r S-Jtr-ii?J - "Hrl f -T-r '' &" A IV if '- SKEPTICS ANSWERED. Dr. Talmaire on Things That Are Hard to Understand. , TlioCrs-at inn rth World Consistent With the TlHtiry or Srlenre-Other -Ma rial. tun Tilings Spoken rm the Itible I"ull Kxplaiutvl. In a late sermon at Brooklyn Ev. T. De Witt Tahuage discoursed on "Tough Tilings the Bil!." and his text was from 1! 1V'K-r Hi. 1(5: Iu which are some things hard to ba understood" Dr. Tal iiiji;o said: Tut' Ititiie is tbo most common sense Itook in all tho world. But there are many things in it which require explanation. It all depends on tho mood in which you come to this grand old Look. You may take hold of tho handle of the sword or its sharp edge. You may employ on its mys teries tho rule of multiplication or sub traction. There are thin;;, as my text nigRests. hard to La understood, but 1 shrill solve luius of them, hoping to leavo upon all honest-minded people the lm prcKsion that if four or Jive of them can lm explained, perhaps they may all be ex plained. Hard thing the first: The Bible says the world was created in six days, while grology says it was hundredsof thousands of years in process of building. "In the beginning, God created the heaven and th earth." "In the beginning." Tnere you t:an roll in 10.000 OJOyears if you want to. There is no particular date given no contest between science ami revelation. Though tho world may have been in pro cess of creation for millions of year, sud denly and quickly, and in one week, it may have been lilted up for man's resi dence. Jiist as a great mansion m-iy have been many years in building, and yet in tie week it may be curtained and chan di'lieicd and cushioned and uphoUteied lor a bride and groom. You tun not compelled to believe that tho world was made in our six days. It may not havo been a day of twenty-four h'jiirs, tlio day spoken of in the lirst chap ter; it may havo been (Jod's day. ami a thousand years with Him arc as on j dny. "Ami tho evening and tho morning were the liist lny" God's day. "And the evening and the morning were tho si-coml day" (Jod's day. "Ami the veiling and the morning weio the sixth dny" God's day. You and 1 living in the seventh day, the Kabbath of tho world, the day of gospel redemption, the ginudest day of all tho week, in which each day may have been made up of thousands of years. Can you tell me how a man can get his mind and soul into such a blasphemous twist as to won at that first chapter of Genesis, its veises billows of light surging up from b ipphire sens of gloiy? The Bible represents that light was created on Mondav, anil tho sin was not cieated until Thursday. Just think ol it! n book declaring that light was crmtod thte days before the miii shone! Why. don't you know tint heat ami olcetricity emit light independent of the-un'r Besides tint, when the earth was in pioeess of condensation, it was surrounded by thick vapors and the discharge of many vol canoes in the piiuniiy period, and ail this obscuiation m:iy havo himieied the light of Hie sun fiom falling on the earth until that T'nusd'iy morning. Besides that, lnld ItieWsterand Hersehel, the nstiou oiiier,iuiil all the moileni men of iheii o!as-, agrto in the tact that the miii is not light; th it it i- an opaque mas; that it is only the candlestick Hint holds III? light, a pho phoiesceut almospheie Hunting aiou id it, ch'inging iiinl changing, so it is mil to lie at all woiideied at that not until that Tiiur.siiay moiuiug its light foil on tho tilth. Beside thai thn locks in erystalli 7 itiou emit liuht. There is light from a thoiisaml sin faces, the alkalies, for in stance. This metallic bases emit light. Theie a a lima in tlu history of the world when there wr. thousands of miles r I q.ii.l granite tltmiug with light. Beside that it has been found that tin re aieburn-d out 'cano's in other worlds which, when tliev weie in explosion ami nctiiitv. must have cast forth an insuffer able light, throning a glare all over our eaith. B-side that there are th aurora borealis and the aurora auchalis. .tiot lu-i hard thing: The story of the d-luge and Noah's ark. They say that t inn the recount there it must have ruined .Nio leet ol water each day in ord-r that it might l tilteen cubits above the hills. They s:iy that the ark could not have been huge enough to contain "two of every soi t," for there won d havo been hundreds of thousands urn! lmmlieds of thousands of c-ieatures. They say that these creatures would have come from all lauds and all runes. They say there was only one small window in the ink nnd that would not have t,iven fresh air to keep the an mills inside the ark ftom suffocation. They sny that the nrk was tlti.illy laudei on a mountain 17.0. II feet high. They -ny they do not believe the storj. Neither do 1. Theie is no such story in the Bible. 1 will tell you what the Bible storv is. I must miv that I have changed inv mind in regard t some mat ters which once were to me very mvste i toils. The;- are no mote xmsterious. This is the koy to the facts. This is the story of an eye-witness. N:ih, his stoiy in orporateil afterward by Moses in the account. Noah described the scene just a it appear "d to him Il -aw the flood and hefntitom-d its depth. A far as eye could reach e.eiy thing was coveted up, I ivm Iiouzon to horiron. or as it says., "under the whole heaven.'' lie did not refer to tho Sierra Nevadas, or to Mount Washing ton, for A'ueiica hud not lison discovered, oi, if it had been discovered he could not see as far ofT. lleisgiing tint testimony of an eye-witness. Goil speaks after the manner ol men when he ays every thing went under, and Noah speaks after the manner of men when ho -ays every thing diil go under. An e-witiies. There is no need of thinking that the kangaroo leaped the ocean or that the polar bear came down from the ieo. Why did the ile.uge comer It en me for tlu purpose of destroying the outrageous inhabitants of the then thiu'y populated earth, nearlv all the population, piobubly very near the nrk b-fore it was la mebed. What would have been the use of submerging North and South Amnion, or Kurope, or Africa, when they were not inhabited? And as to the skept.eal suggestion that in order to have ths water as deep as the Bibestates.it must have rained tU feet every day. I reply, the Bible distinctly declares thnt the most of the flood rose instoal of fallmg. Before the account Mhere it sss "the windows of heaven weie openetl." it says, 'all the fountains Vof the great deep were broken np." All yeologisU. agree m saying that there are caverns in the earth tilled with water, and they rushed foith. and all the lakes and rivers forsook their bed. The fountains of the great deep were broken up. aud then the windows of heaven were o;eiied. ell. then, another thing, in regard to the sire of the ark. Instead of ln?ing a mud scw, as some of these skeptics would have Us understand, it was a magnificent ship, nearly as large as the Great Eastern, three times tho siss of au ordinary man-of-war. At the t me in the world when shipbuild ing was unknown. God had this vessel constructed, which turned out to be almost in the same proportions as our staunchest modern vessels. After thousands of years of experimenting in nava: architecture and in ship carpentry, wc have at last got up to Noah's ark. that ship leading all the fleets of the world on all the oceans. "But bow could yon get them into the ark?" ask Infidel scientists. "How coald they be induced to go into the ark! He would have to pick them out aud drive them in. and coax them in." Could aot the same God who gave instinct to the an imal inspire that instinct to seek for shel ter from tho storm? However, nothing more than ordinary animal instinct was necessary. Have you never been in the country when an August thundT.torm was coming up and heard the cattle moan nt the bars to get in and setn the af frighted fowl go upon the perch at noon day, and heard tho affrighted dog and cat calling at the door, supplicating entrance? And are you surprise 1 that in that age of the world, wh-n there were fower places of shelter for dumb beasts, at the mutter ing and rumbling and flashing and quak ing aud darkening of an npproaching deluge, the animal creation camo moaning and bleating to the sloping embankment reaching up to the ancient Great Eastern and passed in? I have owned horse and cattie and sheep and dogs, but I never had a horse or a cow or a sheep or a dog that was so stupid it did not know enough to come in when it rained. And then, that ono window in the ark which afforded such poor ventilation to the creatures there assembled that small window in the ark which exsites so much mirthfulnessonthepartof infidels. I r they knew as much Hebrew as you could put on your little finger nail they would have kno.vn that that word translated means window course, a whole, range of lights. Those ignorant infidel do not know a window pane from twenty windows. Then the infidels say that the ark landed on a mountain 17,000 feet high, and that, of course, as soon as the animals came forth they would all be frozen in the ice. That is geographical ignorance! Ararat is not merely the name for a mount ain, but for a hilly dis:rict, and it may have been a hill 100 feet high, or.VK), or 1,0 j0 feet high on which the ark alight ed. Noah measured the depths of the water above the hill, and it is fifteen cubits, or twenty-seven feet. Ah! my friends, this story of the nrk is no moie incredible than if 3011 say to me: Last summer I was among tho hills of New England, and there came 011 the most tetrific storm I ever saw, mid the whole country was flooded. The waters came up over tho hills, aud to save our lives we got in a bunt on tho river, and even the dumb creatures were so nfTrightoned they came moaning and bleating until we lei them in the boat." AVe are not dependent upon the Bible for tho story of the flood entirely. All iig-sniid ull literatures havo traditions, biokeu traditions, indistinct traditions, but still tradit.ous. The old books of the Persians tell about the fioud at tho time of Ahriuiau, who so polluted th-t earth that it hml to be washed by a great storm. The traditions of the Chaldeans say that in tho time when Xisuthrus was King there was a great flood, ami he put his family and his irionds in a large vessel ami all outside of them weie dt-stioyed, and after a while the birds went forth and they came back ami their claws weie tinged with mud. Lucian ami Utrid, cel ebrated writer, who had never seen the Itiblo. described a flood in the time of D-ucalion. He took his friends into a boat, and the animals cima running to him in puirs. So all hands, and all ages, and nil literatures, seem to have a biokun aud indistinct tradition of a calamity which Moses, here incorporating Noah'.s account, so grandly, so beautifully, so at cmately, so solemnly records. My pinyer is that the God who created the win hi may ere ite us anew in Christ lesiis; and the God h undo light tluee d iys before the sun shone nriy kindle in our henit a light that will b un on after 1 10 sun has expired; and that the God who ordered tht ark bin It and kept open mine than li'Oyears that the antediluvians might enter it for shelter, uriv giaeiously incline us to accept the invitation which this morning rose in music from the throne, saying: ''Coma thou and all thy house into the nrk." Another hard thing to be understood: The story that the -un and moon stood still to allow Joshua to complete his vie torv. lulbbd scientists declare that nu impossibility. But if a man have liinln aud strength enough to nrike a clock, can he not start it and stop it, aud start it again nnd stop it ngaiu? If God had strength aud widotn to make the clock of the universe, the great machinery of the worlds, has he not strength enough mid wisdom enough to start it and stop it, and start it again aud stop it again? Or stop ono wheel, or stop twenty wheels, or st p nil the w heels? Is the clock stronger than the c!ockmakei? D.tes the corn thresher know more than the machinist? Is the universe mightier than its God? But peo ple ask how could the moon have been seen to stop in the daytinir? Well, if you have never seen the moon 111 the daytime it is be cause you have not been a very diligent observer of the heavens. Bjside that, it was not necessary for the world liteiallv to sto-i. By unusual refraction of the sun's rays the dny might have ben pro longed. So that, while the earth continued on its path in the heavens, it figuratively stoppetl. You iti'ist remember that these Ilitile authors used the vernacular of their own day, just as you and 1 say the sun went down. The sun never goes down. We simply describe what appears to the hiiuiHii eye. Besides that, the world, our woild. could have hteia'.ly stopped with out throwing the universe out of balance. Our world has two motions tho ono aiound the sun ami the other on its own axis. It might have stopped on its own axis, while at the same iim? it kept cu its path through the heavens. So tliTO was 110 need of stellar confusion because our world slacken? I its speed or entirely stopped in its revolution on its own axis. Th.it is none of the business of Jupiter, or Mars, or Mercury, ortatuin. or the Dippor. Beside that, within the m-tnory of man there have ben worlds that were bom nnd that died. A few years ago astrotu ers telegiapheJ, through the Associated Press, to all the wot bl the astro.iomers from the City of Washington that an other world had been discovered. Within a comparatively short space of time, astronomers tell us thirteen worlds have turned down. From their observatory they notice first that the worlds look like other wor!d. then they become a deep le 1, showing they were on tire: then thev became ashen, siiowing the.- were burned donti; then they entirely disappeared, showing that even the ashes were scat tered. Now, 1 ay, if God can start a world, aud win; a world, and destroy a world, lie could stop one or two of them without a great deal of exertion, or He could by unusual refraction of the sun's r.i.s. continue the illumiuation. But infidel scientists say it would hae been belittling for other worlds to stop on account of such a battle. Why, sirs, what Yorktovvn was for revo'uiion ary times, and what Gettysburg was in our civil conte't, and what Sedan was in the Franco-German war. an 1 want Waterloo was in the Natoleonic destiny thnt wa this battle of Joshua against the five allied armies of Gibeoa. It was that battle that changed the entire course of history. It was a battle to Jos hua as im jtortaut as though a battle now should oc cur in which England and the United States and Franc and Gsraianv and Italy and Turkey and Busna should tight for victory or annihilation. However much any other world, solar, lunar or stellar, might be hastened ia its errand of light, it would be excusable if it lingered in the heavens for a little while and pat down its sheaf of beam; and gazed on sach a Armageddsn. in the early part of this century there was what was called the dark day. Soma of these agei men perhaps remember it It was known in history as the "dark day." Workmen at boob went to their homes and courts and Legislatures at- Jooraed. oastroaosaers have ever able to explain that dark day. Now, If God can advance the night earlier than its time, can He not adjourn the night until after its time? I often oe 1 to bear my father describe a night I think he said it was in 1833 when his neighbors aroused him in great alarm. All the heavenly bodies seemed to be in motion. People thought our earth was coming to its de struction. Tens of thousand! of stars shooting. No astronomoi s have ever been able to explain that star shooting. Now, does not your common reuse teach you that if Gol could start and stop tens of thousands of wor!d4 or meteors. He could start and stop two worlds? If God can engineer a train of 10.00) worlds or meteors, and stop them without acci dent or collision, can not He control two carriages of light, nnd by putting down a golden brake stop the moon? Under tbis explanation, instead of beta.; skeptical attout this sublime passage of the Bib! ft; you will, when you read it, feel more like going down on your knees before God as you read: "Sun, s'and thou still above Gibeun, and thou moon in the valley of Ajalon." Then there is the Bible statement that a whale swallowed Jonah and ejected him upon the dry ground in three days. If you will go the museum at Nantucket, Mais., you will llnd a whale large enough to swallow a man. I said to the janitor, wild's I was standing is the museum: "Why it does not seem from the looks of this skeleton that that story in tho book of Jonah it so verv improbable, does it?" O, no," he replied, "it does not." There is a cavity in the mouth of the common whale large enough for a man to live in. There have been sharks fou id again and again with an entire humiii body in them Beside that, the Bib!e says nothing about a whale. It says, "The Lord prepared a great tish;" aud there are scientists who tell us that there were sea monsters in other days that make the modern whale seem very insignificant. I know in one place in the New Testament it speaks of the whale as appearing in the occurrence I have just mentioned, j)Ut thewotdmay just ns well be translated "sea monster" any kind of sea monster. 1'rocupius says, in the 3'ear ,V2. a sea monster was slain which had for fifty years destroyed ships. I suppose this sea monster that took care of Jonah may have been one of the gient sea monsters that could have easily taken down a prophet, and he could have lived there three days if he had kept in motion so as to keep tho gastric juices from taking hold of him and destroying him, and at the end of three days the monster would naturally bo sick enough to regurgitate Jonah. Be side thnt, my friends, there Is one word which explains the whole thing. It snys: "The Lord prepared a great fish." If a ship carpenter prepnro a vessel to carry Texan beeves to Glasgow, I suppose it can carry Texan beeves; if a ship carpenter pi epare a vessel to cm ry coal to one of the Northern ports. I sit pposa it can carry coal; if a ship carpenter prepare a vessel to carry passengers to Liverpool, I suppose it can carry passengers to Liverpool; and if the Lord prepared a tisb to carry one passenger, 1 suppose it could carry a pas senger and the ventilation have been alt right. So all the strange things in the Biblo can be explaiue 1 if you wish to have them explained. And you can build them into a beautiful aud healthful lire for your hearth, or you can with them put your im mortal interests into conll ignition. But you had better decide about the veracity of the BihV very soon. I want this morn ing to caution 3011 against putting off making up your mind about this book. Ever since 177:! there has been great dis cussion ns to who wns tho author of Junius' Letters, those letters so full of sarcasm aud vituperation anil power. The whole English Nation stine.i up with it. Mote than a hundred volumes written to discuss the question: "Who wns Junius?" "Who wrote the letters of Junius?" Well, it is nu interesting ques tion to discuss, but still, after all. it makes but little practical difference to you ami to me who Junius was. whether Sir Philip Fiaucis, or Lord Chatham, or John Home Tooke, or Borneo Wnlpole. or Henry Grattan, or any one of tho orty-four men who were seriously charged with the authorship. But it is an absorbing ques tion, it is a practical question, it is an overwhelming question to you and to me, the authorship of this Holy Bible whether the Lord God of Heaven aud earth or a pnek of dupes, scoundrels or impostors. We can not afford to adjourn that question a week or a day or nu hour, any more than a sea captain can afford to say: "Well, this is a very dark night. I have really lost my Ix'arings; there is a light out there. I don't know whether it is a lighthouse or a false light on the shore; I don't know what it is; but I'll just go to sleep and in the morning I'll And out." In the morning the vessel might lie 011 the rocks and the beach strewn with the white faces of tho dead crew. The time for that sea captain to And out about the ligh house is before h goes to sleep. O. mylrieuds, I want vou to understand that in our de iberations about this Bible w e at o not at calm anchorage, but we are rapidly coming toward the coast, coming with all thelurnaces ablnze, coming at the rate of seventy heart throbs a minute, and 1 must know w hetlier it is going to be har bor or shipwreck. lwnssogladto read in tho papers of the fact that the steamship E lam hal come safely into harbor. A week before the Persian Monarch, plowing its way to ward the Narrows, a hundred miles out, saw signals of distress, Itore down upon the vessel, and found it was the steamship E lam She had lot h-r propelter. She hnd 2i pasengers on board. The merci ful captain of thd Persiau Monrrch en deavored to bring her in, but the tow line broke. He fastened it again. I ut the sea was tough and the tow line broke again. Then tho night came on and the merciful captain of th? Persian Monarch "lay to," thinking in the morning hs could give rescue to the passengers. The morning ing came, but during the night the steam ship Ednm had disapiteared. and the captain of the Persian Monarch brought his vessel into harbor saying how sad be felt becauso he could not give complete rescue to that lost ship. I am glad that afterward another vessel saw her and brought her Into safety. Bat when 1 saw the story of that ship Edam, drifting, dnfting. drifting, 1 do not know where, but with no .udder, no lighthouse, no bar-1-or. no help, I said: "That is a skeptic, that is an infidel, drifting, drifting, drift ing, not kuowing where he drifts." And then, when 1 thought of the Persian Mon arch anchored in harl-ar. I said: "That is a Christian, .that is a man who does all he can on the way, crossing the sea to help other, cent ug perhaps through a very rough voyage into the harbor, there safe and safe forever." Would to God that there might be some one to-day who would go forth and bring in these souls that are drifting. In this assemblage, how many a score shall I say, or a hun dred, or a thousand? not qaite -certain about the truth of the Bible, not certaia about any thing. Drifting, driftiag, drifting. O. how I would like to tow them in. I throw you this cable. Lny hold of that cable of the gospel. Lay hold of ii. I invite you all in. The har bor is wide enough for all the shipping. Come In, O, you wanderers oa the deep. Drift no more, drift no more. Cotae iato the harbor. See the glorious ligbtboBse of the gospel. "Peace on earth, good will to men." Cone iato the harbor. God grant that it may be said of all of yoa who are bow drifting ia your unbelief as it might have been said of the passenger of the steamship Edans, and as it was saM cearuries ago of the wrecked oora ship ef Alexandria. -It case t bus that they aj escaped safe to tattL TRAOE REPORT. Oaa's Weekly Reriaw Shows Less Oat Than Might Have Ifcrca Espectett. Kiw York. March 23 Dun's weekly review of trade y: The signs of Im provement in trade continue to increase and, while in many important respects the season has been unfavorable, there i leas dullness and depression than und-r the circumstances might have been expected. Prices settle doAn steadily, the decline for the week, in the aver igo of all com modities having b-en about thrte-quar-ters of 1 per cent, which trie speculat.ve holders, but facilitates distribution. From three-quarters of the ct.es report ing, there comes signs of some im proverivnt in trade, though it is nowhere great, but moderate and gradual. The outlook is generally thought favorable and at New Orluau it is reported that planting is under good headway, while in Dakota and Minneiota preparation tor seeding is a full imnth ahead of last year. At Cleveland and soma other points bus iness is considered better than last year, but there is marked reaction at Pitts burgh from the favorable tone of the past few weeks; iron is lower, coke in less de mand and complaints of the delay ef spring trade are general. At Philadelphia some improvement is noted in the boot and shoe and the wool trades but dry goods are in ordinary con dition and collections are slow also at Milwaukee. The Government report as to wheat in farmer's bands helped a decline of HN'cfroin which there was recovery of about l.?c Thursday on the covering of shorts. Exports continue insignificant with good prospects for the coming crop to weaken somewhat. Corn has declined l'fc in spite of large export while pork products and oats are substantially unchanged. Cotton receipts and exports lotb con tinue much beyond last years, and the prtce of raw cotton has yielded Vc. A light demand for coffee aud belief of buyers that prices are un warranted, cause a decline of only a quarter for tho week, while raw sugar Is strong and has advanced to ri.l3o on considerable purchase by refiners. Leather is still weak. Bubber is pressed for sale at Wte forl'ura line. The disclosure of au increase, in the weekly output of pig iron causes weak ness. It is halbivcd that stocks of unsold pig iron mtist be rapidly accumulating. Small sales of steel mils are repjrted for 27 at the mill. Tho price of copper is but nominal, while lead is weak at sKk 70 aud tin at fJO.Ui. No disturbance has occurred in tho money market, and rates are 1 i per cent, lower, thetreasury having paid out J'- HM, 0O0 more than it has taken in fur the past week. m THE DOUBLE ALARM. Burning ot 11 I!.ci"K Factory auil Death of m Woman. St. Iouts, March IM. At threo o'clock yesterday afternoon a double alarm was turned in for a tire in the Standnrd bagging factory, on Stoddard avenue, near Twelvlh street. The building had a Srontage of 1".' feet on Stoddard avenuu and ran bick about the same dirtauce. The w hole concern wns a motley group of old building, with very little lire protec tion. Tho main structure in the center was three stories high, topjied off with a big modern ventilator. It was here thti tiro started and owing to the inflammable nature of the building and contents the flames prend rapidly. Immediately upon the cry of tire the wildest panic ensued amongst tho tJO em ployes, most of whom were g rls. A rush was mnde for the narrow stairwnv. but before half the numlier could escape tli"v found themselves cut off by heat nnd smoke, lint few men employed in the building worked bravely and rapidly and succeeded in leading the panic stricken girls through the smoke nnd flames to a place w here they could drop to the lot ad joining the building and all were thus saved with the exception of Ada Lebrecht, who was found horribly burned. Charles Gufron. n middle-aged man, worked heroically in getting the girls out of the burning building. He remained on the third floor too long and when he turned to go out found all means of escape cut off save by tho window. He took his only chance, jumped and wns terribly injured by the full, but will not die. A man was run over by a fire engine during tho ex citement and badly Injured nnd was taken away from the scene by friends before his name could le lenrnrd. The pecuniary loss by the fire is small. Cirantral t'l.e I'arrfnns. TorEKA, Kan.. March VS. Governor Humphrey yesterdny granted five piirdoua to persons who Lavo been serving sen tences in the State penitentiary at Lriveli wortb. One of these was James C Puey, who was on September SS, ItssTi, convicted of forgery and embezzlement and sen tenced to eight years' imprisonment. The Htate Board of Pardon, in recom mending that Pusey be set free, refer to the fact that be had Itotn a good character before the embezzlement aud that the crim was committed while there was a great deal of m management in the af fairs of the company. Pardons were also granted to I). A. Warwick, of Sedgwick County, doing two and one-half years for cmherzlcmuiit. Ihe board find that his conviction was due to a conspiracy; also to Henry Williams, m for forgery in M ami County, to Z. K. Hart, of Hodgeman Coun tv, ami to Charles Knox, of Mitchell County. - m A t'boctw Murder. Mt'UKonKK. I. T.. March iM. Wilson Co ley, a Choctaw lndlnn. left McAllister, where he had received his part of the Choctaw payment, to go to his hom- some five miles distant. He did not reach bis home an I his family, after waiting some days became alarmed, bat could learn nothing. Tuesday Aunt Scylla, an Indiaa woman, while fishing in Handy creek. found a dead man lying with his head ia the creek and the body was Identified to be that of the missing man and was takes to his home. He bad been shot through the lungs, the throat bad been cat front ear to ear and the head had beea mashed with some blunt weapon. A glove found near the body has fastened suspicion upon a negro named Sam Allen and he was ar rested. es Killed oa the L. Kaxsas Crrr. Ma, March SI At 7:45 o'clock last night Alfonso Ellis, aged forty-one, of the firm of Patten & Ellis. Building contractors, was run over and instant It killed by an engine oa the L road at Fifth and Walker streets ia Kan sas City. Kan. Mr. Ellis was on his way from his residence to a butcher shop aad attempted to cross the tracks behind a north bound train when be was struck bv -T a train going south, knocking hiss under the engine and horribly mangling his body. The engine was thrown from the track and the passengers considerably shaken up. The train was running at a moderate rate and eo other damage re salted from the aecid-al Ratine aad Beassvoleaee. PtrrsECncH. Pa, March H A call has beea Issued to the boiler manufacturers of this and adjoining States to meet la this city Tuesday, April la. to form as organixation to be composed of the leading manufacturers' of steam boilers with a view to creating a greater interest ia the masu fact are of boilers of all kiads aad make the see of the very best material compmlscry. By doiag this the boiler makers expect to decrease the ammber of explosieas Bad establish a mialmam price, which will ie ssue a reesoaable arcflt oa all boilers Uult, that offeriag a premium far MBerfer atfm STOCK ITEMS. Cows which are expected to come hi soon should have p'enty of fodder, bran, roots aad such food, but none of a heating character. The 40,000, CW hogs raised in the coantry are valued at J2JO.000.Oi). The MUlippi valley claims to have raised tnree-flf tin cf the number. Water under foot is a great detriment to sheep-growing, and hence ia wet seasons the flock have to tie watched closely. Foul foot is seldom known in a hilly country. The Stonewall Cattle Company, of Hn Miguel County, N. M-, will remove thuir entire herd of cattle to the Indian Ter ritory, where they will l matured and marketed as soon as possible. Cattle stealing has bsn carried on to such an extent in Karnes County. Tex , that the stockmen have met and organized for the purpose of putting a stop to the thieving and bring the guilty parties to justice. Young cattle which have been wintered at the straw stack are quite apt to be lousy. This should be seen to. and proper measures used to clean out the parasites. Applications of lard and kerosene o.l ill do very well. The horsemen of Saline and adjoining counties in Missouri met at Marshall re cently for the purpose of taking steps to improve the breeds of horses. A perma nent organ zntion was effected untler the name of the Horse Breeders' Association of Saline County. Young colts will soon team to eat onts when in stalls with their dams, aud an excellent way to make the young lamb grow is to keep ground oats, where they can eat whenever they so desire, but the food should Im so placed that the lamb, can get to it while tho old sheep can not reach it. There is no doubt that when Devons are as pTsis'ently and carefully put before the public, as has leeT done for other breeds by men of wealth, aid their g od qualities well understood, tl.ey will stand in tho front rank as the fanner's breed; hardy, good rustlers, easv feeders am! docile. Cor. Live-Stock Indicator. Mmt of us make a mistake by fedngat the wrong end of thi Ik g's existenc. We don't get down to business in the hv f feeding until a month or two lieforewe sell him for pork. This Is nil wrong. The main secret is In giving tho piggy a good send-oir during the first two or three mouths of hi txistence. During the first week of a pig's life it Is quite important to feed the sow so as not to start too great a flow of milk, a handful of sh rts twice n dav in less than half a pailful of warm water lieing the best feed at the time. Uuial New Yorker. The increasing demand for sheep can le attribute I to the low-priced cattle, cholera among swine and the increasing demand for mutton. The animal with the golden hoof is fast assuming that exalted posi tion on our Western farms to whi h Im Is certainly entitled. Politician may dis cuss whether or not it is necessary to hae the sheep protected, by a duty. I say protect tho sheup from dogs and wolves and we will have at'tiinmi victory enough for a lifetime, aud will lu the near future make sheep husbnudry second to no othei vocation. Iown Cor. Live-Stock Indicator. FARM NOTES. Throw your onion Meed into water nnd use that which sinks. Test tho garden seeds by sowing n few pinches of each kind in a shnllow Ikx of oil, which shuu d be kept moist. Several f irmers near Wood Like, Neb , have formed a joint stock company nnd propose buil ling a cn-nmery live mile, south of that town. Ihe building will cost aliout , and is to be completed in a short tiiiM. There nre two ways of artiflcally manur ing the soil; one by the direct use of chemical fertilizers; the other by feeding farm nnlmals the foods that ore noli in fertilizing elements, such ns ultiogen phosphoric neid and potash. The hot-bed for sweet potato plant must not b; overlook? I. Now U the time to have the Ud ready. I'su p rnty of seed, ns there are manv diflkuitles to Im encountered In icplaut ug, due to late frosts thnt may hapKii and to cut worms. A farmer living in Harper County. Can., who has leen experimenting in Kartir corn, finds it not Injured by t ,0 hot winds, and also finds that his stock .eaves all other kinds of feed for it. This year he will try raising it as a substitute for ordi nary brral stuff. There will be no crop of out ns If tho ground is not rich and well prepared, ami butlittlo time remains ttefore th- onion sets will Ite planted. After the sets twgin to start they will not thrive if glass or weeds grow among them. Ihey must be clear of all obitncle. if you dissolve bones by boiling them in a strong potash lye and then ue dry earth or leached ashi-s as an nbsorlient, you get a fertiliz-r or compost rich In loth phos phoric acid and potash. It will contain also most of the nitrogen which was in the lones. Farm and Home A correspondent who hmbeen traveling over the best portions of Kansas, reports thnt there is less obi wh?attu Kansas than for many Boastiis. All the mills are run ning very light and many do ng nothing M.lls in the Southern portiou of the State are now importing wheat. Some crops rrqu re an early tatt In order to get ahead of the weed, and alt to have mere time for growth. Among such ar- carrots, parsnips ami Letts. (;t the seed in the grutiud ns enriy a posi bl" and keep the ji'ants fre from wds in order to have them well under way be fore summer. The mnnngement of the Paris Exposition hive s.jt apart space free of charge for the proposed American exh-b.t cf Indian corn. The Intention is to build a handsome corn palace, in which the different k.nds of ccrn will be exhibited. American cvoks la at tendance will prepare corn fcr food in all the various ways known to the Ameiican housewife, and sample will h fresly distributed to all who visit the exhibit. The promoters of tbis display believe it will prepare the way for a greatly in creased demand for the American rsrral In the Europ-an markets. i Notes. An acre ia fruit, especially o! strawber ries, will sometimes pay belter than & acres of grain. It should pay lb- fencer to have a sufficiency of fruit for his m us alones Cats are beyond qaestion the bt emp to seed grass and clover with. Itisaoteo much the crop as the conditio of th soil and the t.me that favors te successful growth cf gra-s. 0ta secures the very best time, aad If thst crop is properly pre pared for, it affords all the aesvesary con dition of so. I. When you Cad eegs with a thia sheil it is a'taost a certain In Jicatioa that ths a&s neest !its and ground bos. The Lima Is cow improved so as to grow in the bush fcrm instead of en poles. It is known as the Bash Liau. a&d the es-eds ire ssaalL The loss frcm i§ ravages l8 this reentry may appear small, tat ProC Riley estimates the annual damage a high as SSO.M.O0a This is eeocsaotts. and equals the entire prods ct of sesae eC the cereal crop. Ycosg poultry ef all knt eagfcx te he well fed and cared far astil the feethera get a good start to grewiag aad they are aVe te pick mp a coeslderahje part ef their livlag. Thea they caa be tsrae4 et will largely take care ef themeelvse. Makeahedfer kale. It is cms ef IB CHICTtr CHO : flirts . fhcbojr-sjij Wis, Xst. IX X hare utiSsi DLJecotsOilfsr eakira cluiT wtlh grsi oc ctsja. Kicrj .ol aSnted with tils- vU-sm S' rami s. i (&4 I jeerearsend tt as a rare eapr. It sstsd me oas7 stubAi u. a. KirtN-vs. Brrrsttr of ns Tam'jt. Diamond Vera-Cura FOR DYSPEPSIA. a wtTTTTE caai ro t wdioi no xa all ttTTS-1 ?rab.M anstic Trrs. Tsp r-ssH.r ee 0-r.t flw ' r fjr -r if sU a m.lf Is .f,- mr ll .. Jsr W rrmpt f f !-- It v") t-f - t M-vt v. rttnyl mf SsrrsJ .la s thi Charles a. viieur ci., -umi-. - j. 1. use t. a SUM rACTVKSSS 0 fsnrtaMe. fttauonsr? il Trtwtien Engines. AKAIOHs. IIjI. Pester. Trr.J s."r. 1 RtW Mil. I. Ms-llirr. "! s 11 Mi.-Us,S llAsnm nil jsTsisx.rs. MSILCb BUA rtoaiiu nru-.i -. In 1-K3 1 rontrsetrj TOws! To'son of tsid t)p sxaI a trrattd .t. DKLUI jr. sJvU SC.1 Uli" -S tali Ltirj;i I-,; of e ll thet me. 1 t'-'i 7 ftas.1 Uit'.WsNS HW, cimii me ca'.r. , sisl uoisn uf tfcc dreadful illxroc Uxs rvnncL. J r sc-. Jia.W.'-X HvbtjuJ, LL ry Itttitf ri-t-e fca.1 white i-Mair-s" to such sn iitcst tJ.-t ! c jo-ntH-a to ttei Nil for a bnj ttrsr. More tt an D kvt of bote CAnv ootcf h rlcr. srt Uicu st.r w aratm'nlien ski's oc'jr lsr l !.. r! to. I rcfu-sltiei:-r:tJ.a ami 1 ut her on s "s. anil J U now uti.ltlcndtni:ttrhh an.cd.M Mim AssiBlJtf.us.. Fit. It. 1.. 1145E.WW, ! Bws.k co Uk..i Dlr- sett fire. s.irT rsiirioC'j praurr 3, AOitilA, Oa. Advice to the Aged. A hrinx.r.rsll.c. -iicn -. -Crlait hots els. wenlt BtUMeja Blasl der are terries User. Tutt's Pills base m tserll'.r efTeef en thsseorc. nlllMMlistlNa'Inrbttwvla. "-- -r-al ctUrhnra-ssi wlthewt atralMltsg or griping, BBSs IMPARTING VIGOR fe the klitnrye. Blasltlrr ami User. Tae araslp-sl laolU r jouiij;. soli i:yi:kvviii:ki:. CATARRH Cold in Htad Eli's Ctiaw Cain" IXT LIUI s. I wtn SU..S . MOfHERS' FRIEND makes CHILD BIRTH as? ll USIO is-ORg CONetNiMiNT. Book t "yTiirn 'MsiLrn Kr. ElisBriLLI Krct I.STHK ITLUTA.S. eiu ur au. liHCooirrs. $5', $iooy AIENTS WANTED! te-C.llltURs KC Hfsr . S.fftr Kls ll-.Wrs CIVIM AWAY l- istr-lw. Il..m K-ry hfms. 4,s,f-r Ikij. frwtn f to , IJnrt n.r niMltr h.rsn f.-t. -4 il fsr-it. lit tMt t vy -fr- .1 P sing? for Mk.l 1111 .mJ-s.t II. f..r SUV r-nu BBS WHTtl MANUfO CO., HtA.LT, BtlcW. -j. tM rsr&a SMVf Imtmfmn mm 'rnrsifssl T;lktr lips IkMnfl U- iiiiimi riTZOEKAU). I Claim rvrj for 'i.rn SJdir. I4l.-i t4. J Bessaaruis rin- m-..- I 18. 'pfcwr! fTymmmLjdBBsmlmmmi emfcammmmT V Bsrmmmmmme mmu mmmmmw Q ' t?mC-mmmVEjtBT ( mmmtmmmsmi 1 VtJ 1 Wj ' BTmFB mmm 1 SsH faI mVsWmBml BsPh srs4Bm-emm .rrixemBBBBBBj "" mmmf-mwsmi MsV dPrnftf JOSEPH H. HUNTER, Z-:;.H'J??'t -- J W wT m BWBBBBmBBTSlvW JB9,hJBBWBT il I 43r I I SmJ J I sm9ABftLsweVVABmBVm Pmw emf M BBBBashv I I MIRACULOUS : eafsir brfr trtr-rJar hr. Hose Cxiit K-r avfi. how Urtzti Vr -r-, How frrsh brr tnV-k srsh s-aitifol gSz IXK rears tet ia Xsrtlw Urrm Aad yet frse wssaka here psea i rs-sy K sfce was ta-2ac. txr fcr tfajr. The 4octcrs ska esJi mart naz Weaker she f-nrw. sad taia aad ptit. ITeBMae; wrw xsd fJeTXrrrais sssvr pnate ymmrsmit frtvm the csiEMa-KSKrerx tfcat k wfa rfre safSsexctism JK9. IB rrrnr rsai ie an i unii r i i -rn.:. . . A . . r the IWlfli WIlBSBli arJ falriifsins. . ' . w,.t. Ceerr-rht, me, ay Wot- DeaemAXT Br. Pieroes Pellete, or SCOTT'S ffiflffll II I JL Almost PUth MK a Is ufesa r-swliij sstd laaaSaSstl IW B SSBg tm '-" '- agmttm. - - . . ) t a imtst yews iwsi tllLU AtTu'W. HIV n.Tios.. ..Jul lUTm flllAfU it U SMTtv.Ma. ul IWrtLst n4 rseian-4 by the k its eisitn or I esxtst. i4 f j r-r w Tsstessv ae) SCVTT Jb IMSSkBK. Set V-sT MM mr I tv ladies : $2.50 shoes - e ass. we ! sjs -"ease Uo fo tM laStseneest iT sts try Ut een vou ..rostolheC !" "US I ftic sl IM ks e-ilsrl rrr ssssrsv. 1 Mi!iMi'"s loaluur IlKMiKMao. I al.Br -r T" ''IE0 SCHML WtU" SMCS for Ufy anJ lilrta rn s)lA. Years Ut? C.M.HEN0ERS0N&C0. CTBCXCXAGBsO. PENSION . . i.ufi iii ite jaiim w.stmamsSs, IJllst ITIU lsSVj I IM.IMI, V a rvui- iiwnwa. Alt'? L.U IKuklluK. t,iss-uUs rLtilfs. SStftf.&St, ltts- rermttns. Wr, ftilMrwi a-4 .rw tfml rtsil- srrteur.i .jia-ln llo r Ki IroUm H.rM. suel srs. is-aiUtUJt HUSMJ. gr-stas isia rrsasTJt.ssws WM.RADAM'S UIPDnDC r..ee Csirs UstsrHs, sflcns l'.siafUHl'Mt. l,tksMtsttsm. taanvlsv WsOolsv, l'f- sr. ttpbltkf1. Tr IS Tllrr llsf rf riwsssl rMt- IHIIII1U1JL, Ur ssj u rriisi s exiuw. "s n SrrJ t'tt i-airfMfl 4 If 1 1 I Pll M-rteiie "t IV " -4'rrl4 s,.f. II I rll lIAt'AM's Mil. It OS I. glLLSJl CU. Uf ssj ll rriisl sl elSiWl au Jisb.Msv ENGRAWNG 1 ELECTR0TYPIH6. t ( ! tt rsjalprsM MsblUkntesI fk (..!.. TiS fhrtatsi tr?ttm be .-ine Mrfcl. iwd uw a 'rsl i rsSoje lre. fi Ut inj-!. ses f itlmilf s B. N KiUiMrrl .in BBBBsmmi WAHTIO Busmtas MIR r- rfce. g.,it-..- .'i si KBbBb ,.f.trf.. viImm ..- . i i tats - f I Ih B B , kf svll Stn. 4 stss. .! Ss. Mps I 1 1 SB Bl lM,ls iw-,rial mI.i rf m iws a. is-us-4 Is.. vis C IT ftlsS i ur. uki et.tM a b .mum .-v aj.,1.., . wsj.s tuuriiu.si.t PATENTS IMUiCt'llKli Ala ThjMI VJshb. .Irs A1iK frr lliah- rsl rf f f.-s .m sts-rieni's. lHl lmi mr ! -, Ki-n'-m s. T. rtrMIStlB, Silsswy ss U, i S B. I. tjrftsas tut rt ui s t sss HOME OF 5 ACRES al L:aVKWO!I.IC. kA sas fur J (b-.Aa4sMsr l.rma. UramifsMf Ks ll tl4, .l. r" ri I rairavurih aid tUe a-tal'r. II n J.,4rss Q. U Vflr.II ..! altlbsu!, K ansa Clif, Ma. FLORIDA! ni MFNliTui I'ur map. Mat fas Irtln astnitil in) sl W rl. '.a.ra fl.vt.l4 IS-sr,,, .,, . I-.I..S. -i.iiti rWtJ. iuis( BsSi3snr.rii hi. fs- ssslssssM. i M .UHV Be r-raaaltn M, M T. e-aa tti rs aa mt m r BABY CARRIAICS SENT C. 0. 1. StBt.SBBjsS B v... t. I ,im lrs, fcM lfrltll,IUW s, mS Im, W a- -m afrissni-i'-'Ti- ,"7m',7i'nm' M rt-o'a Cars, for isnmt,llna TH K rtr.NT rass-tr fe a-ussii and te sissvr Uaa UiKJat. MYAIT i STMTTOI Rrr!. LasM. Ma It Sam t"4a' V-sttr Uitvl.4 ssra etwaaasfai la svu y-,u-a. Bs4 tmt Clrsulae. ItsMTslillB s-'.f.I llsistas. laalrnrtlon. wwaa I SsHBjBI Hia.s. fim .ia..nl Lisa. . !.. Xs. Aas44 ilt!i.S.4 . !wl. Wtil.tw ssisslaf. BBBCITIMe Ssir i:vriiirisT AAr rmwTI I MH txitiu. Mtsiu. cu.KMia,t'. A. J. St.-a. " Bsa. T J7" WHO WKITIMd TO Altrr.KTleKH.tt. plsas aaf aaw Ik A4a-llas,sat Iss Utla pstessr. RESTORATION. I A mw-sfSsa-fe, . koVae .'rasas. j Oar 4r ir taw. "TVre is a asssss? r. Ie tvtVa p e isssaw-tr iVrfcspa "twin Wij: I as g try,- A4 sn. sercs-ifaax In shrssrttus. I Ad rrrrr s-eirrai rrtois mst. j Xsri wax ntt& as t nex tke (. p-aHir to vomes. soil fcr Anit, - . ,. . JZ? Z? . s P n. s emj jsjsn, Mamcxi. Amwattawe. ft.jen.tsa--. sAiti4jflim5 Grani C0.Lfl m H smsssa mammmmm V afammlmmmmmmmV m BHBmmmf: k mmmmflBKmmmmmmV" WBV BmBSSSSmisBSflBSSSBBSBmmmmmmmBs . mm me item)