Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 11, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 April 1888 — Page 2
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 1888.
DE. TALJIAGE OX PROFANITY
IT'S A VILE AND DISGUSTING HABIT. ne Tie Rampant From the low PotHont tothef.litterln;; iTawlng-Kooni IVomen Swear in the 1'arlornad Men In the Counting House. So vent Satan forth from the presence of the Lord, and emote Job with gore boils fruin the jole of his foot unto hi crown. Ami he took bira a potsherd to ucrape himself withxd ; ami ne sat down araon? the ashes. Then snid Lis rife unto him: Doit thou M ill retain thine integrity? Corse God and die. Hook of Jub, ii, A Ftory oriental and marvelous. Job wa. the richest man in all the East. He had camel and oxen and apses and cheep, and, what would have made him rich without anything else, coven sons and three daughters. It was the habit of these children to gather together for family reunion. One day Job is thinking of his children as patln-red together at a banquet at the elder brotuer's house. While the old man i seated at hi tent door be foes pome one running, evidently from his manner, brimjini; bad new.. What is the matter now? 'Oh," iivstho lncviTFer "a foraiu party of Sabtan.s have fallen unon the oxen .ind the :i-ts und destroy tin-in und butchered all the servants except iny.': If." Stand aside. Another messenger runr.in?. What is the matter now ? "Oh," pay the man, "th? li'htnin ha f-truck the sJioop and the chcphenN, and . ,., ..-. - .. "ti. -,-.-,-;.-V- -'.!. : nil th' hepherd are dchtroyi-d eMept int lf." Mand ide. Atiotht r iiichhi hior limning. What i- 1 1- matter now? "Oil," h- rays, "the 'lialdenn have raptured the rameh, and claiu atl the t utnel-di Uei t-xn pt mef." Stand aile. Another incnnii'r running. V.'bat is the Matter now? "Oli," lii'pjvs, "a hurrifiiiio clruel; the four eonu-r i t h tent ln-ic your eliilivn wi n- u'iiih!ed at t If bampiet, and ihey are all A ad." l!t;t the rhapler of ral unity had not filled. Job w a -üiilteii v i 1 1 1 el('liintiiii. or bla' k h-jiro-.y. Tmnoi- from head to foot, forele-ad lidded witli tuberrle-, r!a-he f ill oul, in rtiiU eoii:iti-d, v'oiec destroyed, intolendilr exhalalion fr-jm the entire jimly, until vi;!i none to dre. hi K"r.'s, lu i f down in the a-In-s with nothiii' but piece of broken pottf ry to u-" ia the nsueryof hi woun lt. At thi. inotie lit, hen lie needed all IIfour.T.'einent, and all eoinolal ion, hi w he routes in, in a l'r t and a ra.je, and lays: :,Thi Is intoh-rabh. Our property pone, our children slain, and now you covered np it h t hi- loath-onie and di.t n-tiPir tli.eae. Why don't you j arV L'ur-e if k1, ati'l die !" Ah, Job knew rL'ht well that t-wcarln;: uoiild tt"t cure one of the tumor of wyonit d bod v, ould not hi in.; back one ,)l his destroy ed eatm l i, wonlcl not restore 'ne of his dead Hiildr n. lb km w that pi-oUniiv would oidy ti.ike the pain more i:n1' ;'falile, and the poverty inore ilisr; in;'j arid the hep-ayi meid more er.i rue I itiur. lint, judin' from the profanity uhroad in our l iv, you mi'lit come to the eoncluMoti that ihere was foiin- vrreat advantage to be reaja-d front pi'oi'.Miity. I'.laf j.iietny is all abroad. Von hear it in every direction. The draviuan Mvearinyr at his eart.the.'win.'irl impreealiii the tangled hl.ein, the account. int cur-ill' llie olt; line of t P iilbl( moiiic b'lir'S. Swearirn.' j't the More, s taring in the loft, m t-iitin i:i the cellar, mw-antur iu the trect. hwi-arin! in lite i.i. toy. children . wear. .M-an Mear. Women ear. weariii from the roii-lt calling on the tie.- Alntiirhtv in the (. rotautaut h-ar nj to the recklei" "I Mi, bonl !" of a FlitterItiff draw in-rooiu ; und the one is a much bl.iphemy a the other. Tin-re are time wiu-n we ji.ut ery out to th I.rd by reason of our physical iii'ony 'r our mental di.-tn-ss, and that is only thn in' out our weak hand toward theVtron arm of a father. It wanopnfanitv when J times A. Oarli Id, hhot in tins Va? liiiu'toii depot, cried out: "My (iod, ulw.t doe i this mean?" There is no profanity in calling out upon !od in the day of trouble, in tin day of darkness, in the- day of phyricid nnu'tiish, in the day 01 Iw-rt ave'nent ; but I atn fpeaUin) now of the triviality and of the r kh--ncfs w a l icit ti t- j:uine of lod is tojuctiinc tnan;.'ed. The wltoh land is cursed with it. A F'ntletnaii comber from the far We-t n:tt in the car day niter day behind two person who were if dulirin in profanity, mid he mate up his mind be would make a record of tin ir profanities, and at the end of two days M-er.d slice ts of paper w-r llllcil with tin e itnoreeation-, and at the end of the-journey lie handed t lit t aper to one 'of the persons in front of liim. "U it Kwible," said the man, "that Wo have uttered m many profanities thela.-,t ( w.lays? ' , "It is," repli'd the frentleman. "Then," said the man who had taken th'imanuseript, "I will never svvearaain." Hut it i a eoniparativelv uniiniortant tiling if a man makes record of our itnproprietie of sjteoch. The more memorable consideration is thr.t rv-ry iinprojter word, every o-ith utterel, has a record in the tsok of iod's remembrance, and that the day will com when all our crimes of cpeech, if unrepented of, will be our condemnation. I shall lift to-day deal in ab- , straetions. I bate abstract ions. I nm j.iinz t1 l've si plain talk with you, my brother, about a habit that you admit to )e wroiijr. The habit prows in the community in the fact that yoiiu' people think it manly to swear. I.i'ttle children, hardly able to walk straight on the street, yet have rnotth ditiin tm-ss of utterance "to let you known that they are damning their ow n mouIs, or damning the couls of others. It is art awful thiriF the first time the little ett are lifted to have them cet dowu on the burning pavement of belli IJctwecn sixteen- and twenty ye ars of r.e, there is apt to come a time when a jouni? man is as much nhamet of not f.cin able to mvear Frr,huly as lie is of the diiiiK-ss of hi-t firt ci.irar. lie has his hat, hi loot, ind his coat of the rkdit pattern, ami now, if he can only nwear with; out awkwardness, and a well as his mm rades, he lc!ieves he is in fashion. There Arc youns mea iv ho walk in an atmos
phere of imprecation oaths on (heir lips, under their tongue, nestling in their chock of hair. They abstain from it in the elepant draw ing-room, but the street and the club-house ring with their profanities. They have no regard for God, although they have great respect for the ladies! My young brother, there is no manliness in that. The most ungentlemanly thing a man can do is to sw ear. Fathers foster this great crime. There are parents who are very cautious not to sw ear in the presence of their children ; in a moment of ptidden anger they look around to cee if the children are present w hen they indulge in this habit. lo you not know, Ö father, that your chifij is aware of the fact that you swear? He overheard vou in tho next room or some one has informed him of your habit. He is practicing now. In ten years he will swear as well as you do. Do not, 0 father, be under the delusion that you may swear and your son not know it. It is an aw fill thing to start the habit in a family the father to be profane, and then to have the echo of his example to come back from other generations, so that generations after generations curse the Lord. The crime is also fostered by master mechanic, boss carpnteJ., those who aro at the head of men in hat factories, and in dock yard, anil at the head of gn-at business establishments. When you go down to look at t!in work of the Fca'll'oMinir, and you lind it is not done ripht, what do you Kiy? It i not praying, is it? The employer t wears; his employe is tempted to swear. The man cays: "I don't know why my employer, worth ?0,0(H) or ?H)0,iXK, should have any luxury I should be denied, simply because I am poor. I ' cause I am jtoor and dependent upon a day's wages, haven't I as mindi right to swear" as he lias, with his large income?" Employers swear, and that makes so many employes ewear. The habit alo comes from the infirmity of temper. There are a good many people who, when they are at pease, have righteousness of rpceeh, but when nn-p-red tlnv Maze with imprecation. I'crhapnall the rest of the year they talk in the right lati'juage. but now they pour out the fury of u w hole year In one redhot paragraph of live minute. I knew r.f a man who excused himself for the habit, fining: "I only wenr once in a great while. I mu.-t do that to clear myself out." Tie habit coincs also from the profus use of by-word. The transition Iront a by-word which may be perfectly harmlos lo imprecation and profanity, i not n M-rv larg" transition. It is "niy stars'," and "inerev on inf!" and "irood gracious!" and "by Oeorge!" nnd "by Joyc!" and you go on with that n little while,' and then vou swear. Thee word, perfectly harmless in themselves arc next 'door to imprecation and blasphemy. A profuse use of by-words always end In profanity. Tho habit i creeping up Into the highect ctyh s of nocicty. Women have no patience with flat and unvarnished profanity. They will order a man out of the parlor indulging in bla'pheinv,and yet you w ill c unci lines lind them with fairy fall to the Iii and under cbandclici s w hu b bring no bbn-h to t lie ir cheek, taking on their lips the holiest of names in utter triviality. Why, my friends, the l'liidish language i minprchi iv he ami capable of expressing all shape i f fclinj anil ercrv degree of energy. Are yoit happy, Noah V bster v. ill giv you lOiMi voids with which to c. pro your exhilaration. Are you righteously indignant, there are whole armies in the vocabulary, liu'hteou vocabulary w hole armies of denunciation nnd scoin, and sarcasm, and irony, an. I catiealure, and w rath. You express yourself against nunc meanuehs or livpociisy, in all the oath that ever smoked up from the pit, and I will come right on after you und give a thousand fold more emphasis of denunciation to t!u fame meanness and the same hypocrisy in word across which no s'i'ne la's ever trailed, and into which the lire of hell hae never shot their forked P iicruc tle pure, the innocent. Ibsblvmred Anirlo-Saxon in which Milton sang, and John banyan dreamed and Hiakspeare dramatized. There i no excuse for profanity when we have smh a ma.'nilieciit language ste h a How of gottd words, potent words, mighty words, words just to mit every crisis and ccrv ca-e. Whatever be the cause of it, protanity is on the increase, and if you do not know it, it is because your cars have In n hardened hy the din of imprecations so that i on uro not stirred and moved as you oujltt to be by profanities in these cities w hich are enough to bring a hurriciiiie of lire like that which con. limed Sodom. Jo you know that this trivial m-e of owl's name result in js rjntv? ho you know that, people who take the name of Oo on their lips in recklessness and thought lo'ticy are fostering the crime of perjury? Make the mime of God a fiothull in the community, and it has no power when in court-room and legislative u.cmhly. It I employed ill solemn ndjuration"! See the way cometiines they admini-ter the oath: "S'hclp me find kissthe hook!" Smuggling, which is always a violation of the oath, becomes in some circles a grand joke. You say to a man: "I low is it possible for you to sell those goods mi very cheap? I can't understand it." "Ah!" he replies, with n twinkle of tho eye, "the custom house taritl' on thee goods isn't as much as it might be." An oath docs not nv-an n much as it would were l he name of God used in reverence and in Solemnity. Why is it that co often jurors rendf unaccountable verdicts and judges give unaccountable charges, and u-el.'s railroad schemes pass in our date ca pit ols, and there are inoi-t unjust changes made in tarilD -tarills lifted from one thing and put iion another? What is an oath? Anything solemn? Anything that call upon the Almighty? A ii tiling that mark an event in n man's history? Oh.no! It 1 kiting tlia book 1 There i no habit, I tell you plainly anil I talk to hundreds and thousands öf men t'Ml.iy w ho will thank me for my utterance--1 tell von, inv brother I "talk to vou not professionally, but just as one brother talks to another on nome very Important theme I tell you there is no habit that so depletes a man's nature as tho habit of profanity. You might as well try to raise vineyards and orchards on the cities of belching Stromboll n to raise anything good on a heart from w hich there ttour out the scoria of profanity. You may swear yourself down; you cannot cweax yourself up. When the Mohammedan finds u piece of paper he cannot read, he puts it away very cautiously for fear the name of God may be on it. That is one extreme. Wo iro to th" other. Now, what is the cure of this habit? It is a mighty habit. Men have ctruggh-d for years to get over it. There are men in this house of (bst who would give half their fortune to get ril of it. An aired man was in the delirium of a fever, lie had for many years lived a most upright life ami w'u 'honored in all of the Community, but when became into the delirium of this fever he was full of imprecation anil profanity, and they could not understand it. After ho came to his right reason lie explained it. He said: 'When I was a young man 1 was very firof.mc. I cor.rp.ercd the habit, but I iad to Ktruggle alt through life. You haven't for forty years heard mo say an improper word,' hut it has been an awful struggle. The tiger is chained, but ho is alive yet. If you would get rid of thisWiftbit, I want you, my friend, to dwell upon tho uselcssncas of it. IMd a volley of oaths
everctart a heavy load? Did they ever extirpate meanness from a customer? Did they ever collect a bad .debt? Did they ever cure .a toothache? Did they ever ctop the twinge of rheumatism? Did they ever help you forward one ctep in the'right direction? Come, now, tell me, ye who have had the most experince in this habit, how much have you made out of it? Five thousand dollars in all your life? No. Ono thousand? IVo. One hundred? Tso. One dollar? So, Ono cent? No. If the habit bo so utterly useless, away with it. Uut you cay: "I have struggled to overcome tne habit a long while, and I have not been nueccssful." You struggle in your own strength, my brother. If ever a man w ants God, it is in such a crisis of of his history. God alone by His grace can emancipate you from that trouble. Call upon Hun day and night that you may be delivered from this crime. Itemembcr, also, in the cure of this habit, that it arouses God's indignation. The bible reiterates from chapter to chapter, and verse after verse, the fact that it is accursed for this life and that it makes a man miserable for eternity. Thcro is not a ein in all tho catalogue that is co often peremptorily and suddenly punished in this world as the ein of profanity. There is not a city or a village but can give an illustration of a man struck down at the moment of imprecation. A couple of j-cars oj-n, briefly referring to this in a sermon, I gave sonic instances in which God had ctruck swearers dead at tho moment of their profanit y. That sermon brought t mo from many parts of this land and other lands ctatemcntsof cimilar cases of instantaneous visitation from God upon blasphemer. My opinion is that euch cases occur somewhere every day, but for various reasons they are not reported. In Scotland a club assembled every week for purposes of wickedness, and there was a competition n to w hieh could use the most horrid oath, and the man w ho cneceedfd was to be president of tho club.- The competition went on. A man uttered an oath which confounded all his comrades, and he wa" made president of the club. Hi tongue began to swell, ami it protruded from t he mouth, and he could not draw it in, and he died, and the j'hycieians Raid: "This is the rt rängest thing weever Haw; we never caw any ncrount in tho book like unto it; wo can't underMand it." I understand it. lie cursed (toil ami died. At Catskill, N. Y., a group of men ctoml in a blacksmith's shop during a violent thunder storm. There came a crash of thunder and come of the tin u trembled. One man said: "Why, I don't ceo what you are afraid of. 1 am not. afraid to go out in front of the chop and defy the Ahnightv. 1 am not afraid of lightning." And lie laid a wager on the subject, and he went out, and h shook hU fist nt the heavens, crying: "Strike, if you dare J" nnd instantly he fell under a bolt. What destroyed hun? Any mycterv about it? Oh, in. 1I cursed God and elhd. Oh, my brother, God will not allow this ein to go unpunished. There aro styles of writing with manifold chect, co that a man writing on one chect writes clear through ten, llftern or twenty sheets, nnd co ecry profanity wo titter pwn right down through the leaves td God's book of remembrance. It is no exceptional ein. Do you think you could count the profantiosof la.st week the profanities of otlice, store, shop, fitctory ? 1'bey cursed God, they urM-d I li word, they cursed His only he-rotten S.n. ( inotuorniiiL'.on Fult on -ct. ,n I wa passing n long, l In ard a man swear by the name of Jesus. My hair lifted. Mv blood ran e-old. My breath caught. .My foot halted. Do you not suppose thattiodi aggravated? ' Do you not suppose that God ktiowsnbout" it? Dionysius used to have a cave in w hich his culprit were Incarcerated, and In? listened at the top of that cave, and he could hear every gro.m, could hear every sigh, and he eould hear every whisper of those who we n imprisoned. He was a tyrant. God is not a t j rant; but hebend over this world and he hcarscverything every voice of praise, every voice 'f impn eatiou. He hears it all. The oaths seem to tlie on the air, but they have eternal echo. They come hack from the ages to com'. Listen! Listen I "All blasphemer chall have their place the lake which burnetii with tire and brimstone, which is the second death." And if according to the theory ef some, a man commit in the next world the eins which he committed in this world if unpardoned, iinrcgeucrated think of a man's going on cursing in the name of God to all eternity. The habit grows. You start' with a email oath, you will come to the large oath. 1 m a mnn die with an oath between his V'eth. Voltaire only gradually e-aiiit to his tremendous imprecation; but the habit grew on him until in the lid moment, supposing Christ ctood at the lied, ho exclaimed: "Curse that wretch! Curse that wretch!" Oh, my brother, you begin to cwear ami the re is nothing impossible for vou in the wrong direction. Who is this God whoso name you are using in swearing? Who is He? Is He a tyrant? Has He pursue d you all your life long? Has Ho etarved you, frozen you, tyrannized oer you? No. Ho has loveM you; He has sheltered you; He watched you last night; lb' will watch you tonight. He wants to love you, wants to help you, wants to cave you, want to comfort you. lie wh your father'n Got! and your mother's God. He has housed them freun the blast, anil He wants to shelter you. Will vou cpit in His face by nn imprecatjfin? Will you ever thrust Him back by an oath? Who in this Jesus, whose name I her.rd in the imprecation? Has He pursued you all your fif i long? What vile thing'has He done to you that vou should co dishonor His narno? Why, He was the lamb whose blood simmered in tho lire s of caerillen for you. He is the brother that took oil' His crown that you might put it on. Hohns pursued you all your life long with mercy. He wants vou to love llitu wants you to servo Ilitn. Ho comes with streaming eyes and broken heart and blistered fe-et "to save you. On the craft of our doomed humanity He pushed out into the sea to take you otf tho wreck. Whero is tho hand that yvill ever be lifte-d in imprecation again? Ixt that hand, now blood tipped, be lifted that 1 may see it. Not one. Where is the voice that will ever bo uttered in dishonoring the name of that Christ? Iet it cpeak now. Not one. Not one. Oh, I am glad to know that all these y ices of the community and these crimes of our city will begone. Soe-iety is going to be bettered. Tho world by the swer of Christ's gospel is going to be caved, and this crime, this iniquity, and all the other iniquities w ill vanish before the rising of tho sun of righteousness upon the nation. There was one elay in New 1'ngland memorable for storm and larkness. 1 hardly eer caw such an evening. The clouds which had been gathering all day unlimbcrrd their batteries. Tho IIous.itonic, which Hows quietly, cave as the (addles of pleasure parties rattle tho ear oeks, w as lashed into foam, and the waves hardly knew whe re to lay themselves. O! what a time it was! The hills jarred under the rumbling of God's chariots, blinding sheets of rain elrovo the cattle to the liars, or be at against the window pane as though to dash it in. Tho grain f.elds threw their crow n of gold at tho feet of the etorm king. When night came on it w as a double night. Its mantlo was torn with the lightning,and intoits locks were twisted the leaves of uprooted oaks and the chrcds of canvass torn from tho masts of the beached chipping. ' It was euch a night as makes you thank God for ehel-
ter, and open the door to let in the spaniel how ling outside w ith terror. We went to sleep under the full blast of heaven's great orchestra, the fore sts w ith uplifted voices, in chorus that rilled tho mountains, praising" the Lord. Wre woke not until the ringers of the ennnv morn touched our eyelids. We looked out the window and the llousatonic dent as quiet as an infant's dream. Pillars of clouds set against the sky looked like tho castles of the blest built for heavenly hierarchs on the beach of the azure pea. All the trees sparkled as though there had been pome great pricf in heaven, and each leaf had been God appointcel to catch an angel's tear. It seemed as if our Father hat! looked upon the earth, His way ware! child, and etooped to his tear-wet chT-ek and kissed it. So will the darkness of ein and crime leave our world before the dawn of the morning. The light chall gild the cit v epiro and ctrike tho forests of Maine and the masts of Mobile and all betxveen. And one end resting on the Atlantic coast and the other resting on the Pacific beach, God w ill epring a great rainbow urch of peace, in token of everlasting cejvenant that the world chall never more ceo a deluge of crime. "but," say. some one, "preaching against the tvib of society, will accomplish nothing. Do you not see that the evils go right on?" "I answer, wo aro not at all discouraged. It eeeme'd insiirniiicant for Moos to ctre-tch his hand overthe bead Sea. What power could that have over the waters "J but the -ast wind blew all night ; the waters gathered into two glittering palisades em either tide. The billows roared as God's baud pulled back on their crvstal bits. Wheel into line, O brael! March! March! Pearls crash under the feet. The ehoutof hosts mounting the beach answers' the shout of hosts mid-sea, until, as the last line of tliei Israelites has gained the beach, the shield clang, and the symbols clap, nnd a the waters whelm tlie pursuing foe, the suiftdiugcrcd wind en the, white keys of the foam play the grand march of Israel delivered, nnd the nw t'ul etirgo of Egyptian overthrow. So we go forth; and stre tch out the hand of prayer ami Christian eil'ort over the se elark, boilIng wntcrsnf crime atnl sin. "Aha! aha!" cays the deriding world, but wait. The winds of divine help will begju to blow; the way will clear for the great army of Christian philanthropist.; the glittering treasures in the world's hem licence will lino the path of our feet ; and lo the other shore we will be grct led with the clash of heaven's cymbals, while those who resist and deride and pursue us w ill fall under the se a, and there w ill be nothing h it of Ihein but here and there, cast high and dry upon the bench, the splintered wheel of a chariot, and, limi t out from the suif, the breathless nostril of a riderh'ss cha rger. A M l.il lift Ui? , Nl.w Yonu, April II. S lid. -The rmi. rrrtl e uifrri nri of tlm iiirtlitlit i-plm-opnl cliurcli, it quu'lrennl.d hnily cniupoNCil of lending tueit frttin alt the Honual fonff-rmri, niel from every m-iohi of lh country, w ill coiiii-ne In the nn tropulitan opera liou, New Yoik City, Mhv 1 next, to remain In m hion nn en lire intiiiih. Tili cenl'i reiiet m the naly 4ntly in I lu iiii thvlit I'piK'ojitd f litireli hiivin ptivvrr t lllllkl' or IIUmIiIV I.IM H (if 1i' I'llUK'll, It U nUn Oh' body hii Ii rliM'tn bit-Imp, ciliteiri, jjt-iicrnl ci-ri'liirle, book ncnln tin. I nihcr hk-h t'llirill!-. At lln co I n in i, tliil It'll I hrfi- will fi-r-t.lliil.V be fi" f tliiia f 1 1 r hi-li'ip) cheleil, und -."MH think id" inimln r will n ni li t 1 1 . Anion? ihn iiiiirl.Mit cIui'T''s propo-cd will he t lie iTiiiovftl ! Ill' t i it to limit li'tiiti ths pi-P-r.ile, tlit uliohiinti ff (In pptli Uioiu ry i r-acin oi im iitliinhl) nal tin' In'riiihietiori ul Inj rep. i(x niiuli Into tin- nnniud e-enli n-ive. The month coMTcd by thi session will nl-o vltnri M'liiiitr "lehnte -iinl iiitfr'tiriir ciuifhiion in rcjiird to tin color fpn-Mion, llie ii iupi-nnve rctorin, t!n ci lcl-etirul fnttis ot tvoini n, Iii hop Tn lor' wot k in Afrirn, t!io cxpetliciicy eif forciifn bl!iop, rit. 1 In piocstrliiii, of thin body wilt he wiit-rl w ith ih-cp ini rel la t ry purt of die country, no', by itictlmdigtA (dole, hut by religtoiii people ge n 'rally. PEW AND i PULPIT. Will, wltV, I've v runti'l with Vj-iij ' I unit J In In' out- rli it rob ; J!f I r l-l Hi" nivpil" i.iihit oil me, '1 Iii' relink Ii l cd im 1 1 f It. Fni In-, ''IMik nt nur meiiiluM' now '1 lirro'n Jinny ,m.i ilrunk, nu' sr:ii W III rl' .U A PI' ii I ti limkii R lMli; .Mil l 1 na un.i'l a tlu m Cjva I, "A hatcher huj lnit Murk Iii. i n Juki tili ;V Jnll ili; li Inuitu nruuiul tie- i-hllli ) arj, An' IlteU l Iii iihmih'! Ihj Tin-Ii ev'ry n:t.'Mli:it In in il.i', An' tv'ry hu In: lnuri, Ii roiirilnl litt Ihn nrrrln' tvorits Mii I i k nt llii'in i.itiKi-n!' Yen pit k tlie im niiiMt l hil-ilun i out, Alt lin n lti Irii kv Jo rs Ynti run id" iinl rln.icli ilown hy thnt 'Ji liMik at U. nu inn t i r:' No f;inuer funli il hr that oIt- trlek, An' you r.tn'1 all.ttil Tu rlk mir ul In Iryln' It I'l'OU llie Bll-is t.n.'il." l rnl N)o In Omnia W'orM. The iiei-Dtlatlonii Inokhtt? townrd nn oriranln nw ion hetween the reformed und lhi (n-rinnn re foriiinl clitiiclu-j are ini'li'rM'ioil to be proKrening favorably. Mr. Moody it miiklitc very jmecessful evnnfelistlc tour ln-voml the Misiiippi, hiking lenver, Jcudville, pueblo, iitel ( 'oloriuliSirlnir on hit war. At Ih-nvcr 3M rniivmioini arc it--e-eiveil in Iii laeelii!-,-. hun Jone "Mitlnm, your pr'nbt of tln will itetoiiiilish your rli'tnieiiitn. We'll never meet in hettven." Iiiildy soi-it-ty belle "Why, do vou know, Mr. Ji'ii.' I tbnogbt that if nil)hoily ever got tliorc it won hi ho you." There w ill t tlihli'il tfiaottg ihe iin-rnnnti-flted preacherm nnil whlmva tnl orphnnM eif prcnrricrn of the n 1 1 n 1 i t. e-pUeopid cluir.'li, next yi'ar, $P,mi out of lht pnlit of tic Methodist Ihsk t iuieern. The book Concern will he a century old in Issii. One-li.'tlf the pof illation of Newfoundland nrf P.oiiinn e;iihiilir; tin- expi-nse of thu governtneni mindly exceed tlti n veiiue; it hau a pnhlie ilcld aiiiituntiiu to 12 per capita; the tiniiiiiiioii !oes not care for it. fir heries ; it.t tnnlo Li birgt-ly x i ill llie L'nited M in s. The twelfth e hun-h conirn-"i of the episcopal church i tu In; heid at Uullaln, Nov. b". There nre int imntio.'i t!iat h-uin) of ihe exti-i-c.it- high chiiivlinii-n arc ho tlispe(scij nt llie liberal tone, of some of llie tiMcrunce of the last conyrt-fts that they ruuy not atteml the nexl. Afi-r ontj or two grnth Uort on tlie jtart of tlie e'oU,ctor to n'':ikcn Heneoti Jone the minbier nnili. from the jmlpit: "Never mi ml. brother Jjiyiiinii, n J It-aeon Jonen linn not heard the sermon perhaps it would not be right to expect liirn to pay nn) thing for it." When llrnry Wnrd I Seedier received hin first Appointment It was nt Ijiwrcutvbuiv, I ml., in lMT. J lo WH M own sexton, he rwc-nt the Hour nnd liehtf il the fircM, lie hoii-.dit lumps for tho cluirt h, filled and lit them, lie op'. nid the church nt every inet-tini;, nnd had Ihe curt! of Iiis pa.storr.to heslde, ail fur i' K)a year. The tinilnl eoiijiretrutional conferciieo fif Cieorui.!, reeently eir.iui.ed at Athuitii, rejiresi iitii und iiichnfi'M nixty eongrt 'jationul iin i!io1 ist clinrche In tho Mate, a few lue tluuli-1 prottunt chnrehi's and a few oonsreuatloiiul rhu rche. The niiV e'onfercnec h.it phteed itself hi coniietia with the national coiineil of lite congregational ihurehcn of thej l'nilt d h'Utles. "What was your lusitieni when on earth f ntki-d St. I'eter of un Applicant nt the pearly gate, "f'.ilitoref a conn-rvntivr cor.stitntioniil weekly," replied the spirit of the scribe. "Itii circuhition, of course'?" ".Ne, said the flppliemit; "om of the Miiallest in tlie country." "I'us on," wp the apostolic rcjoiiuh r, "and pick up your hnrp." A collci'e student was Invited ono fsumlny to occupy the pulpit hi n little country church. After what he considered a masterly cfTurt ou the subject of "liiis'iirti nnd the J.ieh Man" he called on a goeul old brother to prrty, nnd wns somi-what electrified to hi'iir the lollow niti 1inl, wc thitiik Tlit ti that wv lire not liku this IMior, th spiscd bfirynr, Ivtiirtis, w ho we've- Jet ten a li'tenia' to!" "I-rt'a srr, whi-re tin yoti nttt-ud church now?" "I go to the .sixtee nth eh noniinaiional church." 'Po you? And how do you like? it?" ''Kvcrco much. We have dclii;hUul social parties every sri-ek, nnd then you sliould see what n splentlid kitchen wo have!" "And what kind of a nrcachrr Is Mr. felah?" "Il'ml Weil, fact U Pve never hearJ hin preneb, Lut he's a rvid
plensant roan to meet, and a splendid hand at getting up games, amateur theatricals and such things." Ohadiah of Fifth-ave. (to Mrs. Obadiah "Aren't you going to church this morning, my dear?' Mrs O. '"No, I'm compelled to stay at home. Parker 6ays Ihe footciaa is tick. Faucy how it would look elrivine to church without a footmnn on the box." Mr. O. "Why don't you take a 6tage?" Mrs. O. "Beeanse I think it is downright w icked that the etatJ'S arc permitted to run on Sunday." Several of the great benevolent and missionary orcaniationi appear to he in straits, and are calling strenuousfy upon the churches for prompt aud IilH.-ral gifts" to enable them to close their financial year without debt. This is the case with the prcsbyterian foreign missionary board; with the baptist missionary union, which needed to receive $1.70,000 between March 1 and April lö in order to come out fQiiarc, and with tne bom missionary society, which makes an appeal for help. People w ho question the productiveness of mission work will be edified by a comparison of the statistics of the congregational churches
in Massachusetts in isstf with the mission churches in Japan in lss7. ,The M.7 congregational churches in that uttte in lSseJ received 3,733 members' on confession of faith, an average of about seven to each church, and an incrcase of less than 4 per cent, on a membership of !Ki,4t2. The 2:'l Protestant churches in Japan received in ICS? .7,014 members, an avernse of over 23 per cent, on a membership at the beginning of the year of 1 j. It is nnnouneed thnt llie translation of the bible into thi Japanese laniruaire has been eonipleted. Tliis work, which lins been la progress since 1S71, lins been accomplished by two ciiiiiniltriK, nppointcil ty the Irndinij bible soeie tie. The first consisted of the llcv. S. Ik brow n. P. 1)., the Uev. l. C. Green, I). 1 and lr. J. Hepburn. This committee hnring performed the fre-lc of translating the New J'cslnincnt, about iNl a new committee consisting of Pr. Hepburn, the Uev. O. F. Verbeck, I. P., and Ihe llcv. P. K. Fyson, who resigned about n yeor aro, was appointed to complete) the translation of the) Jcw Testament. There's a pious and Itrnorttnt farmer Id VirKiiii.twho used to do a littlo extra work nt preaching, but hclutn't for several year now. On tlie occasion of hi last appenrnneo he selected for Ihe bibbt reinlintj Job's ilescriptjon of tht! yvnr horse, in w hie h oceurs tho jiasnge: "He saith itrtmnu' Ihe trumpets, bn! Iial and he siiicllt-ih the bntile nfnr vt." Ihe food man rend nlon j with inert -rising fervor nnd emphn. si until be came to this, nnd then ho rolled the sentence forth: "He smith among the Iriiuipi-ts, liny! hay! and." Put he never yot nny further than thnt, tor the people, foreeltiiiif the Mitictlly ef the plnee, tittfretl, nnd tlu-ii went Inlo sin h a bitich that the merlins' broke up In illnirder, and tho furnier quit the pulpit forever. The- religions papers have printed the cor. respondi nee w lib Ii hits taken place bet ween the conlt ifiice fotuinlHfrs appointed by thi iieirlhern and ihe southern prcshytirlnn'rhtirehi a to cotinlil-r a btisii of union, and the rapid npprojicli f (he iui-ctlnt;of the asm niblies of theo t w o great bodies which take plnec hi May lends ittti rest nnd importance to thla corre. spondriiee. The four points of elillcrencf be. Iwecn the two e hurclit n were: As to doctrine; as to I he ecclesiastical iiosilloii of the beiifvolant n-;enele (bonrds) of the church; as to political th live nunc, ami as to the stilus of colored church member nnd ihurchia. The first three of these are pracl lenity removed. Thti northern eommitlt-n has sittiatled the southern that the northern church fully and henrtilv ai't-epts the atamhirds of belief, and that the church "board t" are n much under the control of the emend assembly aa if they were culled "committees." As to lha elellveratiees of the northern church upon slavery and the war tln southern committee aeeina to he content to let the metier rest at litst. Tho fourth rpit Ntioii Is still nu open one, Tlier in a general ai'reeiiicnt in the South upon the advlsability of sepiirnte churches and separate pres. by li-rles fur the colored people, 'I bis heilig the case, it sct-nis lo be na hiiüspcnMibir) retiuirite 'f union that the northern eluin Ii should not litslt that the colored tii-oplc ahitll lit lontr to i hun lies i ii rily or inn inly composed of whites, or the colored churches l i presbyteries purtly er mainly compost d ef rhurcliri whose members are till white. MADAME SOHLKE'3 HYSTERIA. The Mlnfoi tunes or a lUllet Pnneer Who t'sed to Day nrds lVllh fiiMtihet to, New Verk Herlit. Tho public who were de-lighted with the nriitic dancing ed Mine. Atcusta Cohlke in the principal theatres In this city not mnny yrnr ie." liuve since heard something of her misfortune ns well as of lit r triumph.. None of the loi nier, however, equalled the elisraee of being drv,'fd into a police court on a vulgar rhnrce of ii-'-nult, w hielt was her unhappy lot on Wedln sday, Mie has latterly kept n cliool of ballet tlanciiiL( nt tin. r 7 Tliird-avr., and two Ctrl nmoiii; her pupils were bti.uheth ami Mury Wnns. Mie promised them, as they declare, positions on llie Ktage, oml when they thought that they hud been loner enmifh in tutelage nnd wanted her to keep her word she elccliircd that r.liihtlh was too stupid for anything nnd strut k her on the nose, ft bh-d, that poor little nose tlid, and riiadntne was si rested. Jus. ticc Murray wanted security for her subsequent nppeiinmre, nnil clio wits nhotit to he led nwny to ii dunce on cell, but Some (enllemfln w ho had known her in her days of clory gallantly interceded, nnd she wits released on parole. Mie fainted before she left tho court room. The hist tb-cndi' of Mine. So hike's career hl continued some preltv notorious episodes. Mie isn llunt'iiriiin by birth, and is now nbout fortylive, years old. Hio ha travelled ni'ich in läirope and America. In ls77 she ret ti rued from Paris to New York at a member of tho bonfanti "black Crook" company, nnd In the autumn of thnt year wa premiere, dnnsetise nnd hud charge of the bnllet in "bife" ot the Fifth-live, theatre. Mie also was engnged in "The White l'uwn" nnd other pcrtncular pieces. Put by Unit time her starof beauty and youth nnd grace was on the wane, and in 1C7 she was reduced to the keeping of a lodging house for theatrical people. On tho moring of July 2(J, 17., she startled ihe police by informing them that she bud been atrociously assaulted in her room while servant nnd lotlge r were absent from tho house by two snlluw-fnee-d, ragged and fib by tramps, nnd that after llopiring Iter, half drowning her in a bathtub an J nearly strangling her ith a srurf wound tight around her neck they had robbed her of her jewel and tied. One ot the riie.'s which they had taken, she said, was given her by (iamhctla. Mine. Jsohllu'' fctory wm not generally believed. The jol ice declared it to lie a elelusion. Her manner and appearance were stich as to snpgest derant ine-nt of mind. Hereyeahada glassy look, her face w as flushed, her speech w a incoherent, nnd it wus quite evident that she had taken somull.ing pretty strong in the way of stimulants, No one doubled, however thnt she believed nil she had told, and she fainted alter she. vent to Ihe eloor and had called to an iceman to go and infoini the police. 'I he police surgeon w ho examined her proiiouneeil her n.l'eeiioii hysterical n in nia. In l'l Mine. Jsohlke i.gain produced a sensatlon. Mie wrote a letter to tho Undid elcrlnring that her poverty and the ncglee't in which site found herself were loo.groat for her to bear and that sho was fully determined npon suicide. The method she had chosen was the slow nnd lingering ono of starvation. Up to that time she had gono w ithout food for fourteen days, although che had elrank abundantly of strong liquors. She remarked that she thought that they miht help to finish her. Mio wus living 'then in a llat at no. Ct Fotirth-ave. nnd had with her her liitlc sorf Hans, about seve n years old, w ho was already educated us a dancer, tuid could have earned a salary but for the objections of Commodore. Ccrry's society. As she was talking to a Jlrrn'l reporter tho little fellow begged his Mother rutiier piteously not to tlie. Mie il -e lared that she hnd spent all of her money wr.s in elcht nnd had failed In the design of stnrtlnt; a dancing school. In the midst of her recital ehe burst into tenw. The publication, of the story the next day broii yht her abundant pecuniary re lief, and sho took ii more cheerful view of life, resolving not to epiit it quite jet. To a reporter hut-aid: "II made i,i mad. you j-e, to think of old times, of the days when Oiimbetta played cards w iih me ut my ow n houe iu Paris; w hen Napoleon nevcrj'usMcd me by without a compliment; w hen fiie old king of llivnri.i said to me, 'Sthlke, elon't ever go to America; you'll surely starve there, like loln. Montez Then tho serenades, nnd the flowers ami the jewels and the love-making! Ah! it is bitter to recall those pleasjint times, now that 1 am so peor and miserable." I'reporlng for the Ilettle. Chicago, April 11. The executive committl e of tlie elemocrntic association of the northwest met In this city to-elay. F.lli Ik Vshcr of Wisconsin, Fdward II. Hunter of Iowa and W. J. Mie of Illinois were present. The unification of the slates ia an active cam-pui-'n tor a reduction of the UrtrT, a proposed Iu the president'! message, was discusseel, and ot the next meeting of the association it is probable that a plan will be prepared.
THE LUCKY OR TIIE PLUCKY
JOE HOWARD, JR., COMPARES THEM. Temperament the Chief Element In Success or Failure In Lifts A few rerttnent Illustrations from a Well mied Scrap-Boolu BY JOE nOWTABD, SR. Without plunging very deeply Into tue metaphysics of this subject, we will have a few moments' talk about fate and luck. We speak of a lucky fellow, meaning by that a man who is fortunate, and yet luck may bo good or ill, the one as often as the other. If we mean by luck, how ever, an oft recurrence among the line of help or hindrance, without ppecial effort, work, th-ought, exertion on the part of him to whom the luck, good or evil, comes, wdiy not believe in it? Some people go through life bathed in ennt-hinc perpetually, others w alk forever in a vale of tears, and the shadow of the high mountain impassable, unctovcvabl?. r-omo men, snnny-natnred, easy-tcm--pored, lazy, gotxi-for-nothingfellows, to whom a thought would lie a novelty, and an exercise a curiosity, find every eloor open at their approach, and nannuete fpread with even imaginable and con ceivable elelicacy, with netthinjr to interfcrc with the onpoings of their pleasure from the rising of the sun to the going down thereof, While other men, careful, brooding, ever plodding earnestly, e-on-acientiously along first this road, then the other, meet a continuity of disappointment and disaster, which absolutely en shroud them in a gloom that i never penetrated by a ray of hope: confronted ever by elisnppointrnent until the closing scene wiH tliem from the face of the. earth into tho Mack new of darknc-fn impenetrnble. It will not be gravely argued thnt birth has nothing to eio with" nian'n rh.mcca in life. I remember, w hen I began to yvork in thinking thnt of all the men iu the world whoso chance. I envied there were but two whoso opportunities were seriously nny Iwttcc than mine. They were Albert Ivlwnrd. Prince of Wnlc:e, whose progrcfci through the provlrcenfind the Mate I wan then chronicling for the Not York Tiinn, and ynnnj Jim I't-n-net t, whose) father wnt then editor ami proprietor of tlie great journal with which hid name wa eynojiynionH. Io you mean to tell me that young Hcnnitt didn't have u better opportunity for professional renown thon any other young man about toeinhrncethat noblest profession, journalism? Pid tho Prince eif Wale have no ampler neopo than the other young men born In tho british dominion? i course, Hith andtclnl position and pecuniary Matua have much toelo with tnen'd opportunitlea, but w hen we ellse-us broad question we must look with wide vision ; we must not contlne our illustration to extreme, in tint take the average. Tho average man In poor, the great majority very poor. If it bo a fact, and it UiKpiestlonnbly 1, thnt of evcrv 100 young men who go into mercantile lifa ninetylive fail be fore they Rre thirty year of ngc, nnel of the other live, thie-n jet em fairly well, one make n profound iinprrsion In bin sphere, nnd one alone becomes phenomenal, standing head and Shoulder above his fellow In all tho wotld, where come in tho matte r of hick? Whero i the exception? Isn't It a fact thnt the trrcat multitude toil nnd suffer through the blasts of winter nnd in tho torriditi- ed t uintncr for barely enough to keep theinselvc from Marvingand to cover their nakedu.es from the jibe' and fneering of the world? I te ll you temperament decide almost everything. What would tu-ein to ono luck of the most grewsotno nature appears to another on a similar pbne of lite simply an unhappy incide nt, temporary In it nature, not lasting iu iteH'ect. Some men, worth fiOtyn'rO, groan over the luck of their neighbor who is worth $l,(jfl,(X)0, while nnother man who can honestly say "lam worth to-day $100,(HK),M i so overwhelmed with recognition of Id independence, of the power in hi band to do pood among the suffering and the sick andthei tired nnd weary of earth, that he can find no word MinVicntly rntunel with which to expres hi satisfaction, hid content, his eb-lipbt. frimo people, mv, "Whatever i to be will be. If I am fated to be rich I will have money, and if I nm fated to be poor I won't have any. A man who w a born to be hanged will never be drow ned, so whatever coined I take it because I have got b). I didn't ask to come here." Now lhat'nrilly. In tho first place I don't know whether vou ukcd to come here etr not. Neither tfo ytiu. That two and two added together ate fat'd to make four, yes, but are yon fated? Is there any compulsion that force you to put one two unde-r another two? If you Muh your too you fall. Hut why Muh yourtee? If you hack your finger with a knife Mood will flow, but w hy hack your linger? You may assume that you nre fated to be rich. What littercncc d-fd your anfumption mnko? In order to be rich you must be industrious, saving, sclf-aacrillcing, inelustrious. TIiom factor enter largely into the problem of pucccss in life, and if those factor aro properly grouped in yourea.io you will bo rieh. It is a very räre combination, this honesty of purpose, this continuity of industry, thi intelligent direction, but if you have them the result is certain, nnd if you have them and ej.i not use them the result is equally certain. You cannot raise, figs on a thistlo tree or thistles on a fig-tree, and you cannot bring elisgrace uponhonor.nor can you crow n elishotn-sty with integrity. I known nian who lias lost an eye, who has broken an arm twice, w ho yvas shot through hid right lung, nnd w henever anything happens to him, hewy: "It i just my lurk. ' My friend of the many nevitlc'nts Is a peculiarly constituted individual. Had lie looke'd he wouldn't have fallen down the hatchway. Thnt he wan shot through the right lung was eine to his preenco upon the field of battle. That lie lost hi eye is attributable to the fact that w hen be flashed his little pile of poweler he didn't shield his face, ami ye t he say, as accident after accident occurs, "It i"iiist ray luck." It is just his stupidity. Ami when vou mt that it i Jay finulJ'. luck, or it to Vandefbilt'a luck, or it is tlie luck of thin, that ami the other, you attribute to some unseen potentiality rcnulu w hich might much itetter bo attributed to the natural forcings of perfectly we ll understood, hut rarely possessed, cfements in human nature. Cannon Kenouilnnted. Paul, III, April lb Speci.il. The republican convention of the Fifteenth Illinois district met hereto-day. The lion. J. G. Cannon k m renominated for congress hy nrclanintion. William It. Jewell, of Ptoiville, was renominated for presidential elee'tor. ( harlcs P. I I itch . of this city, end Frank K. Rohinmn, of Champaign, were selected as delegate to the national convention. Jaines C. tilenn, of Mattoon, wus nominated for member of the stnte board of eqtinllwttion. Resolutions of sympathy for the, Hon. I.oscoc Conkling in his serious illness were passed and a copy telegraphed to Sir. Conkling. A Shooting Affair. , GRRKJsanvso, April 11. Special. At Forest Hill, five miles east, Dr. Geo. W. Godfrey shot John Taker to-day. The hall struck the left srm and passed through into the sM., where it struck a rib. The cause of the trouble is an old grudge. The sheriff has gone dow n to make arrests.
R. R. R.
RAD WAY'S Ready Relief Tbe Cheapest sod IVst Medicine for rm!ly Um la the World. Sore Throat, Cold., Cough, Inflammation, Sciatica, Lumbago, Tdieumatism, Neural gia, Headache, Toothache, Nervousness, Diphtheria, Influenza, Difficult Breathing, CLT.ED AND rKEVENTED BT KADTTAY'S HEADY RELIEF. In esses of LureK-so and rheumatism, EJy's It'-a.lT r.tlltf never fails. Streng Testimony of Emigrant Commissioner, the Hon. George Starr, o to the Tower of KadwayV Ready Relief in a Ca.o of Sciatic Rheumatism. No. rt Vas Nr.M V ack, Nrw Toat. l-n. rUtiWAY : With nte your n! lf Iis rnrko snnOi-i. l or eh hist Ihm. jittrs I lure tial freiiient strt si vcre sttm-ks of n Utl- t, otnol lairs eiti'iniini; Irotu Ihe bmilinr n kIii to my snkli, sul Ot lluir in Im.iIi liiwe r ltnih. t'iiriiiK Hi" Ilm 1 Imvo Ix-rn lT1li-t..4 I liv IrlM lite t uil the ri-inislli-s ri-is.inti rnd -. ls rwi ml (.Mil, Unplug to liirl it liif, hut all proTdl to tm f.iltnrt-s. I linxs trlet Tcrlmts kltids of tmtlis. tnisnlpulstioe, outwnnt Sili(-ntlti ol luiliiii'iit ton numerous en inriitloii, mil in -i i i.l iotin i. ilu- tmist rmliicul pitfSlel:lll, (til fif liirtl l,ll(s to I rr tue r lif. N plrinlicr, nt Ilia tiruert reijiirst of a frlen-t ( h lia.l lH-rii t:t. t,i mxM1fi I m In. lues-. I 1 Irr your rr-titnly. I na ihi'n sun.-r.nit lesrlulle (ili one of my oi l turns, l .t nijr surprise tint eJe-lli-l;t tin- rtrt iii.lii-lliin jrnve nm caw, afirr hutlilm nml rtiUl.tfiK the 1'iiris ui.i . i. l, Ii stIui( Iiis llinl. Iu s arm i l'i, t is-uti-il l.y tUe lli-'li I. In aliott lime tin- fin I u pMil rntlrilv sfat. Alihotiuti 1 liare shttlii .rri...li I nii.n l. s..ruui liin,: selisneeef writhrr, I knoir nv Ii i i rurr tnvi If, still rr ijiillf ti.nst.T iif tin ltittl"ti. IIAOWA VS hi. AOr PI.I.IS.I I niy fid ml. 1 iirrrr travel without if tmtU in in y illf. Vom in.h, C.LO. STACn. Tlie rollowliiff was llreeliewt ty Mall Throuuh W. II. Itl)lh, lruitirttl Mount I'leasmtt, Trim. Mn. W. II. Hi. vi ir. Mr: In e.iin.liim- srtih yovr riin ' lurtil-li J i'U Ith Iii ri'.nli- of ntr knnwleiii;e suit r Ttierli-iiir Uli Jr, Pailwsv's 1C. Il , In re-1-ljf 1 esn Stute I (ml I hsvs 1ms n ulni( tli ILtdwaf ,.'inr.i im- . l. I know llirt lli ml T ILi lli J lo tue SM'fli (i.r tint nn.t nil Imwil n.iu!nliil. Ills mure n-llnl-ln fur isilil, plnirUr, pat inm-nU sail idsn, pruwlnj out ol inl.U, fi.r i ut, l,rulsr, irlu, rlii-iimatlMii uml si In, hicI ii.niis grin rally, tlisn nr rrtuMl I hvf et-r known trle.1. I r-nii inr inriiul knoli-iln of tue litulwsy It. m. illf- I think llir-iu all sufH-rl'ir iu flii.T i"tii''liii of Iiii ii I luve any knol-e-il.-e fur till tin Ills fur nltlrli Ihry re reisinnaendeit. " l;ejMt'f liillv, T. II. sKII'Molli; l'aj.t..i e.ri rn Hill pri nt'? U-t iu i'Uurrh. lADAVAY'S .HEAD Y BELIEF ... WILL AlTOr.D INSTANT EA5E. Iar1itninstlon of tin kl !n"y, Inflannustlnn of M1 b-r, liithiiniattlon el il liosrl. enitirtin of tl litiiK-, surr t lit out . illfTii-iilt l.r.-.i l Ii i rijr, iall ts ton if Ihr lip-trt , hysterica, enmp, cllilitlnilA, riilanh, lall irn-n, III :tiiirhe, tool Ii' Ii", III UlsU'lS, rlilHIUil Hill, ril rliiila, t hllh Ulli, fruit-hlte., lu retiusne, leej )riuri, i tu-a.r.iii-i.tion of th r:t:Anv nri.iti' t the j-ii I i.r j.ui () In-rc t,r illlhriiliy er puln xLit ald Sil ir. e.i.Hi Mini t'iitiifiirl. l hlrty tu sixty ilrui In s bnlf ttnuhler of tir l'.l In a l-w mitlitt- t-tir" irsmtiK, sotir sionnw-h, In n t hurt), hi-Hil.u'lii-, 1 i: ri hoi-s, ilj cillery, exilic, s lid in i lis Ihihi U uihI liiti i list i.t!n. MALARIA. Chili nnd Fovor, Fovor nnd Afluo Conquered. Radway's Ready Rclicl Not only eure Ihn iinlUnt twli-! with Iltis trrlM (in- to Sri tiers Itl liew ill'trli I, lull if p-Cjile eiKsi-i1 In it will, et i-i r iiiortt I nvT em f ttlfig out of Isst, Uks t wi'til v or t hin r (lr.i f Ilm Iti'uily lU'lli l In a nln of atr, sihI tlrliik It nii.l irat a rrwkrr, thi-r w 111 esi ajie altai k. 1 tils inusl lie tlmia Ix fre aolna; out. I I.VI'It sr. I Afi IT. eiini! for Meent. Tit.'re U r.l a n imiil.il nis-nt In Ihownrhl t lint will cum h-rrr soil niiw ntnl all otln-r iiinlnrluu hilloua ati'l ntbi-r fevi is isl'li-il hy UA lVA V I'lLl-; i tpilekly lUdna ' lu-aly Ixlli-f. Klft.r Cent IVr Nellie. KlI.Ii NY DRfOi.I.sH DR. RADWAY'S SARS A PAH I LLI AN RESOLVENT. i ' The tiroat IHol rurilier. l or the Cure of All Chronic Disease. f'lironle rtieiimntliin, a.rufiila, yilillltie compUintM, etc, granular s.-Ulr.'.-, lin.Ulii, dry rouph, ratin-roii allii-Oiiii, t.hs'iiitiK of Hie Inn?, dyrsl;i, wali-r-tiin'h, white ri !liti;, tuiuors, piui)li-s. Mult-lies, t-rtiitiejns of t Im fve, u Ii t r. hin tl iittt, pout, iliui) , rh ki ll, s.ilt b-titu, liriiDchltis, eon- : euiiiiltun, ll'tr uniijilai'it, etr. 7r. natUray'nSarna pa vidian Ketof mit A n mi'ily mtiiiHiM .1 of Intrrft'li-iil of eilt vtrilinorr nio'lii-al irojH-ri Irs ewiiii.il lo nit!fv, hi-sl, r-pir uni lui h"irsif lite ipiki-n In o onl v suti' t Issl .li( k. 1'li'liSMIlt, l-illn Mllll JH-I UJltll'ltt in lit lO .U iih in an.! cure. tHil'l hr !l I! it;it. oni: dom.au rr.R hottle. Radway's Pills, The Great Liver and Stomach Remedy. Terfctly tsdrli., ehvr.titlr coated with sweel gum, piiiv, regulitte, jpurily, rIcTi.se atiJ strength-1. Radway's Pills. I'ur the cure of all tlKoriW of tln stomarb, liTer, tmwcl, khlm ys, hlHihlrr, li' i vous tlMaw, rnuti(alion, tsistlvcti'-, itidU'i-siiot,, hlllouni, fet-er, tun.imuiatliin of the Imst I, (Mh-s and all rli-ranemecU ol the liili-reul Tlirfxia. 1'urrly vi-c'-lfhlr. cnotaialag no tm-n-ury, utint-rulS or UcUtrrlous aru. Perfect Digestion Will oroimjillshM by Uklnj Kalwar's IMli. Ij so eJuliig Sick Headache, rswpls, fotd stomartt, hl!ounfs will he aroi'le.1 ml ihe I'mmI ilmt is culi-n tsmlrihuUi i'a timirl-hlnj jpreperlli-s lor the u rt cf the natural mute ol tue M.V. eihscrrr the followins; sj nt'itntn n-Milliuc from eSisi-ascs of the ilir. ,r;iiis: ('nn.tliat lin, inwant iiilpn. ftiUitrsa of lilool .'.I tin hrnd, arlilltr of the stutnarli, aii.ns.-H, In uil'mi n, ol-piiit nf hisxt, fulllis or wnlp lit of the slortini li, m ur crttt-t.itiuna, slnktntt or flutti-rinfT of llie heart, bcklnc ur iiriK-üiio N-iiNMtlon w hrn In a Irli'C isi--lire, etliitncs.1 of vtnlon, etuis or wt-ls Ix-fure thi sirfltf, tr,er sinl .lull jtln lit the hi ait, tii fliiciii-y of ierv'lr.ittt n, yellowiieM of thf skin nml rym, uiu in th ahlo, i hrl, I hubs, aud stntili-n t1wrtirol lrt. ruirniujf in tin- ;le.h. A fpwlo-rof ICAItWAY'.s IMLIe will free tli rutetn of all the altni-e-uameil tl'.intrts. I'rlie, ?. cents rnr o. N1-1 hr nil dru-:rl'. S. od lotirr t.nnp tu Ir. KAl'WAY A ej-, NsV, 82 Wsrrrn aereet. New ork. Itifurnitilou Vorth tbouundi will tic sent to too. TO THK rroLic. Fesnresrd fur Hal war 'a, anil see ILaI Ca aanit "UAL WAY" la ou what you buy.
