that she astonished the poople in litis region by claiming to be the bride of Jesus Christ. This was not at all pleasing to her husband, and much trouble ensued. Becoming more and more impressed with her fanatical notions, she traveled about the country and gave readings and lectures. In this manner she secured a large number of converts. Societies of iJeekmanites were funned in Chicago, Alpena, Mich., Plumb Biver, Kansas Citv, St. Charles, Bucha Vista, Kingston, Mich., Paw Paw, 111., and Minneapolis. The members all believed that their leader was the wife of Christ, notwithstanding she had a living husband. Since her death in 1SS3 they believe that she has returned to them" in spirit and conducts the meetings which they hold. Some agitation alwut this sect is stirred up over the pubUcation of a letter here, in which it is stated that the king of the Beekmanites, George Schweinfurth, went to Kentuck)' a short time ago and held meetings, in which he induced two respectable married women and members of the church to leave their husbands and come to this city and join the sect. The king says this is not 6o; that the women came to see him, but of their own free will and accgrd, and .returned home this week, but not until at-;r this newspaper agitation was started. Schweinfurth is of German extraction. He is of thirty-live years of age, was born in Marion, ()., ande'ducated at Albion college and the Northwestern university; has a pleasant and engaging address."is about live feet four inches in height, with liery red hair ah'd 'beard, and light gray eyes. When seen by a reporter he was neatly attired in a gray checked cutaway coat. lie readily stated his belief to the intervjewer, and remaaked: "The paters have never used me. fairly. They have lied about me and our sect persistently and knowingly, and I don't see that there is any use of talking to them." Mr. Schweinfurth was a methodM minister in Alpena countv, Michigan, in 187S, leing then twenty lour years old. lie was not a full-fledged minister, but was on tiial, and had preached two years. Mrs. Heekman went therf, he heard of her belief, saw her. and became a follower of her. He lived in Chicago for two years and then moved to. Byron, and has since lived in that vicinity. The sect claim that rdii. Beekman .was the purest and best woman who ever lived. She was absolutely pure and holy. Schweinfurth canre bore several years ago and was as poor as Job's turkey. A few days ago the Irish farmer Wahlon, who is a strong believer in this strange religion, deeded property to the king valued at SKVXH- The transfer Has made legally and filed for reeord here.1 Other developments arc soon expected. lie Fonnd a I.lttle. Detroit Free P'ess. "Urn! Yes! Singular!" lie saiM rs he stood at the cashier's desk in the rcstaura.1t and felt in his pockets. ' "I'.een robbed, I suppose?"' sneered tha cashier. "Perhaps. " Let's sec! Did I change my pantaloons?" "Oh, ofcosrst!" "I guess I did, and left all my nrmey in the other pair." "Say, tint's too old to go down here, mister! I want t0 cents!" "Yes yes, but, yon see " "I see a dea jlieat. who'll get a jpod kicking if he doesn't hand over the cash! "Mercy! but you dou't take me for a deadbeat, I hope?" "Sixtv et UN! :i "P.ut I've left my money " ' 1 "Sixty cents or you get the bounce ! "I'll go out and borrow it." "Oli.no! llnnd it over, or the kicker will take charge of you!" "lAt'ssec! Dirt I change my clothes! Yes, I did. But "No huts fthottt it! I Tt-nnt CO rents!" "P.ut 1 must lyive slipiM-d tome money in my hind pocket. Ahl so 1 did, an J here it M." And he lihed up a great wnd, tossed the cashier a $Tn bill, and while waiting for his clirar,re shook hands with two hankers, and drew his check for f5,otx) to settle a real estate transaction: The cashier is still in bed, und the doctor say j it is a very serious case. Onr of Tiiliiinj'r'i Storl-. (New York Tribune. Tr. Ta!mnje told this story nt Louisville, Ky., the other lay: "Once there were a nninherof tuen, solemn find sedate, and mi old woman nt n meeting. The first ninn got tip. Hid Mid: Oh! yr; I :u in n chip n:tilinir utraiuht lo hoflven, ii t my l.ai k in sailing hint, i in poing nt the rate of sovenlecn knots un hour, und PH on he tienr the fdiore.' The second, to nightly overcome the former prcilVsuor, s:ud: 'Yes, I'm sailing home; my bliin is sail

ing forty kinds mi hoar, and I'll soon le near j lhef.hor.' The old lady listened cnrefnlly at j every word, mid when the men had pictured j tin ir religion on their ships, tdie pot up nnd i s:iid: 'Well, you nil nre get tin' 'long mighty fit l. I hnve been n goin' to heaven for seventy ' Vrnr. nnil I've ulked nil the w:iv. If 1 it! i there nt nil I'll walk the rM of the - way, and nil I've gut lo Siiy to yon nu n is ilmt if ym got lo goin'iiMK Ii faster you'll bust your Idlers, mid you tton't fclt there tall.' " A 'otly IMimer. (Albany Expf-v One f the most tmiiie of the mnny private dinners given this scnsoii t IVlmouiiVs took pliice lied week. On the plate of cucli guest and uttached to Ihe iuenn was hesutiltil ring with an emerald stone set in diataoiid. The ring cot $1,000, und. ns there were eiht guests, the menus, with llieir novel Mtiteliments, must hiive cost over einht ihotisnnd dollars. The host was (ieorge Law, a hlrcel milwrtv mngnitte mid several times a iiiiilioiiai.f. 'flie jnieols nt this dinner uere not so (rrenilr surprised, for Mr. luvt is known to spend considembl.. overl00,(Kia year on Jewelry. Very nearly nil of this he distributes urouud timoiitf Lis acquaintances. '

norE rou CONSUMPTIVES t "A New Theory 'of the Dread Disease Which seeros'Very Sensible. In fifty per cent, of the cases, consumption is only the symptom of some other disease! . The disease. In such enscs, cansotbe cured until the cause, whatever it is, is removed. Jloie thin' half the victims of consumption have albumen in the water. "What does this indicate?" Albumen cannot appear in whit escapes Irom the body, if the organs which take the water Trcm .he blood are healthy. WTe drink water in lanre quantities every day. This water goes through the body and washes away the waste matter and dieay of the system, and takes it to the. kidneys. If these organs are healthy, thisvaste involution in the water is remoed by them. If out, the natural action is rrwrW, and, instead of removing Ihj wa-te, that poisonous fluff remains huthe blood, but the real life-giving element or the albumen escapes. Fancy the cifect ! This uric acid waste is a rank poison, and attacks the weakest organ first. The Brump'.on Hos

pital of London, England, shows in its reports that oer ö'i per cent, of the victim of consumption are rei.l.y viefms of kidney diseae, the lung trouble, Icing shown by the presence of alhumcn in the Liool, to be but the iniicalion of kidney deiangemeni. The rel cause of pulmonary troubles being authoritatively shown to be faulty, even though unsuspected action of "the kidneys, exp'a'ns why, in order to master thedieaded runsumption, one must rid the blood of the uric acid irritant, which iatlatnes and barns up the li ng substance. For th's purpose, there is nothing equal to that great speciiic, Warner's safe cure. This remedy has won the favor of medical men all over the world, purely on its "inerits. We have no doubt that if the Uiiin 'vs are kept in nan.nl action, 'onsumpuon and a great many other diseases, cause I by uric acid, will not only - be cured, but widbe prevented. . .1. W. Westlake, of Ml. Vernon, Ohio, -had a sister residing in Michigan who wa-thought surely to be going with con- . sumption. She took ten bottles of Warner's sale cure, which he sent her. and he says: "That was the last 1 heard of her consumption." Thousands of such casc are developed every day Dip your finger in acid everyday, and it soon festers and is destroyed. Send acid-poisoned blood through the lungs every second and they soon give w ay. Tliis, then, is the condition of things that always precedes consumption: First, weakened kidneys; second, retained uricac.d, poisoning the Hood; the development of disease in the lungs by the irritant acids passing throu h them. Then there is a little couh in the morning; soon, thick, yellow mat ris spit up, followed by loss of flesh and streng h with dreadful night sweats; and when the patient goes to his school physician for help he is put on cod liver oil, which his stomnch, weakened a'so by uric acid in. the blood,- cannot dige-t. B "cause there is no pain present in the kidneys, the patient docs not think tl ey are affected, but the kidney acid is doing its work every nvnute, every hour, day and night, and by and by the disease of the lungs has advanced until pus is developed, then comes hemorrhages, and ht last Ihe glassy stare of the eyes, which rlcnote that the end is near A post-mortem examination of such cases bhows that the terrible uric acid bss completely destroyed the substance of the lung. ' It is impossible to cure lung diseases, when the blood is poisoi.e, I with uric acid. A WILL AND A CONFESSION. A Sad Story Told in n Mining Camp aud Its Sensational Sequel. Globe-Democrat. Ne t many years no a group of Invalids and Sambiers were seated about an evening fin in the otlice of a Colorado hotel. The institution was in the center of a region where nature had launched her .ifts. Healing springs and invigorating mountain breezes attracted invalids from every quarter, and the proprielor of the sanitarium was reported a rich inrin. lie hud been in that country for thirty years. He was a silent, uncommunicative man, not morose or sullen, but simply tincoiiiiiiuiiicative. He never spoke of hi family or of "the states,' and were it not that he was a man of evident refinement and education, he would have passed as one 1mih in ihe life-giving valley, which he, above nil men, had developed, for anything he would ever say of the world outside ot its pine-fringed conti ties. Oa this particular night an old man in the group told, with the simple pathos of an unlettered mind, the story of the great grief of his life. He had gone to California in 49, leaving a wife and child behind him. He prospered iu the land of the Argonauts, and kept up a regular communication with his family, sending them suflicicnt sums from time to time to keep the i ii in comfort, but saying nothing ahoilt the "pile" he would have within a year or so. lie wanted to surprise the folks at home with his good fortune. At last he had accumulated ?1 u.t KMl, und the longing came over him to go home. His dust was converted into ten crisp bank notes and he started homeward. "You see, hoys, I didn't rig up in new togs, or anything like thnt. A icllow likes to go back home in his old camp togs, and knock around a few days, letting on as though he had come home broke, nnd then when every one has about nmdc up their minds that you never were any good anyhow, spring your fortune on them, aiid give them the laugh that had been giving it to you. 1 made the trip overland all right, and was on the railroad train within 3u0 miles of my wife and baby, when 1 dozed oir for a few minutes. When I awoke I haif been rohbed of niv ile. I always was a d d fool about , telling uiy business to stringers, and there wasn't a man ou the ear that didn't know thnt I was a miner going home with n fortune. When I awoke and found that I had been robbed I gave tho alarm. No one had left the traiui. There was great excitement, and one man proMsed that everybody in the car be searched. No one objected, aud'the conductor and myself went through every man on the our, and examined ercry vliseand piece of baggage in.it. . I fell jut n though my heart would break, not for tnywlf I was used t; hard luck but for my wife noil little gal. I couldn't go home and face tlii'iu, so I got otl'at the next ciiy, und tlie nest day I wasöil on my way for t lie coast lo begin nil over ac.iin. I was jut getting un my leel once more when I got a letter one day with a black bonier. My little pi hail been taken sick with typhoid fever and died, und ttvod.ivs later tliev laid hrr mother away wi'.li her. That setlied it. I nave been no good iiice( nnd I am only waiting (lie lime nhcti I can join the in lip there if I can ye I in." The silent partner of the snnit.iriiim had listened to lid', sad story iih Lis face buried in his h.'iids n common attitude with him. When l lie old on n bad liuislied the proprietor left the room abruptly. The group noticed that he was deadly pale, nod one of iheui remarked thai it appeared as though Jim had been taken bad. Tno tours later a pi.dol shot rangnnt from the l.'l man's private ef.ire. When the group, ran into I lit room "Jim" lay oil the ifoor with a bullet-hole in his head. On 1 lie tletk lay two documents, freshly written. One was marked "mr will," Ihe other, "my conftfsion." The will left everytliitiff to the old uiiicr who bud told the sad story. The roiilioii was lo the t licet that lie had robbed the "returning miller as he slept. Ketiring ton elowt he hud w ith a knil'e scooped out the iiiKsle of u t ake of sotip nnd secreted ihe roll of 'fiills and replaced ihe cuke, which showed no signs of hating been cut in two pieces in hii valise.' John L. Ofliih of Indianapolis flapped the hoody shirt lo u munII Cuss couuly republican lidiveution Saturday.

m

DOMESTIC FELICITY. Some Practical Hints for Making a nappy .Home. Gill in St. Louis Eapnblican. "How are you, John?" ''tiood eveninj, sir."1 "Halber unusual, in't it.yoit beinj down town at this hour! Quite time you were home at supper." .. "Quite, fir, but I've just been getting a trinke; tor Jennie." "Your wife, all her birthday?'' "No, sir," faid the workman, "but its my theory." Iy curiosity .was excited, so I asked him this foundryinaii friend what his theory was. He belongs to a class of men too eminently practical to indulge in much theory, or any great drenniinü. "it's n theory I hare ir, to keep from growing old," he said, as we walked along, making part of the stream of humanity that, pouring Irom stores and workshops, was moving west on Washington-ave. "You see, 1 was oulte a time making: up my mind to get married. I liked the j;iil, but 1 was afraid of drifting into such a way of living as' men who had been married six years did. I mean men of my class workinjrnien. sir." "I understand you." "They seemed to get shiftless not at their work, you know, but about home. Sprucelooking fellows enough beforehand, you see, but tretliuj uiarritd t-eemed to make 'em cartless." "In their personal habits?" "Yes, sir. Well, I couldn't stand that in my life, so 1 set myself to thinking the reason for it?" "And you found it?" "It was mainly poverty. A man can't keep two people looking as well on the money that cares for one. but, looking paM the main question ol poverty, I saw that there were mure particular causes, or, I don't know just how to express myself, sir, there were things even a poor man could do if he would to keep himself from falling into those shiftless ways, and I've acted on my ideas and reduced my happiness to a rule that has just three main things in ii." "Yes?" "Ye, sir. The first idea that I insist on is cleanliness. The lack of that makes more poor people unhappy than low waives does." "Are poor people not as clean as rich ones?" "No, sir. I m a poor man myself, and I say that. They can't be. Just rub j our handkerchief over the sleeve of the coal that 1 wear every day at the foundry. See the soot on it! Well, 1 can't change this coat. I wear it ai. home. Of course it soils the furniture there, and it soils my baby's clothes wheu he climbs on my knee. Hut, see here sir, there is -oot on my neck nnd on my hands. I can pet that ol!', and I do. No matter how tired I am when I c mie home, 1 wash up and have my hair looking nice and my hands and nails tidy w hen I sit down to my supper-table. The comfort in it is that it encourages my wife to do the same, and by an understanding b t .veen ns she is always tidy herself. Jt would be very easy for me to neglect that, and often I am so tired that I am tempted to do so, but I think that if I. w hose will should be the stronger one, fail in uiy part of the contract, I could expect nothing else from her. We are too poor to have a bathroom, but I own a sponge, and before 1 retire with the odor of a hard day's work tijioti me I take a quick sponge bmh. The work doesn't consume two minutes, and it not only refreshes me, bnt makes my presence w elcome to her. You see, when I waseourtingher. I never called unless 1 was wtil-dressed and clean. That was one thing she liked about me, und I don't feel that I've any right to be different now. I try to sit straight iii my chair, and I don't fro round-shouldered-like and old-fashioned, because 1 remember that she used to speak of how straight I was, And I know that my strength was one of the things that Attracted her. Y ou see, all that doesn't cost anything." "Only a little thouühu'ulness.' "That's it. Just a little thoughtfulncss. Well, it pays. She is tidier about home lor it, and thinks a great deal more of me. Now, there are two other things I do." "What are they?" "I make it a rule to spend 25 cents a week on her. I aee you dou't understand me. Well, '23 cents isn't much. A fellow pays it for two drinks of whisky, and it's little enough to give her. W iih that 25 cents a week I get each week some little thing exclusively for her. Maybe it's only a comb or 6ome paper-backed story book, or half a pound of fine caudy, but it's always something for her herself, and not a thing that others tdiare with her, or which 6he uses for others. It's never a scrub-brush or anything like that. 1 make it a rule to get it on diil'erent days, too, and not on pay-day, so she doesn't know exactly when it's coming. I don't believe she even knows that ths litUe gifts come weekly, for often they are twelve days apart, but this always pleases her, and although we've been married six years, she knows that I still have sonic thought for her. Now, to-night I'm tnkinj home a new kind of tooth-hrush; she read about it last week and said she'd like one." And the honest fellow took from his pocket a little package that he showed with allectionate pride. "You said there were three things you did. What's the other one?" "I take her out somewhere at lenst onee a

week. Often it is only for a walk or a call on some neighbor, but it is a relief to her, and gets her aw ay from the monotony of her household work. About once a month it is to the theater. I can't afford to go offener, aud then 1 can't sit in the dollar scats, but she's content to go in the second tier, and I'm proud of her. She has a black cloak that is out of style. The sleeves are wide and not like the cbats the ladies wear now, but then I'm not very stylish myself. We always go to some good play, and don't throw away an evening or our money on bad ones. This year w e've seen Clara Morris and 'Jim, the Penman,' and tooth, and one or two like that. So, there you are. That's the way I have reduced my way of living to a kind of rule, and it's kept our home a "happy one when others have been miserable. My wife knows what's going on in the world. She has the right kind of ideas, and ia something more than a housekeeper. She is a companion." After a little further talk on other subjects, wc reached a point where our paths diverged nnd said good night. This practical philosopher went towards his home, but his philosophy, if the sensible views he held can he so called, seemed so simple and so valuable, that I have felt nt liberty to intrude them. Oregon and Washington. No section of the country is to-day attracting as much attention as Montana, Oregon ami Washington; Montana, because it now ranks first in the production of precious metals; Oregon, because of its rich valleys, and Washington territory by rensou of its mild climate, timber, coal, minerals nnd wonderful production of fruits and cereals. The rapid growth of Spokane Falls, with a water power exceeding even that of Minneapolis. Tacoina, on Paget Sound, tlie terminus of the Northern Pacific nulroad, w ith 12,000 inhabitants; Seattle, thirty niilesdistanl.au energetic and thriving city, mark this section of Ihe Pacific Northwest ns one that öfters peculiar inducement, to those seeking new homes. I5y w riting Charles S. Fee, general passenger ngent, Northern Pacific railroad. i?t. Paul, Minn., he wilisend you illustrated naniphleis, map ami Imoks giving you valuable information in reference to the country traversed by this great line from St. Paul, Minneapolis. Puliilh and Ashland to Portland, Ore., and Tanotmt and Seattle, W. T. This road, in addition to oeing the only rail line to Spokane l-'nlls, Tni'otna and Seattle, reaches all the principal points iu northern Minnesota nnd jlakot.t, Moiltaon, , Itlaho, Oregon ami Washington ; potesses 'tllicfpialed scenic attractions tin well ns ii pi-riot train equipment, such ns dining-cars and colonist sleeper, for the use of inlciidiu? eitler, Heilder ol' w hieh conveniences nro to he found ou Hliy etiler line ticketing business to the stales nn'd territories named. Life is Imrdenf-ome alike to the stifTcrer and nil around him while dyspepsia and its attending evils hold away.' Complaints of this nature ran ho speedily cured ly taking Prickly Ash Unters regularly. Thousands once thus afllicted now bear cheerful testimony as to its merits. A slight cold often proves the forerunner of a complaint which may be fatal. Avoid this result by Inking "Aver' Cherry Pectoral, the best remedy for coiJs, coughs, and till throat and lung diseases. That tired feeling and loss of appetite tire entirely overcome by Hood's Sarsaparillu, the peculiar medicine. Try it nnd see. ' Atlrict to l others. Mrs. TVIotlnw's Soothing Srtup should alwars tM used hfii children are rtittliig leeta. It relieves tlie 1 1 ii In su (Irrer si wnt: II irluce natural, ouict sleep by relieving (he child from fain, and the fiitU tlivTiili awake at "btiylit a a tuition." it i vcrv pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, soften . f turns, sllava all pain, relieves wind, rcjtulutes Iba )Wi-l and 1 the best knoN remedy for diarrhea, whether arili from tecibing or other cauaes. Twenty-fiv tenia Uittle. David Itoderi k, ii P la ware couuty pioneer aud prohibitionist, died Saturday.

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RADWAY'S Ready Relief The Chcsrt and Eest Medic ins for Tamily Use la tbe World. Sore Throat, Colds, Coughs, Inflammation, Sciatica, Lumbago, IMieumatisni, Neuralgia, Headache, Toothache, Nervousness, Diphtheria, Influenza, Dillicuit Breathing, CURED AND PREVENTED DY RADWAY'S READY. RELIEF. In cases of Lumbrgo and Rheumatism, Radway'i Heady Relief tevcr tails. Strong Testimony of Emigrant Commissioner, the Hon. George Starr, as to the Tow er of Rad way's Heady Relief in a Case of Sciatic Rheumatism. No. 3 Van Ness Place. New Tork. Vk. Hadwav. With . me your lielief hjj worked wonder. I or the la.t three years I have, had i'requei.t and severe attacks of sciatica, sometimes rltendimr. from the lumbar regions to uiy ankles, anal at tini.'s in both lower limb. I'unuc the time I have been a (TIL; ted I hare tried almost all the remedies recommended by wise men and loots, huia to timl relief, but all proved to b iailure. . 1 have tried various kinds of baths, manipulation, outward upplieaiion of liniments too nuiuf rvus tt mention, and resorij.iions of the nitst eminent physician, nil of v -hielt tailed to eive me relief. Ijwt -N iteiuler, at the urrnt regnet of a fricrd (who h.id beeu atllieted as myself) I ns induced try your remedy. 1 was then suflcrinz fearfully wi'tli one f my old turns. To my surprise and delijrht the lirst application frave me eae, alter bathing aud rubbing the parts afl'ectcd, leaving the limb iu a wann plow, cnatcd by the lielief. In a short time the pain passed entirely away. Although I hav slight periodical attains approaching a changn of weather, I km.w now how io cure myself, and fet ?uite muster of the situation. KADWAY'S REALiY ;LLlbl' ik my friend. 1 never travel without bottle in my valise. Yours truly, GEO. STARE. Tha Following was KecelTed by Mall Through YV. II. Elyth, Druggist, . Mount Pleasant, Texas. s Mb. TV. It. Blyth, Sir: In complisnee srith yemr request to furnish you with tbe result of tuv knowledge and experience with Ihr. Had war's R. R., in raply 1 can täte that 1 have been uint; the Kad wsy heniedies since itti. 1 know the Ready Relief to a fcpecilir for flux and all hovel conipUinta. ItU more reliable for colds, pleurisy, pneumonia and diseases pro hii? out of colds, for cuts, bruises, sprains, rhenmutini and aches, and pains generally, than any remedy I have ever known tried. Prom nir personal knowledge of the Radwsy Remedies I think them ail superior to any remedies of which I have any knowledge lor all the ills for which they are recommended. ' Respectfully, T. H. teKIDMOKK, PaaUu Green Hill Presbyterian Church. RADWAY'S READ ir RELIEF WILL AFFORD INSTANT EASE. InCarani'ition of the kidneys, Inflammation of bladder, inflammation of the bowels, congestion of tho Iudk'. sore tiiiMtat, difficult breathing, palpitation of the heart, hysterics, croup, diphtheria, catarrh. Influenza, headache, toothache, neuralgia, rheumatism, cold chills, chilblains, frost-bites, nervousness, sleeplessness. The application of the READY RELIEF to ths part or parts where the difficulty or pain exists wUl. afiord ease and comfort. Thirty to sixty drops in a bf.lf tumbler of water will in a few minutes cure cramps, sour stomach, heartburn, headache, diarrhoea, dysentery, colic, wind in the bowds and internal pains. MALARIA. Chilis and Fever, Fever and Ague Conquered. Radway's Ready Relief Not only cures the patient seized with this terrible foe to settlers in new districts, but if people exposed to it w HI, every morning on gvttln out of bed, takw twenty or thirt v dro of the lU;ady Relief in a glass of water, and drink it ant eat sav a cracker, they will escape attacks. This must be done before going out. I-EVER and AI.CE cured for 50 cents. There la not a remedial eut in the world that will cure fever and spue anil nil other malarious, bilious and other fevers taided by KADWAY'S PILIj so quickly as lUd way 's Rcauy Relief. Fifty Cents Ter Bottle, SOLD DY DRUGGISTS. DR. RADWAY'S SARSAPARILLIAN RESOLVENT. Tbe Great Blood Purifier. For tho Cure of All Chronic Disea.sos. ChroniiJ rbenmatm, scrofula, syphilitic cora-plint.s,ctc,sraiiui;u-swellings, hacking dry coughs, cancerous a.ieclions, bleeding of the lungs, dycepsla, water-brash, white swelling, tumors, pimples, blotches, eruptions of the lace, ulcers, hin disease, gout, tlropsy, rit ketts, salt rheum, bronchitis, conuuiptiou, liver complaints, etc J)r. Radicay'sSa rsa partlltan Rcsol ven t A remedy composed of Ingredients of extraordinary medical proiertiea esseiiliul to purify, heal, rrnair and invigorate the broken dowu and wated body quick. rlcaMiit, safe and icnuauciit lu Its treatment and cure. Sold by all Druggists. OXE DOLLAR ri'.R BOTTLE. Radway's Pills, The Great Liver and Stomach Remedy. Perfectly tastrlcss, elegantly coated with rwcet gum, puife. rt'tfulatr, 1'iiii.y, tl- ans! and strengthen. Radwav's Pills. For the ein! all tl.'iroVrs of the stomach, liver. towel, kitlneys, ttl;itlcr, m-rveu .li-ra-, c.nijlion, citti' lics. iii.iisoli m, biliousness, fever, inflammation of ihe l.(ls, piles anil all dt nineiiient? ol tlif internal ivi j. I'utelv veet.il-lc. eolituiuinf uo iaicrcui'3 , minerals or Uclcleiious diugs. Perfect Digestion Will be otouij iiMiel by tai:i; Rrdway's rills. Cy so dull) j Sick Headache, Pytpepvia, foul tonis h, lilliouncss will be avoided ami the to. nl ll.ut Is cuic n contribute its uourij-hir-.g properties lor t lie suppoit of the nutuiul waste vf the body. observe the following syreptonis resi'ltin? from diseases of Ihe tlijrtle orr;tus: Cnusiipul ion, luw rd piles, lultness of hiood iu the head.aiiüily of the stouiutli. nausea, heartburn, of usl, lilltiesa or weight of the sluiuacli, Mur eructations, sinktut or OultcriuK 1 the heart, etioking or suRocataig StmsaUons when in a lyins posture, tlmiftess I vision, tlotsur webs lielore tho si;ht, fctT au I ilull pain In Ihe bead, Jrf.cienty of K r.pirntlon, yellowness cf the skin and eves, psiu in tbe side, tbct, limbs, and iikI !co flushes of heat, litiiniin; in the flo-h. A few doses f H.UWAl' I'll.l.S will frtM tha system of i 1 1 the uliovcnaimst ilisoiders. ' lrice, .'S cents cr l. iN'ld bv all drtirrK N ud a letter stamp to lr. AHU AY A CO., Na. 62 Warren street. New York. luloi vnuUoii worth thotisunds will be scot to you to Tin: rtnLtc. He nil re and s-k for Hud WAV's, and sea that tha nam "KADWA Y" 1 on what you buy.