The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, December 27, 1889, Image 7
JL k 125. PEACE! BE STILL!" Bev. T. DeWitt Talmage PreachGB at Capernaum. Tlir Slfirmy i'at:i(;r r the Sea ofCalUrc I.ikiii-il to the Storms that ArUe in Our I.I if, ChrUt Can Still the Wind ami Wates. Dunns Isis trip in the Holy Land Rev. T. DeWitt Talmajjc delivered tlie fol lowing discourse at historic Capernaum, taking for his texts: KntTl into n .-h!p:tnil went over tin' sca tow.tnl Caiicrnatun. ,Ioliii vl.. IT. Ami IIMirt-c ami r.-IiuktU tin wind ami tlMs-va. M.irk iv..3t. Here in this seashore village was the tomjvorary home of that Christ who for the most of His life was homeless. On th site of this village, now in ruins, and all around this lake, what scenes of kindness and power, and glory and patho when our Lord lived here! It has ljer'n the wish of my life I can not say-hope, for 1 never expected the priv ilege to stand on the hanks of Ualilee. What a solemnity and what a rapture to le here! I can now understand the feeling of the Immortal Scotchman, llohert McCheyno, when, sitting on tho hanksof thi-. lake, he wrote: It N not tli.it tin- wild gazelle Cnw down to drink thy tide. . ISut lie tli.it was pierced to s:iefroin hell it wandered liy thy frlde. r.w.ftil ur.iuiid thee the mountain- meet, Tliouc.ilm ri'iijn-4 s-e.i, Kut ah' far more, the beautiful feet Of .testis walked o'er thee. 1 can nov easily understand from the contour of the country that hounds this lake that storms were easily tempted to make these waters their playground. From the gently way this lake treated our lioat when we sailed on it yesterday, one would have thought it incapable of a paroxysm of rage, ltut it was quite different, on hoth oeea-ions spoken of in my two texts. I clo-e my eyes, and the shore of Lake Galilee as it now is with hut little, signs of human life, disap pears, and there comes hack to my vision the lake as it was in Christ's time. It lay in a .sci-no of great luxuriance. Tho surrounding hills, terraced, sloped, grooved, so many hanging gardens of beauty. On the shore were castles, armed towers, Roman baths, every thing attractive and beautifulall styles of vegetation in shorter space than in almost any other space in all the world, from the palm tree of the forest to tho trees of rigorous climate. It seemed as if the Lord had launcLed one wave or beauty on all the scene, and it hung and swung from rock and hill and oleander. Koman gentlemen in pleasure lioats sailing this lake, and countrymen in lish smacks coming down to dron their nets, pass each other with nod and shout and laughter, or swing ing idly at their moorings. O, what a beautiful scene! It seems as if we shall have a quiet night Not a leaf winked in the air. not a ripple disturbed the face of (icnnesaret but there seems to jfcin a little excitement up the beach, and BFc hasten to see what it is. and we find it an embarkation. From tho Western shore a flotilla pushing out: not a squadron, or deadly armament, nor clipper with valuable merchandise, nor piratic vessels ready to destroy every thing they could seize, hut a flotilla leaiing messengers of light, and life, and peace. Christ is in the front of the loat His disciples are in a smaller boat Jesus, weary with much speaking to large multitudes, is put into somnolence by the rcckingof the V-ves. If there was any motion at all the ship was easily righted; if the wind passed from starboard to larboard, or from larlward to starboard, the boat would rock, and by the gentleness of the motion putting the Master asleep. And they extemjHtrize a pillow made out of a fisherman's coat I think no sooner is Christ prostrate, and His head touched the pillow, than He is sound asleep. The breezes of the lake run their fin gers through the locks of the worn sleeper, and the boat rises and falls like a sleeping child on the bosom of a sleep ing mother. Calm night, starry night lieautiful night Run up all the sails, ply all the oars, and let the large boat and the small lK)at glide over (lennesaret Rut the sailors say there is going to be a change of weather. And even the pas sengers can hear the moaning of the storm, as it comes with great stride, and all the terrors of hurricane and dark ness. The large boat trembles line a deer at bay amoag the clangor of the hounds; great patches of foam are flung into tho air; the sails of the vessel loosen, and the sharp winds crack like pistols; the smaller boats like petrels poise on the cliffs of the waves and then plunge. Overlnwrd ffo cargo, tacking and masts, .ind the drenched disciples rush into the back part of the Iwat and lay hold of Christ and say unto Him: 'Master, carcst Thou not that we perish?-' That great personage lifts His head from tho pillow of the fisherman's coat walks to the front of the vessel, and looks out into the storm. All around Him are the smaller boats. 'driven in the tempest, and through it comes the cry of drowning men. Ry the flash of the lightning I see the calm brow of Christ as the spray dropped from His beard. He has one word for the sky and an other for the waves. Looking upward He cries: "Feace!" Looking downward He savs: "He still!" The waves fell flat on their faces, the foam melts, the extinguished stars re light their torches. The tempest falls dead, and Christ stands with His feet on the neck of the storm. And while tho Uxy sailors are bailing out the lioats, and J while they are trying to untangle the ' cordage, the disciples stand in amaze ment now looking into the calm sea, I then into the calm sky. then into the calm Saviour's countenance, and they cry out: t "What manner of man is this, that ' even the winds and the sea oley HimV" Tho subject in the first place im presses me with the fact that it is very important to have Christ in the ship; y for all those lioats would have gone to the Ixjttom of Gennesaret if Christ had . do been present Oh, what a lesson for you and for me to learn! We must always have Christ in the ship. What ever voyage we undertake, into what ever enterprise we start let us always have Christ in the ship. All you can do with utmost tension of body, mind and soul, you are bound to do; but oh! have Christ in every voyage. There are men who ask God's help at the beginning of the great enterprises. He has been with them in the past: no trouble can overthrow them; the storms might come down from the top of Mount Hermon. and lash Gennesaret into foam and into agony, but it could not hurt them. Hut there is another man who starts out in worldly enterprises, and he depends upon the uncertainties of this life. He has no God to help him. After awhile the storm comes and tosses off the masts of the ship; ho puts out his lifeboat and the longboat; the sheriff and tho auctioneer try to help him oil; they can't help him off; ho must go down no Christ in the ship. Your life will be made up of sunshine and shadows. There may he in it Arctic blasts or tropical tornadoes; I know not what is before you, but I know if you have Christ with you all shall be well. You may seem to get along without the religion of Christ while every thing goes smoothly, but after awhile, when sorrow hovers 'he soul, when the waves oi rv? : " over the hurricane deck, a are crowded with piratic.w oh. what would you do wi -.rit in the ship? Take God for; .r por tion, God for your guide. God for your help; then all is well: all is well fot time, all shall 1ms well forever. I!le.ei is the man who puts in the Lord his trust He shall never be confounded. ISut my subject also impresses me with the fact that when people start to fol low Christ they must not expect smooth sailing. These disciples got into small boats, and I have no doubt they said: "What a beautiful day this is! What a smooth sea! What a bright sky this is! How delightful is sailing in this boat! And as for the waves under the keel of the boat, why they only make the mo tion of our littlo boat the more delight ful." Rut when the winds swept down and the sea was tossed into wrath, then they found that following Christ was not smooth sailing. So vou have found it; so 1 have found it Did you ever no tice the end of the life of the apostles of .Tesus Christ? You would say, if ever men ought to have had a smooth life, a smooth departure, then those men. the disciples of .lesus Christought to have had such a departure and such a life. St .Tames lost his head. St Philip was hung to death on a pillar. St. Mat thew had his life dashed out with a hal bert St Mark was dragged to death through the streets. St James the Less was beaten to death with a fuller's club. St Thomas was struck through with a spear. They did not find following Christ smooth sailing. Oh. how they were all tossed in the tempest! John Huss in the fire; Hugh McKail in the hour of martyrdom; the Albigenses. the Wal denses. the Scotch covenanters did they find it smooth sailing? Hut why po into history when we can draw from our memory illustration of tho truth of what I say? Some young man in a store trying to serve God. while his employer scoffs at Christianity: the young men in the same store, antagonistic to the Christian religion, teasing him, tor menting him about his religion, trying to get him mad. They succeed in get ting him mad. saying: "You're a pretty Christian!" Does that young man find it smooth sailing when ho tries to fol low Christ? Or you remember a Chris tian girl. Her father despises the Christian religion; her mother despises the Christian religion: her broth ers and sisters scoff at the Chris, tian religion: she can hardly find a quiet place in which to say her prayers. Did she find it smooth sailing when she tried to follow Jesus Christ? Oh, no! All who would live the life of the Christian religion must suffer per secution: if you do not find it in one way. you will get it in another way. The question was asked: "Who are those nearest the throne?" And the answer came back: "These are they who came up out of great tribulation great flailing, great pounding and had their robes washed and made white in the blood of the Lamb." Oh, do not be disheartened! Take courage. You are in glorious companionship. God will see you through all trials and He will deliver you. My subject also impresses me with the fact that good people some times get very much frightened. In the tones of these disciples as they rushed into the back part of the boat I find they arc almost frightened to death. They say: "Master, carest Thou not that we perish?" They had no reason to be frightened, for Christ was in the boat I suppose if we had been there we would have been just as much af frighted. Perhaps more. In all ages very good people get very much af frighted. It is often so in our day. and men say: "Why, look at the bad lect ures, look at the various errors going over the Church of God; we are going to founder: the Church is going down: she is going down." Oh, how many pood people are affrighted by iniquity in our day, and think the Church oT Jesus Christ is going to be overthrown, and are Just as much affrighted as were the disciples of my text Don't worry, don't fret as though iniquity were go ing to triumph over righteousness. A lion goes into a cavern to sleep. He lies down, with his shaggy mane cover ing the paws. Meanwhile the spiders spin a web across the mouth of the cavern and say: "We have captured him." Gossamer thread after gossamer thread, until the whole front of the cavern is covered with the spiders' web. and the spiders say: "The lion is done; the lion is fast." After awhile the lion has got through sleeping: he rouses himself, he shakes his mane, and walks out into the sunlight: he does not even know the spiders' web is spun, and with his voice he shakes the mount ain. So met come pinning their sophistries and skepticism about Jesus Christ: He seems to be sleeping. They say: "We have captured the Lord; He will never come forth again upon the nation; Christ is captured forever. His religion will never make anr conauest among men." But after awhile the Lion of the tribe of Judah will rouso Himself and come forth to shake might ily the nations. What's a spider's web to the aroused lion? Give truth and er ror a fair grapple, and truth will come off victor. Hut there are a great many good peo ple who get affrighted in other respects; they are affrighted in our day about re vivals. They say: "Oh! this is a strong religious gale; we are afraid the Church of God is going to bo upset, and there are going to be a great many people brought into tho church that are going to be of no use to it;'" and they are affrighted whenever they see a revival taking hold of the churches. As though a ship captain, with five thousand bushels of wheat for a cargo, should say some day. coming upon deck: "Throw overl)oard all the cargo;" and the sailors should say: "Why, captain, what do you mean? Throw over all the cargo?" "Oh," says the captain, "we have a pock of chaff that has got into this five thousand bushels of wheat and tho only way to get rid of the chaff is to throw all tho wheat overboard." Now, that is a great deal wiser than the talk of a great many Christians who want to throw overboard all tho thou sands, and tens of thousands of souls .' v. ho are the subjects of revivals. Throw ' verlioard liecause they are brought r.' the kingJom of God through great re.ivals because there is a peck of chaff, ' quart of chaff, a pint of chaff! i - iv let them stay until the last day; I iie Lord will divide the chaff from the ivheat Again, my subject impressed me with the fact that Jesus was God and man in the same being. Here He is in the back part of the boat Oh. how tired He looks, what sad dreams He must have! Look at His countenance. He must be thinking of the cross to come. Look at Him, He is a man bone of our bone, flesh of our flesh. Tired. He falls asleep: Ho is a man. Hut then I find Christ at the prow of the boat: I hear Him say: "Peace, be still:" and 1 see the storm kneeling at His feet, and the tempests folding their wings in His presence; He is God. I have sorrow and trouble, and want sympathy, I go and kneel down at the back part of the boat and say: "Oli, Christ! Weary one of Gennesa ret sympathize with all my sorrows, man of Nazareth, man of the cross." A man. a man. Hut if I want to con quer my spiritual foes, if I want to get the victory over sin. death and hell, I come to the front of the boat, and I kneel down, and I say: "Oh, Lord Jesus Christ Thou who dost hush the tempest, hush all my grief, hush all temptation, hush all my sin!" A man. a man; a God, a God. ' I learn once more from this subject that Christ can hush a tempest. It did seem as if every thing must go to ruin. The disciples had given up the idea of managing the ship; tho crew were entirely demoralized; yet Christ rises, and He puts His foot on the storm, and it crouches at His feet. O, yes! Christ can hush the tempest. You have had trouble. Perhaps it was tho little child taken away from you the sweet ostchildof the household, the one who asked the most curious questions and stood around you with tho greatest fondness, and the spade cut down through your bleeding heart Perhaps it was an only son. and your heart has ever since been like a desolated castle, the owls of tho night hooting among the fallen arches of tho crumbling stairways. Perhaps it was an aged mother. You always went to her with your troubles. She was in vour home to welcome vour children into life, and when they died she was there to pity you: that old hand will do you no more kindness: that white lock of hair you put away in the casket or in the locket didn't look as it usually did when she brushed it away from her wrinkled brow in the home circle or in the country chruch. Or your property gone, you said: "I have so much bank stock. I have so many Government securities. I have so many houses, I have so many farms all srone. all gone." Why, sir, all the storms that ever trampled with their thunders, all the shipwrecks, have not lieen worse than this to you. Yet you have not been completely overthrown. Why, Christ says: "I have that little one in my keeping. I can care for him as well as you can. better than you can, O bereaved mother!" Hushing the tem pest. When your property went away, God said: "There are treasures in Heaven, in banks that never break." Jesus hushing the tempest. There is one storm into which we will have to run. The moment when we let go of this world and try to take hold of the next we will want all the grace possible. Yonder I see a Christian soul rocking on the surges of death: all the power of darkness seem let out against that soul the swirling wave, the thunder of the sky. the shriek of the wind, all seem to unite together; but that soul is not troubled; there is no sighing, there is no tears; plenty of tears in the room at the departure, but he weeps no tears calm, satisfied and peaceful; all is well. By the flash of the storm you sec the harbor just ahead, and you are making that harbor. All shall be well, Jesus being our guide, into the harbor of Houveii now we glide; We're home at last, home at last. Softly we drift on the bright, silv'ry tide. We're home at la-t. Ulory to God! all our dan;:er are o'er. We stand seeure on the glorified -diore; Glory to God: we will shout evermore, We're home at last. A Parkersbur? (W. Va.) merchant owns a dojr of superior intelligence. The do goes to the store with the mail every morning, and from it takes the mail addressed to the private residence to Mr. Devorc's home. Nothing can divert him while attending to his duties as mail carrier, and he never makes a mistake in taking the letters to their proper direction. Every evening he sees to it that the evening papers are taken to the house, and if by chance the pa pers should be missing, either by being blown away by the wind or carried off by boys, the dog makes a raid into some neighbor's yard and hypothecates a pa cer, which he carries off Lome. FOUND IN FARM JOURNALS. If the straw was returned to wheat land it would not become exhausted bo soon. Do sot feed ore thing right along to any animal. All animals relish a littlo variety occasionally. OoAt tar should be spread on tarred papcr-r.ofs at least once a year if they are to remain close and tight. TuiafiP tops, chopped and mixed with traw, have been used in the silos in iScotland, and good results aro claimed 'therefrom. A "warm mash" on a cold day, early in the morning, is an excellent invig orator for tho animal that does not havo an appetite. T.iPMenffnnnil with lrprnsnno until It will just flow in eummor heat makes as good oil for mowors, etc., as that sold by dealers at 100 per coat, pront much better than some of it Wiinx a limb is cut from a tree it should be as closo to tho body as possible. The cut should be a smooth one, with out bruising tho bark, and the cut sur faco should bo covered with some kind of cheap paint mixed in oil. CATAKKU. Catarrhal Heathen Hay Feeer A New Horn Treatment. Sufferers are not generally aware that these diseases aro contagious, cr that they are due to the presence of living parasites in the lining memorane oi tne nose ar.u I eustachian tube-, Microscopic research, j however, has proved this to be a fact, and i the result of this discovery is that a simple I remedy has been formulated whereby v,aiui i ii, aia r v.i iiu iiviHi .-..-i ... are permanently cured in from one to thret simple applications made at home by the patient once in two weeks. N. B. This treatment is not a snuff or ar ointment; both have been discarded b rctiiitable phvsicians as injurious. A pampl j let explaining this new treatment is sent i. receipt of three cents in stamps to pa posture bv A. H. Dixon & Son, cor. of Jo! I and King Street, Toronto, Canada. (.:.- (fan Advocate. Sufferers from Catarrhal troubles shou! carefully read the above. 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It is fully the equal of any of its predecessors in the interest of the Great Remedy for Pain, St Jacob Oil, whose virtues never abate, and whose popularity never wanes The demand for both book and medicine is very great DEBvin means "one who lies at the door." It is not proper to call a returned fisherman a dervish, for ho begins it as soon as he pets on the ferryboat San Francisco Alta. " Whv ned It be?-' we ay. and glgh When luvtnu mother" f.ide and die. And lave in Utile one hoe teet Itoey hoped to cuidc in pat lift ays sweet. It need tut be in many cases. All about us women are dying daily whose lives might have been saved. It seems to be a wide-spread opinion that when a woman is slowly fading away with thediseases which grow out oi female weaknesses and irregu larities that there is no help for her. Khc is doomed to death. But this is not true. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is con stantly restoring women afflicted with dis eases of this clans to health and happiness. It is the only medicine for their ailments, sold by druggists, under a ;Kni'ir yuarantix from the manutacturers of its givin" satis faction in every ca-sc, or money paid for it will be refunded. Dr. Pierce's Pellets, theonginal anI only genuine Little Lirer Pills; 25 cents a vial; one a dese. Tnnnr is no ue in tryinjr to tach the av erage spinster tricks in lejrerdemain. Sho i ran't be expected to do niueh in tlie way of blight of hand.- Merchant Traveler. Consumption Purely Cured. To the EniToii: Please inform your readers that I have u positive remedy for the ahovc named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopek-S" cases have been permanently cured. 1 shall be glad to send two bottlfs of my remedy fkkk to any of our readers who have consumption if they will send me their epro and post, office address. Uespertfullv, T A Si.v;um,M C. JM Pearl street New York. . Dox't swear you know a thing is true because you believe it You wouldn't know you were living if your wife didn't pull your hair sometimes. Texas Sif tings. Is- l&V). Henry Goethe, or Ueaufort, S. C, wrote Dr. Shallonbergor: "I regard your Antidote a specific for chills and fever. It was used on the Charleston & Savannah It Koad last sum mer and autumn in the most sickly region, and under the most trying circumstances. Out of one gang of nepro operatives,? were stricken down with chills and fever, and every one recovered by the timely use of Kh.illenbeigcr's Antidote. You possess tbcGitCATE'srMcuH.'isn in Tnn would." A man who owns a jroat has only to earn bis bread; be has bis butter for nothing. Rochester Post Throat D!eacs commence with a Cough. Cold or Sore Throat "UnnciCt linmcJual Ttuchts" give immediate relief. Sold only In boxes. Price 25 eta. Tnn cat's purr is the sign of peace. The rooster's spur is tbe emblem of war. Yonkers Statesman. 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AadreM at oaet, To Dlfpel Colds, Headaches and Fevers, to cleanse tho sys tem effectually, yet gently, when costive or bilious, or when tho blood is impure or sluggish, to permanently cure habitual constipation, to awaken tho kidneys and liver to a healthy activity without irritating or weakening teem, uso "Syrup of Figs. It is no uncommon thing for a theatrical star to complain of the support while the company retorts that the star is insupport ableBoston Transcript Oregon, thn I'aradlDO of Farmer. Mild, equable climate, certain and abundant crops. Best fruit, grain, grass, stock country in the world. Full information free. Address Orejron Immigration Board, Portland. Oregon One of the most depressing facto that has recently come to light is the possibility of a crank going over Niagara Falls without losing his life. Norristowa Herald. 13 it economy to save a few cents buying a cheap soap or strong washing twwder, and lue tloluut in ruined rotted clothes? 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A slDZleOmn from th imnu I r tuirr at whpleal price. No AGENTS' PROFITS or EXPENSES. ISENTONTKN DAYS' TtsTTRIAU HE.ND FOR CATAMIUll- WORCESTER ORC AN CO.. nuuitiix. SA9S. rNAJit tills rirtr. oowttaoreuv-f RAW FUR SKINS! Gfc-jfcM Highest Cash Prices Paid. 7Vr- HONEST ASSORTMENT. -i Send for oar Pne Current. A. E. BURKHARDT . CO.. Forrth d EIn Ctrr-t. CINCINNATI. Ohio. flBjEtaaaji JOSEPH H. HUNTER P ISO'S RESTED V FOK CATARRn.-FJest. Easiest to use Clieatjcst. Relief is immediate. A cure is certain. For Cold in the Head it has no equal. It ix an Ointment, of which rk t,n tifictrila frine RIV by maiL Address, . T. aBBaalraaWaVaPjKaaPAafaN ItaBaBBBBKaSSaHBatiaaKBaNBBaaBBN I laraffifl.lilMr.aW.SnHBI(BaSar TO MAKE J SS9al.H.TaapSS5USara.B.kB7aT A aW jPaVF XHaaaVAHaaaaaaaaaaaaaaar T0U GAOCtR FOft D KjPs"BS3BBBHBT cow brand mm VM fc , ii-r-JD VNV boiutit rung. -1Sa.a9H.B9.aH9.aaEHHP.&s Note nurul.-r ..f PAGESiVM) andnnmber il.l.";rKATIOSa (3x A I PIT T I AVI" J. rT AWalalaViaa a la-V III ft J, Sciatica TRADE MARK lftn.r JanolDsOil: GOLD MEDAL, PAEI9, 2878. W. BAKER & CO.'S 1 absolutely pure and it is soluble. No Chemicals are u,td In it prrpiritn. It ha more cAa tirre tlmri ttl t:Ttr.jt of Cocoa mlitJ with March. Arrowroot or Sujcir, acd i therefore iir mar economical, cettinj Ui tJ.au n ecl a cup. It it cciicioLt, coarlinis;, irrn;t!i'n'.nc. Eauit DlGISTIU. tiJ admirably adaftrd for icva'ij n !! forprroBi in hta'.th. Sold by Crucor. everywhere. W. BAKER & CO.. Dorchester. Mass. SE.D for Catulogae aT CUNS Hunting Emiiriment. Bat Ilnll. Rymiiasium and Atk lotic ilouil and Sporting Novelties or all kinds to .Sporting Goods Company, P tSB Mula HtrreC Kansas City, 3to. AK TH13 WEE im Bd jto aitta. I CURE FITS! When 1 iat cur I do not mean merely to stop thea for a time and then Iiatc tbem return kkjIu. I hkw radical cure. I litre marie the dleac of FITS, EPi LWsY or FAU.ISI. MCKNKSb a life Ion; study. I wa rant my rerredy to cure the worst cne. Ite-aoj-othershaT failrdi.no reason for not r.r rerelTtnga cure. Send at onca for a treatise and t. Free Bottla Of my Infallible remedy. Clio Kirreu and I'oat-Oflt. H. ti. ROUT. M C. 18 i'earl fttrect, ra Yark. arXaXS THIS Fans mn can m wrlta. JONES ME PAYS THE FREIGHT. 5 T n Wiitotj calea Iron Lrer MM Hearings, Hraaa lore ixta aa.i uao box lor aeo. Erry aire Scale, torrreaprieella tnrnt.on th.9 Daner and mldmm . 'JONES OF BINGHAMT0II1 BINGfJAMTON, N. Y.! riuuz tuts rurzK.Tw, u mmii, HIVE YOU BIKES " - m ww l-. Use PeruiAi Sfrengtfierinj Bu'r, The bt TOXIC la EXIHTEXCE. I'lani to the ta-tP. but nut a bev.-r.ic- Cure ullia nea. Orneral Debility, Indlgcalloa. MAwrr Complaint. I'eer and Aur, rtc. CVASK TOL'K UlirrsfiisT- KiR IT. Manufactured by Mcl'IKEAPOX, ATCHISON. KANSAS--NAMtTTm rAPEKmrjtirMj-.s"" DETECTIVES TTaattd threwrj two t vtttc4rf&tTo?tloni la Scmferrft rk. RerfvottiM rrceiv tb InureUosl DsCcliTw Graaaaa Wart in f Affmlstt Fraud. Graafian' Pocket Gallery JatM rrimlna'. Tb latrrratfl lnctect.f t-tt!DM,r 6sr tat i t d'te'-tivaa Rft at amp for particular, raplat atat far All BA!(AXDKTElTlTEBtBtCaKAnt4OaalawU.Ow NEEDLES, SHUTTLES, REPAIRS. f F(rallP"tr inn Machine. STMiAIM)UOOIinlT TheTraile Supplies'. Send f ii' whnle'hlp prut lit. Dl.ELOCK iVr'r. ' 1 3Il.K.ut t.$t.luLs.Xi MXETUIS rArtRwjrh.jT. "HA DDCQCIITc,)ni'ara,,,' to n)iu Biwk. 1" riiSaJSwl or.iiiriM'rlptiontallrt-:la. rnasazine like WIBE AWAKE." .-cnilp.j-.tal n II. l-OTHUor Co.. U.ton. furllhiMrate-l l.i9t.r Bookand lriinee.tu of tbe l-oltirop magazine. VMAM, TB1S rAPEK mj tn. J nta, Pensions; aaiaai Ad.ire, p. h. Procured quickly. IZ-pac' pampniftnn fenlon and ISoiintvIjiwB fF.vrrtit. Ad.lrr.i 1 H FtTSOEH IJ1. C. K Claim Agency for V.V.tern bolilins liuiiA'iapoli-'. tno. ITM1U TUU FATER mry Kmtjm mr ta. $ 65 A IIONTII AM) BOARD a'Atlk. orhijhetcomraiioii and 'It DtlV !R'.fHTln A"enton.nir.'-v IIovJ.. P.W.ZlF.I.KKA-...'i;MrkeUt-t.Loii-..V.o GflAXl THIS rAPr.lt .rj f. y "e. PATENTS fnr I V FNTWto. o ?.f BOOK t'RF.K. AdJrm tV T. Fmgf-rald. Attarve rai this ej-in.. u, ,..,.. $5 to S8 a day. Sample worth S'i.lS FKKK. I.inet not nnder hnrp' feet Writ nKinHTaRMFKTVKO HOLIlFBlO., H.llj.ttrk. MM!; THIS raff K.nrytMfM ant. ACENTS CTIUICV'CF.X F.XPf-ORATION ia WANTED dlKilLr.1 O AMra. Ken Baca. a-IU. Uniterm. .National l'ab!ihinfCo., St. jam ZTM tills rtrtlttttri ta. fovmta YOUNG MENIar?.T,esraph? """"'"i VJWJ watl Ai-nt Bume tier,aTidMvura VWMlfituaU'.n.. rit..l . mtOWN.fcedalta. Uu. j-: Alii THIS ratra.wjew jo. n:. raCUCIAUC UE ALL SOLDIERS. CllaIUilaS H !lisablcd:pay.ctc.; Da- fclWOWHW r.-rierrelie.vl.ljiwrra. . T OrMiKiltiK Al1.ria.l.ail,..ATrualatoa.aa.r. TCI CGDADIIY w" Kuarantea Savod pay)ac khWHIIMrn I . iKislnon ( rry itradu.,1. mcll.-.!i SiImhjI of 7lr;raphy. MadUoat, 1ta VN AUC TI1I9 PAPER amy Ls. )n ant. I! A U C STTOT. Rook keeping. reimsnjliip.Anib HUME mt!r.Sli"ilhand. etc . thuroughlY tans. mall. ;irvularsfle BnTlM'SfuLLkOK. Barale.VT. A.V. K.-D 1271 WIIF.N WRITING T ABXKRTlKFIW N.EAKK atate that jaa tin tbe Ad.ertlat.aral (a tha. Attoc.it. WaiBlBjiaa. D.t.Wlt.l.OETTWfc rrM05 wUoalaav. a small particle is applied finlt Kv Anitrntcte at cat, Hazelxixe, warren, Pa. rill Qui ill 'j it f I (SB :'ia j W iri HOT GREAT DETECTIVE STMT! BY UWKEM:E L. I.TIaCL. 670 Nets! 55 Fill Pagt Etraviiitt ! RIUKI KVEK WUTTKI. Eff-UEAUU.Ta incident," "point" and "awtlon" m. .in .... ..mwtnt " in .rpr, xiaKE riUiskeny Lakfsiie MMiig, IHCIW , ILL