KKKKKKfftBff'f - --,'-! iW'm :-T i- v'i.i;jyimmjmmmmMaBjC.y.' 4 ?v?7 5rqSPKl BffigSfter ----. C4tA Zt:5T' -a-- .-. . y - v , -w,&VC- .li.'. ..-. r, V. .-i-y-. -----,wlf ,.a BBBBBBBBBBaBBaVSIfiP' "sSS?? mmmmmmmmmmHjms. tjgsutf j-i-." t -.- t- 3fe, -'jgm- i. S? 4 -J" rr-rt- -if . " . .v -, - - J-rf.v . -TrlSS-j osTOiisiinttmiPtt -i-saHJ'-- V -v -, "SaSmmmBmmBmajasmmmmmj, J- . TUmw on th IMmMWi rtororimtf. 7 ; Tk8taT rani r tkwten r iNntf the OU - -. Iacoatiaaatioaof hie mm of lec tures on the Holy Land, delivered at BrooUyn, Bev. T. De Witt Talmage re a. cently took his text from Joehaa, xl 5: A "And when all these Kings -weremetto- Y gather, they came and pitched together f at the waters of Merom to fight against Israel." He said: We are encamped to-night in Pales tine by the waters of Merom. After a long march we have foaadonr tents pitched, our fires kindled, and though far away from civilization, a variety of food that would not compromise a first class American hotel, for the most of our caravan starts aa hour and a half earlier in the morning. The """'""mhi - ' around this Lake Merom are so 'poison ous that at any other season of the year encampment here is perilous, but this winter night the air is tonic and health ful. In this neighborhood Joshua fought his last great battle. The na tions had banded themselves together to crush this Joshua, but along the banks of these waters Joshua left their car casses. Indeed it is time that we more minutely examine this Joshua of whom we have in these discourses caught only a momentary glimpse, although he crossed and recrossed Palestine, and next to Jesus is the most stirring and mighty character whose foot ever touched the Holy Land. Moses was dead. A beautiful tradi tion says the Lord kissed him, and in that act drew forth the soul of the dy ing lawgiver. He had been buried; only, one Person at the funeral, the same One who kissed him. Imt God never takes a man away from any place of usefulness but he has some one ready. Moses has passed off the stage and Joshua, the hero, puts his foot on the platform of history so solidly that all the ages echo with the tread. He was a magnificent fighter. He got his military equipment from God, who gave him the promise at the start: "There shall not any man be able to stand before thee all the days of thy life.' God fulfilled this promise, although Joshua's first battle was with the spring freshet; and the next with a stone wall; and the next, leading on a regiment of whipped cowards; and the next battle, against darkness, wheeling the sun and the moon into his battalion, and the last, against the king of terrors, death five great victories. For the most part, when the general of an army starts out in a conflict he would like to have a small battle in or der that he may get his courage up and he may rally his troops and get them drilled for greater conflicts; but this first undertaking of Joshua was greater than the leveling of Fort Pulaski, or the thundering down of Gibraltar, or the overthrow of the Hastilc. It was the crossing of the Jordan at the time of the spring freshet. The snows of Mount Lebanon had just been melting and they poured down into the valley, and the whole valley was a raging torrent- So the Canaanites stand on one bank and they look across and see . Joshua and the Israelites, and they laugh and say: "Aha! aha! they can not disturb us in time until the fresh ets fall; it is impossible for them to reach us." Uut after awhile they look across the water and they see a move ment in the army of Joshua. They say, "what's the matter now? Why, there must be a panic among these troops, and thej are going to fly, or perhaps they are going to try to march across Jordan. Joshua is a lunatic." But Joshua, the chieftain, looks at his army and cries: "Forward, march!" and they start for the bank of the Jordan. One mile ahead go two priests carry ing a glittering 1kx four feet long and two feet wide. It is the ark of the cov enant. And they come down, and no sooner do they just touch the rim of the water with their feet than by an al mighty fiat, .Ionian parts. The army of Joshua marches right on without getting their feet wet, over the bottom of the river, a path of chalk and broken hells and pebbles, until thev get to the other bank. Then they lay hold of the oleanders and tamarisks and willows and pull themselves up a bank thirty or forty feet high and. having gained the other bank, they clap their shields and their cymbals, and sing the praises of the God of Joshua. Hut no sooner have they reached the bank than the waters begin to dash and roar, and with a terrific rush they break loose from their strange anchorage. Out yonder, thirty miles of distance they halted. On this side the waters roll off toward the salt sea. Hut as the hand of the Lord God is taken away from the thus uplifted waters waters perhaps uplifted half a mile as the almighty hand is taken away, those waters rush down, and some of the un believing Israelites say: "Alas, alas, what a misfortune! Why could not those waters have stayed parted? He cause, perhaps, we may want to go back. Would it not have been a more com plete miracle if the Lonl had parted the waters to let us come through and kept them parted to let us po back if we are defeated?" My friends, God makes no provision ior a Christian's retreat. He clears the path all the way to Canaan. To go back is to die. The same gate keepers that swing back the amethys-tinc-and crystalline gates of the Jordan to let Israel pass through now swing shut the amethystine and crystalline gate of the Jordan to keep the Israelites from going back. I declare it in your hearing to-day, victory ahead, water thirty feet deep in the rear, triumph ahead, Canaan ahead, behind you death and darkness and woe and hell. Hut this is no place for the host to stop. Joshua gives the command. "For ward march!" In the distance there is a long grove of trees and at the end of the grove is a city. It is a city of ar borsua city with the walls seeming to reach to the heaven, to buttress the very sky. It is the great metropolis that commands the mountain pass. It is Jericho. That city was afterward captured by Fompey, and it was after ward captured by Herod the Great, and it was afterward captured by the Mo hammedans, but this campaign the Lord plans. There shall be no swords, no shields, no battering ram. There shall be only one weapon of war and that a ram's horn. The horn of the slain ram was sometimes taken and holes were punctured in it and then the musician would put the instrument to his lips and he would run his fingers over this rade musical inrtra-nrat and make a great deal of sweet harmony for the people. That was the only ldnd of weapon. Several priests were to take these rude, rustic musical instruments and they were io go arooad the city every day for six days once a day tor six days and then, on the seventh day they were to go arotmd blowing these rude musical instruments seven times, and then at the close of the seventh blowing of the rams' horns on the seventh day the peroration of the whole scene was to be a shout at which great waHs should tumble from stone to base. The seven priests with the rude sical instruments pass all aroand the eity walls on the first day, and a failure- Not so much as a piece of plaster broke luctc from the wait-not so maea Malooseaed srsKmmmmimmmfiiiMT, wmxwi.kin. mrr . mi&. ;!wjife.. -;: ,'.t r plMeatuirfarAl rrhere." aar tl MbVlWM Tr1l-: "didirteUyowsb? Way;o mhv fatera afte.lools. TKsidea Tof goiag arcmnd the cky with those mmOcal la tlrameahiaad expeetfagiathatwayto de-troy it! Jonhaa has been spoiled he lainks becaase he has orerthrowa and esUojed the spriag -freshet, he eaa overthrow the atsae wall Why, it fa not philosophic. Don't yoa see there is ae relation between the blowing of these maaicsl' inetraawati ad the knocking down of the wall? It hart philoaophy. -The second day, the priesta blowing the musical instnuaeats go aromnd the eitr, aad a failare. Third day, aad a failure; fourth day, and a failnre; fifth day, and a failure; sixth day, aad a faihxre. The seventh day comes, the elamaeterie day." Joshua hi aa early ai the avvaiag aadeunines J the troops, walks all around about, kxilsi'at-the city wall The priests start to atake the circuit of the city. They go all around once, all around twice, three times, four times, five times, six times, seven times, and a fail are. There is only one more thing to do, and that is to utter a. great shouts Joshua feels that the hour hascome,v and he cried out to his host: - ."Shout! for the "Lord hath given you the city!" All the people began to cry: "Down, Jericho, down Jericho!" and the long line of solid masonry began to quiver and to move and to rock. Stand from under! She falls! Crash, go the waHs, the temples, the towers, the palaces; the air blackened with the dust. The huzza of the victorious Israelites and the groan of the conquered Canaanites com mingle, and Joshua, standing there in the debris of the wall, hears a voice saying: "There shall not any man be able to stand before thee all the days of thy life." Only one house spared. Who lives there? Some great King? No. Some woman distinguished for great kindly deeds? No. She had been conspicuoas for her crimes. It .is the.aoasc of Rahab. Why was her house snared? Itecause she had been a great shiner? No, because she repented, dembastrat ing to all the ages that there is mercy for the chief of sinners. The red cord of Divine injunction reaching from her window to the ground, so that when the people saw that red cord they knew it was the divine indica tion that they should not disturb the premises; making us think of the divine cord of a Saviour's deliverance, the red cord of a Saviour's kindness, the red cord of a Saviour's mercy, the red cord of our rescue. Mercy for the chief of sinners. Put your trust in that God and no damage shall befall you. When our world shall be more terribly surrounded than was Jericho, even by the trumpets of the judgment day, and the hills and the mountains, the metal bones and ribs of nature, shall break, they who have had Rahab's faith shall have Rahab's deliverance. When wrapt in fire tlierealuisof either glow, And heaven last thunder hakM the earth below; Thou undismayed nhalt o'er the ruins smile, And light thy torch at nature's funeral pile Hut Joshua's troops may not halt here. The command is: "Forward, march!" There is the city of Ai; it must be taken? A scouting partj- comes back and says: "Joshua, we can do that with out you; it ns going to Ikj a very easy job; you just stay here while we go and capture it." They inarch with a small regiment in front of that city. The men of Ai look at them and give one yell, and the Israelites run like reindeer. The Northern troops at Bull Run did not make such rapid time as these Israelites with the Canaanites after them. They never cut such a sorry figure as when they were on the retreat. Anybody that goes out in the battles of God with only half a force, instead of your taking the men of Ai the men of Ai will take you. Look at the Church of God on the retreat. The Itornesian cannibals ate up Munson, the mission ary. "Fall back!" said' a great many Christian people "Fall back, 0, Church of God! Borneo will never be taken. Don't you see the Bornesian cannibals have eaten up Munson, the missionary?" Tyndall delivers his lecture at the Uni versity of Glasgow and a great many good people say: "Fall back, O, Church of God! Don't you see that Christian philosophy. is going to be overcome by worldly philosophy? Fall back." Geology plunges the crowbar into the mountains, and there arc a great many people say: "Scientific investigation is going to overthrow the Mosaic:account of the creation. Fall back!" Friends of the church have never had any right to fall back. Joshua falls on his face in chagrin. It is the only time you see the back of his head. lie falls on his face and begins to whine, and he says: "O, Lord God. wherefore hasftr Thou at all brought thi people over Jordan to deliver us into the hand of the Amorites to destroy us? Would to God we had been content and dwelt on the other side of the Jordan! For the Canaanites and all the inhabitants of the land shall hear of it, and shall environ us round and cut off our names from the earth." I am very glad Joshua said that. Be fore it seemed as if' he were a super-' natural being, and therefore could not be an example to us; but I find he is a man, he is only a man. Just as some times you, find a man under severe op position, or in a bad state of physical health, or worn out witht overwork, ly ing down and sighing about everything being defeated. ; God comes and rouses him. How does He rouse him? By complimentary'apo9 trophe? No. He says: "Get thee up. Wherefore liest thou upon thy face?" Joshua rises, and I warrant you with a mortified look. But his old courage comes back. The fact was, that was not his battle. If he had been in it he would have gone on to victory. He gathers his troops around him and says: "Now let us go up and capture the city of Ai; let us go up right away." - ? They march on. He puts the majority of the troops behind a ledge of rocks in the night, and then he sends compara tively small regiments up in front of the city. The men of Ai come out with a shout. The small regiments of Israel ites in stratagem fall back and -fall back, and when all the men of AS hare left the city and are in pursuit of these scattered or seeniinglyscattejad.fjegi jnents, Joshua stands on a rock. The men rush out from behind the rocks and take the city aad it is put "to ihe torch, and then these Israelites in the city march down and the flying reg iments of Israelites return, aad be tween the two waves1 of IsraeKtish prowess the mea of Ai are destroyed and the Israelites gain the victory. But this is no place for the host of Joshua to stop. "Forward, march!" cries Joshua to thetrstmg. Tbereic the citybfGibeon. It has pat itself under the protection of Jo&aas, They send word, "There are fine iustgs after as; they are going to destroy as; send troops quick; aead as help right away." Joshmv has a three days awek more thaa double quick. Ore the mraing oCthe third day he is beforetheeaemyr There are two long lines of bettteTJ bat tle opeas with great CsmnriUr sooa discover They say: "That is Joshua; that k the man who conquered the rhjgreihet ana khockto aown we suae wau ana. destroyed the city of Ai. There tj-ft u '--6 -(u-f. ran iney sound a retreat ami as they he- gim wo icuw, ubmk mm -jus nose (hem likeapaather, ever the racks, m. "-V f mi. 2k - &-e -Wmmmmmmlm imW--. ilm .l-sill- ?i mMvmimmUt iff st Ml ! hai P-JiW7w-' "?&:'aIifinUWri"Ai -- ---' '- -"- '"' -T- - , aBWafefaVaarAahaitaaeneahaad. 7.f7 ' !TTS-V FS f "ilf NUr Alff tuU-.-riMiD-,t Pn II Ulliice mm Wan Tonality TWacmmen in In BfeJrseaeer. fJey-l m a. Kery mm y.Tt 4-. thai the or Jeahaa, "this ffctorj.1 Batdoroaaotsee the isgoiagdowa? Those AmorHes are gf fag to gel away after all, aad then they. twill eame aa some other time aad bother as aad perhaps destroy as." See, the saa Is goiag dowa. Oh, for a longer day thaa has ever been seea fan this clhaate! Has he fallen ia a apo pletiefit? No; he is ia prayer. look oatwheaafoodaua nukes the Lord his ally. Joshua raised hw fact, raduu with prayer, and MaaMhe deeding saa over Ciheon and st the fsiat creseeat of the mooa. printing ami hand at the dfsoafsding sun and ,the. other at the faint crescent of the mosa, ia the name of thai Gad: who shaaed trhe worlds aad Tnoves the worlds, he erisd: "Sun, stand thoa still upon Gmean; aad thou, moon, ia the valley of AhUon." They halted. ' .Whether it was' by refraction of the aaas rays or. by the stopping of Ihe whole planetary system 1 do not know sad do net care. I leave it to the Christisa scientists aad the infidel sciear4s to sertle tf uttqaestion, while I tellyoe I have seea" the same thing. "What!" say yoa, "aot the sen stand still?" Yes. The same miracle is per- fofned'aowadays. The wicked do not Ifcre oat half their day and the sun sets at noon. -But hit a( ssan start oat for God and the truth aad against sin and the day of his usefulness is prolonged and prolonged aad prolonged. Robex McCEeyne- was a consumptive PreTsVyterian. It was said when he preached, he coughed so it seemed as if he would never preach again. His name is fragrant in all Christendom, that name mightier to-day than was ever his living presence. He lived to preach the Gospel in Aberdeen, Edin burg and Dundee, but he went away vcryearly. He pscached himself into the grave. Has Robert McCheyae's sun set? Is Robert McCheyne's day ended? 0, no! His dying delirium was Ailed with prayer, and when he lifted his hand to pronounce the benediction upon his family, and the benediction upon his country, he seemed to say: "I can not die now; I want to live on and on. I want to start an influence for the Church that will never .cease. I am only 30 years of age. Sun of my Chris tian ministry, stand still over Scotland." And it stood still. A long time ago there was a Christian woman very consecrated, and she had a drunken husband, and so on came the night of domestic trouble. She lost her children, and there came the night of bereavement. She was very ill, and there came the night of sickness. Her soul departed, and there came the night of death. Itut all these nights of trouble, and darkness, and sorrow, and sickness were illumined by the grace of the Gospel; and people came many miles to see how cheerfully a Christian could die. The moon that illumined that night of trouble was a reflection from the Sun of righteousness. In the last hour of that night that night of darkness and sickness and misfor tune, as she lifted her hand toward Heaven, those who stood nearest her pillow could hear the whisper for she wanted to live on in the generations that were to follow, consecrated to God; she wanted to have an influence long after she had entered upon her eternal reward, and while her hand was lifted and her lips were moving, those who stood nearest her pillow could hear her say: "Thou moon, stand still in the valley of A jalon." But Joshua was not quite through. There was time for five funerals before the sun of that prolonged day set. Who will preach their funeral sermon?. Mas sillon preached the funeral sermon over Louis XVI. Who will preach the funeral sermon of those fire dead Kings King of Jerusalem, King of Hebron, King of Jarmuth, King of Lachish, King of Eglon? Let it be Joshua. What ia his text? "There shall not any man be able to stand be fore thee all the days of thy life." But before you fasten up the door I want five more Kings beheaded and thrust in: King Alcohol, King Fraud, King Lust, King Superstition, King In fidelity. Then fasten up the door for ever. 'What shall the inscription and what shall the epitaph be? For all Christian philanthropists of all ages are going to come and look at it. What shall the inscription be? "There shall not any man be able to stand before thee all the days of thy life." But it is time for Joshua to go home. He is 110 years old. Washington went down the Potomac and at Mount Vernon closed his days. Wellington died peace fully at Apsley House. Now, where shall Joshua rest? Why, he is to have his greatest battle now. After 110 years he has met a king who has more sub jects than all the present population of the earth, his throne a pyramid of skulls, his parterre the graveyards and cemeteries of the world, his chariot the world's hearse the king of terrors. Itut -if this is Joshua's greatest battle . it is going to be Josh ua's greatest victory. He gathers his friends around him and gives his valedictory, and it is full of reminiscence. Young men tell what they are going to do: old men tell what they have done. And as yon have heard a grandfather or great grandfather, seated by the evening fire, tell of Mon-mouth.-or Yorktown, and they lift the crutch or staff as though it were a mus ket, to fight and show how the" old battles were won so Joshua gathers his friends around his dying coach, aad he tells them the story of what he has been through, aad as he lies there, his white locks snowing down on his wrinkled forehead, I wonder if God has kept his promise all the way through. As he lies there be tells thestorr one. two or three times yoa have heard old people tell a story two or three times over and he answers: "I go the way of all the earth, and not one word of the promise has failed, not one word thereof has failed; all:has..come to pass, not one word thereof has failed And thea he tarns to his family, as a dying parent will, and says: '-Choose bow whom yoa will serve, the God of Israel, or the God of the Amorites. Asfor me aad my hoase, we will serve the Lord." A dying pa rent can not be reckless or thoughtless ia regard to his children. Coaseat to part with them forever at the door of the tomb we eaa act. By the cradle in which their infancy was rocked, by the bosom oa whfch theylrst lay, by the blood of the covenant, by the God of Joanna, it shall not be. We wfll sot pert, we eaa aot pert. Jehovah Jireh, we take Thee at lay promise. "I will he a God to thee aad fhr seed after thee." Dead, the old chieftain mast he err tpeatly; Is over lit veers ef Lay haa eat, stretch oat thee feet that walked dry shod the parted Jeraaa. Ckse those lips which helped, blew fhe blast at which the walls ef Jericho feH. Fold Jhe arm that lifted the aaaar toward the do ami city of AI Fold It right over the heart that exalted wham the five KfanntdL Ttel h saaTI lithi ssusiihiil iiisTIii fini II i 1 1 t Ihflstos mj self mw, I aaiaaitferthelraadksaan --' -m sti CeaaaaHea afaiaet the ledfea ef " TIpTiVm J- H5-. -. . . BtI-lnML - '. -.. . . . . ! .. inaau " " w . Baaava-amamaaaaaa armm;mmrsam aavaaaB mw - - -jar .aw r Belli SBBtfcatsaiSmstmaataB Pr- j aad for the toe aha asses aV thear f s-Sllia lhe valley e Ajalsav ,3is?SigS - . -w, , -an - . ?. aw 7 -. " : i v . .- .- . -- ---. --. .--. . ia amntlT a '"" - - -- --. I aM at tun love aad ataar have ae arcteasiea to that title miliar, says the Eaglish Illustrated Magaxiae. with the quaint driakiag mugs and other vessels which are kaoara as Gres de FlandretT Scoffer have said that the eeeuliar stoacware in question aaaheen so aassed because it wan never made in Flemish-land; hut, as will pres ently bo seen, the scoffers are wroag. The province of Limburg, however, aow divided between Germany and Bel gium, which was so long one of the principal seats of this manufacture, has always been a frontier Slate, and bad always hecn up to 1814 subject to tho counts and other rulers of Flanders. The ware U in truth essentially Ger man in its history, and in the character istics of its diversified forms and artis tic embellishments. The preciso date and place of its origin remain unknown. A well-authenticated fragment of tho brown ware bears tho date of 1539; but examples of a rude, unglazed, white ware, and of a coarse, earthen body of dark gray, smeared with a lead glaze, havo been found in excavations, and may bo supposed to have been the pro ductions of a very remote period. But evidently, by the raiddleof the sixteenth century tho art had attained to some thing like perfection. For two centur ies Germany retained the monopoly, and kept Europe supplied with drinking ves sels adapted very much to the tastes, to tho measures and to the usages of differ ent lands. It was toward the end of tho eighteenth century when a successful attempt was made by ono Dwight, of Fulbam, to produce tho like at tides in England. This was, however, a period of remarkable activity among En glish potters. Tho piituresque, though rude, puzzle-jugs and tygs had been tho product of much ingenuit3; hut they wero disappearing beforo the beautiful salt-glaze ware, much of which has nev er been excelled in perfection of form and sharpness of ornament, and which bad attained to tho highest degree of artistic quality beforo tho advent of Josiah Wedgwood. Tho stoneware, however, properly so called, was probably produced in num berless localities all over Germany and the low countries, whero suitahlo clay and natural aptitude existed. But there aro a few districts to which peculiar in terest attaches; these r.ere seats of characteristic and often remarkable original styles. Among the most notable places was Siegburg, situated not far from Bonn, on a tributary of tho Rhine. There were produced tho tall, cylindri cal cannettes in what was long known as Cologne ware, and other articles of a like kind in a white body, often un glazed. but richlt embossed with elab orate figures and ornaments in relief. Siegburg suffered severely during tho seventeenth century wars, and tho pot ters, despairing of carrying on their in dustry in peaceful security, emigrated to other lands. All attempts to induce them to return wero unsuccessful; but some fifty years ago an enterprising pot ter undertook to revne the business. With tho aid of old molds, gathered from different directions, and following closely the old traditions, ho legan the production of naro of the old type. These pieces found a ready sale, being PACKING AX OVEN. disposed of by unscrupulous dealers as genuine Siegburg ware. In the year 1014, it appears that the Earl of Isenbourg, with commendable ssgacity, made grants of land and gave exemptions from taxation, with other tempting privileges, to one Bartrain Knodtgen, a potter of Siegburg. by way of inducing him and his fellow-workers to transfer their art from its old home and to settle in this locality. The men of Siegburg and of Raeren thus encour aged flocked into the new country, and found there the peace and the protec tion for which in their old homes they had sighed in Tain. Their art thus transplanted has survived manv vicis situdes, at times has been well-nigh extinguished, but has happily revived, and it flourishes to-day in greater rolumo than ever, the name of Knodtgen being still borne by many of those who are associated with its-fort-ui la the earlier days of which wo have spoken the stoaewear of the Kma. bscherlaad had ao special character of Its own sufficient to make it easily dis tiaguishable from the productions of tne Limbourg center from which it had beea imported. As a general rule, it may be said that one seldom finds erigiaal figure subjects, or delicate f rieses of ornamentation, such as those which sre tho glories of the treasured examples of old Siegburg and Baerea. When subjects of this kiad are found they are generally borrowed from the older types. The relief oraamentatioa was generally impressed by small metal seals, and these rosettes were then con nected by steams aad branches inciseit in the clay. Of tea enough a medallion portrait or heraldic panel occupies the center of the piece, but sacb always hat the appearance of being a mere acces aory rather than an essential detail ia tmrA fnCfal &aVl Wa-a-Bn-itW'e Ja: The effect thus obtained was heightened I hy the employment of bright colored enamels, ia deference to the rather gaeey taste of the age: faarmoaieas TMBBaiagnef parplesaad Uues are BrfamiBal characteristics of the ware. The rsBaeahacherUad ef to-day e pHsesafaahasy villages, f whieh two- aset Behr and -ianea,five title ? J - rl3Sfe5CSr -?, rysssssSSad? tt mr.Jj-srZX!, - v! !Z aferie There ware is many eremalorers. AaVtosamnaia chest Useaa gsf aawt tif , herejr, rests ea the amkiag ef certain wmA axsi that are the jsj ofavery Wer-drfcikrr ia Geftaaay. ta fAeral sppesraace the tova is meea like Bear, as are alee preaabach, Boashsh. ilihreri, iUyea- dorf. Wirges. UUlscheid sad Arxbech. The last alaet chiefly produces asiae ml water bottles, of which nlllioa are di poscd of aaaually. At the Staffordshire potteries, where the Wfdgwuod ware is prod seed, the whole or nearly all the material is brought from a distance, the clay and marls fouad at hand a century aad over ago having beea exhausted. Ia tho IIohr-GrcRzhatuea country, to the contrary, raw material it contiguous and abundant- In general appearance the factories or Hohrreazhann sag. gest a comparboa with the small pot- teries that might have been built in Staffordshire in the far- ... . - . away pre- iVedgwocd days. There is the saate absence of architectural do- Sign, the same look of haphazard ness, tho familiar maze without th.alleat suggestion of a plan. All tho world ever, indeed, there b a family Ukones ..... !, v.i,.,. v..:. .- .. . , ,. ""-" potter's simple craft wai pursued ustll the very modern edlnces or tho great :i bouses of to-day came to bo con structed. It is sot impossible that under the influences thus fore-1 shadowed tho handicraft may disap pear, and with it the imagery that is an truo to-day as it was thousands of year ago, of clay in tor potter s nana, and or the rower which he nossetuMMl. of hUkim - plo volition, of tho same lump, to make v , ' . . .. . one vesHel unto honor and another unto dishonor. It is, however, noticeable thtt the ancient art of the throer"--the pot ter of antiquity is largely practiced here, though many of tho objects are pressed from plaster mold;. Women sro employed to attach the handles and spouts and to finish the ware after It has loft tho thrower. Upon (ho women too .UUJi wu. devolves tho deiicato work or scratching . .aa. as - . in the clay sucn patterns or nowcru and arabesques as form a rough decoration on tho surface. Model or patterns an) rarely used. Tho women traco their design with great freedom of hand. These devices in "scratching arc sub sequently relieved by broad touches of color, tho cobalt used being mixed with PUTTING ON A FIM9HIXU TOUCH. water and clay, with a further admix turoof salt to make tho pigment run fluidly under tho brush. The apprentice serve a term of from threo to four years, and the work peoplo are paid upon a system of piece work called Tagenwcrken, under which a given number of differing articles are adopted as tho unit for calculating tho work per day. For example, a man ii understood to mako in ono day two hun dred and forty mineral water bottles or ono hundred and sixty mugs of one liter size. Tho processor firing differs material ly from that commonly pursued in tho ordinary manufacturo.of pottery. There tbe oven Is vertical, inclosed within a bottle-shaped "hovel," wbioh protect it and the Arcs from the external weath er. At IIohr-Grenzhausen the oven is of a long horizontal form, with apert ures at intervals along each side of tho arched roof, covered with earthenware slabs which are removable at particular stages of tho firing. This is for tho purpose of throwing in tho halt, the fusing of whicb at tho proper heat gives to the waro its glazed surface. A tijrsnpatltlslBg Emp'oje. Mrs. Do Fadd (who can not stand tho odor of turpentine) I would have sent for you to have donathis cleaning last week, but we have been having the out sldo of our hotiso painted and it made us all sick. Mrs. McSadd (sympathizingly) Sure, Oi don't wonder. Thlm colors is enough to make any ono sick. X. Y. Weekly. In Case of Ure. A grim stroke of humor Is being at tributed to tho Marquis of Ailcsbury in Wiltshire. A large supply of hand grenades for extinguishing fire had beta ordered for tho mansion at Savcrnake. After all tho corridors had been suf ficiently supplied there were still aix of the grenades over. A servant asked tho Marquis what should be done with them. His lordship reflected a moment, and then replied: 'l think you had better; put them is my coffin." Foreign letter. OTEK TRAILED. First Sportsmaa Vhat did yoa do with that setter pap of yours. Tom the eae yoe were goiag to train? Second Sportsaaaa Oh, he got trained a little too heavily. He got upon the railroad oaek'janas the express cante bv.-Musacy's Weekly. .. x Blohsoa I doat see how Jabber ffesi aa laritatioa to this party. He's a rsg alar traia wrecker. Saapper Traia wrecker. Why feat he ia jail .. - Blehaea--JBe eaa -aet daace with a lady three miaateaaaheatstassataff aU I Bsifsa aesala. nt-ase, my stieaf iamy leva ferraea. De yoa rill he a sisesras am. She Se, Geerre; I sriu Yoe He Thea yea'arlU see Tea amy he a JS- s- - .-jr -i r s. J xc; v - -, -'--s , rrU3fJ m?2.,m-mZ -f. - " k X. '-aw-., T. 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" trz- i 'A jots. -i3 js - - 7vtr.rrE'K sias,, st'rrT3ff. vW1" .--. ; "jwb . rs- ---at, as. ,&& Jm.s' 'sr -.,ss?r:a..-. .- lm ? & .izr--$jl r-r?sa?xr3-j&fA -&mm'?-&7jci r y- c- a aSBi-gigQfera VaasC-lD:"?5WrL'saUK T. "5 SsSPf-sv- '!isfiasasMHBS&S .?-- VlTlimTt "" ---- - ; , jafe3S-5flB' : ,,r , imma i iff s" ilrt firiiigBaBaBaTal fcfcC-yJii.".- .55stS, SSSmBBjammamnpmsaf afa(aa . ..-- :--'.njfiftaMS,BaBMsff'3:"L . iianfr " aJ--saam-h. jaa5aTamafcgaaaiiajaMaasaaaMiammmmmsamammmmmmmmmmM .!-.'- -!,rfaHv-ftiB.g. .!j'i. - - - - - f. ,?!? 4ufceb. jjtft. . rvr' ..v,- - . .--- 'i-r i;-.'rs - j. -JTsiiWKrt5' . . .-i-4 .. &-? . ., r.ir- .- T.as riam IVskky-YiBtmMhrr wU teU yea. aryatm. Mw sjways has the lest weni, -Muasej-s Weekly. he Lvt'sgeeatae aaatef the street, rompoa This in mark ale ter. tamho 1 knew; hat they are iag a safe oa the other (44r. walk nader it. West Shore. urn aat r .v. mm & ti ( tmii i ti . T TrrTv.rTvL i!7rt . . T7? vws aevrr, aao joa wiu v m ww m the proee-Mamiay to rtetote jeer hcaWh wli uaill -oKr ikrfiar mti Tea caat 1' aad thca try it Docvwa Base a atUUke eulto of tM mad ttoetor raiMeaui isfttead ef aneaifs. AaUeateoaiifliiaa et aftyvri - oa sctes aad pain's trr4 -";.T fonsirlitir. bcrvott ditaulrtad. c !! is circs a Ualseeat for fcla arW, a aareollc far h !?'-, wit! y te stake felta cheerful, al sax resdes or other jotoa to SSiZTVuZ j mmay fall into taewhlafcy orohbm hb.t " - rvaialu conflrswM IcraiUl usuloVath , t?,g i11" .,'foa,ido9 v awJ VH! J l ou need aa alterative. OU ceod r?iiff tit jj rxrtrlr aUt aatare la rrcalrdr. ' her cqcilibriuai. Ytvu sl s rctMxly U4 I wmataaasireaftacatbenatarairoec & eS5ftil food ouvt, an-aicdj that 1 ear ! kied to th toaach. kfdaem ad liver Mcb a ( matdv UIr. Ball KarunsrUla, Trr it aadyou wi:itbenrptwrUlapito;dovUr ana rrrustou t rri recti ! LabT writ at th rail of a letter ts ine&u: "ovt, I matt conclude, for asv.) fet are k cold tliat pea.'-incklleUp .n t..tvI.All - -m,j www jaij Map or tke Called , A large, Lndvuic Mp of the I'aiUx! States, mounted and mubl foroSeror 4 borne uw, I iucd by the nurUoctoa rirca frtM when it l route. Copies will ho can be done wilitout expeo for trantat on; or they will be mailed to any ad ' on rejpt of ix cent- in poiftjr. by will be mailed to any iMrv r rt Kuatift, (;f n'l Va. Agent, G H. Q R 1L. Chicago, IIL - - Wr Bunpoac a wosaa"5r.ar bo said to be for-tlvo In tier way when Ee trie to na eff p!uh lor analikln. Yock attention i called to the 4cM advrr tirtesicutof H. liurkUv. Kvktprd. IIL If you intend to purchax nrd. pUuU, rtr, .,,, i aim is urica. reuauic buhki. ui, illustratrd caUiojrue will U 1 -V mailed free upon application to all i-wdcr sr tnt pa;er. Tbe man who doesa't think hU b.-ibv it the priio baby hasn't got any bby. lilts batatou Leader. rtajrlas; Card. You can obtain a pack of b9t quality placing cards bv cndiug tifteeuccuuiu postaire to P. 8. Kuti, Ccn I lua Agt , C l. &Q. IL It, Chicago. IIL "You devote a gmt dnd of your time to pedemtrlatiiMn.' "Ye, it is my solo diver slon.' WastiSngtou lo"t. Worm medicine! The very name put a bal luMu in a child mouth, utile her mother ban Ix-en kind titid etreu her lr I Hull's Worm letnycr. Thee Utile can ties taste good. Irjiouwish to have your portrait taken on ivory, face au carsf-rd elephant.- Texas Slttiugs. . .... . Iw.l .1.1.... .li... L.nit stt.l W inned grlpinc pIlN, try farter's L)tth Liver rills nnd take ome- nituiurl A tnaa can I stand ever, thing One pill a dov. Tr them "You're ju-t the man I'm laj lag for." as tho brick tuaon sa'd to tho contractor f'inghamton Ixiadcr. Av Extrndeo PoruLtaiTr. Huow.v s Hkonciiul Tkochcs hire for many y ears lieen the raot popular article In uo for re lieviag Coughs aud Throat troubles. Ir a eourtlug niatcb Is must end in a lie H. O. not declared on It I'icayuae. Exrionio of Cou.liin? are stopped by Hale s Honey or Itoretioutui ami Tar. Fiko's Toothacbc Drops Cure lu one minute j- Ir children havo petn they aro less liable to become pettish.1'ittsburgh Dispatch. Tun best eouRh mwlleine l I'lso's Core forConsumpUoo. bold everywhere JBo, THE GENERAL MARKETS. "" K.V.V-A- CITi.lHv. ?i CA1TI.K Milpplnic t-vr I J Si tf 4 il ltiiteliir teer 2 ' I .litlf e o 2 ) u )) IICK5S :om! to rlioiew hrvy a SO r j TS WHKAT o 2 trU ... N", t X. 1 b.trd M it n OMtx xo. : a tv?. OATS Xo. 2 Oi3w iv- KVK Xo. 1 rV Kit "LOCK lHtnt.por ack.... 2 J III Ir'aiicy.. 3 10 2 IS HAY l!.tiM ; io V HlTrKK Clidee criinery.. 2 sf 22 CIIKKsK Full cream..... ... t w 'A KfM:S-4;ti(dee. ;- is IIACOX Hsm . .....M lo v II MionWers s ft. Milci ..... s IAKI. Mjf r, ixrr.tTOKa- ;s s bT. I.OUIS. CATTI.K 9hlpplns "t-r . . im m 4 to IttitchriV Uf r... 1 Ul e Oi ltM? Packlux sn st ITS MIKKI Fair to choice 1 j I 11 rUH'U Choice . ......... 2. VI 3 71 WHKAT Xo. 2 rctf i Ml COKX X0.2 r n ; OATS Xo.7 4i 41 ItYK Xo. 2 .. . ! m 7 HUTTKK Creamery 22 w i POKK ... . 9W eiooo CHICAGO. CATTI.R Shipping strrs. .. It IIOOS Pack Ins and hlppln fn tt lis fcHKKP FHlrtnehoIco 4 m t 00 riJOCR Winter wheat 4 o f flft WHKAT-Xn. 2rel lt st m COItX Xo. 2 4T S t-h OATS Xo.2 40 St 40 RTIrXo. 2 C st 6j BUTTKIt Crestarry ......... 22 V. !1Rfs S OJ I2i sr.w TORK. CTTIJ Common to prime I 30 4 HOGS Good to Thole ... S i5 st 1 riXlUB Good toebolev ...M I) IM WHKAT-Xo. 2 red I 04-4 ' J S CORK Xo.2. . ... . rt OATiS Wgytcni nttarl 17 4 BCTTKR Crenuirry . K St 2Se iokk ib mum OaBBBBOaf Arm .i-'-aV OaVw. ,BK JK V A -mtmmmW Jw TmWX 1 CS-FI BsaaaaaPaW bbTsbbbbw aaBBBaaV r iJataT-mT " ilL'WMvaai Bfe aa I: s1&- I'Jfi?. J "., &- .- . &- !:.3S- '" jr, --5" -"i i .'(r-.s -' ., . r ia.i t- .irT.-r- -w. V " '"'" -iJ.-ssiT' Ir,A"1 -J'-KV " F-Ti .JV . - -1 - - -?T VXmtlZL asHsaa Mm aaA atsaai asa avaasaa aasT aaBasaa "'v t BiiaaBjaTaraBBS aarat. s?f "l f? Tmmm -c s ' - j - - j ttzt -. " a mPWt we W. tee as tin '. Iraeehaew FV. theayAf tfcfhtM aimpem-cvy m ia a to? aest leeagnH est tmr nKieeU"-1 weasel Trwucw Wafcfca. Kiaea) alfsCasarrh CW Is artls 4trtctl ea tN ?efd ftna f tW rHat. f lTioTV--rW!C. AaBDraarMat ' Lmts bat fpf. tfc t-arr the tfce cvSJKSj et rea.tt t raf"l isBt,aa---Urh rfc- u la4mMSef taBMMk " ss. ..?- - ... L..H. aea i-sHr: mmot9v -'r4, t , tate a?e it s 0 rt f ?. I fi nil HiiimtI- - ''T'1 irrWw. TM wlu ikttJr l.ar .ur. t . tci ta rr t vrT U ! t f rtr ticH fel. r$Uii taeetecsto S miwtri v s riwM el ia w iter .wj - a i .... ..X . .. ys Uia rciaterwC. s . , , f- , 'WT-ariV: Yea aa-tS BK rarSSj I cajsvtoA ta bbvj. 4wi. 1m the 14 f ve w4L.j-wmm eaf mr w-- Tiaaeav BTsseveae. a aaa' - Mr. A. T haixa4 A C lUcfctcr. I). Tt WUS I 8ajdlcaWrcvr'- 1 ml Is Ynsj Ut I rv te W O Arrea.H tWs jUr. alafiUiUrraWBtfT Uo hd trti rvw-rUUtaf ktwa ltiOttt i vrma&rat rwd- la ka,taa ?a Ua nvr ti,kla rtiiir Antidote fee km .ed ' mxA vrxrU, aad fe ttkre; ' eUr a . MiMB without aar rrtturw. It ws to tut -m.-4,-,tr.iit,tmUalrLimfmtTm ,. . ,t jyB rlCOl. llrl V A- AtftamX Wasx a voaw oe ta iavrt ia rmlktt be vkiu trtlitc t:M f.ftj du!Ur WUl awt ro fur lie tea lVraJd. l'atiae afcrsel he that ) was thrrtrtttd SMa saialfshi w HhBlf . 5 1 uffnxi trrriai tn? oar a UxxrUftvaaV lit mr bestl, reKvidlyYfcrn 1 w4d4 Pi or vrm5. wtd ranas'tswrfwrHtosld W- ecaif Tieti bit ad aad had to had ? o3-lhics ta prftcat aiv faUjtSk 1 tur nappy to ay tnat nKirm Har;4fuu na enllrrly rehrvri ums. 2Uy fpeit rjJ , and for tte ttrt Ubw la iu&j t hilr ! rk , tnj diit:r. Mr U. C Itivcm, icvUnvtU, TatM Rft, jol, of k,,, j tola wU ! car.fu.lr .rvl ,I,, f,v,L,,i, ttbiuprillt..,,! .. -- . .tea Jtfid aLe uudrriKrath.--AUdkW UkM - . " "f " " to"" - "a i'es To . rt . !o to Calif&rula vie t! through lift t tbe llurhntrtou !Uu! frnta Clticst or hL IHiis to lcuver. ana thc&rwt otcr t?-? urvt broAl ruatr, tbrouKh ear lln r ta lai vw A; Itlo Urande or Color a.tn Mldbuid Hail ), ii ladvula.(Utawo(t prtait l Salt l.ak lbrtnth lnterua? rlUr aad uaitrparl sccuery. liolcv Cr all UW way. - .. LtTKaASf mtu e not, aaarn!, hava U 1 for buslne., aad so, paradoaical a it amp seem, they do tvt gvt tlja. vir : vllki Journal TnoKof you who are weary and hoary adcutxl with li-itjo aud van. wrtijbd S down with tbt luQrmltl- ti4t Wt lt I human m strut, eaa find ih ihlHT ' oarv u retori ou t bnht !, nut . health, la Nherman'a JVkV'j Att ittttws. It invltrT'ratra atui trrtstit ttndrMli Uttti oncatK, aldsdittiSi, ami rtjj4 tt. t ilouds urtslor from a dsoal liver. f m irfllt-Mi m v. mm A,. m .& V ...f , kL to havo th nw-a think uy aro, why ! It uiai w.ey nato snclj a kren (Oixlsut ur confx'Uoncryi Kjuirrrtlle Journal Irrws- rv U this Un.i ku- tr hr slf llir actual tUrtllt5 Of iMubitt Flretrie Soap, ittMr rxUiiif stm ..could bn s4d Millions J uso it, but olur inlllions tvt never trlid IL Have iKtuf t.k or g rti for if. Tnc color Hoe, as applied to ih ugmr nblec, 1 a ciattr of rrH&rnent llwtctj iqsou Nona. !iM?t r, diiztir.taus's. hesJjscb, ar rUevd bj small o-s ul Carur s It Ue Uvr "i. Firt ctua scurltl Haadcuffs BBaaaaaaaaaaaaaK!BaBBaBaBau Uuirlocks. lksion Transcript. WmL39!mmlTmm9IRmmmW&- BV Amfs3mmmmmmWmfK.GyLr ' BrSSPP ' wjmy&Sir- Vsamh sss cw --!rsaBBaBaBaBaBaalll,'" I mWjfjLW B SBB aaBBVSC" W' 't1' $SaaBMBBBBBBBBBBBP' i yWKrWw BV BBBkr-.mBBBaBsaavC .tttlftaMlBSBBBBBBBBBBBBBa AmzLSWW nVSBBaV aBBB'BBBfiaBW BLMsriW 4S4 m it mmmttmL BBBBBBBBBBBBaBBT .HPIjBbT BsBsBaBaBBBT BBwarlPk 'fTwMt! v - sflbBBaBaBaBaBvJBBB I NSSbbI ijsaBaaaam wLW7 sss. W.sv4aelMapBa?sgB AnErVsV& '- 'a-sa-pBapntssss m-wis-j iBTBW MORY , VdAlaaBaaBvTV-vl -aBBaM -- -- B iii-a VoVcBaaaaaV OhV i h. ---f .-sr3 i .w ---. mm- 1 :i Amt, m. t aiiis, wi 1 st m -i m mttm jta - aih,a. na. y s- eat 1 lis jaw mK- ssi smi jpfri,;-- e Baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaam bbbLV SBBapaTrBaCsBBBL bH stAJmBa bbV.. JbbbBbT VbbbbbV a'fafa1 '9 rfsah sbbbbbbi?sbm aaaBaa 1 -"Who Wins thceyes-win JL-- iryou regera PEAS certainly use SAPOUO- in houee-Mafi.nSapo I io Is -k solid ce.keofacourini 30 p TVy Hq house-ckdninfl aa s.BBBaBBBB bbbbbbVsbb Hit I TTOTJ -AJEtEJ ftp sm- MsiBrfftBt 4BB gjtrouo. ALLARirSHOflEUOUWI OVDIID BBTsaSBT J rsLllmmltCOUtlMttEMMDY mm 1 Illll svaaW fWaBaaaawBWP'BmT"0P"aT 07VOMaBaaBmmBBBama' ay mm aam mrm nam mm bbj mrm awaansasaa. sWaTOSBBOavTBBBOaOOBBW Waa? afmaaafal w -as .jj sp atiani -'-mmmr rm -may aj bj mv m ma Baf BafLaafxt as S2S12 mmkmm it tm aaaaSLS SSBaanBBaVaTa m -"mWrnmrn ' " TimmmmmmmV"'' A9BBC0BSt Vjr arlfem CaaeC-ae tho arlfeaad chad I tytrl taet me smaafl trjr a sartiis.t nfe PPS'S CO GO A VsftBV' L.V. $- -sSf a -a( - Jr -Vsi- "-0" istj- ,&- AAS ?sa . .JH-S.-- IPJwJiiBir! S!3sSial3BrfllBW Tmi m mmmWmmmm -mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmW w - -mm aa am mm m ami aaaaa 'T m srsaiassissiafcfaBaBBaaBaavaaB '"- i rBam aaaaaB' Xd-Beu&yBBVaBBBBBBBBl -MBaaaaaaw bbt b bbbtl 'eaBMv aaV K mHsM V -sbbbbbbV B7,BBBBr ll VBBBBBBBBBBaa OXI5 KXJOYH JVtk th trrtWI a&I rrt!t wi SrrcoFigHtatT;UlBytat't aa4 rtttkxzu thi u a4 rtntlj jrt ptftfitUjf m tl KMaej. Jtvr as! IWswcl, gl4'T lhA j turn cavctttallr, tHMpc-k ciia, lw-at chef a4 fever s! cvm WHbI crtilpaiisa, Brmf $t l"V J ealy rrsre! f ll errr Pro iitCtU pirfog it ! IN refmUela the sto-aaek, wrtmfi t itt tscmo A imlf hraV! hlMw ent-oK fftaWl elr ftja th Bwwt hea-Uy atol ieaUa mUcaas, its mnf eicellrat im m-J it to all mad have 4e it tki nal W rvKiv kBwmv hvrufVf nktWisUkMi swl l Uti! br mil wtti(BV" gUu. Any rrfisHJe cjrsre may ?l kaVa il ea h& VSI fr care k avijdy :r any e vishea Ia try ic. 0 t amesfe aayMrNthnto. mimMA rm sm? m iMHtf. f. efsjireat,e. I Ms Pills v)lt tH SBf HI Lo-rtlnc for Brmi4 tO MlHl JOiLW BS)sjast euro th Clp, BBaa'-BBnAaYaBBBnBBfcaV1 aKraasB saWaSaal WwwfWWWw TUffHIi That houJn ttt Roll on which Io Tho ral that Io kt tho worM 1,000,000 FsffattilTlfret MLKU Its HSKT Prttf-KHi l NtftiHi itjt-'4 r-.4 ra4e mt- a " ; u . . . .. a m. J .. h.1 rurti - 4. - tH04J 0)lf st . im m., s-. t, ff O-JBBh.Ws, rsaas im p sy Biss vt"1. A) & i , you win o 9 IrffJeJaETa , ! 1 ffatcCi i--;"Ci: V , WHBftf WEt. HBWftPWL StaSaapaaaaeA aaaBZietoeafsaal WOLD MVWKWWUlUmL Mat. 4 atVini aaBmsv ataV lMh asssasMhM mmmimmmmmnmmmmmm'" faoa tSBSrikaa aaii aa ffwvvw"aw 7aas OfOtHifJ. 3i 3K"3sr- -ssissasa-BPH 1 1 SB FARMS .SBBtsraw .arasraw .asasaamsw : iillililiiili,Tt,',r aaaTsaMaaaBWPl;f "sssrs ass aaTTiyBBBEmmmsma a mm Sv .. mmmmmmmmKmmmmmLmmm):W MBBBBBIBaaBH cajBBtahaBmiasma)ataam ""t' BBB . mramamsi vm J BV z& ssasnaa 9m a aaPBaasaama.aasi BMBasBsamaasaamsmas . -- , I, i,, i MJBBJpTii i JammBamgias .. j-yJ h, amsammeaes amsam-aTs -cr- " 'JZmTt'1l-&'' - -. .-rv : t .i.?-;- .Sbr,Z 4 f ,i