SONGS IN THE NIGHT. REV. DR. TALMAGE'S SERMON AT THE TABERNACLE. Jubilunt i:rirUH nt tlio Mmlii ftr. tUk Tli Iticlit HiiihI l 1IokIiI l-:stenl-l lii Many New ?I-nlrn. TIioiiuiiiIh to Il-iir llm liri-at Divine. Hko k i.y.v. March 4. Kxcrcisesat the Taliernade this morning were jubilant. One hundred and twenty new mi iiiImth wore piveu (In right hand of fellowship, making the communicant membership onu thousand fiiiir limidn-d and lifty. Thousands of ftrangeis were prcM-nt. The t 't i great f-i 1 v-r tankard.s and the ri line of ehalic-; .mal; tin; nacra iiK'iital tal!; very impressive. Before the M-Mii-iJi tin; congregation, led by corn't atil organ, sang: Win :i i:i; ! li -li.ill .iissuiv;:y. In I'll- .1 j'i I "i.i-ut i!:iv, .!:: i i leni" ! The Kev. T. I)e Wilt Talma-o. T). I., took as tin- Mihjict of his di-emuse : "A fcong 'oncening My ?:-I-!.' Hi tot wm I ;:iih v. I: Now will I sing t: iny wi II holoved a song of my In-loved. " L)r. Tahn.iue said : The ni'-t f.r eiu.-.i ing heine for a heart jroT at I :it ii 1 is the Saviour. Then; is holm !hin ia the morni ng H-j.ht to Hug P'.Mt liiiii. ami . oiin-1 hing in the evening fih.iliw to ; pealw liis prai .e. The (lower breathes l.iei. the .-tar shine-i hiiii, the cascade .:'!K-!.ii:i:s hiai. all the voices r if nature ehml hi a. V.'li..i v r i -i grand, blight ami I : i : L. if you only li. ten to it. will s," u'v his piai-e. When I come in t he sii'ii in" r ( hue a:il plaek a (lower, I thiak of liiia .!io i., "the rose of Sharon ami (!. liv of th" alley. Wlieli I .v.: e in l he !; a Iamb, I sav, "Be hold the l-anib oi I ; .l lii: L laia-th away th-;in of tin- v.o : !.'' Wiie:i. in very hot weal her, I eonii- under a projecting tliir, I say : Him-!. ..f A ;i -s, i !. t! ( r inc. I. I a;. hill.- inv .-!!" iii i:i.'.-: Over the oi I fa -!ii. 'M'-il pulpits there Wa'l U Ko'.mdiug hoard, ill'" V' ice of the iniubter ins' t lii-. sounding lard, and then was :-tr'-;e!v l.a--: again upon the cars of the peoi'l... An so the ten thous and voiei'.s of earth ri: ing up linl the heavens a sum. wing Lean I which strikes liaek to the ear of all the nations the praises of ('hiisi. The heavens tell his fjlorv, and the earth shows his handi work. The 1 !. hie thrills with o.ie great K.orv of reil'Ti'p' lii'i. Upon a blasted ami failed pata'ii .e ii p M,vd the II. Jit of a p!oi i ius re: t-iral : a. It looked upon Ahrah;iin fioas li." rani cauel't in the thicket. It sooke ia ti e 1 d";ll iiii? of tins herds driven down to .leitisak.'ni for sacrifice. I' pat ia.iaile pathos into th upecch of u'-.e.iia!i li-lu mien. It lifted l'aul into the s"ven;'i Fi'-aven: a:id it broke upon Mi" e.i- of St. John witli the brazen trumpets and the doxolo.ny of the ciders, and .the rushing wins of the seraphim. luytcad of waiting until ycu et sick and worn out lx-fore you s'ak the iraise of C'krM. while y.iar heart is ha iet. and your tep is li'-diuv-t. ami your fortunes smile, and your pathway blos soms, and the overarching heavens drop upon you their benediction. t:jeak the praises of Je.-'.is. The old Civck orators, when thoy saw their audience inattei.tive and slnmlicr ili";. had one v. ol d with which they would rouso then; up t. tho p;rea test cn thuNiasni. In th- mi.i-l of their orations thev would st' j ;:!'d cry out ''Marathon!' nn-i th.; people's iithu-iasni wouM le nnlxium'.e I. My hia.crs though jou mav have kvn loiii-.- down with sin. ami thou.e'i t:'()!i::li' and trials and temptation mav have oav upon you. and j'ou fit! hardly like 1 i ki;:- up, m thuiks there is onf e-rrnid. r y:d. iiuiu-rial word tliat ought to rou-e M.-.u' M)i;l to ialir.ite lv joicinc;. and that word is Jerus,"' Takinj; I he stv.-i;-:i of'tl:e text, I shall sjicak t y u '.' ( hrist. oar son:;. I ivniark. ia tla' ii; t pka-e. that Christ OUhl Jo be the c.:' ::e soil";. What Oil. inolh'M-s ;-: to T : wi.cn they ptlt us tc tie.-, is ii!'.:v; . i. W.' cay havo for gotten the v-'( .-: h i! !: '" v.'aut iiUO the Jihtrof our soul, ai.d iit forever be a part f it. It is J'.ot :".iiuc!i what you formally v.:ah ;- vr c'cl.hvn as wliat you sing to tii- A ! nu! has wiu.s and can t!y cv- iy :!::.. r. O.-.e lunnh-ed nd lil'ty ye irs afi. v c:i are dead, and 'Oi l Moi i,:l!t "' J as worn out his chL-jl i-i re-cut ti:i; vwn' r.ame on the toni'i-ior.e. your r;if-ai-ra'id-cialiht a wilt 1-' s'!!.ei!! the n which this a!u ;::.;! you s:n:: to your lit;!. oil.-.-: e -.. h !,-1 a';;. at vrtur knee. There ha i;i'v ia vhn where, if you di-onfiiy utt-r yo;:r voi-.e, there como back : a or tlt't. e:i 1; iiuct echoes, and t-v.-ry Cia i- I. soa.-r strap: by a mother ii. th" e. ; -..'i !- v c'- iM !.a!i have ten thoti.-aril ich-.ves t .milirt Iz fro:n all the eaic-i f hca.vcn iU. if mothers only knew ;!; :,;iv.t of this sacrtil spell, how much. i'i"'.icr th- l.tlle ones would 1h? :;U'ie!e.l. and ad "i-r I'.omes would chime .witii th" sri: -;s of Jesus! We want i eoui.i.-.raeling in1ucnco uiinn oar c':i!il:-n. J iie very, moincni your .chili .n ps i: to the tivet he ?tps into thi) !;:h f tomj-.f.uion. There are l'oid n .. -uf h d (' H iren who would like to bes"Il our b.il'u or.es. It will not do to keep year b and jrirls ju tlio house and n,aUe them j.onse plants; th.'.r nmst liavo l're.-h air and rcer. at ion. fcJod Kive your cluldnn fvonx the scvtljing;, blasting' ai::nl:--:riidh,.-iiceof the f t "reet s ! I km.v7L.f no couutc-:ic;iv intlxence but the power of t in i-t;a?i culture and ex ample. 1 1 :ld before our litd- onc-s the pure lit''; of J est:.-: !-r that nau.u the uoid that hail -.orvk-o pvil from their hearts. Give to j-our ir..-:tUction nil the fascina tion of inr:.-:h , rn aah, ;ic.-n and nivcht; jet it be Jc;-us. the cr-elk sonjr. Ttiis 5 inqiortam if your cL"IJi.mi j-row up, but perhaps ti cy nuy not. Their pathway jnav lo short. Jesus may lo wanting that child. Then there will b. a soisni lessstep in th.e duelling, and tho yoolh ful pulse will Ui;in to flutter, and little hands will Ik? lifted for help. You can not help. And a great agony will pinch at your heart, and tiie cradle will be emptv, and the nursery will he empty, and the world will be empty, and your told will be empty. Xi httie feet staua iiiK on the stairs, toys scattered on tli Vj bar pet. No quick following f t orn rooui o room. X strange and wonderi questions.- No upturned face, with lcugh faj blue eve? . come for r. kir-: but only a irave, and n wreath of wllJte blosaom on tlio top of it ; and bitter desolations ! and a sighing at nightfall with no one to put to hod, and a wet pillow, and a grave, and a wreath of white bloswwns on the top of it. The heavenly Shepherd will take that lamb nafely anyhow, whether you have Ix-on faithful or un faithful; but would it not have been pleasanter if you could have heard from tliono liin the praises of Christ? I never read anything more beautiful than this about a child's departure. The account Kiid, "She folded her hands, kissed her mother good-by, King her hymn, 'turned her face to the wall, said her little prayer, and then di.tl.' Oh, if I could gather up in one para graph the last words of the little ones who have gone out from all th"se Chris tian circles, and I could picture the calm look and the folded hands and sweet de parture, methinks it would Ik; grand and ln autifid as one of Heaven's great dox ologies! I next speak of Christ an the old man's song. Quick music loses its charm for the aged ear. The school girl asks for a schottische or a glee, but her grandmother ;. ! s for "Ualerma" or tlio "Portuguese Hymn." Fifty years of trouble have tamed the spirit, and the keys of the music biard must have a solemn tread. Though the voice may ho tremu lous, so that grandfather will not trust it in church, still lie has the Psalm book open Ik fore him and he sings with his soul, lie burns his grandchild asleep with the same tune he sang forty years ago in the old country meeting house. Some day the choir sings a tune so old that the young jieople do not know it; but it starts the tears down the check of the aged man, for it reminds him of the revival scene in which he participated, and of the radiant faces that long since went to dust, and of the gray haired minister leaning over the pulpit and sounding the good tidings of great joy. I was one Thanksgiving day in my pulpil in Syracuse, N. Y., and Itev. Dan id Waldo, at fert years of age, stood be side me. The choir sang a tune. I said: T utn sorry they sang that new tune: nolxxly seem3 to know it." "Bless you, my son," said the old man, "I heard that seventy years ago!" There was a song today that touched the life of the aged with holy fire, and kindled a glory on their vision that our younger eyesight cannot see. It was the Sony of salvation Jesus, who fed them all their lives long: Jesus, who wiped away their tears; Jesus, who stood by them when all else failed; Jesus, in whoso name their marriage was conse crated, and whose resurrection has poured liht ujon the graves of their departed. Blessed the Bible in which siectacled old age reads the promise, "I will never leave you. never forsake youl" Blessed the stalT on which the worn out pilgrim totters on toward the welcome of his re deemer! Blessed tho hymn book in which the faltering tongue and the fail ing eyes find Jesus, the old man's song. I sieak to you again of Jesus as the night song. Job speaks of him who giv ctli songs in the night. John Welch, the old Scotch minister, used to put a plaid across his bed on cold nights, and 6ome one asked him w hy he put that there. He said: "Oh, sometimes in the night I want to sing the praise of Jesus, and to get down and pray 5 then I just take that IIa M and wrap it around me, to keep myself from the cold." Songs in the night ! Night of trouble has come down ujion many of you. Commercial losses put out one star, slanderous abuse put out another star, domestic bereavement has put out a thousand lights, and gloom has lieen added to gloom, and chill to chill, and sting to sting, and one mid night has seemed to borrow the fold from another midnight to wrap itself in more unbearable darkness but Christ has spoken peace to your heart, and you can sing: Jesus, lover of my soul, Lt me to thy tosoin Py, While thn biilows near trie roll. While the tempest still is high. Hule nse, oh, my Saviour! hido Till the storm of life is past, Safe into the haven guide; Oh, receive my soul at last. Songs in the night! Songs in the night! For the sick, who have no pne to turn the hot pillow, no one to put the taper on the stand, no one to put ice on the temple, or pour out the soothing ano dyne, or utter one cheerful word yet songs in the night! For the poor, who i'ive.e in the winter's cold, and swelter in the summer's heat, and munch the hard crusts that bleed the sore gums, and shiver under blankets that cannot any longer be patched, and tremble because rent day is come and they may be set out on the sidewalk, and looking into the starved face of the child and seeing famine there and death' there, coming home from the bakery, and saying, in tho presence of the little famished ones, "Oh, my God. flour has gone up!" Ye songs in, the night! Songs in tlio' night ! For the widow who goes to get the back pay of her husband, slain by the "sharp shoot ers," and knows it is the last help she will have, moving out of a comfortable home in desolation, death turning back, from the exhausting cough and the pale cheek and the histerless eye, and refusing all relief. Yet songs in the night! Songs in the night! For the soldier in the field hospital, no surgeon to bind up the gun shot fracture, r.11 waei; foj. the hofc hps, 1.0 kind hand to brush away the flies from the fresh wound, no one to take the loving farewell, the groaning of others poured into his own groan, the blasphemy of others plowing up his own spirit, the condensed bitterness of dying away from home among strangers. Yet songs in the night I bongs in the nightl "!Alii" said one dying soldier, "tell my mother that last night there was not one cloud between my soul and Jesus.' Songs in the night! Songs in the night! The Sabbath day has coiie. From the altars of ten thousand churches has i smoked up the savor of sacrifice, . Min ; inters of the Gospel are how preaching- in . plain English, jn broad Scdi, jn flowing j : Italian, m barr-li Choctaw. God s ieo- , ! pie have assembled in Hindoo temple, i and Moravian church, and Quaker meet- nig house, and sailors' bethel, and king's chaiel, and high towered cathedral. They sang, and tlie song floated off amidst the spico gravis, tiy. itruck the t icebergs, or floated" off into Jie ' western pines, or was di owned in th6 ' clamor of lbs great ciiies. Lumbermen sang it, and the factory girls, anj the children in tho Sabbath class, and ' 1 tLje' trained choirs in great 'assemblages. " Trap- 4 pen, with the Min ' vtAoca with which they shouted yesterday in the stag hunt, and mariners with thrijah that only a few days ago sounded in the hoaise blast of the seu hurricane, they sang it. One theme for the sermons. One burden, for the song. Jesus for the invocation. Jesus for the Scripture les son. Jesus for, the baptismal font. 'Jesus for the sacramental cup. Jesus for the benediction. But the day will go by. It will roll away on swift wheela of light and love. Again the churches will be lighted. Tides of iieople again setting down the streets. Whole families com ing up the church aisle.; We must have one more sermon, tw prayers, three songs, and one benediction. What shall we preach to-night? What shall we read? What shall it bo. children? Aged men and women, what shall it be? Young men and maidens, what shall it le? If you dared to break the silence of this auditory, there would come up thousands of quick and jubilant voices crying out: "Let it be Jesus! Jes!is!" We sing his birth the barn that sheltered him, the mother that nursed him, the cattle that Jed leside him, tho angels that woke u tin; shepherds, shak ing light over the midnight hills. We sing his ministry- tho tears he wijed away from the eyes of the orphans; the lame men that forgot their crutches; the damsel who from the bier bounded out into tho sunlight, her locks shaking down over tho Hushed check; the hungry thou sand wdio broke tho bread as it blossomed into larger loaves-f-that miracle by which a boy with' live loaves and two fishes lie came the sutler or a whole army. We sing hisorrows his stone bruised feet, his aching heart, his mountain loneli ness, his desert hunger, his storm pelted body, the eternity of anguish that shot through his last moments, and the immeasurable ocean of torment that heaved up against his cror.s in one foam ing, wrathful, omnipotent surge, the sun dashed out, and the dead, shroud wrapped, breaking open their sepulchers, and rushing out to s-o what was the matter. We sing his resurrection the guard that could not keep him; the sor row of his discij iles: the clouds piling up on either side in pillared splendors as he went through, treading the pathless air, higher and higlfer, until he came to tho fool f the throne, and all heaven kept jubilee at the return of the conqueror. I say once more, Christ is the everlast ing 6ong. The very liest singers some times get tired; the strongest throats sometimes get weary, and many wdio sang very sweetly do not sing now ; but I hope by the grace of God we will, after a while, go up and sing the praises of Christ where we will never be weary. You know there are some songs that are esiiecially appropriate for the home circle. They stir the soul, they start the tears, they turn the heart in on itself, and keep sounding after the tune has stopped, like some cathedral bell which, long after tho tap of the brazen tongue has ceased, keeps throbbing on the air. Well, it will be a home song in heaven ; all the sweeter because those who sang with us in the domestic circle on earth shall join that great harmony. Jerusalem, my happy home. Name ever dear to me; When shall my labors have an m4 Jn joy and peace in thee? On earth we sang harvest songs as tho wheat came into the barn, and the bar racks were fMled. You know there is nc such time on a farm as when they get the crops in; and so in heaven it will Ix a harvest song on the part of those w he on earth sowed in tears and reaped in joy. Lift up your heads, ye everlasting gates, and let the sheaves come in! Angels shout all through the heavens, and multitudes come down the hills cry ing: "Harvest home!, harvest home!" There is nothing more bewitching to one's ear than the song of sailors far ottt at 6ea, whether in day or night, as they pull away at the ropes; the music is weird and thrilling. So the song in heaven will be a sailor's song. They were voyagers once, and thought they could never get to shore, and before, they could get things snug and trim the cyclone struck them. But now they are safe. Once they went with damaged rigging, guns pf distress booming through the storm; but the pilot came aboard, and he brought them into the harbor. Now they sing of the breakers Iast, the lighthouses that showed them where to sail, the pilot that took them through the straits, the eternal shore on which they landed. Ay, it will be the children's song. You know very well that the vast majority of our race die in ' infancy, and it is esti mated that eighteen thousand millions cf the little ones are standing before God. When they filial! 1 isa up about the throne to sing, the millions and the millions of the little ones ah! that will lie. music for you. These played in the sheets of Baby lon and Thebes; these plucked liUc from the fofc of Uit vet while Christ, was preaching about them; these waded in Siloam; these were victims of Herod's massacre; these were tnrown to croco diles or into the fire; these came up from Christian homes, and these were found lings on the city coruuiona children everywhere in all that land; children in the towers, children on the seas of glass, children on he battlements. Ah, if you do not like children do pot go tere. They are in yas majority, and what a song when they lift tt around about the throne! The Christian singers and composers of j all ages will be there to join in that song. I Thomas Hastings will be there. Lowell j Mason will be there. Bradbury will bf there. Beethoven and Af? ilt be there. They wo sptfiided the cymbals , and the trumpets in the ancient tempkvs will be there. The forty thousand harp ers that stood at the ancient dedication will be there. The two hundred singer that assisted pn that day will te. there. I?atriarcli3 wno lived amidst threshing floors', sheplierds 'ho watched amidst Chaldean- hills, 'prophets who walked, with long beards, gnd c.oarso apparel, pro pPMnhiH i against ancient sdiomina tions, will meet the more recent martyrs who went up with leaping cohort of tire; and some will speak of the Jesus of whom they prophesied, and otdu'va vt the Jesus for whom tl;ey oed. Oh, what a sopg: It oame'to John upon Patmos; it kpiati to Calvin n the prison; it dropr to John Knox in the lire;' $nd, bwmetunrs that song has'cbir:& $0 your, ear, perhaps, .r realty do liink it sometimes breaks over, the battlements of heaven,, '4! Christian woman, the wife of a min ister of hq CJospel, was dying in tire par- I sonnge near tlio old church, where on ; Saturday night the choir used to as j soluble and rehearse for the following Sabbath, and she said: "How strangely sweet the choir rehearses to-night; they have lieen rehearsing there for an hour." "No," said some one about her. "the choir is not rehearsing to-night." "Yes," she said, "I know theyV-re; I hear them sing; how very sweetly they sing!" Now it was not a choir of earth that heard, but the choir of heaven. 1 think that Jesus sometimes dels ajar the d.-o r of heaven, and a passa-re of that rapture greets our ears. The minstrels of heaven strike such a tremendous strain the walls of jasjier cannot bold it. I wonder, will you sing that song? Will I sing it? Not unless our sins are pardoned, and we learn now to sing the praise of Christ, will we ever sing it there. The first great concert that I ever attended was in New York, when Julien, in the Crystal Palace, stood In fers hundreds of singers and hundreds of players ujion instruments. Some of yon may rememlicr that occasion; it was the first one of the kind at which 1 was present, ami I shall never forget it. 1 saw that one man standing, and with the. hand and foot wield that great harmony, beating the time. It was to me over whelming. But oh. tho grander scene when they shall come firm the last, and from the we.-,t, and from the north, and from the south, "a great multitude 1 hat no man can number," into the temple of the skies, host l-yond host, rank lievond rank, gallery above gallery, and Jesus shall stand lief ore that great host to con duct the harmony, with his wounded hands and his wounded feet! I.ilielt.e voice of many ::.:- : , V.".: .'.: . . mighty thundering.--, they shall cry. "Worthy is the lamb that was slain to receive blessings, and lichc., and honor, and glory, and power, world without end. Amen and amen!" Oh, if my ear shall hear no other sweet sounds, may I hear that! If I join no other glad as semblage, may I join that. I was reading of the battle of Agin court, in which Henry V. figured; and it is said after the hattlu was won, glori ously won, the king wanted to acknowl edge the divine interposition, and he or dered the chaplain to read the Psalm of David, and when he came to the words, "Not unto us, oh Lord, but unto thy name be the praise," the king dis mounted, and all the cavalry dismounted, and all the great host, ofiicers and men, threw themselves on their faces. Oh, at the story of the Saviour's love and the Saviour's deliverance, shall we not pros trate ourselves before him now, hosts of earth and hosts of heaven, falling upon our faces and crying: "Not unto us, not unto us, but unto thy name be the glory !" A Queer Sort of Watch. While traveling through New York state I came across what I consider a curiosity. The clerk of the Dibble house, in Mattcawan, N. Y., Mr. Charles Sweet, has a watch he purchased from a German many years ago, who bought it in a pawnshop in Germany at a cost of not quite $1, American money. The curious part is, it never lias been wound for eight or nine yea is since ho lias had it, for two reasons;' First, it does not wind with a key, nor is it a stem winder, nor is there any other mechanical means to wind it. It winds itself simply by tho motion of the bo'y while walking or natural motion of the body during tho day. It has an hour and minute hand, also n tiecond hand, is solid llyer, and lias an inde pendent second hand that registers tho number of hours it i ? wound. hL-.o has a peculiar centerpice that, vhc: touched, places tho hands backward forward at will. Io manufacturer's ; name can bo found on the works or in t'u1 case; the only letters are on the worh-: rerpetual manometer." Dr. Charles 1 1 ! Howard in New York. World, How to Clean !T Ic-'. "This slow process of cleaning the ice o.T the sidewalks by chipping at it w:Ji a, shovel or a hatchet makes mo. luvdx" said a country bred citbe-n as ho strug gled over a t;ias- of fragments of ico, sonic stuck fast uid some loose-, "it could be done ten times more qnickry by the u.h? of an old far-hioned wo wlets maui, made by taking a log fcveral feet long and tri -iiniing it down to a dinmtuv two or three inches for most of its length. It shr.nl,; be of tho original Ikickr.OJS lor about one foot or eighteen inches from one end, r.nd that thou id 1;? the business end. A few vigorou-i hlov, s, delivered without morjr. the maul from the perpend icii'.'-, would smash the icy covering of any sidewalk in New YrtL into loose fragments that ooyhl he moved in a few miuute5,' Icw York Sun: The rvofesrior's Uli-isfal Iiiofum-e. A Buffalo professor the other day was enlightening bis class on the subject of geology, when one. of the pupils cam? forward, handed a piece of rock candy to the professor, and asked wha.t it wa.. The professor suggested that it was probably a Rttanuty ot crystalline quartz, v.hcieuion the boy wondered at its being $0 crumbly. The scientist thn ventured the ppinion that tho subs tan co was car bonate of lima. Some of the boys cutd 1 iiot refrain from giggling outright, but the professor remained in blissful ignorance of the joke. Chicago News. Itaplint DlisHioRS in Ita-iu. Baptists are the only inlc-sian lv which has tho piiyil'.-ii of oiirvyiii;; on tnfsiufis n K-usGi;i vitU the .sanction of hu gover-nnient, but they are not al lowed to baptize members of the Greek church. There are in Russia '.M B.ipti.-t churches, 41 pastors and evanoiii(s, Sunday schooLj anci 13,87 church mem l.ers; 8.u cie baptized last year.- fblo. Oiinion. (iooj Jig at I'oriralt. A fauious art connoissei'- cf Baltimore can, at a glaxi - Vhet'ner a portrait; of aa.y ILerit has l)een paintetl from life 6r from imagination aided by photog raphy. In the latter ease the soul of things 1 not manifest, Only a discerner of spirits could detect the dilTerer.ee. Baltimore American. Scientific test3 in Hungary sliow that j corn will produce the largest yield of ; milk, -while sorghum will produce milk j or the richest quality. - ( An electrical ieanut roaster is one cf . the latest inventions of tie day. FURNITURE Parlor Sefs, I -1 - -F )K Parlors, 2rdr5ms&::, Lhiin"Viomti. c 4 u YlHM'e a liKi'j.niiictii! 1 - -1 1 ;f (Jnods ;;.! i';;r 1 Y! (."- i : 1 1! ii-. ! . UNDER AKIKG Ai'iD KmBAL.G L SFl Zlt.lA X COIINEK MAIN AND SIXTH T). 1 I. JUST RECEIVED. Finnan Haddiea. California Evaporated Nectarines they are delicious. Boston Brown Bread Mi x tur o , --3orn3 th i nrj new and nice. Prunells and Apricoto. A ; ;j p -tr r -j in Cans. Clam Chowder. 1 73 T-T3 k Jil3 ii s 0 ; K s. I l r p 5 ilii.Jl X. e I Will le one i;!:i-i; u Iiiclj l.; 'i'.Iijects -' national i:ilci i .- l a:.-! j'::ij,::-t'. wiii ! stronirlv :u-iia; i! ;.! , !-.-cj;,.;i JVo.-ide-Jit W iil i j !; 'i l.i- ;... j'io ol' Ca.rS (.'oiiiilv who v '.l . in ha. n d' Political, Commercial and Social Transactions f I of tli is vc; l i i w'lm 11 1 J" V mm mwmtm wmum Q J ally qt Weekl? Herald AO'.V While! we havt; people we will v.:.: III! 11 rUli'L. i Wliicli is l:r.t-cl;;?5 in .-.11 vexcu .at a from whic'.i os:r joli jtriiUer.s uvt tuniiuf out Diueh sati-hietorv work. PLATTSHOUTII, EMPORIUM. Bed 0 v :-' "V L .Se. ' -.-rJ V- j tv. 1 i . - I'l.A'l TS.' i . t ! ! , NIMM.'ASK . : V vr, j- -r .Lv;. j, vi J.:.: rr. t 1 r : . : 5 i. :. ? t. '. f. f' i ) , . 1 i i I lV..y.i X Q0 'V. G C ' uii'I W'Mihl !.;; :;r ace '.i!h I lie i i i s : t - - .--h'iiihi ; i,j: i tr,. th' .-!;!. f.-.-t ln.-foj-e 1 he :u.-' ! .-j.e.'ik oimii- h i ; - j NEBRASKA.