i n THE TEMPLE OF DIANA far):-- • i|.- , - Dr. Talmage Preaches of His Visit to Ephesus* A Continuation of Sermon* on Ills Trip Asms* the Pyramids to the Acropolis —A Discourse Fall of Thought* Worth Reading* * Bboom.tk, N. Y., Nor. 15, 1891.— Br. Talmage continued this morning Ma series of sermons • entitled, "Fi ora ttm Pyramids to the Acropolis." Tills •trmon, which is the fifth’of the series, ti concerned with the doctor's visit to Bphesus, of which city, with its won* derfu temple and other buildings, ho gives a vivid description, with char acteristic exegcticnl comments on o!> soure passages of scripture. His text Was: Acts 19:34, Ureat is Diana of tlie Hpheslana " WO nave lanauu mint morning in iH/roa, a city of Asiatic Turkey, tee of tho seven churches of Asia once stood here. You read in Revelation, ‘•T# the church in Smyrna write." It it a eity that hus often been shaken by earthquake, swept by conflagration. Masted by plagues, and butchered by war, and here Uishop l'olycarp stood M a crowded amphitheatre and when he was asked to give up the advocacy ml the Christii n religion and save him self from martyrdom, the pro-consul saying; "Swear aud I release thee; reproach Christ," replied; "Eighty and six years have I served him, and ha never did me wrong; how then can I revile my King and Saviour?" VVhen he was brought to the tires into which he was about to be thrust, and the •fitoiuLs were about to fasten him to the stake, he said; "Let me remain as 1 am for he who giveth me strength to sustain the fire will enable mu also without your securing me with nails to remain unmoved in the fire." His tory says the tires refused to consumo him, and under the winds the flames bent outward so that they did not touch bis person, and, therefore, he was slain by swords and spears. One eypress bending over his grave la the only monument to Uishop l'olycarp. Rut we are on the way to the city of Bphesus, about fifty miles from Smyrna. We are advised not to go to Ephesus; the bandits in that region have bad an ugly practice of cutting Off the ears of travelers and sending these specimens of curs down to Smyrna, demanding a ransom. The bandits suggest to the friends of the persons from whom the ears have been subtracted that if they noidi like to have the rest of tho body "be.v will please send an appropriate sum of money. If the money is not sent the mutilated prisoners will ba assassin ated. One traveler was carried off to ■ the robbers’ den, and $7,500 was paid for bis rescue. The bandits were . eaught and beheaded, and pictures of these ghastly heads are on sale in the shops of Smyrna for auy persons who may desire to have something to look at on their way to Ephesus. There have been cases where ten and twenty and thirty and forty thousand dollars have been demanded by these brig ands. We did not feel like putting our friends to such expense, and it was sug Seated that we had better omit Ephesus ut that would have beeu a disappoint ment from which wo would never ro oover. We must see Ephesus-asso ciated with the most wonderlul apos ■ tolio scenes We hire a special railway train, and in about an hour and a half we arrive at tl e city of Ephesus, which Was called "'1 ho Ureat Metropolis of Asia," and "One of tho eyes of Asia," and "The Empiess of Ionia," the capl - , tal of all learning and magnificence. Here, as I said, was one of the seven •hurches of Asia, and first of all we visit the ruins of that church where once an Ecumenical council of 2,000 ministers of religion was held. raura me lumumenc oi ine prophecy. Of the seven churches of Asia, four were commended in the book of Bevel ation, and three were doomed. The eities buying the four commended churches still stand; the cities having the three doomed churches are wiped out. It occuned just ns the Bible said it would occur. Drive on oud you come to the theater, which was 600 feet from wall to wall, capable of holdidg 56,700 spectators. Here and there the walls arise alrnoht unbroken, but for the most part the building is down. Just enough of it is left to help the imagination build it up ns it was when those audi ences shouted and clapped at some great spectacular. Their huzzas must fettve been enough to stun the heavens. Now, we step into the stadium. Enough ot its appointments and walls are left to show what a stupendous place it must have been when used for foot races and for fights with wild beasts. It was a building 680 feet long by 200 feet wide, l’aul refers to what transpired there in the way of spectacle when he says. “We have been made a spectacle.” “Yes," Paul says, *T have fought with beasts at Ephesus," an expression usually taken as figurative, but i suppose it was literally true, for one of the amusements in that stadinm was to put a disliked man in the arena with a hungry lion or tiger or panther, and let the fight go on until either the man or the beast or both were slain. It must have been great fun for these haters of Christian ity to hear that on the morrow in the Stadium in Ephesus the missionary Paul would, iu the presence of the crowded galleries, fight a hungry lion. The people were early there to get the best seats, and a more alert and enthusiastic crowd never assembled. They took their dinners with them And was there ever a more unequal combat proposed? Paul, aceording to tradition, small, crooked-backed and weak-eyed, but the grandest man in sixty centuries, is led to the center, as the people shout: “There he comes, the preacher who has nearly ruined our religion. The Hon will make but u brief mouthful of him.” It is plain that all the sympathies of that crowd are with the lion, in one of the un derground rooms I hear the growl of the wild beasts. They have been kept for several days without food or water that they may bo especially ravenous and bloodthirsty. What chance is there for Paul? But you can not tell bj a mas s also car looks bow stout a blow he can strike or how keen a blade be can thruBt. Witness, heaven and eariU and hell, this struggle of l'aul with a wild beust. The coolest man in the Stadium is Paul. What has he to fear? lie has deflcd all the powers, earthly and infernal, and if his body tumble under the foot and tooth of the wild beast, his soul will only the sooner find disenthralment. Hut it is his duty, as fnr as possible, to preserve his life. Now, I hear the bolt of the wild heust's door shove back, and the whole audience rise to their feet as the tierce brute springs for the arena and toward its smull occupant. I think the first plunge that was made by the wild beust at the apostle was made on the point of a sharp blade, and the snarl ing monster with a howl of pain and n ek ng with gore, turns buck, liut now the little misiioaarv has his turn of making attack, and with a few well directed thrusts the monster lies dead in the dust of the arena, and the apos tle puts his right foot on tno lion and shakes him, and then puts his left foot on him and shakes him—a scene which I’anl afterwards uses for an illustra tion when he wants to show how Christ will triumph over death—"He must reign till he hath put all enemies un der his feet;’’ yes, under his feet l’aul told the literal truth when he said: "I have fought with beusta at Ephe sus," and us the plnrul is used, I think he had more than one sueh fight or several beasts were let loose upon him at one time. As we stood that dny in the middle of the Ktndium and looked around the great structure, the whole ' scene cam hack upon us. In the midst of this city of Ephesus once floated an artificial lake, brilliant with painted boats, and through the lliver Cayster it was connected with the sea, and ships from all parts of the known earth floated in and out carry ing on a commerce which made Ephe sus the envy of the world (Ireut was Ephesus! Its gymnasia. Its hippo drome, its odeon, its athenaeum, its forum, its aqueducts (whose skeletons are still strewn along the city,) its towers, its castle of Hadrian, its monu ment of Androclus, its quarries, which were the granite cradle of cities, its temples, built to Apollo, to Minerva, to Neptune, to Mercury, to ltacchus, to Hercules, to Cnisar, to Fortune, to Ju pitor Olympus. What history and po etry and chisel and canvas have not presented has come up at the call of archaeologists' powder-blast and crow bar. Hat I have now to nnveil the chief wonder of this chiefest of cities. In 1803, under the patronage of the Eng lish government, Mr. Wood, the ex plorer, began at Ephesns to feel along under the ground at grant depths for roads, for walls, for towers, and here it is—that for which Ephesus was more celebrated than all else beside—the temple of the goddess Diana, called the sixth wonder of the world, and in 1889 wo stood amid the ruins of that temple, measuring its pillars, trans fixed by its sculpture, and confounded at what was the greatest temple of idolatry in all time. As I sat on a piece of ono of its fallen columns, 1 said, “what earthquake rocked it down, or what hurricane pushed it to the earth, or under what strong wine of centuries did the giant stagger and fall?” There have been seven temples of Diana, the ruins of each contribut ing something for the splendor of all its architectural successors. Two hun dred and twenty years was this last temple in construction. Twice asking os the United States have stood was that temple in building. It was nearly twice os large as St. l'aul’s cathedral, London. Lest it should bo disturbed by earthquakes, which have always been fond of making those regions their playground, the temple was built on a marsh, which was made firm by layers of charcoal covered by fleeces of wool. The stone came from the quarry near by. After it was decreed to build the temple, it was thought it would be necessary to bring the ’build ing stone from other lands, but one day a shepherd by the name of Pixodorous, while watch ing his flocks, saw two rams fighting, and as they missed the interlocking of their horns and ono fell, his horn knocked a splinter from the rock and showed by that splinter the lustrous whiteness i f the rock. The shepherd ran to the city with a piece of that stone, which revealed a quarrv from which place the temnle was built, and every month in all ages since, the mayor of Ephesus goes to that quarry to offer sacrifices to the memory of that shepherd who discovered this source of splendor and wealth for the cities of Asia Minor. In removing the great stones from the quarry to their des tined places in the temple, it was nec essary, in order to keep the wheels, which were twelve feet in diameter, from sinking deep into the earth under the unparalleled heft, that a frnme of limbers be arranged over which the wheels rolled. To put the immense block of marble in its place over the doorway of one of these temples was so vast and difficult an undertaking that the architect at one time gave it up. and in his chagrin intended suicide, but one night in liis sleep he dreamed that the stone had settled to the right place, and the next day he found that the great block of marble hud by its own weight settled to the right place. The temple of Diana was 425 long by 220 feet wide. All Asia was taxed to pay for it It hail 127 pillars, each sixty feet high, and each the gift of a king, and inscribed with the name of the donor. in audition to those pillars that I climbed over while amid the ruins of Diana's temple, 1 saw afterwards eight of th se pillars at Constantinople, to which city they had been removed, and are now a part of the mosque of St Sophia. Those eight columns are all green jasper, but some of thoso which stood in Diana’ temple at Ephesus were fairly drenched with brilliunt colors, t ostly metals stood up in various parts of the temple, where they could catch the fullest flush of the sun. A flight of stairs was carved out of one grape vine. Doors of cypress wood, which had been kept in glue for years and l(ordered with bronze in bas-relief, swung against pillars of brass, and re sounded with echo upon eeho. caught up, and sent on, and hurled back through the corridors. In that build ing stood an image of Diana, the god dess The impression was abroad as the Ilible records, that that image had dropped plumb out of heaven into that temple, and the sculptors who really made the statue or image were put to death, so that they could not testify of its human manufacture and so deny its celestial origin. It was thought by intelligent poople that the material ,from which this Idol was formed might have dropped out of heaven M an aerolite. We have aoen In the British Museum, and in universities of our own west, blocks of stone hurled off from other worlds. These aerolites were seen to fall, and witnesses have gone to the landing places, and scientists have pronounced them to be the pro duct of other worlds. liut the ma terial out of which the imago of Diana was fashioned contradicts that notion, j This image was carved out of ebony l Rud punctured here and there with I openings kept full of Rpikenurd so us | to hinder the statue from decaying and make it aromatic, but this ebony was covered witli bronze and alabaster. A necklace of acorns coiled gracefully around her. There were four lions on each arm, typical of strength. Her head was coronettod. Around this figuru stood statues which by wonder ful invention ffited tours. The air by strange, machinery was damp with de scending perfumes. The walls multi plied the scene by concaved mirrors. Fountains tossed in sheaves of light and fell in showers of diamonds. Praxiteles, the sculptor, and Apelles, the painter, filled the place with their triumphs. Crussus, the wealthiest of the ancients, put hero and there in the temple golden heifers. The paintings were so vivid and lifelike that Alexander, who was moved at nothing of terror, shnddered at one battle scene on these walls, and so true to life was a painting of a horse that when Alexander's horse wub led up to it, he began to neigh, as one horse is accustomed to greet another. In this city the mother of Jesus was said to have been buried. Here dwelt Aquilla and Priscilla of Bible mention, who were professors in an extempor ized theological seminary, and they taught the eloquent Apollos how to hie eloquent for Christ. Here John preached, and from here because of his fidelity he was exiled to Patmos. Here Paul warred against the magical arts for which Ephesus was famous. The sorcerers of this city pretended that they could cure diseases, and perform almost any miracle, by pronouncing these senseless words: “Aski Cataski Lix Tetrax Damnameneus Alston.” Paul having performed a miracle iu the name of Jesus, there was a lying family of seven brothers who imitated the apostle, and instead of their usual words of incantation, used the word Jesus over a man who was po sessed of a devil, and the man possessed flew at them in great fierceness and nearly tore these frauds to pieces, and in con sequence all up and down the Btreets of Ephesus there was indignation ex cited against the magical arts, and a great bonfire of magical books was kindled in the streets, and the people stirred the blaze until $35,000 worth of black art literature had burned to ashes. Jiut, all the (flory of Ephesus I have described has gone now. At some sea sons of the year awful malarias sweep over the place and put upon raattrass or in graves a large portion of the pop ulation. In the approximate marshes soorpions, oentipedes and all forms of reptilian life crawl and hiss and sting, while hyenas and jackals at night slink in and out of the ruins of build ings which once startled the nations with their almost supernatural gran deur. ltut here is a lesson which lias never yet been drawn out. Do you not see in that temple of Diana an expression of what the world needs? It wants a God who can provide food. Diana was a huntress, in pictures on many of the coins she held a stag by the horn with one hand and a bundle of arrows in the other. Oh, this is a hungry world! Diana could not give one pound of meat, or one mouthful of food to the millions of her worshippers. blie was a dead divinity, an imaginary God,and so in idolatrous lands the vast majority of people never have enough to eat. It is only in the country where the God of heaven and earth is worshipped that the vast majority have enough to eat. l.et Diana have her uno.vs and her hounds; our God has the sunshine and the showers and the harvests and in proportion as he is worshipped does plenty reign. ho also in the Temple of Diana the world expressed its need of a refuge. To it from all parts of the land came debtors who could not pay their debts and the offenders of the law that they might escape incarceration. Hat, she sheltered them only a little while, and while she kept them from arrest she could not change their hearts and the guilty remained guilty. But o ur Gpd in Jesus Christ is a refuge into which we may fly from all oursins and all our pursuers, and not only bo safe for time but safe for eternity, and the guilt is pardoned and the nature is trans formed. What Diana could not do for her worshippers our Christ accom plishes for us. Rock of npres cleft for me. Let me hide myself iu thee. Then in that temple were deposited treasures from all the earth for sale keeping. Chrysostom says it was the Ucasure-house of nations, they brought gold and silver and precious stones and coronets from across the sea, and put them under the care of Diuna of the Ephesians. But, again and again were those treasures ransacked, captured or destroyed. Eero robbed them, the Scythians scat tered them, the Goths burned them. Dian'a failed those who trusted her with treasures, but our God, to Him we may entrust all our treasures for this world and the next, and fail any one who puts confidence in liiin he never will. After the last jasper col umn has fallen and the last temple on earth has gone into ruins and the world itself has suffered demolition, tho Lord will keep for us our best treasure. Rut notice what killed Ephesus, and what has killed most of the cities that lie buried in the cemetery of nations. Luxury! The costly baths, which had been the moans of health to the city became its ruin. Instead of t ie cold baths that had been the invigoration of the people, tho hot baths, which are only intended for the infirm cr the in valid, were substituted. In these hot baths many lay most of the time. Au thors wrote books while in these baths. Business was neglected and a hot bath taken four or live times a day. When the keeper of the bath was reprimanded for not having them warm enough one of the rulers said: “You blame him for not making the bath warm enough ; I blame you because you have it warm at alL” But that warm bath Which enervated Ephesus, and which is al ways enervating except when followed bv cold baths (no reference, of course, to delicate constitutions) was only a type of what went on in all depart ments of Ephesian life, and in luxuri ous indulgence Ephesus fell, and the last triangle of mnsie was tinkled in Diana’s temple, and the last wrestler disappeared from her gymnasiums, and the last racer took his garland in the stadium, and the Inst plea was heard in her forum, and, even the sea, as if to withdraw the last commercial op portunity from that me r >polis, re-1 treated down the beach, leaving her without the harbor in which had I floated a thousand ships, lirooklyn, New York, London and all modern | cities, eis-Atlantie and trans-Atlantic! take warning. What luxury un guarded did for Ephesus, luxury un-1 guarded may do for alL Opulence and I splendor Ood grant to all the people, to all the cities, to all the lands, but at the same time, may he grant the right eous use of them. As our train pulled out from the sta tion at Ephesus, the cars surrounded by the worst looking group of villains I ever gazed on, all of them seeming in a wrangle with each other and trying to get into a wrangle with us, and we moved along the columns of ancient aqueducts, eaoh column crowned with storks, having built their nests there, and we rolled on down towards Smyrna, and that night in a Sailor’s Bethel, we spoke of the Christ whom the world must know or perish, we felt that between cradle and grave there could not be anything much more enthralling for body, mind and soul, than our visit to Ephesus. A HIDEOUS REPTILE. Despised kr Kvsrjr On*, the Tnad U Still a Very VmIiI Animal. It was Shakspenro who wrote, near ly three hundred years ago: Sweet aro the uses of adversity: W hloh like Uie toad, ual> uu i venomous. Wears yet a previous Jewel lu lilstau.nl. Even the bard t»f Avon, with his great loving heart, seemingly ignored the virtues of this much-maligued rep tile, and the grentor part of mankind, with characteristic obluseness, lias ac cepted his verdict as decisive. Bat it seems to me the prejudice is absolute Iv without a rational fouudution, says Kate FiehVs Washington. In the tirst place, it is only to tlio careless eyu that the toad is ugly. In reality, with his somew hat humorous mouth—which looks at times as if he were poking sly mental jokes at you and laughing in his skin for a lack of convenient sleeve —his mottled coat.of wood broivu and gray, with here and there a touch of yellow, nnd his weird, sphiux-like eyes, lie possesses a fascination as pe culiar ns it is delightful. Sir Bufo is a gentleman of regular although rather dissipated habits, pre ferring the night to the day; but he caU'Ofieu be found squatting under a projecting leaf or bower of grass, half napping while the noonday heat lasts. At dusk his fun begins, when he emerges from the shadow of his retreat and Imps about iu search of a supper. His appetite is guucrully good but ho likes to bo a bi^of an epicure when lie has Si chance. lie will cat worms, which lie crams into his mouth with his queer, bony hands and swallows whole, hut he loves a By or moth much better. Ho will sit quietly watcldug while a pertinacious By buzzes around. Apparently he is doziiig, for his eyes are half closed and his sides rise and fall to the regular beating of his heart; but suddenly—you cannot exactly un derstand how, fur the operatiou is so rapid—the fly has disappeared, aud a scarcely perceptible motion of our small friemlss throat is tlio only proof ive can obtain that ho lias already made his .-upper. Toads are ralnable acquisitions to a greenhouse, for'tliey are always ready and pleased to dispose of a bug <>r a beetle, aud their sudden darts invari ably bring down their prey. Xney can easily ho tamed, and. wltcu once they liml out that no harm is nieuut them, their friendliness is extreme. There are few things more amusing than to watch a toad submitting to thu operation of a back-scratching. Ho will at tirst look somewhat suspicious ly at Hie twig which you are advanc ing toward him. But after two or three passes down his back his man ner undergoes a marked change: his eyes close witli an expression of in finite rapture, he plants Ids feet wider npnrt nnd his body swells out to ob tain by these means more room for en joyment. Thus tic will remain until you make some sudden movongmt which startles him, or until lie has had ns much petting us lie wants, when with a ptilf of regretful delight, ho will reduee himself to his usual dimensions ami hop away, bent once more ou the pleasures of the chase. Not His Kissing Time* Perhaps no man in tho theatrical profession likes to appear dignilied on the streot more than lines actor Scan Inn. Whenever he walks up Broad way. which ho dbes every afternoon, he wraps himself in a big. thick coat of dignity and rireumsneotness, and none of tho frivolities of life move him. Now wlion on tho stage Mr. Scanlan plays parts of quite nn opposite nature. He is particularly at houiuwliuu romp ing aud dancing with the children, nml. of course, kissing them all in turn. Whenever he comes up from his dressing room the little ones all rush at him, clitnh over him and in sist on being kissed. It so happened tiie other afternoon that he met some of the children of Ids company on Broadway. It was the lirst time. They all made a rush at him. and very much to his discom fiture insisted on being each and every one kissed right then and there. "I felt like a fool.” said Mr. Sean lan. “and I knew that I was making a laughing stock of myself.” Since then he has not encouraged the familiarity of the children to quite such im extent as before.—N. Y. herald. The Pursuit of Knowledge. There are over 12 500.000 pupils in the public schools of the Uuited Slates. Wild dogs never bark—they simply whine and howl. Wise men say that barking is but nn effort to speak on the part of the animal The townhonse in Scltnale. maaa., erected 1654, waa burued recently. MISSING LINKS. Salvador has a telephone acbool. Russia has twenty-two iron-clads and monitors building. Tuekerlon, Pa.. is to have a vinegar vat tliut will hold 1,000 barrels. Men of science say that the chemist will dominate coming inventions. A syndicate lias olTered to buy the Washington Monumeut for a shot tower. Michelson has calculated the veloci ty of light to be 180,360 miles per second. The actnal length of the new St. Clair tunnel is 6.026 feet. It cost $1. 460.000. A swarm of flies cannot travel at any greater pace than eleven miles an hour. In the year 1635 a tulip bulb was sold io Holland for $2,200; it weighed but 200 grains. The waters of Lake Erie are to be piped into Cincinnati, taking in other cities eu touts. Thirty barrels of inaeuse were burned during'a three days* ceremonial in Siam recently. Easldonable men in Paris and Lon don are now using electricity as a cure for excessive tippling. There are 700 Americans residing ia the City of Mexico, some of whom ewo the houses they occupy. An American contractor is to build a railroad from the Amasoti to the Madeira, connecting Brasil with Boli via. A temperature of 330 degrees below lero line lieea produced by a bath of carbon bisulphide and liquid nitrous acid. The lire states of Iowa, Kansas, 111* Inois, Nebraska and Missouri produce fully oun-hnlf of the corn crop of the United Slates. The largest steer in Illinois, and probuh'y in the world, weighs 4 000 pounds and belongs to a Macoupin County farmer. Clear summer sunlight is said to penetrate the Mediterranean Sea to a depth of 1.200 feet; winter sunlight to only COO feet. In a certain portion of the Ural dis trict camels are the only working cattle used. some large farms possessing a hundred camels. The constitution of the United States has been published in New York in the Hebrew language, with explanatory notes in Hebrew. A cubic foot of newly fallen snow weighs live and one-half pounds and has twelve times the balk of nu equal weight of water. A female clerk at Washington has a hot-hnuso and last year sold 100.000 violets. Sno thinks of resigning and becoming a florist. A fuueral party in Kenuelt Square, Pa., were attacked at the grave by boos, and for a time not a little ex citeiueut prevailed. A wild goose killed in California had a grain of wheat in its drop, which, when plauted, produced a variety hitherto uiiknowu. Engiuo No 63. on the Panhandle Road, rau 060,000 miles in three years' time, and was still in good condition at tlie end of her service. A colored preaoher in Keutucky has made a big sensation by declaring that the “forbidden fruit” spoken of in the Bible is meant for watermelons. A farmer in Jelfersou County, Wis cousin, dislodged a huge rock at the bottom of his ivell when it sank out of sight revealing a subterranean lake. The bicycle has bacoiue almost as popular in Germany as it is in Ihe United Slates. The German Union of Bicyclists now has over 1.400 members. Waves exert a foreo of one ton por square iuuli whoa they tire only twenty feet high. At Cassis. France. granite blocks of fiftecu cubic meters have bceu moved by wave force. A man at Hazelton, Pa., is reported to. have been taken up by a gust of wind during a heavy storm" to a height of 100 feet and landed 160 feet from where ho started without being hurl And now cottonwood comes to the front ns a sugar factor. A southern grower says its saccharine qualities are lifteeu times greater than sugar cane aud twenty times strouger than beets. The chief caterer of fashionable society iu Washington is a woman who occupies a most unpretentious little shop. Sho has served every President since the days of Harrisou's grand* father. b In the village of Rio Grande, sis miles uortli of Cape May, N. J., there are two woeping trees, from the limbs of whieh rain falls to the ground daily, and the hotter the day the heavier the fall of uioisluro. Rattlesnakes are said to have a natural antipathy to whi e ash leaves. Some uaturalists assert Uiat a rattle snake placed in a circle of half ash IfSMVi*-* Mini If*If hot rn*U will cro«*q thn A Warning Word Buiif-r iruui eftittrru, wueiner is ui& l or great degree • Do not allow this treacherous disease to continue its course unheede^and unchecked. It is liable to develop into bronchitis, or con sumption, that most dreaded destroyer of human life. Catarrh is a disease of the system, and not simply of the nose and throat. The blood reaches every part of the system. Therefore the proper wav to cure catarrh is to take a remedy which will reach the disease through the blood. This is Just what Hood's Sarsapa ril.a ooes, and this is the secret of its success in curing cata rh. It expels the scrofulous taint which causes and sustains catarrh, and gives that healthy tone to the whole sys.em before which disease cannot maintain its hold. If you suffer from catarrh, try u avo suffered with ©atarrn in “ for years, and paid out hundreds #f dollars for medicines, but have hcretofole received only temporary relief. Hood's Sorsaparrtln helped me so much that my catarrh is nearly cured, the weakness of my body is all gone* my appetite is good—in fact, I feel like ftn' other person. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the boat medicine I have over taken.” Mas. A. Cunningham, Providence, It. I. ••For several years I have ket troubled with that terribly disagreeable disease, catarrh. I took Hood’s Sarsaparil.a with the very best results. It cared me ef that eon tinual dropping in my turoat and stuffed up feeliug. It has al « helped my mother, w has taken it for run-down state o4 health an kidney trouble.” Mes. S. D. Hjjath, Putnam. Hood’s Sarsaparilla <111 urunniH*. VI , elX IOT *1. ITCptrCil OlHy C. I. HOOD ft CO., Apothecaries, Lowe.l, Mui. 100 Doses One Do^Sar Sola by nil druggist*, r; *ix lor v*. * - - ' by C. I. HOOD * CO., Apothecaries. Lowell. »»■* lOO Doses One Dollar cuaia miner »uau auuuuuiar ibal^gl It is stated that at the lower . the Sal ton Lake the stream is not tv£ twenty-live feet wnio and not Z* than two feet in the middle and ti’1* the water is subsiding One of u largest mud volcanoes, or cevsers. h ceased activity. * * A seemingly miraculous cure of malignant caucer has been made * Chattanooga. Tenn., the victim haviuv been pointed out iu a dream to a cer tain herb, which ho gathered and atlT and is now welL The story is vouched for by men of veracity. French ingenuity has contrived an improved sluuecutting saw of remark able efficiency, a circular saw havinv its edge set with black diamonds in the same way as the straight blades but as the strain on tbe diamond is aii in one direction tho setting cun iJ much firmer. During the year 1890 182 386 man were recruited for the German am.v Out of these 6.916 were not permitted to enter.*as tney were in excess of the number provided for by the arniv budgot. They numbered 12.666, malt iug tho total of 196 502. of whom 4,121 are destiued for the fleet “Convent hair” is an article well known to the trade and highly prised. When a young woman takes tho veil in the Roman Catbolio ohurcb her hair is cut off. and tiie tresses are sold for the benefit of tbe convent As the hair is out pretty close to the bead the tresses are usually long, aud thus “convent hair” has a special value. Maid servants have their whims, like other people. A capable girl who left the service of one family of the “four hundred” in New York to enter that of another was asked why she made the change. “Yes, they are nice people," the girl admitted, “but I had to leave them. I never could stay with people who put their elbows on ths table at dinner.” A Hannibal, M.o., man bought tap pills anil put them in his Tost pocket lie also bought a small pearl button anil put in the same pocket. When it came time to take a pill he opened bis mouth, shut his eves and gulped one down. He was relieved of bis head ache and went on his way rejoicing. Afterward, having use for the collar button, lie felt in his pooket and found two pills but no button. At Monterey. Mexico, some Phila delphia capitalists, and not very large capitalists either, started a knitting factory about a year ago. They got a concession from the governor of the state providing that they should be the only knitting factory in it for twenty* five years, and they are now turning out 200 dojseu pairs of stockings per day. The duty ou stockings is so great that they can soli at a high profit. They use Mexican girls to work their machines and they are mak ing lots of money._ HERBERT SPENCER HORRIFIED. A Fmh Yoancr Woman Mistook Him lor m Writer or Novels. I was told a good story about Her bert Spencer a few days ago. the truth fulness of which is vouchsafed, says a Loudon letter. It seems that Mr. Spencer was at a West-end reception last spring. There were many notables present, as it happened, and Mr Spen cer was being lionized more than usual. During the afternoon a young woman, superbly gowned, entered the parlors. She was presented to the em inent Englishtnau.'her host telling her. snito voce, that "Mr. Spencer is the famous author of whom you have doubtless heard." The girl was an American. "jjear me, Mr. opencor, 1 am so glad to see you. I just love authors aud poets; they’re so jolly, you know.” Mr. Spencer is a modest Englishman of gentle voice anti feminine grace. He was unprepared for this onslaught of the young woman's. But she took him by the arm and hastened off to a corner with her prey. It was only for a moment, however. The conversa tion was brief, but it was interesting. ••Oh, Mr. Spencer. I must tell you,” went on the young lady, ‘Tve read all your books; 1 know them by heart. It •nakes me laugh so muoli to read them. Your situations are so funny aud your climaxes so dramatic; then you are not like our authors. Your heroines aro not all alike. atfti the meu are so charming. They make love so well; and oh, Mr. Spencer, do you know your dialogue is very funny. Yotir name ib like a household word iu our home. Don’t you ever get tired of writing?” The young woman stopped. Sho had to. She was short of breath. Mrr Silencer looked at her in amazement. His face Hushed. He could not find his voico, but be arose all of a tremble, bowed politely, turned to the hostess, and hoarsely gasped: ‘‘She’s mad! Mad as a March hare! Don't let her coine near me again!" Aud the young lady didn't know, until her hostess in formed her of the fact, that Herbert Spencer was not that kiud of an au thor. The story Is really true, and hap pened at a bouse where I was stopping a few days ago, the host narrating the inei