' "tr t VAMa ... S- .,.!--! .. - a, .j.,. ... r - - -ay. V .,,,, ' ;;-" 11 r MM C7i t, II. ' I - V J e ," t V f . r E . f , - f - I, v. - .' -.t: 9- --H i -Ys - - ' x' '.' V:. " it. V ; . HI' V. J' ' t ' Uartfcon SoumaL t'T- : - tttee areve their utility Da Uae of battle may la time a Ua srf aMag, tea, ta Hew Tart kutor indW tM that tae Heilaad subauarlas boat fa aainl t ef eight. , A MbaOlM kat broken oat at Chow-C-ttw; gradually China Is getting bar fet-f late a pretty pickle. 1 Pewij ) said never to bare voted, Cat .here's likelihood of lota of Dewey a ago twenty-one yean from i Baatlago la merely the Spanish way B epelUng "8t Iago," meaning St. 13 was recently rsnnonlsart by A Dearer paper aaya that "Dewey's Helmt was the greatest erer woa by it atagle admiral," Da married admlr fcle lght better? ' Jean Steel, of Pueblo, Oole- has sVaea arrested for assaulting Prank aT-atf, bat Isn't It the usual thing for to strike Kiln 1 7 are disposed to resent En- jtSaad's making lore to this country, al Cfceugn they admit that Canada may a of these days be more than a sister 'Am exchange says: "The weather has am Tory severe In Paris this week, Sd one man Is reported to bare died exposure." If the paper bad said girl! an -.udamanese woman be- a widow she prepares ber hus- tsuhffs skull and uses it for a treasure ftn." This prores that the "old man" m a good bead for business. Oabs may not be "ripe for Independ kea," says lienor Giber J a. But if He ster Giberja continues to break into ferlat with that name of his be will And ChS American people ripe for rerolt Joaeph Letter has met with disaster; mt while be baa manipulated the great est wheat deal of modern years he has P millions of dollars Into the pockets American farmers, and they can forget him. v srer m inyicr, w am (UKra uuxtu( that tameos charge at Dargal Gap, Is drawing $128 a week In a London 1 And sa It seems, after all. the pvbUe mast pay the piper. tataer It dancas or net Western paper says that the par- i of a stage-struck girl "oppose ber to) adopt a theatrical career on ; af bar youth and Inexperience, m Is 28 years old." She gfcaa Hat despair; la a few years she be aid enough for the chorus. who Indulge In stilted for- Itf, Ignorant that the best man- ton are the simplest, ought to read aritfc particular care the queen's mes aaga ta Miss Gladstone on learning of feat father's death. "Beatrice and I." ajat the qneea and the princess, ex- tbelr sympathy. long a question whether 1ne ts er the Engl lab loco root! re is better, bat evidence that the best In the world are made in United States accumulates con The sate of American locomo- aeatral markets Increases er try year and many of them go to coun fgtat which art under British dominion Ofaoarss they would not be purchased MM bat tor tnelr superiority. It supposed that the day bad when a judge In Kentucky adjourn his court because be a bloody conflict between two Ural dans of outlaws. But Judge Srsws was forced to do this at Man Mater, ta Clay County. . There msy be fc picturesque side ta these mountain Mad, but the spectacle Is anomalous sad disgraceful In these days, when TTantnrij la lavttlng capital and Imml abould receive a reward Car baring alt upon the most progres grre graduatloa essay yet heard of. The ; men and women of her "Agrlcul- and Mechanical College" wrote eassmonesessBt these en such ; subject as the native gmpes af she Terrtery, the affect of growing sjMtaMea under different colored Chta, and so on. Btadlea of this sort IBM a waatderabte adrance orer the , TMoaary commencetteut theme. gtery win he taken from Lieutea Ct riNna If 4m appreciation be glr- 0 tt aVat aa af hi serea companions 'Cg ware fortunate enough to eroire it tofor atartlng oa the desperate ZZX2 a phrase that deserves to Hre CZl CL It was Oabera Deigns a, of fjv. a baf af tk, who managed to lm HlVtS blmastf Wtthoot any help 3 taalM aiiira Whea asked If L crpafllai a gat hack alive be an txrzX aarslessry "Oh, I guess we f Tjtfcir ahance af getttng out," and 1 f3l amrhala, at they can't f great 2a to Sa bulge la the price of rj Ca assaO af fay, wmb r:r7 en p a bar-tC-1 tk fttaa Ci aat heM. ' :rfCaaMM . ner-vef Ctfar- food Moducta are rarioos. total lues of one, though K be a staple, causes so great dlstrtea. If we have ao wheat, we still bav com, sad ev ery year the people are anaing new merits m that excellent grain. If the rice crop fails la India or In China ac tual starvation follows, and thousands of human beings suffer agony or death. When the potato crop of Ireland Is smitten with the bllgnt even ia these recent years shocking destitution fol lows. But In magnlntently endowed America there la abundance of food of many kinds. The country's resources are without limit; and while we send scores of great ships besvy laden with food to Europe while engaged In a war the developments of which no man can foresee, while we send an army of In vasion tea thousand miles from boms and hurry provisions after k for an other army already abroad, we suffer no more than a brief advance in price of one staple. And when the rest of the world knows the value of American maize as we know it now, they, too, may be saved by coin from the terrors of a one-crop food Hply. If any one of our readers wishes to see how history repeats itself, let him take a map of the world and with a couple of pins and tiny American and Spanish Hags trace the course of our fleets and that of our enemy during the month o' May, while they played a game of hide-and-seek, with all of the civilized world looking on. A month seemed to us a long time for a fleet of nine or ten Spanish vessels to go dodg ing over the ocean, escaping every eye. Yet bo vast is this ocean that just ninety-three years ago a French and Span ish fleet of twenty -shlia contrived to escape tbe pursuit of Nelson, the most able of naval heroes, fur nearly seven months. The maps snd pins and little flags will make tuls wonderful ebons clear to the boy student. Vllleneuve, a French admiral, set sail in March from Toulon, and having rallied a squadron of Spanish vessels, beaded di rectly for the West Indies, where a fleet from Cadiz joled him. Lord Nel son, meanwhile, was scouring the Med iterranean Sea for him In vain. Hear ing at last that Vllleneuve was In Americsn waters. Nelson crossed tbe Atlantic but was lured by a fabse re port to tbe shores of tbe South Amerl- can continent Meanwhile Vllleneuve sailed from Martinique for France, again eluding Nelson, who had learned of his whereabouts, but reached tbe West Indies only to find tbst Vlllen euve and his fleet were gone. Tbe chase, the combined fleets numbering more than thirty ships, continued upon tbe vast plain of gray water until late In September. The fleets met at last, and the great battle of Trafalgar was fought. In wbch Nelson was killed; but the supremacy of England upon tbs seas was established. Tbe electric telegraph wires over the land, and tbe cables under tbe seas, In times of wsr become of untolJ vslue In tbe quick transmission of dispatches to and from tbe forces In tbe Held. Distance Is annihilated; Important movements are executed with less de lay, and a war Is Itself shortened. In addition to this application, electricity Is now put to many other important uses in the conduct of war. More over, new applications are constantly being found for its varied capabilities. A modern mine field for coast or har bor defense Is sn electric sdaptatlon akin to electric masting, in wnicn su able fuses are arranged to be fired by a battery current sent at will from some control station by the simple closing of tbe circuit Heavy charges of high ex plosive, called mines, are so distributed and connected by cables to control-stations that It Is diflcult to Imagine a hostile ship or fleet traversing a well organized mine field without destruc tion or most serious damage. Another terrible engine of destruction for use In defense of harbors Is the electrically controlled dirigible torpedo. Moving and steering Itself In response to elee-; se. rsteJ slurs tbci were tides of drunk trie currents sent through s small wire , runes and licenttcusucM such as tin or cable. It carries a charge of explos- J world never heard f. and tbe very sewers lve suflicient to destroy In an Instant ; PrdiUon brok. loose snd flooded th the most formidsble warship. Its h!gh cb"rc,h- After. V'Ie the prlnt.ng Pr,, . . . ' , . .... was freed, snd it oroke the shackles .' speed and Its almost complete '"M the hums. mind. Then there came t, mergence save It from damage by the irKW nmber of ld books, and where guns of tbe enemy, even If its approach ' ihrr(f wall one ml-1 hostile to the Chris, be discovered. Tbe dirigible torpede ' tian religion there ere tweuty men ready may be regarded ss n explosive mine, ; to advocate it. 8.1 have not any nerv- moved, directed and flred by the agency of electricity. The effectiveness of some of the more recently developed electrical devices has not yet been test ed In actual wsrfare, but It Is safe to say that tbelr use will certainly nasteu tbe day when war will prove to be so destructive and so. terrible as to be avoided. If possible, by all civilised na tions. ' - 1 The W-ste of Waw. A shell thrown from a twenty-four-ton quick-firing gun rushes through the air at the velocity of 4.900 feet per second, striking Its object with a force equal to that of 11.230 tons falling one foot And yet, comparatively speak ing, they are very harmless. Thus, during the one-day bombardment of Alexandria by tbe British fleet of twelve ships, lasting from 7 a. m. to 430 p. m., no less than 8,165 shells were thrown Into tbe town, yet not more than 800 Egyptians were killed that is, It took, roughly speaking, six bells to kill one man. Again, during the Franco-Oermaa war, tbe Germans threw 800,000 shells Into Belfort, only killing sixty French men, or 500 shells to kill one French maa. At Strasburg. la tbe same war. M took eighteen shells to kill a atagle maa And at tbe siege of Parle 110. 000 shells killed only 107 ana weaadsd 90. Jtaalsh laoswtM Tax. Tha Mtcet areject af the l)sleh Oev anuasat la la bttredeee aa tacian tag TJ J9 I: N his sermon Sunday Dr. Talmsre nhows what sectarianism really Is, its origin, erils snd care. The text wss Judges xiu : "Then said they unto him. Say now shibboleth, and be said sibboleth, for he could not frame to pronounce it right Then they took him sod slew him at the psMKam of Jordan." Do you notice the differenre of pronoon cialion between shibboleth snd sibboleth T A Tery small and uniuiportaut difference, you say, and yet that difference was the difference between life and desth for a great many people. The Lord's people. Gilead snd Kphraim, got Into a great fight, and Ephraim was worsted, and on the retreat came to the fords of the rirer Jordan to cross. Order was given that all Ephraimites coming there be slain. But how could it be found out who were Eph raimites? They were detected by their pronunciation. Shibboleth was a word that stood for river. Tbe Ephraimites had a brogue of their own, and when they tried to say "shibboleth" always left out the sound of the "h." When it was asked that they say shibboleth, they said sibbo leth, and were slain. "Then said they nnto him, say now shibboleth, snd be said sibboleth, for he could not frame to pro nounce It right. Then they took him and slew him at the passages of Jordan." A very small difference, yu say, between (Jilead and Ephraim, snd yet how much Intolerance -about that small difference. Tbe Lord's tribes In oor time by which I mean the different denominations of Christians sometimes magnify s very small difference, and the only difference , between scores of denominations to-day Is ' . . . . J all.. .uibbo.eth snd sib- boleth. Tbe church of God is divided into s great number of denominations. Time would fail me to tell of the Calvinista, and the Arminians, and the Sabbatarian. n tbe Baxterians. and the Dunkers. sod th Shakers, and the Quakers, and tbe Mett odists and the Uaplixts, and tbe Episcu palians, and tb Lutherans, and the Got. gregationalists, Sjfld the Presbyterian and Spiritualist ml a score of other da nominations of religionists, some of then, founded by veri ood men, some of then, founded by verf egotistic men, oj,44 them founded bf very bad ssesv a I demand for m; srlf liberty of couscfco I must give that same liberty to ereri other man, remembering that he ao mor differs from nie .ban I differ from him I advocate the is gest liberty is sll relig. ions belief snd form of worship. Ia ait to politics, in tuirals snd in religion let there be no gsg Is, no moving of tbe are vious question, is) persecution, no Intoler ance. V-. b-. that ka air . th WStrk keep pure by coolant circulstlon. snd I one ')e. another at another s.de, and think there is s tesdency in religious dis-,' ,m' came bm'- (h oa uu onIr cussion to purification snd moral heslth, on" lde. nd happened t- meet the Between tbe fourtf. and the sixteenth ecu- ry sys. and Uey got into . rank quar ,h. hnrch unnoiNl In make oeoola rPl boot the W of that obcliKk. One ., . . : , . l V.u; ..:.-. j:.....a,;- luiua ' ' . I, 1 ft . . i h i ; .. nf tliu nni.,1 11 , ot id down j Zltf JJ'lt! I the throat tried t) giske people orthodox. but It was discovered that you cannot change s msn's le5ef by twisting off hit bead, nor make s yian see differently b putting an awl ttxjugh his eye. Ther is something in a nan's conscience wliict will hurl off the maintain that you threw upon it, sod, uus.ived of Uie fire, out of the flame will maU red wings oo which, the martyr will u.jnt to glory. Is that time of ariich I speak, bet wee t, the fourth and ixtaentn centuries, people went from the bout of God into the most appalling iniquity, tad right along by o , uumih-ks in regard u tbis battle going 014 between troth snd error. The truth wit conquer just ss ctetaiuly a that Oodri stranger than the oVvil. Let error run It ru only let truth sun along with it. Urg ed on by skeptic's Qoiit snd transcendent M-a gp0r, let It ran. God's angels or wrath sre in hot pursuit, snd quicket tbaa eagle's beak dutches out s Lstwk', heart God's veiyfeaoce will tear It tc siwaa. . , Phases of siectarlaatam. I propose to spesk to yon of seclarias Isin its origin, its evils and its cares, Tver sre those who wsnld make us think, thst this BBOBsler with horns aud hoofs is religioe. 1 shall chase It to its biding place and drag it out of tbe caverns f sWkneaa and rip off its bide. But 1 want ts make a distinction bet wees bigotry snd the lawful fondness for peculiar religions beHefa sad forms of worship. I have ne sdnilrstioo for s nothingarian. Is s world of such tremendous vicissi tude snd temptstios snd with s son I thst must after swhile stand before a throne of iosoffersbl brightness, in s day when the rocking of the mouutsius ssd tbe flaming of tbe hears ns snd tbe upheaval ef the seas shall be smong the least of the excitements, to give account for every keaght, word, action, preference snd dis likethat man is mad wbe has no relig kus preference. But ear early education, our physical tea pers went our meats! constitotios will very mach tern ef worship. A style ef psalmody that ssay may dsspirsst you. Rom would Ilk to have a ausister la sarpUee, and ethers prefer to hare a ajie. kstsrw paUacitsMB'sassjarsi. stosseaie whea a little ehtti Is pes. as ted at she altar sed tmeissUai ef the WUtsrs s s bsly beesdittiea "aa the nsass gf Cm fwabsr, and af the ieswae-efths Holy Ghost," and others sre more im pressed whea tbe penitent comes up out of the river, his garments dripping with the waters of a baptism which signifies tbe wsshing away ef sin. Let either bavs bis own wsy. One man likes no noise ia prayer sot s word, not s whisper. An other man. just as good, prefers by gestic slation snd exclamation to express bis de votional aspirations. One Is just as good ss tbe other, "Every man fully persuad ed in his own mind." George Whitefield was going over a Quaker rather roughly for some of hla re ligious sentiments, snd the Quaker said: "George, I am ss thou srt I sra for bringing sll men to the hope of the gos pel. Therefore, If thou will not quarrel with me about my broad brim, I will not quarrel with tbee about thy black gown. George, give me thy hand." In tracing out the religion of sectarian ism or bigotry I find that s great deal of it comes from wrong education in the home circle. There are parenta who do not think it wrong to caricature aud jeer the peculiar forma of religion in the world snd denounce other sect and other de nominations. It la very often the case that that kind of education ads just op posite to what was expected, and the chil dren grow up snd sfter awhile go and see for themselves, and, looking in those churches and finding that the people are good there and they love God and keep bis commandments, by natural reaction they go and join those very churches. I could mention the names of prominent ministers of the gospel who sjient their whole lives bombarding other denomina tions and who lived to see their children preach the gospel in those very denomina tions. But it is often the case that bigot ry starts in a household, and that the sub ject of it never recovers. There are tens of thousands of bigots 10 years old. I think sectarianism and bigotry also rise from too great prominence of any one denomination in s community. All the other denominations are wrong and his denomination ia right because his denom ination ia tbe most wealthy or the most popular or the most influential, snd if la "our" church, snd "our" religious orgnn lzatioo, and "our" choir, snd "our" min ister, snd the man tosses his head and wants other denominations to know their places. It ia a great deal beUer In any community when tbe great denominations of Christians are about equal in power, marching side by side for the wu-ld's con quest Mere outside prosperity, mere worldly power, is no evidence that tbe church is acceptable to God. J tetter a barn with Christ in the manger than a cathedral with magnificent harmonic rolling through tbe long drawn ftile and an angel from hmven in the pulpit If there be no Christ ia the chancel and so Christ in tbe robes. Hisrotrv d larnarance. Bigotry is often tbe child of Ignorsnce. You seldom find a ma a with large intel lect who ia a bigot U ia the man who thinks be knows a great deal, but does not That man m almost slwsys s blU'X Tbe whole tendency of education snd civ ilization ia to brlyg s man oat of that kind of state of min snd heart There was in tbe far east j great obelisk, snd on aide of the obejsk wsa white, another aide of tbe obelisk was green, another aide of the obelisk sraa blue, snd travelers went snd looked at that obelisk, but they did not walk aroaud it One man looked HMD said It wss white, another man said was green, another man said it was d h" oy I" " very heat of tbe controvert i more InMHsWtrsv- eler came sad said; "Gentlemen, 1 have seen that obelisk, and you are all right, snd you are all wrong. Whr didn't you all walk around tje obelisk?" Look out for the man who sees only one Side of a religioiwi truth, txjok out for the man who neier walks around about these great theor.es of God and eternity (nd the dead. II will be a bigot inevita bly tbe" man wl.o only tutu one side. There is no man njore to be pitied fhan be who baa in his Ijead just one idea--no more, no lios. M jre light, less sectarian ism. There is nothing that will so on kill bigotry as sunshine God's sunnlilne. While each denomination of Christians is to present all the truths of the Bible, it seems to me that God bus given to encb denoniinatiiii an ess-cia mission to give particular emphasis to some one doctrine, and so the Calvinistic churches must pre sent the sovereignly of God, and the Ar uiinian churches must present man' free sgency, and the Episcopal churches must present the importance of order and sol fmu ceremony, and the Baptist churches oiilst present the uecessity of ordinances, and the Congregational church must pre sent the responsibility of the Individunl niciuber, and the Methodist church mnst bow what holy enthusiasm, bearty con gregationnl singing, can accomplish. While inch denomination of ChriHliuns must set forlb all the doctrines of the Bi ble, I feel It is espe-ially incumbent upon each denomination to pat particular eta pbasia on some one doctrine. Damag Done by Scctarianiam. Another grent dauuige done by the sec ts nanism and bigotry of the charch is that it disgusts people with the Cliristisn religion. Now, my friends, tbe church of God wss never intruded for s wsr bar rack. People are afraid of a riot Vou gs down the street, and you see an excite ment snd missiles flying through the air, nd yon hesr the sliw k f firearms. Do yon, the peaceful and isdustrlous eitisea, gs through that street? Oh, nol You will say, "I'll go sround the Mock." Now, men come snd look upon tbis narrow path to heaven, and sometimes see the ecclesl aatlcsl brickbats flying every whither, snd they say: "Well, I guess I'll tske the broad road. There la so much aharpshoot Isg on tbe narrow road I gsess I'll try the brosd road." Francis I. so bated the Lutherans that he said tbst if be thought there wss one drop of Luthersn blood is bis velss be would puncture them and let that drop ut Just as long as there is so mach hos tility bet wees desotnlnstlos and denorai aallen er bet wees ese professed Christ sis aad another or bstwsenj ese church and aaetaer. ss leag sses wilt hs dlMostsd with the Christina rengios and say. If that rengiee, 1 want twee ef It." Again, tagstry aad sswtarisalsat do great la ant suet ansa , usulsv trlussph of tbe gosevL Oh, how mach wasted sBaounitiosl Bew awsy mea of splendid Intellect have given their whole life to controversial disputes when. If they had givea their life to something practi cal, they might have bees vsstly useful. Suppose, while I spesk, there were a com mon enemy coming up tbe bay snd sll tbs forts sround the hsrbor began to fire into each other. You would cry out: "National suicide. Why don't those forts blsse ewsy la one direction snd thst against the com mon enemy?" And yet I sometimes see in the charch ef the Lord Jesus Christ a strange thing going on church against church, minister against minister, denom ination sgsinst denomination, firing away Into their own fort, or the fort which ought to be oa the aame aide, instead of consecrating their energy snd giving ons mighty snd everlasting volley sgsinst the nsvies of dsrkneas riding up through tbs bay. I go out sometimes In tbe summer, snd I find two bee hives, snd these two hives are In a quarrel. I come nesr enough not to be stung, but I come just near enough to hesr the controversy, snd one bee hive ssys, "Thst field of clover ia the sweet est" snd snother bee hive says, "That field cf clover la the sweetest." I come in between tbem, and I say: "Stop this quar rel. If you like that field of clover best go there. If you like thia field of clover best, go there. But let me tell you that that hive which gets the most honey is the best hive!" So I come out between tbe churches of tbe Lord Jesus Christ. One denomination of' Chriatians says. "That field of Christian doctrine is bet.1," and another says, "This field of Christian doctrine la the best" Well, I say, "Go where you get the most honey." '1 bat is the liest church which gets the most honey of Christian grace for the heart and tbe most honey of Christian usefulness for the life. Intolerance Avails Nothing. What did Intolerance accomplish against the Baptist Church? If laughing scorn and tirade could have destroyed the church. It would not have to-dny a disciple left The Baptists were hurled out of Boston in olden times. Those who sym pathized with them were imprisoned, and when a petition was offered asking leni ency in their behalf all the men who sign ed 't were indicted. Has Intolerance stop ped tbe Baptist Church? The last statis tics ;n regard to it showed 44,000 churches and 1,000,000 communicants. Intolerance nevei put down snything. In England a law was made against tbe Jew. England thrust bark the Jew and thrust down the Jew, and declared that no Jew should hold official position. What came tf it? Were tbe Jews destroyed? Whs tieir religion overthrown? No. Who bwame prime minister of England? Who ws next to be throne? Who was higher tian tbe throne, because he was counselor and adviser? I 'Uracil, a Jew. What wre we celebrating in all our churches is well aa synagogues only s few years ago? The one hundredth birthday of Montedore, the great Jewish philan thropist. Intolerance never put down anything. But now, my frlenda, having shown you the origin of bigotry or sectarianism and having shown you the damage it does, I want briefly to show yon how we are to war against this terrible evil, and I think we ought to begin our war by realizing our own weakness and our Imperfections. If we make so many mistakes In tbe com mon affairs of life, is it not possible that we may make mistakes In regard to our religious affairs? Shall we tske s man by the throat or by the cqllar because he can not see religious truths just as we do? In the light of eternity it will be found it, I think, there was something wrong in sll our creeds and something right in sll our creeds, but since w may make mistakes In regard to things of the world, do not let oa be so egotit and so puffed up aa to have an idea that we cannot make any mistake in regard to religious theories, snd then I think we will do a great deal j) overthrow the sctarinnism from our 1 eart and the sects rtnlum from the work! ty chiefly enlarging ia those things in Which we agree rather than thou so viblch we differ. Now, here is a grtat gospel platform. A man comes up on thia side of the plat f(.ttn and says, "1 don't believe in baby spi lkling." Shall I above him off? Here ia t niau coming up on this side of tbe platform, and be says. ! don't believe in the perseverance of the saints." Shall 1 shove him off? No. I will say: "lo you believe in the Lord Jesus ss your Savnjur? Do you truNt him for time and for eter nity V He says, "Yes." "Io you take Christ for time and for eternity?' "Yea." I any, "Come on, brother! One is fiun and one in eternity. Brother now, broth er forever." Blessed be God for a gospel plntform so large that all who receive Christ may staud on it Noble nstitutionw and Npble Mr-n. I think we may overthrow the sever se tiirianii,n and bigotry in oui hearts and In the :bu :b also by realising that all the denoaiinat: ins of Cliristiuns have yielded noble inslitulious and noble men. There is nothing that so stirs my son) as this thought tine denomination yielded a Itobert Hall and an Adoiiiratn Judson; another yielded a Istimer and a Melville; another yielced John Wt-sley snd tbe blessed Sum nerlield, while our own de nomination jielded John Knox and the Alexanders sien of whom the world was not worthy. Now, I say, If we are honest and fair mindtsl men, when we come up in the presence ;f such churches and such denominations although tbey may ta dif ferent from o.' own, we ought to admire thesi snd we cuglit to love snd honor them. Churches which can produce such men, and such .arge hearted charity, and sscli magnificent martyrdom ought to win or affection at any rate our respect. Ho come on, ye 000,000 Episesilians m this country, and ye 1.400,000 I'reabyterisns, and ye 4,000,000 Baptists, and ye ft.OUO,- 000 Methodists, come on. Shoulder to aboslder we will march for tbe world's conquest, for sll unions sre to be saved, and od demands tbst yon snd I help. 1 or ward, the whole linej ! the Young Men's Christian associations, In the Bible society. In the Tract society, In the For eign missionary society, shoulder to shoul der to shoulder sll denomination. We must be One srmy of the living flod. To bis command we bow; Psrt ef tbe host have crossed xh flood, And psrt are crossing now. And I expect to see the dsy when all nominstlons ef Christians shall join bands areoad tbs rress of Christ snd recite the creed: "I believe Id God the Fstber Al mighty. Msker ef heaven ssd earth, and ia Jseue Christ, and la the eommankos ef saints, and ia life everlsstlsg. A Oawrlgst lSSt. The best safe for year gseaey a aeat wile. A Tntafal Usaws. Counsel ''What Is your see, madam?' Witness: "Forty-esvon, sir." Counsel s "Married or single f vrii.a. "sinaia T never had aa niiinaii " - - offer of marriage in my life, and U it h) of any interest to tbe Court, I don't mind easing thst I have worn taise new lor nearly thirty years." Counsel : "Hem I That is all madam. There is no use trying to shako the d rect testimony of to truthful a womsa as you sre." Real Warm Weather Rest and Oosa fort. There Is s powder to be shaken Into the shoes called Allen's Foot Ease, la vented by Mien S. Olmsted. IeRoy, N. Y whlcb druggists and shoe deal ers ssy Is the best thing tbey have ever sold to cure swollen, burning, sore snd tender or aching feet. Some dealer claim that It makes tight or new shoes feel easy. It certainly will cure corns and bunions and relieve Instantly sweating, hot or snisrtlug feet. Allen's Foot-Ease costs only a quarter, and tbe Inventor will send s sample free to an address. Creiul transplanting insures rapid growth. Swine wi'.l destroy the white grub ia the strawberry Iw-ds. When Hot PONT swest snd fret but kepp cool snd tske Hood's Sarsaparilla. This Is good advice, as you will find if you follow it Hood's Sarsaiarills is a Grst-cbiss sum mer medicine, because it is so gi,od foe the stomach, so cooling to tbe blood, so helpful to the v. hole body. Wake 00 mistake, but get only Hood's Sarsa parilla America'! Oratt Mfdiein Hood', pill rur" Ur" I ItlJU 3 rill.- ,r i o!rsta. rCCOOOOOCCCC ij Remember the name J when you buy ! z 1 again CCOOOOOl lbs Bt Jopb and brand It I ssd raasas City sod Otnahs Bailwajg ass r SHORTEST AND QUICKEST ROUTE! to a ix eoiHTs NORTH WEST EAST SOUTH 'uts'ts. Unisn Psoitis Syrhm 4SS TBS tsvosivs Lists Ts Oslllarala. Orvg a snd all (mwi Pafats. for lateraatloa rstardlat rawx. ate, sail en r addrsM aaar eat afaata t. H. ADsrff, W. r. Snstl son, J. 6aa rasa. All ban 'I Msaagar. St Jasenk. Mn POPJJIWEL Ta BrM Sa'JH Coat. SLICKER Kt both rlitr nJ t.ajl, p" tKy 4ty In Kit itonat Subnu!r1t,S.j,pain. AH t&uT Flh Uran4 1'emmal Slkkn 1 S3 it I nm ly nn, If not tit i" wit la iJtr your town, w rlta far ctl A. J TOWt tVntnn CURE YOURSELF! T'a, Hla Si fc.l i.ilani Slarkatcaa, laSaftaaialluaa, I frriutioDt or tlraratlaaa JrnntU Ia. Cal.Uft. aaS ulna. t(isiCMHieCe. '' " aaiMMat. aM s, ntaiiissa. or arnl la plain rmaatr bv tiitrm immIii ft 1 w. or 4 wrilaa, BJ.TS. wmaiar aaai aa TKg FREIGHT. SIUT BCALCa, tCAUT MON gv.JONga Of BINGHAM TO ft, M.V ooooooccc: I Or Rpmpmhcf thf n.imp ' - a, I VIIIVIIIVVI ss s s -v Q when you buy j again sjifU "e sTsrawas DOUtLI -c OUIOKI urn at rrstmi - tWatscSt,l M. N. U. MO. B04-93. YORK Nit VrM waiTiaa to aurrawTWsrae Vf sjasss sag fSSJ saw SSrS aS)aavassBaM 18 ft : n iXUaSxl f l,lw.4a-. 13' BVOif aaa strw voiseissin.o.f-"! V Vli..7 raaaaaVa IK j 03 Cr w W W WW W W W W W ) v'.,x ; 1 'If ' ' '."4-j:;t''--;...i,.: