TALMAGE'S SERMON, j light. We must pause, our si.is. We must paus', ami weep over and i;bso:b of rerpe s ) important I cometiint-s The text was Psalms CI, 4:-Sehih." The majority of Lible readers look npon this word of my text as of no im portance. Tliey consider it a super fluity, a mere li ling in, a meaningless interjection, a useless refrain, an unde fined echo. feelah: But 1 have to tell you !h:it it is no scriptural accident It recurs seventy four times in the Book of Psalms and three timu3 in tli3 Book of Habakkuk. You must not charge this perfect book with seventy-seven trivialities, t-tl.ih! It is an enthorued the streiittu of promise, l.earicoi lei casting about how im-n? t;,..cs tl ey l.ave lead ti e tibie through to trow l.o n ore a-iui i ie . ... ,n ,.M uri'er some words are battles, then taia word , . ' . ... is a Marathon, a Thermopyia, a Sedan Vater.oo. It is a word decisive, ! f n tl.t-v se m itthanai i.sscngc-r would know about the state of Pennsylvania wnotaou.u Ko through it in a Sf. Lorn lL-htiimg, emu-ess trr.in ana m a i uimuu er," the two characteristics of journey, velocity and somnolence, r.i.i .. a -,,, r in .-ill nur diiTerent .,...,,;.., nf ..fnlne-aui I a Wress the long resou Imnreds of people who are trying to do O wake up to .,.viP :,. m.re of the dramauc j deaths p.r. element and les of the 2Watie. Ihe j i'.ous, i-.ien a-. uitytiake onr gett.r.g read) I ... 'Kit lorsuc.i pr...i..v.... . . i ..;.i..l.v.k Of of travel, whnt oKt.,:-- - nut oi ei t, sin): .om-br,u rrt'lOl'S OI mi; inkled Ihe de- nai-srKTt;; ....i n-r i.nt tn a i e and phil-haunteJ, cr into :,.' an 1 spray SUU-i.-"" - . . .... i.un I i ... wi l it he hlvium ui . . . i . ..-..r'.l VVP The current is to swift can res is i '"J helm cm steer or Manic ;.rm WALL STREE1 FORTUSL uthssir.ee in ite Jimmy less gardi ns ? nay Once st. cannot slop. rt...' i-i 1.0 oar nt of it. no n- rcu.eai. in lia::.'- cm Hark to dins .-! "iorever. the inte.est of your t: ftriKe out Iw.me-i fr whom !,' Selai! forever! I moan region, to croak reiu.o.i. a ater:oo. it is a woiu rMe,,t it in ani- sometimes for poetic beauty, sometimes . ,aeuUa manner. for solemnity sometimes for grandeur, . by sabba and sometimes itr eitm.u in.i-...- Through it rolis the thundering cha: lots j otthe Omnipotent Cod I take this word for my text because I am so often ?sked what is its meaning, , (., .:. I .1,. i.t It or iieiueru.." . - , , , of tl(C ch,ln. lias an ocean of meaning, from winvh I, - . moniitiir I address many students who are here ministry. Tiiev come in the different instutions. I say to them t!,is niornin": If vou CO home tli theo.ogiC.il from the here from most souls dramatic Tliom is ti thall this morning dip up only four or tivebucketfnls. I will speak to you, to 'far as I have time, of the i-'elah of l.n,.';,.-,l cirri, il'ic'lllrr. HlH Sldll'.l Of illttT- r. . .,..; i ' dramatic; Chris mission, uic ccinii ui tn,j;ituj.. ...... ..... . gtlah of pe.veuiity. j 1 Are you surprised that I speak of j the Sielah of poetical signilicnnce? ; Surely the God wlio sapphired tlie Leavens and made the earth a rosebud of beauty, with oceans hanging to it Lke drons of morning dew, would not m ike a bibie without rhythm, without redolence, without blank verse. Cod knew that eventually the P.ible would be read by a great majority of young j eop'.e, for in this world of malaria and casually an octogenarian is exceptional and as thirty years is more than the average of human life, if the bible is to ba a successful book it must be adapted to the young. Hence the prosody of tiio Bible the drama of Job, the pa3toralof Ruth, the epic of Judge3 the dithyrambic of llabakkuk, the threnody of Jeremiah, the lyric of .Solo mon's long, the oratorio of the Apocalypse, the idyl, the strophe, and antistropheand thehi'elah of the Psalms. Wherever you find this word Selali, it means that you are to rouse up to great stanza, that you are to open your soul to great analogies, that you are to spread the wing of your imapination for tfreat flight. "I answered thee in the secret place of thunder. J proved thea at the waters cf Meribah. Selah." "The earth and all the inhabitants thereof are dissolved; J bear up tha pillars of it. tielah." "Who is this king of glory. The Lord of hosts, he is the king of glory, fielah." '"Thou shalt compass me about w ilhsongoOf deliverance. Selah." "Though the waters thereof roar and be troubled, though the mountains shake with the swelling thereof. Selah." "The Lord of hosts is with us, the God of Jacob is our refuge. Selah." "Thou hast given a banner to them that fear thee, that it may be displayed because of the truth. Selah." "I will hide under the covert of the wings. Selah." "0, GoJ, when thou vente3t forth before thy people, when thou didst march through the wilderness, fc-elah." Next I came to speak of the Selah of intermission. Gescnius, Tholuck, fleugstenberg, and other writers agree in saying that this word Selah means a rest in music; what the Greeks call a diapsalma, a pause, a. halt in the solemn march of catitiliation. Every musician knows the importance of it. If you ever saw Julien, the great musi cal leader, stand before 5,000 singers and players upon instruments, and with one stroke of his baton smite the mul titudinous hallelujah into silence, and then, soon after that, with another stroke of his baton rouse up the full orchestra to a great outburst of har mony, then you Know the mighty effect of a musical pause. It gives more power to what went before: it gives more power to what is to come after. So God thrust the Selah into his Bible and into our lives, compellins us to stop and think, stop and consider, stop and admire, stop and pray, stop and re jpent, stop and be sick, stop and die. It lis not the great number of time3 that jwe read the Bible through that makes us intelligent In the scritures. "We ;must pause. What though it take an jhour for one word ? What though it jtake a week for one verse? What , though it take a year for one chapter? jWe must pause and measure the height jthe depth, the length, the breadth, the j universe, the eternity of meaning in j one verse. I should Lke to see some ( one sail around one little adverb in the Bible a little adverb of two letters, dur ing one lifetime the word ' so" in the new testament passage, "God so loved jthe world." Augustine made a long pause after the verse, 'Tut ye on the Lord JauM Christ," and it converted ihim. Matthew Henry made a long pause after the verse, "Open thou my lips, and my mouth shall show forth i thy praise,": and it converted him. f William Cowper made a lonj pause af- jter the verse, "Being freely justified by his grace," audit converted him. When God tells nt seventy-seven limes medi .tatlvei to pause in reading two of the ; book! of the Bible, he leaves to bur (Common sense to decide how often we should pause in reading the other sixty four books of the bible. We noti mw, and ask for more dra-Joiin oraniaiic. and h you ouiziii to Christ who have been Rowland Hill, dramatic;: uthne, dramatic; Joan u.ivn '.mas KvaiH, dramatic; George Whitelieid. dramatic: Robert Had, dramatic; Robert South matic; Peiihm, dramatic: Alason. dramatic: Dr. Xott, When you get into the ministry, if you attempt to culture that elem n's t mid try to wield it tor God, you w.u 1 meet with mighty rebuff an i caricature and eclesiasthal council will take your ! cuss in charee, and they will try to put I you down; but the. God who starts you will help you through, and great win he the eternal reward for the assiduous and the plucky. What we want, ministers and laymen is to get our sermons and our exor tations and our prayers out of the old rut. I see a great deal of discussion in the religious papers about why people do not come to church. They do not come because they are not interested. The old hackneyed religious phrases that come moving down through the centuries will never arrest the masses. What we want today, you in your sphere and I in my sphere, is to freshen up. People do riot want in their sermons sham llowen bought at the millinery shop, bat the japonicas wet with the morning dew; nor the heavy bones of extinct megatherium of past ages, but the living reindeer caught last August at the edge of Schroon lake. We want to urlv.; out the drowsy, and the prosaic, and the tedious, and the humdrum, and in troduce the brightness and vivacity, and the holy sarcasm, and Ihe sancti fied wit, and the epigrammatic power, and the blood-red earnestness, and the fire of religious zeal, and 1 do not know of any way of doing it as well as through the dramatic. Attention! Behold! Hark! Selah! The Targum, which is the bible in Cha'dte, renders this word of my text "forever." Many- writers agree in believing and starling the one meaning of this word is 'forever." In this very verse from which I take my text Selah means not only poetic significance, and inter mission, and emphasis, but it means eternal reverberation forever! God's government forever, God's goodness forever, the gladness of the righteous forever. Of course, you and 1 have not surveyor's chain with enough links to measure that domain of meaning. In this world we must build everything on a small scale. A hundred years are a great while. A tower live hundred feet is a great height. A journey of four thousand miles is very long. But eternity! If the archangel has not strength of wing to 11 y across it, but flutters and drops like a wounded sea gull, there is no need of our trying in the small shallow of human thought to voyage across it. A sceptic desiring to show his con tempt for the passing years, and to show that he could build enduringly, had his own sepu cher made of the finest and the hardest marble, and then he had put on tho door the words, "for time and for eternity;" but it so happened that the seed of a tree some how got into an unseen crevice of the marble. That seed grew and enlarged until it became a tree, and split the marble to pieces. J Here caa be no eternalization of anything earthly. But forever! Will you and J live as long as that e are apt to think of the grave as the terminus. We are apt to think of the hear3e as our last vehicle. We are apt to think of seventy or eighty or ninty years, and then cessa tion. Instead of that we find the marble slab of the tomb is only a mile stone, marking the first mile, and that the great journey is beyond. We have only time enough in this world to put on the sandals and to clasp our girdle and to pick up our staff. We take our first step from cradle . to grave, and then we opeu the door and start great God, whither? The clock strikes the passing away of tims, but not the passing away of eternity, Measurlcss Vleasurless! This SeUh of perpetuity makes earthly inequalities so insigni Gcant,the difference between scepter and needle, between Alhambra and hut between chariot and cart, between throne' and curbstone, between Ax minster and bare floor, between satin and sackcloth, very trivial. This Selah -ixteen er, an i steam Le hiard the dying geJ -r me until Jt was a terr.ble accident. .,.,, ,..-.,l iit.r.n ea .1. oth' t .IJ " ei , I'l. v. ! ni.., f-m roar of the e.;Mpm L,l Tin-kin!! Ham.-sthat added to ; ...,.r .f tin? scene could I il.u art r.-n Jill ' shlitksi Lid wounded. !twa a spectacle that would strike horror to every heart and jsoul. I :-. ,,. .,.,,1 Hiihnor hands rushed to ,!, ,Hhe victims of the wreck and, huiling the timbers sid-, (in mannlei bodiej out from nnd debrR Like heroei they toiled, they thought every one was taken out. Middeuly there, win a cry: "Good heavens! There is a man under the locomotive! And he lives!" If was a hard battle to take the tons of steel and iron from oil the crushed from tit.at could be s-eu underneath, but, spurred by the dictates of human ity, they workel. and at last it was laid bare. Strong men turned away as it moved, lor they exectel to -tee a bleeding parcel of flesh, maimed beyond resemblance to a man. But it lived; it breathed, and it spoke. They bent lower to catch its words, says the Boston News. 'Down! Down I said! Can't you i) hear a teilow aim gei on nun : "What does he mean?' They cried. Then he rose to his feet and looked around, dazed. He brushed his clothes, and as he noted the abounded look on every one's face at his miraculous es cape, he said, laughingly: 'Weil, if that wasn't a joke on me! I thought 1 was playing football and that the wlnde Yale eleven was on me. 11a ha! Good eh ?'' ry-, number the am M this? ' . i .!,.., refOilect. Just inside nJ nib U up in my addu hook." said the old gentleman, holding the d'Kir -. -KsrHiwm Strang hour to cal on a i . .... 69 Ua ftAnuiea reiuaiKea jiua;, - through the had inio i cuair; n is not many m ua called him palmy days got his hrst teal rt "now he can wear seatskinsusr.nders with diamond buckles, if he wants to ' ..,.it..l,vvMti.SvOiic.i encircled "ielll,,r"" ;, ueie a 'Mr. his throat uny ".... i ,.r , ,r Trust stock. serious di ain on bis im , I Mrr io the morning, and At that time I hearted, light uai. U'd young j man, and sjK-nt m .st of his .ei momen'sin fluttering arou.m w, - liiiaore.i, .ui'". atlected skirts of the four however, l-ecomiiii serious : .-Allister- . ...-, nii,t ic taint "I Oy 1MB sl"j-" - i nuvfiiliu figure man, Ids host i.i.r. .mI ncei-ted an easy .'but I have an appointment to meet Newberry in trgMt io soiub ..u- He leaves lor me n hn West early in me m"i.. was going to a big bamiuet mis nip, he said he would see me any tame after 1J o clock. Granger Car Trust had been in .Jimmy's head all day, and that was the reason he came to speak of it. It was a stock which had never paid any dividends, and had consequently sold at a low figure for a number of years. w Jimmy had discovered that the of ihe big VM'siern the ear trust had a ism. u ., oc atutidtT an 1 lie ' - , . , i tall enough just aba,, to lieep , , ,i,v, :,:. r: and short enough to be. obliged to stand off his w.shiady, juVnt of one . .. . u.th which asionan;., . ,.,, :i,.f had 5n,,leof living was a inue j very uisa.iVHtiiageuus --- d. d largely -secret ly acjuirea a cohuwmk . in the stock. And the inference which Wall street training enauieu ; was able to pick up in ' into 01. The Gulf tream. The question is often asked. To what extent does the gulf stream mod ify the climate of the United States? To its supposed erratic movements is laid the blame of every abnormal sea son, the Century says. There is every evidence '.hat tho gulf stream is gov erned absolutely by law m all its changes, The course through the ocean is without doubt fixed, he fluctuations are by days, and they dc not vary materially one from the other. Its temperature changes, depending upon the relative heat of the tropical and noi.lar seasons, and upon tho strength of the producing trade winds. The warm water may be driven toward the shore by the waves- caused by a favorable wind, but the current re mains in its proper place, The warm water gives oil a certain amount of heat to the air above it, and if this air is moved to the land we feel the heat. The presence of the warm water on the coast of Europe would in no way modify tho climate if the prevailing winds were, easterly instead of westerly. If the prevailing winds in New England in winter were southeast in stead of northwest, the climate would be equal to that of the Azores Islands mild and balmy. Por the cause of abnormal seasons we may look too meteorology, ihe current is in its place ready to give off the heat and moisture to the air w hen ever the demand is made upon it, but by the erratic movements of the air this heat and moisture may be de livered at unexpected times and sea sons, and thus give rise to the errone ous belief that the gulf stream itself has gone astray. occ Por urfccarioiis, as he uepeii the "buns" h "the street."' But .Bunny's lucky star was burning with V'., f'llliJll! l",wer "" tllB evening he went to the horse t-how. He had pat in Ins tune with his back to th'i arena, looking at the girls in boxes. At half past II Pa.-luoii began to gather up her Molts and shake the tan bark from off her feet and Jimmy began to lose bis interest in the show. cni,,.fiiu-ivl the crowd out .-'j -----the lobby, and laying his check on the shelf in 'front of the coalrooui window, called out to the attendant, in a jocu lar tone of voice, "A fur-lined over coat, please." Pur-hnel overcoat, sir? Here you are sir, No. W" answered the man, bri'kly', as he handed Jimmy a royally splendid garment. Vim' .linimv 's cheek wai No, and he saw in a moment that the man had read the figures upside down. His first impulse was to rectify his mistake and claim his more modest box-cunt; but on second thoughts he decided to take advantage of the error and astonish the boys at the club with hi3 iic.v magnificence, 'I he return of tho borrowed coat in the morning would straighten matters out. He was an expert on loans of every (k-criitio ) and considered this a "call ioon;'' at least hu knew he had a call. Then he sauntered leisurely through the vestibule and allowed the apparel to proclaim the man, for r.s he reached the sidewalk a uniformed functionary touched his cap respectfully and in quired the number o his carriage. "Call 111," said Jimmy, and chuckle 1 as ho thought of tlte way tho policemen and chorui of hangers on would make the night hidious in the effort to discover his mythical con veyenee. But the shouts had scarcely reached the ears of Dana On tho Tower before a stylishly appointed coupe drew up n front of the portico, and there was nothing for Jimmy to do but press a coin (which he had found in the pocket of the ulster) into the hand of the nearest loafer an 1 sleep inside the carriage. The coachman who had been trying to control his excited team let them have their heads a3 soon as he heard the doors slam, and Jimmy found that he had effected a second loan. "Well, 1 hope this carriage do?su't belong to the same ma) as the fur-' l ned overcoat; the poor beggar will catch his death of cold walking homo j in a dress Buit," he commented,' thoughtfully. i As he spoke, he pushed his hand It I iinniv'ri him to draw from this move was ui.n before nianv moons the boot would be on the other leg, and the car trust would get the cream of the road's earn ings, and the stockholders of the Great Divide South western would get wu..i-. I-I--" "d pnnii-: " A French Otftcm Kuae. There has died at Versailles recently the Yicomte Toussaint, formerly a Colonel in the frerich army and Mayor of Toulouse. He was a brave man and a dashing officer. During one of the Terrible Years, noticing that his troops were bending forwaid under a galling fire to escape the bullets of the enemy, while he alone maintained an erect position, he exclaimed. "Since when, i should like to know, has so much politeness been shown to the Russian?' The sarcasm took instan taneous effect, for the soldiers rushed forward and carried everything before them. Loudon Telegjaph. Sanitary Item. Mamma (to daughter) -Now, Eu genia, this is a new life to both of us If your poor, lamented father , were alive we wouldnt be reduced to the necessity of keeping a boarding house. Eugenia Well, mamma, there dosn'l seem to be any other courso left to us. Mamma I know it, Eugenia. You must be very circumspect, and while polite to all, you must, In your late lamented, nautical father's words, "re pel boarders." Eugenia Don't you think, mamma, we ought to leave that to tho haili? Texas bi ft lugs. down into the poiket of the ulster. touched a cold, hard substance, which his instinct told him, was a silver pocket flask filled with brandy. A f ter he had proved the correctness of his impression he also d scovered a pair of gloves, two cigars and some small chang. He lit one of the cigars and found it equal to those Jack Levof aometimes gave him. lie thought wltli a little amusement of the simple-mindedness of a man w ho could trust such things as brandy cigars and money within the reach of the cloak-room people. "Confound him. He had no business to throw temptation into tho way of men in that class of life. But this will teach him a lesson. By Jove, he'll be more careful next time!" But Jimmy's moral reflections were broken in upon by the carriage, which has turned the corner, coming to a stop before a four-story hou3o in the center of the block. "I'll get out and run up the steps until the coachman drives away," though he; "and then I'll slide around to the club." But this stratagem was not fated to be a success, for as he en tered the vestibule he heard footsteps beli'nd him, and on turning around confronted s.i old gentleman, who exclaimed: "Why, Frank, my boy, you're borne early to-night; oh, I beg your pardon, sir; I thought it was my ion! "I wanted to see John Newberry," said Jimmy, readily; "but you are not he." "No; Newberry lives on Fifty-third stree; litis Is Fifty-second." "Then, my coachman must have made a mistake in the street: and now, be has driven off, as I told him he AMdo't til or me r. Ntwber Nuiitflil Iml nirr l. ) ( i'li t'- , He had been skirmishing around all day, trying to get hold of some Car Trust stock before his tip became public property; and as he had spoken at randon, for the purpose of saying something and to kill tune, Ids pet hobby had popied out of his mouth before he knew it. At tho mention of this security bis host looked up from the book where he was engaged in searching for Mr. .New berry's address. "I have a b'o:k of that stock my self. What dyou want to do with it? he risked. ".Sell it," answerd Jimmy, promptly, scenting trade and approaching it backward on the regulation stk ex change way. "I'd like to sell mine, too, if I could get anything for it," sighed the old gentleman. "I think Mr. Newberry wants more than I have; perhaps 1 can sell yours also." "1 hold a thousand shares, and I'll give you a liberal commission if you can get twenty for them." "I never work for commissions and I'm odering mine for less money," said Jimmy, grandly; "but I'll buy your stock at 13, and lake my chances of squeezing a couple of points out of it" "I guess I'll let you have it," said the old gentlemen that's the best bid I've ever had on it." "Got it here?" asked Jimmy ; "I want to turn it over to Newberry tonight.'' "Yes, it's here in the safe." "AD right: I'll give you my check on my private in the Kinckerbocker Trust company," said Jimmy, ai he pulled out a little private check book which represented an actual balance of 870,48. In his eagerness to get rid of a du bious btock at a fair profit, the old gentleman never thought of request ing a certified check. No one could be expected to get his check certified at midnight; and, besides, a man 'who owned such a swell turnout, and wore such expensive clothes and spoke so coolly of drawing on his private bank account for 15,000 was good enough for him. And the fact that Jimmy knew Mr, Newberry stamped him as a man of means. Mr. Newberry's friends were of the plutocratic clars. An acquaintance with him was belter than Bradstreet's hightest rating. So Jimmy took Ihe coveted stock and made a hurried exit on tim plea that he was keeping the billionaire waiting. As Jimmy lay awake that night, thinking of some means of making his check good, a new dilliculty confronted him. If "Frank" and his fathor should meet they might compare notes about the loss of the carriage and the sale of the stock with disastrous results. But Frank had attached no impor tance to his failure to find the carriage. To him it was only one of the queer events of a very hazy evening. He did not return home until 5 o'clock and when he arose at noon the next day his father had long since leftkthe house. The next morning vague rumors about Granger Car Trust began to cir culate through the street. It was whispered that there was "a hen on," and under the eager bidding of a horde of buyers the prices Jumped up to 40. i-o Jimmy had no trouble in making a loan to take care of his check. This was Jimmy's first ten-strike. He eventually disposed of his stock at 103, and since then his judicious speculations have increased his pile, until he has become quite a capitalist Now I don't envy Jimmy his stood luck, but when 1 hear him holding himself up as a brilliant example of the value of honest Industry and plod ding economy. I am inclined to call him down and remind him that he it con ducting his part of the conversation ! through hit new and always flossy Ilk nav-uarry Uomalna, la Puck. An operatic man-, . now wealthy and tu go. With . coM room, for which they w,, 1 a week. They markJT-i " themselves, and their washing included men were n pit o,i, ...., ""naiHUji breeding, but poor sad itr1 managed to earn thei, .Tf apiece, their 83. then fi c i When then stage commeiifwl in 1 Within two years each n well Now on f.r ii. UWlO hmj lives in the house Jim ' "oustii and ,J - 'iuu oecame of tU fnrrrot vt (. ,i . . ""1 York now than before the , my manager, in telliim ismi. "but if I had to begin ag,s J u 0 .CTr i wouia nut I ,J New York Cor. I'ituburj Bii3 An Old Man and a Mill 0te A tiala And tiAiirto .u ""J UW Rf named Kverett Howard tiieimsioru, street, visiud & the other afternoon. Ie curiuos watch, which he m Knar. ,1.1 .i ,1 i .. Ho .vard, in Liverpool, Knf It has been passed frotj d ... i i i iiowaru, aim Keeps excellent; erett Howard cametoLonj and was married here In Itf J resided on the Merrimack J Mr. Howard was present J legein Materville, Me.,wi1aJ Butler graduated. The HW Jong lived race, hverett Hons, a sister aged severity-six amhj aged seventy-eight He is the youngest of the V Lowell (Mass )NeHn It Will Come Some Oaj, The passage of a woman f bill by the New York Amsljif ' usual a joke. Nine tiriies s J years such a bill has passes J or the other always to fall by ic ' side at last. This time, m unusually large u timber of jotai the real frieui'i of the mtu-jii the vote in iU favor as 2 to i day the "joke" may be camdi for the jokers and the bill through both houses. T!: York happens to have a wai governor, he will be unabletti logical reason why womeo vote and he will alga Uie &giv,, adelphla Ledger. , J riiyl-lo and Thtir fcOBian The active competition f$wM.i that the physician In ,'eB to encounter has rmuM ink method for stimuUUm iAtj are doctors in this city, p due form and no doubt In tur men of ability, who remit t consultation, relying on j they obtain from the prescribe for emointneni g standard prescriptions Umj sj nn in ntiiintities. and I - , . directly to the paum nrpscrintion has to t com, . . patient is sent toacenaw k. ...i.ii. .I.., ihirior nasaiit ill Willi" uiv for his commissions. Between these two dews tioner really captures are; and he eels it moreover, u he otherwise might wtn with a strong show oiw, nationts will Dot dream oi ... credit for medicines, m small bones about leavm? t-.i11 ..nr.ni.l fill f ft ll6 & Ulla uii I 'tan - them to run it up Pittsburg Bulletin i - Wy to KerpFl'H Vroohlv cut (lowers m. alive for a long time by I., n n'aum nr VSISB With which a little charcoal or a small piece of earn.' Tim vain innlil tie Set W Jl-L 1 -...i with 1 .,1 il. At nl Biu'- comes In contact with &n water should bo pouri t air.-Xew York Jourtnl Thraireforbowkliotiil ,. IS i.r,n.,r. Vaster IO" 11 O UII 1.11. ft " of them in every form- Mrs. Struckile-W1 Hrt! queen while you w-t-t 1.1. - Vrt 1 U1UU-' mcanouuie - jj real sorry too. i receipt for hug"8" r New York Weekly. A nnvel and inr1"" . , t.. ueeu gtokwarof llaro ' b, Incandescent m i (f the headgear oi horse. Theli.'ht h i iw is i'l1" power, and tue . , supplies It is t J which are counet-- cumulators c0"01')! coachman's seat- ' Smelts are so abundj, of Castle Hock, j sundlngoutheof I. .hie to dip out in 4 ". ...... he more j j ThouandsofpouiiA Iwmi takan io "