The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, November 21, 1887, Image 3

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    THE DAILY HERALD, l'LATTSMOUTH, NEJJUASKA,- .MONDAY, iMOVEMIJEfi 21, 18S7.
TTrii1 rinJIT,r AT? HlAITII i an Kroand anel groaned and groaned,
llll-i UUol Jtilj )r llLAJJII. : My brother, yotir trouble is not with the
DIVINE
SERVICES IN THE BROOK
LYN TABERNACLE.
lr. Tulntux" It Joloon That I lie Niinihi r
or C.'hrlMluu t'liyiclnit Ih i iKii-nii i,-.
The -AIM ;l of Youth Arc ..n rally
Sown in I In- I.iv-r.
Nov. 20. Tho Jiev. T. Do
I. !., openeel the servieea
acid hum morninsr lv iri vnir
IiROOKLVN.
Witt Talma-.
at (lie t.-ilxTii
out the; Iiyiuri beginning:
Sh.nil.l ! lining Ivh lit- coM atnl dark,
f ii i- not -i-:is- our niniii;
Tlmt -rt'i . t. re-Hl nought can indi-st,
Whi-n- K"l'l-n h:u ,s urej riu;;in;,'.
He then explained it iiss:ies in the
the Oejspe-I 1 St. M.tftlie-v, ounce-ruing
tho inferior l;inl of salt that was east out
to make walks of, to Ik; trodden under
foot of men. The Kubje-ot of Dr. Tal
mage's di.-eoiii'.it; was: "Tho (iospel of
Health." and hi-t text from 1'roverbs vii,
2i: 'Till a dart strike through his
liver." IW-.iid:
There i a fashion in sennonies. A
f'oriiKirat iv ly ; mall part of the ille is
railed on f-r t ts. Must of the imssagi-s
of Seriptuo-, when aiiiiouiiced at the
opening of f i-rmons, immediately di vide
themsel vc; iiiio old discussions that wo
li.ive hear-1 from Ijoyhood, and the e-llect
ie. the auditor guesses
t what thi reac?ier will
very iuiiorlaiit rhapfe-r.s
have never la-en jrea-hed
f my lifetime I am dove it -:g
these gfld ehests and
i!ie-.se; (Hurries. We talk
1, and preach idul the4
, aim. it, the heart, hut if
physical organ Uiat we j
' li;is not haif so much to !
i liealth or disease, moral ;
i ritual ilepression. as V.m I
ideratioii of which Solo- j
! the te.l. when lie de-
.ressing '"till a dart .strike 1
or.
on ih i j sot
;it the start
say. Th'-re
:md vers;-.; th
from. Mueli
illg to l!!:!o. :
hl.isling o; :
alnilll l!it- :
lie.nl. an 1 :;
Vol I reler I
fall the l,e:. I I .
do with spirit
exall at ion .r
organ to lit- .
muii fall ; u.;
Kcrile. -. in j -; :
through hi 4 h
Solomoii. a1
dist-overi.-.-i m
was nearly
scientists of 1
1. ( ye n- ; !;
aIo:it the eiiv:
Harvey di. -'
(.'hri:.t, for win
desrrihing th--
pitcher :it U
means th" thr
heart th::t r.-:- !
When he
silver cord of li
spinal marrow.
Doctors M:i o. ;
and Flint. a:i l
periment-.' 1.
tlse Dihl" tin !
tists dise-ovi i i - 1
s'n'nal cord r- in
the tremors o
silver curd he
In the texi
had studied
liuinan syste
t-lectrie light
room, but hv
domical and physiological j
so very great that he ;
i'0 years ahead of the
'-: day. He, more than
re 'In i.st. SM-meil to know
ition of the blood, which
red 1.01!) years alter
i Solomon in Kcclesi-istes,
licart, it is a g;wtric disorder or a relcl-
lion of the liver. You need a physic ian
more than you do a clergyman. It is not
sin that blots out jour hope of heaven,
but bile. It nut only yellows your i-ytball,
anil fiir. j'our tongue, mid makes your
bend ache, but wikH u(ii dit sotd in
dejections and foielxKlings. The devil is
after you. He has failed to desjioil your
character, .'ind he d's the next Icst
I hing for him- -he ruflli-s your ieaci; of
mind. When he saya that you are not a
forgiven soul, when he says that you are
not light with (Jod, when lie says that
you will never get to heaven, ho lies.
Vou are just as sure of heaven as though
you were there already. 15ut Satan,
finding that he cannot keep j-ou out of
the promised land of Caruian, has de
termined that the spies shall not bring
you any of the Kschol graes lx;
foiehand, and that you shall have noth
ing but prickly (K-ar and crab apple. You
are just as gocxl now under the cloud as
you were when you were accustomed to
rise in the morning at ." o'clck to pray
and sinjr. 'Hallelujah, 'tis done!" My
friend. liev. Dr. Joseph H. Jones, of
Philadelphia, a translated spirit now
wrote a Ixwik entitled "Man, Moral .and
l'hvsical," in which he shows how differ
e?it the same thing may happen to differ
ent jieople. He says: "After the great
battle on the Mincio in 1S."5M, letweeii the
Frenc h and Sardinians on the one side
ami the Austnans on me oilier, so disas
trous to the latter, tho defeated army re-
treat-'d. followed hv the victors. A
description of the march of each army is
given by two correspondents of Jho Lon
don Times, one of whom traveled with
the successful host, the other with the
d Teated. The difference in views and
statements of the same place, scenes and
events is remarkable. The? former .:re
said to Ik? marching through a beautiful
and luxuriant country during the day
and at night camping where they are
supplied with an abundance of the best
provisions and all sorts of rural daintie.-
J hero is neuiing ot war alout the pro-
e. .-cling except its btimuhis and excite
ment. On the side of the- poor Au.-trians
ii, i ; jur t tho reverse. In his letter of the
same date, describing the trine place?
or that Job was any Ix tter when I;o said:
"I know that lay licdeor.HT livetli," than
when covered all over with tho pustules
of elephantiasis he Kit in the ashes scratch
ing the hcalw off with a broken piece of
j lottery; or that Alexander Cruden, the
concordist. was any lx-tter man when he
compiled the look that has heled 10,0U()
students of the Bible, than when under
the jower of physical disorder ho was
handcuffed and strait waistcoated in
lk'thnal Green Insane asylum.
"Oh," says some Christian man. "no
one ought to allow physical disorder to
depress his soul. He ought to live so
near to God as to be ahvavs in tho sun-
ond they had to 1 switched off hero and
switched olf there, and detained here and
detained there, and tho man wh loses
time and strength in the earlier part of
the journey of hfo will suffer for it all
the way through, the lir&t twenty yeara
of life damaging tho following fifty
years.
Some years ago a scientific lecturer
went through tho country exhibiting on
great canvas different iarts of the human
body when healthy, and differents arts
when diseased. And what tho world
wants now is some eloquent scientist to
go through tho country showing to our
young vieoplo on
drunkard's liver, tho
shine." Yes, that is good advice; but I
warrant that you, the man who gives tho ! liliertine's liver, the
advice, have a sound live r. Thank God j Perhaps tho spectacle
every day for healthful hepatic condition,
for, just as certainly as you lot it, you
will sometimes, like David, and like Jer
emiah, and like Cow-r, and like Alex
ander Cruden, ami like 10.000 other in-
blazinc:
l-.'iiiian ldy, speaks of the
fountain, ho evidently
canals leading from the
! . e the 1 lood like pitchers.
: ; in Fcclesiastes of the
. h" evidently means the
dtoiit which in our dry
id Carpenter, and Dallon.
?rown-Seeiard have ec-
A'id Solcinon i. -corded in
! iiids of years In-fore scieii
1 it, that in his time the
la:-. 1 in old age. producing
f hmd and head: "Or the
1-. sed."
h reveals the fact that he
that largest gland of the
:a. the liver, not by the
of the modern dissecting
tiii? dim light of a compara
tively dark age. ;snd yet had seen its im
portant fundi-hi in the God built castle of
the human body, its selecting and secret
ing power, its curious cells, its elongated,
branching tubes, a divine workmanship
in central, and right, and b-ft lobe, and
tho hepatic avury through which God
conducts the crimson liJes. Oh, this
vital organ is like the eye of God in that
it never sleeps. Solomon knew of it and
had noticed either in vivisection or post
mortem what awful attacks sin and dis
sipation make upon it, until with tho liat
of Almighty G j I it bids the Ixnly and
soul separate, and the one it commands
to the grave, and the other it sends to
judgment. A javelin of retribution, not
glancing off or making a slight wound,
but piercing it from side to side "till thj
dart strike through the liver." Galen
and IItpocrates ascrilie to the liver the
most of the world's moral depression,
mid the word melancholy means black
Wis.
I preach to you this morning the Gos
pel of He:dih. in taking diagnosis of the
diseases of the : - nl you must also take
the li:ig!iisi , f the diseases of the Ixidy.
As if to re :og:i:: this, one whole loiTk of
the New Te '.;!';:ent was written by a
physician, l.if-e was a doctor, and he
discourses much of physical effects, and
lie tells of the - d Samaritan's medica
tion of th. v.oa . ls by pouring in oil and
wine, and re-"-. -,-;:izes hunger ps"a hin
drance to heari :
I.OtiO wit.- iV
diet of the
and th. exti:
beggar nv.- v"
know of t'::-- 1
ot th-' dying '
postmortem r
mate of the .-p
not include a!
cal condition i
doorke.-p;T of
excessive joy
rendered at
Fifth of S; :;:::
of his conn:.
Cardinal W. .!'
llenrv th- F.i
the Gosik-1. so that the
1: and records the fj:arse
h'gal away from homo
i.died eyesight of tho
i: :n home, and lets us
: lorrluige of the wounds
:,. i:,t and the miraculous
citation. And any onti
: ' inal condition that docs
tn estimate of tho plvysi
. incomplete. When the
ongress fell dead from
; ; ause lhirgoyne had sur
: -atoga. and Philip the
i -opped dead at tho news
s defeat in battle, and
expired as a result of
. atli's-anathema, it was
demonstrated th :t the Ixxly and soul are
Siamese twins. : nd when yo;i thrill t!ie
..i - . .i...:n .1..
i3ne Willi lov it sorrow mi ini.u uil;
other. We i::: ht as well recogi
fact that there ;..e two mighty fortresses
in the human Ixxly, the heart and the
liver; the heart the fortress of ail the
graces, the liver the fortress of ail the
furies. You m.y have the head tilled
with ail inlel'i vt nilities. and the car with
tf I musical appreciation, and the month
with all clci'.-"Ce, and the hand with
ixli industries, and the heart with all gen
frotities, and yet "a dart strike through
;tho liver."
First, let Christian people avoid the
mistake that they are all wrong with God
because they si ;7er from depression of
spirits. Many a consecrated man has
found his spiritual sky befogged, and his
Jiope'of heaven blotted out. and himself
ylunged chin d -ep in the Slough of De
?ixjnd. and Las said: "My heart is not
right with God. and I think I :v have
made a mistake, and instead of l -eing a
child of light I am a child of darkness.
Jib one can feel as gloomy as I fe:l and
be a Christian." And he has gene to hu
minister for consolation, and lie has col
lected Flavors Ixjoks, and Cecil's books,
and raters Looks, and read and read
and read, and prayed and prayed and
jrayod, aud wept and wept and wept,
and a march over the same road, the
writer can sea reel v find words to set
I fi rth the suffering, impatience and dis
j gust existing around him. What was
j pleasant to tho former va.s intolerable to
the latter. What made all this difference?
! a- ks the journalist. 'One condition only:
' The French are victorious: tho Austrian
! have been defeated. The contrast may
I convey a distinctive1 idea of the extent t
i which moral impressions affect the old-
; eieiiov of tho soldier. ' "'
I
i So. my dear brother, the road 3-ou are
j traveling is the same you have In-en travel
! ing a long while, but the difference in
; your physical conditions makes it look
d liferent, and therefore the two report.-1
you have given of yourself are as widely
different as tho reports in The London
Times from the two correspondents.
I'M ward Fay son, sometimes so far up on
the mount that it seemed as if the cen-trijH-tal
force of earth could no longer
hold him: sometimes, through a physical
disorder, was so far down that it seemed
as if the nether world would clutch him.
Glorious William Cowp.er was as good as
good could lo. and will bo loved in tho
Christian church as long as it sings his
hymn I-eginning: "There is a Fountain
Filled with Blood;" mid his hymn liegin
ning: "Oh. for a Closer Walk with God !"
and his hymn beginning: "What Various
Hindrances we Meet;" and his hymn be
ginning: "God Moves in a Mysterious
Way. ' Yet so was he overcome of melan
choly, or black bile, that it wis only
through the mistake of the cab driver,
who took him to a wrong place, instead
of the river bank, that lie did not commit
suicide.
Spiritual condition so mightily affected
by the physical state, what a great oppor
tunity this gives to the Christian phy
sician, for he can feel at the same time
lwth the pulse of the Ixxly and the pulse
of the soul, and he can administer to both
at once, and if medicine is needed ho can
give that an earthly and a divine pre
scription at the same time and call on
not only the ajxithecary of earth, but the
pharmacy of heaven. Ah. that is the
hind of doctor I want at my bedside when
1 got sick, one that cannot only pour out
the right number of drops, but who can
also pray. That is tho kind of doctor I have
had in my house when sickness or death
came. I do not want any of your profli
gate or atheistic doctors arouud my loved
ones when the balances of life are t cm
Llie.g. A chx-tor who has gone 4hr ugh
the medical college and in dissecting
room has traversed the wonders of the
human mechanism, and found no God
in any of the labyrinths, is a fool, and
cannot dx.-tor me cr mine. Cut, oh,
the Chri-.tian doctors! What a comfort
they have Lcen in many o.f our house
holds. And they ought to have a warm
(lace i:i our prayers, as well as praise
on our tongues. Dear old Dr. Skill-
man: .iy lamer s uoetcr, my motner s
doctor, in tiie village homo. He car
ried all the confidences of all the
families for ten miles around. We
ad feit better as soon as wo saw him
enter tho house. Ilisfr.ce I renounced a
Ix-alke-Io lx-fore he said a word, lie wel
comed ail of us children into life, and he
closed the cM people's eyes when they
ti,. i entered the la.vt slumber. I thmk I know
1 1 . -v i UL'
wae.t mist said to mm when the o;i
j doctor got through his work. I think he
I was greeted with the words: "Come in,
doctor. I was sick and ye visited me!"'
I bless God that the number of Christian
. physicians is multiplying, and some of the
students of the medic:d colleges are here
; today, and I hail you, and I bless yon,
! aial I ordain you to the tender, 1-eautiful,
heaven descended work of a Christian
i physician, and when you take your
' diploma from the Long Island Medical
college, to look after the erishable lo ly,
Ix euro also to get a diploma from tiie
skies to look after the imierishahle soul.
Let all Christian physicians unite with
ministers of the Gospel in persuading good
people that it is not bi cause God is against
them that they sometimes feel depressed,
but because cf their diseased Ixxly. I sup
pose David, the psalraist, was no more
pious when he called on everything
lmman and angelic, animate and inani
mate, and from thowllake to hurricane,
to prniio God. tlirji w hen he said: "Out
of the depths of hell liavo I cried unto
thee, O, Lord;" or that Jeremiah was
any Letter when lie wrote his prophecy
tlian when lie wrote Lis "Lamentations;' '
valids, be playing a dead march on
the same organ with which now you
play a tcx-cata. My object at this
point is not only to emolliato the critic-isms
of the? well against those in ioor
health, but to show Christian Tioopio who
are atrabdanous what is the matter with
them. Do not charge against the heart
the crimes of another p rlion of your or
ganism. I Jo not conclude that loauKO
tho path of heaven is not arlxred with as
fine a foliage, or tho banks beautifully
snowed under with exquisite chrysanthe
mum;! as once, that therefore you are on
tho wrong road. The road will bring
you out at the same g ite whether you
walk with tho stride of an afhl. to or
come up on crutches. Thousands of
Christians, morbid alxnit their experi
ences, and morbid alxuit their business,
and morbid about J.he present, and mor
bid alx)iit the future, need the sermon I
am now preaching.
Another practical use of this subject is
for the? young. The theory is abroad that
they must first sow their wild oats, and
afterward Michigan wh at. Let me break
tho delusion. Wild oats are generally
town in tho liver, and they can never bo
pulled up. They so preoccupy that organ
that there is no room for the implantation
of a righteous crop. You see aged men
about us at f-.;0 erect, agiie. splendid, grand
old men. How much wild oafs did they
sow between IS years and :',0. None.
ansohitely none. (nl does not very ouen
honor with old age these who have in
early life sacrificed swine on the altar of
the bodily temple. He. lumber. O young
man, that while m after life, and after
years of dissipation, you may perhaps
have your heart changed, religion docs
not change the liver. Trembling and
staggering along these streets today are
men. all bent and decayed and prema
turely old. for tho reason that the-y are
paying for liens they put upon their
physical estate before thev were :'(). I5y
early dissipation they put on their body a
first mortgage, and a second mortgage.
ami a third mortgage, to the devil, and
these mortgages are now h; --ing foreclosed,
and all that remains ot their earthly
estate the undertaker will soon put out of
sight. Many vears ago. in fulfillment of
my text, a dart struck through their liver,
and it is there yet. God forgives, but
outraged physical law never, never, never.
That has a Sinai, but no Calvary. Solo-
man in my text knew what he was talk
ing about, lie had in earlv hfe Ix-en a
prolligato, anil he rises up on his throne
of worldly splonelor to .shriek out a warn
ing to all tho centuries. David, bad in
early life, but good in later life, cries out
with an agony of earnestness: "Remem
ber not the sins of my youth."
Stephen A. Douglas gave the name of
"squatter sovereignty" to those who went
out west and tixk possession of lands and
held them by right of preoccupation. Let
a flock of sins settle on vour heart before
you get to 25 years of age, ami the1 will
in all probability keep possession of it by
an internal squatter sovereignty. "1
promise to pay at the bank .;00 sire
month from date," says tho promissory
note. "I promise to ia-r mv life thirty
vears from date at the bank of the
rave," sa3-s every infraction of the laws
of your physical being.
What? Will a man's lxxlv never com
pletely recover from early dissipation in
this world? Never. How alxvat the
world to come? Perhaps Ged will fix it
up in the resurrection body so that it will
net have to go limping through all eter
nity; but get the liver thoroughly dam-
:ged and it will stay damaged. Physi
cians can it cancer ot tho liver, or
uirdening of the liver, or cirrhosis of the
liver, or inflammation cf the liver, but
Solomou puts all these pangs into one
figure and says: "Till tho dart strike
through his liver."
Hesiod seemed to have somo hint of
this when he represented Prometheus for
as crimes fastened to a pillar and an
agio feeding on his liver, which was re
newed again each 1112!. 1. to that the
devouring went on until fir.a'lv Hercules
slew the eagle and rescued Prometheus.
nd a. dissipated early life assures a
ferocity pecking away and c?aw ing away
year in and year out, and Death is the-
only Hercules who can break tho power
of its beak or unclench its claw. f-;o also
Virgil and Homer wrote fables about
vultures preying upon the liver, but
there are those here today with whom it
is no fable, but a terrific reality. .
That young man smoking cigarettes
and smoking cigars has no idea that he
is getting for himself smoked liver. That
young man has no idea that he has by
early tlisripatiem so deple-.ed his energies
that he wid go into the battle only half
armed. Napoleon lost Waterloo days
before it was fought. Had ho attacked
the Euglish army before it was re-enforeed
and attacked it division by division, he
might have won the day. but he waited
until he had only 100,000 men against
200,000. And here is a young man who,
if lie put all his forces against the regi
ment of youthful temptations, in the
ttrenglh of God might he drive them back,
but he is allowing themio be re-enforced
by tho whole army of midlife temptations,
and when all these forces are massed
against him and no Grouchy comes to
help him, and Bluchcr has come to help
his foes, what but immortal defeat can
await him?
Oh, my young brother, do not make
the mistake that thousands all around
you are inaking, in epening the battle
Against sin too late for this world too
late, and for tho world to come too late.
What brings that express train from St.
Lcuis into Jersey City three hours late?
The'y lost fifteen minutes early on tho
route, and that affected thorn all the way,
canvas the
idler's liver, the
gambler's liver,
might stop some
young man before ho comes to the same?
catastrophe, and the dart strike through
his own liver.
My hearer, this is the first sermon you
have heard on the Gosjxd of Health, and
it may lie the last you will ever hear on
tliat subject, and I charge you in the
name of God, and Christ, and usefulness,
and eternal destiny, take better care of
your health. When some of you die, if
your friends put on your tomlistone a
truthful epitaph, it will read: "Here lies
the victim of late suppers," or it w ill lx;:
I "Behold what chicken salad at midnight
wJl do for a man, or it will lx-: "Ten
cigars a day closed my earthly existe-nce, "
or it will lx: "Sat down in a cold draught
and this is tho result," or it will lx?: "I
iied of thin shws last winter," or it will
be: "Went out without an overcoat and
took this last chill," or it will lx-:
"Thought I could do at 70 what I did at
'20, and I am here," or it will le: "Hero
is the eonseejuence of sitting half a day
with wet foot." or it will lc: "This is
where I have stacked my harvest of wild
oats," or, instead of words, the stone
c utter will chisel for an epitaph on tho
tombstone two figure's: namely, a dart anel
a liver.
There is a kind of sickness that is lxau
t if ul when it eennes from over work for
God, or one's country, or one's own
family. I have seen wounds that were?
glorious. After the buttle of Antietam
in tiie- hospital a soldier in reply to my
question: "Where are you hurt?" un
covered his bosom and showed me a gash
that xiked like a badge of eternal
nobility. I have seen an empty sleeve
that was more lx-autiful than the most
muscular forearm. I have seen a green
shade; over the eye shot out in battle that
was more Lx-autiful than any two eyes
that had passed without injury. I have
seen an old missionary worn out with the
malaria of African jungles who looked to
me more radiant than a rubicund gym
nast. I have seen a mother after six
weeks watching over a family of chil
dren down N-itii scarlet fever, with a
glory around her pale and wan face that
surpassed the angelic. It all depends on
how .you got your sickness anel in what
battle your wounds. Frederick T. Fre
linghuysen, the pride of New Jersey aye
of tho nation and one of the pillars of
the Christian church, and fer nearlyfour
years practically president of the United
Suite s. although in tho ofiico of secretary
of state, in his determination to make
peace with all the governments on this
American continent, wore himself out,
and while his brain was as keen as it ever
was, and his heart beat as regularly as it
ever did. ho was according to the bulletin
of Ins physicians at Washington and
Newark, dying of hardening of the
liver. Satan, who does not like good
men, sent a dart through l is liver.
The last my dear friend for he was my
friend and my father's friend before m"e
the last La was seen in Washington
was in the president's carriage, leaning
his head ag: inst the ekotdder of the pres
ident on his way to the depot to take the
train to go home to die. Martyr of the
public service, he died for his country,
though he died in time of peace. In his
earlier life he was callexl the nephew of
his ur.clc, Theodore Frelinghuyson, but
ho lived to render for God and his coun
try a service thai will make othe-rs proud
to be his nephew, and which will ke-ep
his nam en the scroll of history as the
highest stylo of Christian statesman that
this century r,r any other century has
produced. I'ly Lord and my (Jo.!! if we
must get r ick and worn out, let it be in
thy service- and in the effort to make the
world gootl anel happy. Not in the serv
ice ef sin. No! No! One of the most
pathc-tie scenes that I ever witness, and
I often see it, is that of men or women
converted in the fifties or sixties or sev
enties wanting to be useful, but they so
served the world and Satan in tho earlier
part of their life that they have no phys
ical energy left for the service of God.
They sacrificed nerves, muscles, lungs,
heart and liver 011 the wrong altar. They
fought on the wrong side, and now.when
their sword is all hacked up and their
ammunition all gene, they enlist for
Emmanuel. When the high mettled cav
alry horse which that man spurred
into many a cavalry charge with
champing. bit and flaming eye and neck
clothe'd with thunder, is worn out and
spavined and ring boned and spring halt,
he rides up to the great Captain of our
salvation on tho white horso anil offers
his services. AVhen such persons might
have been through the good habits of a
lifetime crashing the battle ax through
hdnieted iniquities, they are spending
their days anel nights in discussing the
Ust way of breaking up their indi
gestion, and quieting their jangling
nerves, and rousing their laggard appe
tite, and trying to extract the dart from
their outraged liver. Better convened
late than never! Oh, yes; for they will
get to heaven. But they wiil go afoot
when they might have wheeled up tiie
stec-p hills of the sky in Elijah's chariot.
There is an old hymn that we used to
sing in the country meeting house when
I was a boy, and I remember how the
eld folks' voices trembled with emotion
while they sang it. I have forgotten all
but two lines, but those lines are the per
oration of my sermon;
. Twill save ua from a thousand snares
To mind religion young-.
2
" "vr srv
Tin-
. 1
1 fie
suiik; (jntility ol uroxi.s 10 percent, cliittjicr llian any house west ot
e M issi.-sippi. Will never ho unelei sold. Cull and hi com inn d
PETER MERGES.
FURNITURE EMPORIUM
UK
ARLOR
ScT
BEDROOM
SET I
1-Oli ALL CLASSKS OF
rit2u Xu J r. -m 'uj-'i
"57" "T!!t
CI
-von.
Pa t'lors, iSrd rooms
EsLitcIiciis, Mallwoys and Offsets,
JO TO
.kiss J&i. J5 4
(ioodx ;ir.(i F:iir IYiiTh
Where a
in a 54 m lice
O
-lock of
abound.
I T TJ T r- r a T ir'r t in r r- s rs s
fslING A SPFCIALTY
r
'5
COKXKIt MAIN .VXD SIXTH
1'f.A 'its m iiTif. m : i ; i : a v i ; a
ft
Fill
P-! C
9 pf
(Sl'CCKS.SOJ" TO J. 7.x.
Wifi kee-p cenetantfy en lumd a full mm c"i.
Drugs and Mediciens,
D
amts. 0
is
Wall Paper and
IDIRI TO- O-IST'S
a
Full Line of
STTZLsTIDIR,!
PURE LIQUO RS.
E. Cx. Dovey & Son.
E. G. Dovev
& Son.
Loll sitBgl fftfgpfw fi&odlc
We '(cjlG plcc)stro ii
Ave lcve le Ftlles
somesj liie
of
O I: - y
Ac
0
Ever hvowfx'nt
and fcha.ll be jileased to
SJJ 0 W M U
31 MP tint
-how
vou a
0 I
uu JUiU
Line
Drawing a Sleijli.
Tliere is no service to which a horse
can be put that wears Iiim out so quickly
as drawing a sleigh. He is used to the
resistance of a buggy's weight, anel
when he finds tbat he lias nothing, so to
speak, behind him, he runs through him
self. People suppose that because a liv
eryman charges $0 an hour for a sleigh
during the few days of the sleiglung sea
son he is paying lumself for storage of
the cutter during the rest of the year.
That is not the case. Chicago News.
Trimmings,
erwear
OF
Wool Dress Goods,
and
Hoisery and Und
Blankets and Comforters.
A splendid ttiS-ortm;rit ot LadiCb ilitSfcCs' und Childrcus
cloaks! wraps a:d jerseys.
Vv e have also auued to our Jine ot carpets -ome new
j71ooi Oil Gloj;ls, Iqjs qqd Ijiisrs.
j altci: ?,
In men's heavy and fine hoots .:nd mik-s.
Children Footo-ear. we have a ( oir.'ete liii
ilfo in Ladies'.
; to wliifh v.
e IJS'YITE
your inpeetion. All deparlments i i:li r.yd Coniiilete.
Mn