4 M. BALEFUL AMUSEMENTS. Dr. Talmago on tho Fourth Plaijuo of tho Cities. Judging AmiMrmrnt According to Their Mural Klfrctft ItulnotiH I'lraiurm and Destructive Indulgences Pleat For tho Home. In lils fourth sermon at Brooklyn on the plague of the cities Her. T. Dc Witt Talmngo took for hLs subject "JJaleful Amusement." Tlic text was II. Samuel, ii. 14: "Let the young men now arise and play licfore us." He said: There are two armies encamped by the pool of Gibcon. The time hangs heavily on their hanils. One army pro jmms a game of .sword fencing. Noth ing could be more healthful and inno-wnt- The other army accepts the hallenge. Twelve men against twelve men, the .sport opens. I!ut bomething wont adversely. Terhaps one of the Hwordsmen gut an unlucky- clip, or in tme way had his ire aroused, and that which opened in .sport ended in violence, each one taking his contestant by the hair, and then with the sword thrusting him in the side, so that that which opened in innocent fun ended in the massacre of all the twenty-four sportsmen. Was there ever a letter illustration of what was true then, and is now, that that which is innocent may be made destructive? What of a worldly nature is more im portant and strengthening and innocent than amiiM'metiL, ami j-et what has counted more victims? I have no sym pathy with a straight-jacket religion. This is a very bright world to inc., and I projxise to do all I can to make it bright for others. I never could step to a dead march. A IhmIc j'cars ago is sued says that a Christian man has a right to some amusements; for instance, if he comes home at night weary from his work, and, feeling the need of recre ation, puts on his slippers and goes into his garret and walks lively around the lloor several times there can be no harm in it, I believe the church of (od has made n tremendous mistake in trying to sup press the sortf illness of youth and drive out from men their love of amiise inenL If Coil ever implanted anything in ns lb- implanted this desire, fiut in stead of providing for this demand of our nature the church of (lod has, for the main part, ignored it. As in a riot, the mayor plants a battery at the end if the street and has it fired oil, so that everything is cat don n that hapjM'us to stand in the range, tne good as well as the bad, so there are men in the church who plant their batteries of condemna tion, and tire away indiscriminately. Kvcrvlhiiig is condemned. ISut my Itible commends those who use the world without abusing it, and in the natural world God has done everything to please and amuse us. And I am glad to know that in all our cities then' are plenty of places where we may lind elevated moral entertain ment. Hut all honest men and good women will agree with me in the state ment that one of the worst plagues of these cities is eiirrnpt. niiiiiM-mcnt.s. i1 altitudes have gone down under the blasting iiiflucnre never to rise. If wo may judge of what is going on in many of the places of amusement by the Sodomic pictures on board fences, and in many of the show windows, there is not a much lower depth of profligacy to reach. At Naples, Italy, they keep such pictures locked up from indiscriminate inspection. Those pictures were ex humed from Pompeii and are not lit for public ga.e. If the effrontery of bad places of amusement in hanging out improper advertisement of what they are doing night by night grows worse in the same proportion, in fifty years New York and l.rooklyn will beat not only l'oinpoii, but Sodom. I remark, in the first place, that you can judge of the moral character of any amusement by its healthful result or by its hateful reaction. There are people who seem made up of hard fact.s. They are a combination of mul tiplication tables and statistics. If you show them an excellent picture they will begin to discuss the pigments in volved in the coloring. If you show them a beautiful rose they will submit it to a botanical analysis, which is only the post mortem examination of a flower. They have no rebound in their nature. They never do anything more than smile. There are no great tides of feeling surging up from the depths of their soul, in billow after billow of re verberating laughter. They seem as if nature had built them by contract, and made a bungling job out of it. I'.ut blessed Ik; God, there are people in the world who have bright faces and whose life is a song, an anthem, a pan of vic tory. Now it is these e.hilarant and sym pathetic and warmhearted H,ople that are most tempted to pernicious amuse Ylients, In proportion as a ship is swift it wants a strong helmsman: in propor tion as a hore is gay, it wants a strong timer: and these people of exuberant nature will tio wen to loou at tne reac tion of all their amusements. If an amusement sends you home at night nervous so that you can not sleep, and yon rise up in the morning, not because you are slept out, but Kvause your duty drags you from your slumlers, you have been w here you ought not to have Iven. There, an amusements which send a man next day to his work bloodshot, yawning, stupid, nauseated; and they n re wrong kinds of amusement. They are entertainments that give a man dis gust with the drudgery of this life with tools localise, they an not swords, with working aprons K-cause they are not roK's, with cattle because they are not infuriated bulls of the arena. If any amusement sends you home longing for a life of romance and thrilling ad venture, love that takes ioison and jdiools itself, mmmlight adventures and hair breadth escapes, you may depend upon it that yon are the sacrificed vic tim of unsanctified pleasure. Our re creations are intended to build us up: and if they pull us down as to our moral or as to our physical strength, you may come to the conclusion that they are obnoxious. There is nothing more depraving than attendance upon amusements that are full of innuendo and low suggestion. The young man enters. At first he Mts far back, with his hat on and his coat collar up. fearful that some one may know him. Several nights pass on. lie takes off his hat earlier, and puts his coat collar down. The blush that first came into his cheek when anything indecent was enacted, comes no"more to his check. Farewell, young man! You havo probably started on the long road that ends in consummate destruction. Young men who have just come from country residence to city residence will do well to lo on guard and let no one induce you to places of improper amuse ment. It is mightily alluring when a ycuug man, long a citizen, oilers to show a new comer all around. Still further: Those amusements are wrong which lead you into expenditure bevond your means. Monev spent in of recreation is not thrown away. It is all folly for us to come from a place of amusement feeling that we have wasted oxir money and time- Yon may by it have made an invotmeut worth more than the transaction that yielded you hundreds of thousands of doUats II ut how many properties have been riddled by costly amuscmeuts. The first time I ever naw the city it was the eity of Philadelphia I was a mere lad. I stopped, at a hotel and I remember in the eventide one of these men plied tne with his infernal art Ho saw I was green. He wanted to show me the sights of the town. He painted the path of sin until itlooked like emer ald, but I was afraid of him. I shoved back from the basilisk I made up my mind he was a basilisk. I remember how he wheeled his chair round in front of me and, with a concentered and dia lolical effort, attempted to destroy my noiil, but there were good angels in the air that night. It was no "good resolu tion on my part, but it was the all en compassing grace of a good God that delivered me. Howard beware! O, young man. "There is a way that seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof is death." The table has Irccn roblwd to pay the club. The champagne has cheated the children's wardrobe. The carousing party has burned up the boy's primer. The table cloth of the corner saloon Is in debt to the wife's faded dress. Kxcursions that in a day make a tour around a whole month's wages; ladies whose lifetime business is to "goshopping;" largo bets on horses, have their counterparts in uneducated children, bankruptcies that shock the money market and appal the church, and that send drunkenness staggering across the richly figured carpet of the mansion, and dashing into the mirror, and drowning out the carol of music with the whooping of bloated .sons come home to break their old mother's heart. When mun go into amusements that they can not afford they first liorrow what they can not earn and then they steal what they can not borrow. First they go into embarrassment and then into lying and then into theft, and when a man gets as far on as that he does not stop short of the penitentiary. Merchants of Ilrooklyu or New York, Is there a disarrangement in your ac counts? Is there a leakage in your money drawer? Did not the cash ac counts come out right last night? I will tell you. There is a young man in 3'our store wandering off into bail amusements. The salary you give him may meet lawful exionditures, but not the sinful indulgences in which he has entered, and he takes by theft that which you do not give him in lawful salary. How bright the path of unrcstaincd amusement opens. The young man says: "Now I am off for a good time. Never mind economy. I'll get money somehow. What a fine road! What a beautiful day for a ride! Track tho whip, and over tho turnpike! Tome, lxiys, fill high your glasses. Drink! Ixmg life, health, plenty of rides just like this!" Hard working men hear the clatter of the hoofs and look up and say: "Why, I wonder where those fel lows get their money from! We have to toil and drudge. They do nothing." To these gay men life is a thrill and an excitement They stare at other jieople, ami in turn are stared at. The watch chain jingles. The cup foams. The cheeks flush. The eyes Hash. The midnight hears their guffaw. They swagger. They jostle decent men off the sidewalk. They take the name of God in vain. Thev parody the hymn they learned at their mother's knee, and to all pictures of coming disaster they cry out, "Who cares!" and to the counsel of some Christian friend, "Who are yon?" Passing along the street some night you hear a shriek :n a grog shop, tin' rattle of the watchman's club, the rush of the police. What is the matter now? O, this reckless young man has been killed in a grog shop light Carry him home to his mother's house. Par ents will come down and wash his wounds and close his eyes in death. They forgive him all he ever did, al though he cannot in his silence ask it. The prodigal has got home at last I go further, and say those are un christian amusements which liecome the chief business of a man's life. Life is an earnest thing. Whether we were lorn in a palace or a hovel; whether we are afllueiit or pinched, we have to work. If yon do not sweat with toil, you will sweat with disease. You have a soul that is to be transfigured amidst the pomp of a judgment day; and after the sea has sung its last chant, and tho mountain shall have conic down in an avalanche of nck, you will live and think and act, high on a throne where seraphs sing, or deep in a dungeon howl. In a world where there is so much to do for yourself and so much to do for others, God pity that man who has nothing to do. Your sports are merely means to an end. They are alleviations ami helps. The arm of toil is the only arm strong enough to bring up the bucket from the deep well of pleasure. Amusement is only the Imwer where business and phil anthropy rest while on their way to stirring achievements. Amusements are merely the vines that grow alout the anvil of toil and the blossoming of the hammers. Alas for the man who sjHMids his life in laboriously doing nothing, his days In hunting up loung ing places and loungers, his nights in seeking out some gas-lighted foolery! The man who always has on his sport ing jacket, ready to hunt for game in the mountain or fish in tho brook, with no time to pray, or work, or read, is not so well tiff as the greyhound that runs by his side, or the fly bait with which he whips the stream. A man who does not work does not know how to play. If God had intend ed us to do nothing but laugh. He would not have given us shoulders w ith which to lift, and hands with which to work, and brains with which to think. The amusements of life are merely the orchestra playing while the great trag edy of life plunges through its five acts - infancy, childhood, manhood, old age and death. Then exit tho last earthlv opportunity. Knter the overwhelming realities of an eternal world! I po further, and say that all thoe amusements are wrong which lead into luid company. If you go to any place w hen you have to associate with tho intemperate, with the unclean, with the abandoned, however well they may be dressed, in the name of God quit it They will despoil your nature. They will undermine your mor.il character. They will drop you when you are de stroyed. I had a friend at the west a rare friend. He was one of the first to wel come me to my new home. To tine personal appearance he added a gener osity, frankness and anlor of nature that made me love him like a brother, lint I saw evil people gathering around him. They came up from the saloons. from the gambling hells. They plied him with a thousand arts. They seized upon his social nature and he could not stand the ehann. They drove him on the rocks like a ship full winged, shiver ing on the breakers. I used to admon ish him. I would say: "Now, I wish you would quit these bad habits, and become a Christian." 0. he would reply, I would like: I would like to; but I have gone so far I don't think there is any way back." In his mo ments of repentance ho would go home and take his- little srirl ei?lit years and a brace her convulsively, and cover her with adornments, and strew around her pictures and. toys, and everything tltat could make her liappy; and then, as though hounded by an evil spirit, he would go out to the enriaming cup and tho house of iliaaic like a fool to the j correction of the stocks. I wan sum moned to his death bed. I hastened. I entered the room. I found him, to my surprise, lying in full every day drcM on the top of the couch, I pnt out my hand. He grasped it excitedly, and said: "Sit down, Mr. Talmage, right there." I sat down. He said: "Last night I saw my mother, who has bees dead twenty years, and she sat where yon sit now. It wa no dream. I wa wide awake. Thcro was no delu sion in the matter. I saw her jost as plainly as I sec you. Wife, I wish you would take these strings off of me. There arc strings strung all around my body. I wish you would take them off of me." I saw it was delirium. "0," replied his wife, "there is nothing there, there Is nothing there." He went on and said: "Just where you sit Mr. Talmage, my mother sat She said to me, 'Henry, Ido wish you would do belter. I got out of bed, put my anus around her and said: 'Mother, I want to do bettor. I havo been trying to do better. Won't you help me tod better? You used to help me.' No mistake about it no delusion. I saw her, tho cap and tho npron and the sjK'ctielcs, just as she used to look twenty years ago, but I do wish you would take these strings away. They annoy me so. I can hardly talk. Won't you take them away?" I knelt down anil prayed, conscious of tho fact that ho did not realize what I was saying. I got up. I said: "G.kmI by, I hoie yon will be better soon." He said: "Good-by. gixxl-by." That night his soul went to tho God who gave it Arrangements were made for the oWquies. Some said: "Don't lirin'r liiiri in tin. f1.i,-j.1 II.. ....u ' dissolute." "0," I said, "bring him in; j he was a good friend of mine while ho was alive, and I snail stand by him now that he is dead Hring him to tho church." As I sat in the pulpit and saw his body coming up through tho aisle I felt as if I could weep tears of blood. I told the people that day: "This man had his virtues and a good many of them. Hut if there is any man in this audience who is without sin, let him cast the first stone at this coflln lid." On one side of the pulpit sat tho little child, rosy, sweet faced, as beautiful as any little child that sat at your table this morn ing, I warrant you. She looked up wistfully, not knowing the full sorrows of an orphan child. On the other side of tho pulpit were tho men who had destroyed him. Did they weep? No. Did they sigh repontingly? No. Did they say: "What a pity that such a brave man should bo slain?' No, no; not one bloated hand was lifted to wipe a tear from a bloated check. They sat and looked at the coflln like vultures gazing at the carcass of a lamb whose heart they hail ripped out! I cried in their ears as plainly as I could: "There is a God and a judgment day!" Did they tremble? 0 no, no. They went back from the house of God, and that night, though their victim lay in Oak wood cemetery, I am told that they blasphemed and they drank and they gambled, and there was not ono less customer in all the houses of iniquity. This destroyed man was a Samson in physical strength, but Delilah sheared him, and the Philistines of evil com panionship dug his eyes out and threw him into the prison of evil habits. Hut in tho hour of his death he rose up and took hold of the two pillared curses of God against drunkenness and unelean- liuess, and throw himself farward until down upon him and his companions there came the thunders of an eternal catastrophe. Again : Any amusement that gives j'ou a distaste for domestic life is bnd. How many bright domestic circles have been broken up by sinful amusements! The father went off, the mother went off, the chihl went off. There are to day the fragments before me of blasted households. 0, if you have wandered away, 1 would like to charm you back by the sound of that ono word "home." I saw a wayward husband standing at the death bed of his Christian wife, and I saw her ioint to a ring on her linger, and heard her say to her hus band, "Do you see that ring?" Here plied, "Yes, I see it." "Well," said she, "do yon remember who put it there?" "Yes," said he, "I put it there," and all the past seemed to rush upon him. lly the memory of that day when, in the presence of men and angels, you prom ised to be faithful in joy and sorrow, and in sickness and in health; by tho memory of those pleasant hours when you sat together in 3oiir neiv home talk ing of a bright future; by the cradle and the joyful hour when ono life was spared and another given; by that sick bed, when the little onu lifted up the hands and called for help, and you knew ho must die, anil ho put ono arm n round each of your necks and brought you very near together in that dying kiss; by the little grave in Green wood that you never think of without a rush of Tears: by the family Hible, where, amidst stores of heavenly tore, is the brief but expressive record of births and deaths; by the neglects of the past and the agonies of the future: by a judgment day, when husbands and wives, parents and children, in immor tal groups, will stand to lie caught up in shining array or to shrink down into darkness; by all that I beg you to give to home your liest affections. Ah my friends, there is an hour com ing when our past life will probably pass licfore us in review. It will be our last hour. If from our death pillow we have to look back and sec a life spent in sinful amusement there will be a dart that will strike through our soul sharper than the dagger with which Virginias slew hLs child. The memory of the past will make us quake like Macleth. The iniquities and rioting through which we have passed will come upon us, weird and skeleton as Meg Mcrrilies. Death, the old Shylock,, will demand, and take, the remaining pound of flesh, and the remaining drop of blood; and upon our last opportunity for repentance, and our last chance for Heaven, the curtain will foevcr drop. Hrr r of Scripture At one of the teachers institutes held a few years ao in Maine a rule was in force that whoever entered the room ing session late should pause at the door and recite a passacc of Scripture, a quotation from some poet or other expression of an idea for the edification of those present at the session. There was present at the session a plain little old maid ("unappropriated hlcssinps' 1 believe, they call them now) who was continually sayinjr and doinsr inappro priate things. It seemed to come natu ral to her. She was late one morning, was this "unappropriated blessing," and pausing on the threshold she electrified thoe within by remarking suavely: "I loTe those that love me, and those that seek me early shall find me. Lewiston Journal. Mrs, de Kscop! "Yes, Marie is very religions, though quite a society girL Winkle Ah, yes; what one might term churdgoing belle. Y. HerahL Class ia Metaphysics. Preceptor "You have used the phrase, "as ooen secre secrc eU' Give an csamplo of aa orxsai .T7' - mwr aa focnd.cn ct. Iipil "A ratra. Xobodr ! Tnf ti:cJ' to contain fnxn two vs tvhat it rallv is." " t UllnIs to thrce-fmtxtS ot the crraai. knows Dc Mascus 4l5 it trno that Jaflr Is oil on a "blovr-ontr St. AffrOore lartlj trse, yes. He's deaO. "Hcvf U!cr oct the gas." St. Joseph Xtus. AGRICULTURAL HINTS. HURDLE FOR SWINE. Aa Ksrellrnt 1'lan for the !a taring of Mtrrp and I'l. I beg to smrgest a plan which I have used for pasturing lioth sheep and ptffa If the pigs have lecn used to control, or are well ringed, as they should be when pastured, a hurdle light enough lor sheep will answer equally well lor them. The hurdle may be made of '2 by 4 chestnut upright and 1 by 0 bars. They may Ihj 10 feet long ami made in tliis shape: The three lower boards are b inches apart and a barlnsl wire is stretched between the low est tw o. No pig over a month old will get through this fence. Tlie hurdle is solid and durable and will last many years. A lot of them may be carried on a low-wheeled wagon or a sled, and set up and fixed in the ground very quickly. I have set up with the help of one man U00 of them in a short day, which will give a double lino acros a 'JO-ncre field. I say a double line, ticcaiis this is necessary for the economical feeding off of a crop of clover. The field Ink ing laid out in this way, in narrow strips, with two lines of hurdles lot 1 is first foil off, and then lot "J; the line 1 j is then moved so as to inclose lot 3, and so oil to the end. This is necessary to let lot 1 grow up again. The ten loti will give two acres or more in each, which should feed a god many hogs lor a week, more or less as t he pasture is heavy or light, giving ample time for the herbage t o lie renewed lie fore the end is reached, and the feeding is lieguii again on lot 1; or the field may lie divided up ami down in the center by one fence, and smaller lots laid off by double lines as In-fore; th n, when one-half the Held is fed off, the other half is fed. beginning next to , the last one -thus returning to the head ' of the field and beginning again. I have found that by tins mellio! tiuee times as much feeding may lie had from a field as by pasturing tho whole at at once, as the waste is scarcely ob servable, while if 'JO hogs were turned into a UO-acre field ut once, in a week the whole field would be t nun pled over and half the herbage spoiled. Hy painting the hurdles with tar mid using them carefully, they will last twenty years. To set them, I have used a square M)intcd bar, with which holes are made in the ground in the right spots, as the hurdle is held half-upright by an as sistant The holes are made small, and when the hurdle is set up, the points enter and are driven down by a few blows of a maul on the ends of the posts, but not on the lioanis. Tho ends of the hurdles are wired together in two places, and to a stout stake driven in the ground, by which they are supported, (juiet sheep will not at tempt to jump over a fence of this kind, which will 1m- fifty or fifty-two inches high, and it will restrain any sized pigs over thirty days old. -II. Mewart, in Country Gentleman. RIDDLING THE SOIL. An l-i-y .lull When Von limm .!ut How to Do It. The method referred to i.s tin shown in our engraving. It consist having a handharrow or other rece ele to receive the prepared soil, this a sieve that is an inch or so w than the barrow should bo placed slide uimui it. After the sieve is al two-thirds filled with unsifted soi is worked quickly back and forth 1 person at one end 01 tne narrow, ti. its contents are properly riddled. The task is a quick and easy one. two persons engage in it, one to vih the sieve, the other to shovel in fcr?? 8IMTI.K DKVICK roll KIIUiUNO SOlI compost from the heap and to a.ssist in emptyino; the barrow when full on the lott"me; Iieneli or elsewhere, it takes: hut a short time ti riddle a larjje amount of soil, provided it is in a .suita ble condition for the operation. To sift well, oil should lie moderately dry: the presence of some sand in it will help much. Popular (nnlcniii";. AMONG THE POULTRY. Onion tops cut tine make a good green food for pmltry at this time. Sirr the hens now as soon as they are ready, providing them a warm place. Ir feed for the young ixmltry must ! purchased millet seed can Iks used to a good advantage. As A general rule it will not le found Wst to attempt to keep more than fifty hens in one house. A iikn that is scared off her nest every time anyone approaches should not be used for hatching. Hens are often obliged to leave their nests on account of lice: it is important to keep a lookout for them. Limkwatkk will not only often cure indigestion, but also often cure the hens of laying soft-shelled eggs. Old plaster kept where the hens can help themselves will furnish the mate rials to manufacture shells. At this season hot ashes from the coal stove will aid to maintain health if sprinkled under the roosts. Kc.c.s. whether used for hatching or cnt to market, should always be clean. The shells are porous and readily ab sorb filth. The mangers can often be cleaned out with the refuse thrown where the poultry can pick it over; they will find many seeds. Milk for Calrr n4 tike Om. A Canadian exchange tells how one of its readers manages u get feed for calves and at the same time milk rich for the churn, as follows: At xailking time two large vessels ate put outside the barn door, one marked "dairr and the other "calves. One-half ol the milk given by each cow, that drawn first, is put into the vessel marked "calves, and the other half, that last drawn. Is put into the vessel marked I The caKes hare th adrnntae of behj ft TTltK ?ni?V -rl-m fnw. ). ". the xuse thne ther ant rrared at a raod- ".. w... . tJ7. m.i. erate cost, as thea- allowance of miUs does not contain ranch crrasj. I i 'it' 1 1 i ym c i 1 3 " i 1 m I lBs LUCRETIA BORGIA. That LVtrbrltjr wa i'mltahlj a rj :l Mriiiiwnnnn. The distinguished art critic and his- tortan of renaissance. M. Charles Yriarte. has attempted in the Figaro what may be called the rehabilitation of Lucreiia llorjria- Thanks to Victor Hugo and Donizetti, the public in general nas not a very iii;jn opinion oi i t . . . J the daughter of Pope Alexander VI. I he sister of ttesar Hrgia. Hut all tgb so-called history runs a Mroug nt of legend, which N apt to sweep awny me tacts ami leave a suiiraium f of fancy "Was Lucrvtia Itorgia really a Mcsahna and a Julia? asks M. narte. "holding the cup of pnm I m w ,, t rrawxly for all liivrsv of wntb ono hand and the poniard with I the Wood, l.vcr, kidncj,cU-.tPri-klj Au the other?" If wc study tho annalists , Hitur. It t purely a tnoiictno ami every ,i . i . ,..-.. i articlfl iimsJ in tl manufacture I of Tct of the .nod-Uregormious. for in- ' aWcortfIfc vf knolva oorallTcqua.iUos. stance -we find no trace of oisou or pomarti. no more than ol improper lore at most ! vi ii lote letters, written to Uorgia I.-! and cardinal, which Kn glisli misses may read without the u of a fan. in the glavs case of the Am hrosiaua of .Milan, where also is pre served piously the lock of hair l.forv which Hyron went into ecstasies Lu cretia Horgia was married at 13 to a nephew of the Sforza. Giovanni, lord of Pesaro. w ho was '..V. On hi" to the ir ruptiou of the French into Italy, soon after their union m I JU3. t;ie course o( sihlics c.itis:d an annulment of the marriage, to wlneh the Vatican lent it.setf ith Hie cynical molality of the eHH-h. To revenge himself the outraged bus band lau?i bed againt Lucretia'sfathei a frightful accusation, which may Ik- egarded as the foundation of subse quent lej'etids The young ln--ulty lc came henceforth the shuttlecock of jxditie.s IJeilig in need of the alliance of Aragon, who was leigiiing at Naples, the l"-'pc made a union lntvecii his daughter ami a natural vin of Alphoiise I IL. king of Naples. He was reputed to bo the handsomest prinre of Ins day in Italy, 1-1 ng at that time 17 and his wife bo-an, of age Owing to the jealousy of Luen-tia s brother f.i-s.ir Horgia. the handsome Alphoiise was strangled in the apartments of his father-in law, Alexander VI In IfiiH) Lueretia w wld rd for the third time another Alphoiise, son of Hercules, duke of l-'eimia At that tune she was -, ami iMnaincil to her death, seventeen yeais later, the "pea 1 1 of spomes," Apait from the Meeting breath of scandal, which at Irihuted to the princess two lovers at the comt of Ferrara, the chioi.iclcrs find nothing whereof to accuse the gohlc n-haiicd lieanly So (says M Yriaite) that wo are foieed to tho con clusion that all her manifold wicked ness must have lu'en committed lielwccn tin ages of i:; aud?i. a supposition not easily credible even in that piucoclous ejMich. t hicago Times A I'lto-iit 'iiiiw rulliii:llt. Mr Mm ray Hill. -Ii - lfnt father, this young lady 3011 want mo to marry stutters ibe.idfiilly Mr Mm 1.0 Hill. Sr.-That makes no dilTcieneo Mic is rich, and after you are married a lit'le you will find that she x' ill talk f:.st cuoii'-h to suit you Texas Sift tugs Kditor--"Mr. Scribbler. I w i.,h you would get up a littlcdcpartment headed I'hildien's Sayings.' anil fill tt full of the biighte I little mots you can pick up" Mr Seribblei -"Veiy sorry, sir. but my children arc all away on 't visit and " Kditor 'Then collect the blight things you hear said by other M-opleschildicu Mr Scribbler- "I I never hear oMiei oplo's children say anything woitb piinting." Iv-'ciiiiig iseotisiu KiTrur. attention is rilled to l!ii silver liseiueiilof the Klkhnrt I'arnae and liar ic.ss.Mfg Co., Klkhart, Indiana Tlicj are well ami favorably known all over thecoiin-ti-.,iiiid purchases s csin eoiiliilentlv rely upon fair dealing in all tln-Ir trans'iclloii-. 'I hoy sell to coiistiiuci at wholesale prices, and ship anywhere for ouiiiinuliuii ln-foic ight Fay. T 44cf 4sj KVi: No. V . . . S7 ss KlAiLIt I'iitentH. per uncle . J 3.1 U J ,V) Kancy 2 10 tt 2 IS IIAV ll.deil 'Ut si 10 in IIL'TTKK-Cholco creamery . VT. it 27 C'llKKsK 1'ull cream ti 10 KiaL-s-Chulce. Jiijrf 11 ItACU.V llioni 10 11 liooltltra I w ii klilva U re Im HO. . ... t'l'i I. ruTATOKS- 1 f a 1 2J ST. MM.'IS. eATTI.B Slilliplns-teer-i.... 4 01 0 i 01 Iliiteliiri' nwri .. so w I o llfiHS I.irkiiiK B II HIIKKl' Knlr tuHiolcu ' tt 6 50 Klit'l-C'lioice aM y WIIKAT No. 2 mf. 1 inv 1 0li C1IKN Nu.2 WU '7 OATS No. 2 tl tt 5itj nK-No. 2 16 t5l HITTKI Creamery Si tt 31 fOltK 11 2J tt II J7 Ml CHICAGO. CATTI.K Plilpplnxtccr.... 3 M e 5 15 lions rnrkltisaml xliljiin 151 0 4 IS RIIKKI'Kair to choice 4 (rt tt 5 M FLOWK Winter wheat. 4 U 5 Ol WHEAT No. 2 nil 101 t 102 CO KX No. 2 CHjrf Mi OATS No. J .! H KYVV-No. 2 H. tt i llCTTKi: Crt-aincry 25 31 rOUK 11 JO tt 11 50 NEW VOKK. CATTLE Cnuitnon to prln.o. M i 0 nm;s;04i to choice sw zv, FllUIt fiiHMl to choice ...... 4 10 tt IM WIIKAT So. J red 1 I55.tt J I? COKS No.? 71 tt 6 OATS Western rnUnl V, tt Ci P.CTTEK Crenuicrj- 21 O 1 fOUK 11 10 C 12 O If You Have 1fMptt.t. IWIctlM. ristalesee. Nlrh Hrarfarhr. -mil rmm 4wa, ! tar nk, ja mUl ttm Tutt's Pills laraiaxa at4. TVr iaea tffe mmmU atna-a aa4 aall4 ap lb flan lac carrclt. mtfrn Iwmtm Maial r y alral auinfc alll fla4 rUrrraaB Uca. 3(lrlxaacar vmlw. SOLD KVKKYWHERE. i LrB.!) M rat Tafr tm tat iK. City Carrageens it .- J frt.-7 ff mrcaJti. lr b4!J' rvert ta -r ! f (ClLarr 4 tlr i'sraxi-lwx Wrtt II fr ifea- UMt CkUVvc' !Earr tA. Tor. Tm. Itrtrlr. frtK3k -MV TVry w litrt o j T.aMiifM-t0-rrr4rra4Tr . 4. BABY CaBHIACC CO.. trrtcat ft. lX Hata B4!. OCT. I itHTKirtnti BEECHAM'S PILLS NiWEUSTOIUI. 25 Cents a Box. or AU UCCMTS. I FLAGS w. siMLHti i k. S3STH;iASSL IPP I AKUASS JT - i r Wa. i ,.,, t.-m I ' latfLTTMrr ftOOO I I A i aaTaa BI aaaa -mtn " I Trip I'n trrtakr tar Health' -k. I Wld I rendcrc! mora beneficial, and tho ; faUp-, of travel rinintrnwtt!. f the i TovnCcf will tat aleiic wits him Ho-Ot ur SuB.K-h Hitter, and uthat protect lvi and rnahlimr toma. nenre inrurriraat and ai'jvtucr rrjruUrljr Impolitic in air and water ncctnUUcd bjr ll. ami it l a matcblc IrainjuiHjer and mralator tf H-Unauw-h, bverand bowel. It counteract malaria. r!r!inaUtn. awl a tcmlcacr U kidney a ad Wilder alimcul. Fun BnVer-"Whal ha Nvomo of that I tn-w-errr lr of jourf Ho vt krarr than dtxuh ecoml ilroker -"Yes tf , fcli trwbW- ll -k .'-- MfcST pcoplo think ibal x rronl Blw -LeiV eun s untl ooljr In O'OMVtu.u with - t..i... ...!.. Iafc... TS Ik .i fr?l Tn opera tiijr who r3rhe- tho high nouvt must hare u invar threat PltUburtfit Dispatch. A Jtr.w l.V for practical irtv planter Is thus tfuilnrvrtl ljr Oramw Jm.I.I. The entire tx.lc Uabb. written. and i;e lruty information for all who khiw Iruii j orunv wrt or kin.L Suric liro . uurerj men, luilana, Mo . will ml u free U all micro led -OrauKC Juuil rarn.tr ItrniJ ought Ut N? a nool place for tiper, for It I a city ahaj on U.o hiprr, llotin tiiupttr. It wtm.'itrani'-cthat anvonenitl continue to suffer from the many lib arising Iumi a slate of fchl tmpuriiv when lr J..I01 Hull's Saraurill-i will restore flcvt health anil slreocih It is a wtotderful viver ll makes the old J eel joaD(c,ua ttejoUb feoi buo)aul It rouM lr it ml unnMor.ab!t woman who 11 ho u Id itiMiiaud of her 4ttv!uan kver that be rdiouh! plve up his club lkUin Trait script "I nvr rices- trrurrcnwith in ifffs'tlon of ttio Throat from childhood, taused hj diphtheria, and hao used aruj remisJies hut have never found an) thing op..l Ui Hhous.s Hhomiiiu. Tit.H-iits - Itcv ti M K Uaui'iluii, Pikutnu Ky Sold ouij in Ik'XCs AC oitruso to the doctrine nt the nrTlval of tho ntb"t. tho lat nuin will undoubtedly bo a tailor.- HivhoMer 1 ulWmaa - Witrs' Isihbmv Kleetru Sr.tp tv.i flrt mado In lsiVt it eut "Jl ttnl i ir ll U rt cttru the same ingicdiciit and ipial t n.or nu, il'-ss't't rl ti f Ituv it of Mini criKt'i aud preserve 1 our clothes. If Uc hain't it, Im will ett it A axon plutift are probubly tho tt on which to aervo hot cannon balU. Uolou Herald. Ir vmi are toed tak.U the large.old f.ish iniieil 1,' 1 1 pi ut; pilU ti y Carter's Little l.Uer Pills and take some comfort A inauinu't luiidctcr.)lhtiig. Unopill adoso. Tr ilu-tu - - Plows nro not ahvays exchacpsl whoa vou itriho un acquaintance. 1 MtlnburKh liUpatell. Hoi isor c,cd little children. wnrii nro making (hem miserable Mothers eel them iih.il of lb Hull Worm iK'stlOcia Chll drui like them Tim world never situ down twice on a man who hu-s any point ubuut blm Milwaukee HentliioL l)o soi put go nor weaken the bowcln. but nctsMVi.illvuii ihohvorandhilc. A tiorfisrl liver con i.s. tor Carter' Little Liver Pill Tur locomotive fireman, no matter how hh;h ho rises, ulwaa has tender rccollec lioni. Pittsburgh Post, Tine Public Awards the Palm to llidc' Honey of I Ion hound and Tnr for rotichs Pike's Toothache Uropi Curciiioiiumtuulo - To lie a aiicrmi a !sla water fountain must le n first class tlwk ljluliojnlou Heptibllcuu. - - Tur. hosti-oui'li mtslielne l PImi's Cure for OiiisumpUou Sold everj where !iV Copyright. !. JTt xcho cai( for an in.ictivo liver to do its work, exposes himself to all tho dwasrs that come from tainteil Mood. Don't wait! Languor and Iom of ajipetito warn yon that graver ills are closo ln?hind. You can keep them from coming; you ran cure them if they've como with Dr. Pierce' Golden Medical Discovery. It'fl tho only blood and liver mcrfi eine that's guaranteed, in every a to benefit or cure Your money back if it doesn't. Thus, you only pay for tho good you get. Can you aslc more? It cleanse tho hVBtcm and cures pimples blotches, erup tions and all skin and ncalp dis- j cases. ScrofuIotH affections, an fever - pores, hip - joint di-aw, swellings and tumors yield to ita ftuiierior alterative propcrtie. ritnat itnu ii am oitiui ! i DR. OWElf'B ELECTRIC BELT Cur Oia Wltnout Mmclcin. tnt i.ooe tutivhius ncirm tii phi tiu tinam Ii.. I l1 f irtir Urmi Mwaw .vJvivr rTrn.T r , .. WEN'S tUCTklC KIT A - . i t t" vttt i iililif . IiIoti U !. Ti Tnlll r n mtt pmfllth limy BUVtrtrtltTDCHlT f !. .') !! riwia lawMtwM aau mrr mm -m Ir.Owwn', ELZCTTUC I VMLXS. Tr tX T . Itmrrf mm a4W Mm. Tmn a ar rmrvaca. m i . rmr m owiw tiKTaUc silt imuict ce I'aawttJaaatarj MM . f. ST. LOUIS. MO. THIS IS THE ROLL CSTAO. isst. on which is wound Yh Braid that is known tho world around. WALL PAPER. W kaa a mair S mi tt tM mm mttt -ri fa Mm M la krw-rl yrto Ivt mnitM . - - - '( ts mma-r ' Hf"" urr ; Haw; Jf"l Imt I DKt aia(a pw nli. V mr. m4 ar ".! yrn vw r aa mm mrr jmtm-r fr mt C9Ct7;-rrm, rrctaarf aaj . tt fta 111 W. a. ivoxo, Ittt Gra4 JLmw . faaaa tHf. Ma. Sa t mTtm. r mm. fm, mm. SOtUrG WATER OR MiUC aVaVant; in I all T r-aataTafaaaTaV I kW . but. !; . 'Li".-77h-iT- I vaaaaflbaaaT. Vr-aTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaV I IWiin i;:AS tarn rBuSEPPS'S GrlATEFUC-COMFOrrriNG. O aO mf aO AliunUmmiMuu.if.;-li a a mm a mm a aaf lTaaF mmmmW m.ff am I " mmv mw a I SttMsQil BRUISES, FROST-BITES, INFLAMMATIONS AND ALL HURTS AMD ILLS J)F MXN AND BEftST. SELL MUSIC -"'' z'ir ?::: Ktoui i musical moitmly. ! t4 fa c 9 - 1 g 11 W tii. U l..lr. -. WMallMMIkm Ml tril. auMIIU, ! It 4 ;.. rut tan rtu mm rH A cough or cold a snv which has 1? stealthily otnc inside the lines, ot health and is (here to dis cover .some vulncr- ahlc point in tho fot ideation of the constitution which U ii.itilit your well-being That point discovered the spy icpoits it to the enemy on the outside. The tnemy is the changeable winter climate H the cold gets in. look out lor an attack at ',c weak point lo avoid this, shoot tlu: spy. kill the cold, using SCOTT'S EMULSION of pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil and I IvjMiphoNphue; ol Lime and Soda as the weapon. It is an expert cold slayer, and foi titles the svstein agatn-t LH3,umptwn Scrofula, General Debility, and all Aturmit and Wasting Diseases specially tit Children). INpoially helplul lor children to prevent then taking cold. Palatable as Milk. Sa'fU'lAt.. Volt Hmnlilon l . f !. r.t ( trwtrst Uf IS Vrdlxtt tV tritlon U uxr tli war 1.1 ! M .irllil t iIM. 4ir t.tJ lit Mk a llialll.pi 1 1 j;ir4lly In. Ir vr Oir.l (! 4ial lw I' f riOS - S,..M leu H ll J' .1 n u!h.i . . r ' .t-.i l mi I Mlhrcoinn I'lrjsunJ Mj I j V 11 A !. Mhh(. I'.i.hk I. " .!. S'w Yl4, cvEur WATERPROOF COLLAR or CUFF THAT BE UP TO THE MARK NEEDS NO LAUNDERINO. CAN THE ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF COLLAR IN THE MARKET. THE ELKHART cirruge m huhhess mfc Mo. 1 Farm Harness. r. I Vrr k Jmtr4 ttyt -r t?A ?;n JmI'i h.u WklalikHr. " Hi wiir -t 'tmxmt4 imt in tfM 'if UfM' i rrlM fcwr I- "r i( 4 Si t lli"MM ff- MA.M mkUtiM. I. intM W tun 11 t (, Tn - p - . ajto I T !!' Ia. aW I )nafllMlf ) rr4.IIOl ' fU llmnll'srl jkww. ft Wt uX. mil rli OUR An fl !. I mami rAftt nifHM.WflltMMi4JNMIMB me. 41 Wait tSO arulr rtnimr j. l m ' 1SE THRESHING MUCH CO., IRONSIDES AGITATORS HORSB POWERS, Wlf10lrC TMCKaX. TREAD POWERS an. SAW FRAMES, SAW MILLS ari ENGINES. TTtry ir Vr 4Wa4 f Alt f Karri la Uw4 r (?! rt mitmm ) I - i?-fwt lUltrt l miYjua. A fru I vetUki. Yu ViiA in Uc llrcfl tt M. twi r-joU. It U an Oistnnt. of wfifh tuUU. I'IXK.Ujt rvisi uj AUtrA. What 1? 'The Library of American Literature wf3jjnM9tMimilmH C. L lUSTE luutMlinii LIVE STOCK CUTS. We wtU 9p- LIVE STNI CT mS.f trikT Ol ier la VUjt, at IfW vacant ?r lot A. M. XELLOCC EWSAfEir CO K .V rTT. J. BORE WELLS ! .M,VIC K i .,.., UIlI a PJI sa WW aa 9 m t7 aac . -a..urLTKa rarrT. r fcT ' mmmw mtmw rILt A.f mmf ( la-a ta a tutiaim m-mxt 1JI45 i ITlaU, TIFFIM. OHIO. iraKaaa AS MffTOHHI PACIFIC lit aa. f trnmlmir tjmmAmmmmsWmmmmmmXmmmW -mm a-a a U-.fi. aa tmrt, Immm- Um.ur.m.M..tt.rmmumm. it - . . --. . t . " r i?5 1--" " - r o. vrnwcm J5-1. a rroa a MtKvj fW ba'a mmm BBmBmaaSaBaT BBaaaamaaV a3SlWf-C; aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaCrV'aa mmmmlmmmmmmmmmmmmmmWrSm aTaail P Hrrrczrmtinwa IBjaaaa Wmm,,!- ,a w- gant tm-Mtn. ' n ' tMmi Mstt C L Tarf. The Soap that Ci cans Most L is .Lenox. CAN MI RELIED ON ! ULAKS this mark. TRADE ssflfl'B fl H Ea. j L. j"5L rcV r ul H mm ELLULOID Mark. BI WIPED CLEAN IN A - 4lr wHk W ft Ml ! bTfl U W (! "'Hi .jtaaaaHL. tUxWfkJ ONE PRICE ONLY Tarfflag 4afcl .Aar-Taaftj . rrla aa V I a t-aa aua at h9 -ii m 4 -l-l.l. w mtimttt. MbwV !.. V J'"f ' f HARNESS Oak I Miber. T71S65 ffiaSIBfcai 'VL.LI srsuz. r4alr. Mt UtiK IJaM Uafcl. . -iKTiSaa; 8 I. mfi, Sk7j, EllIUIT, MU tir.n or Wk tmi UtUlilj 4 !(. tKKK. cji!l njM ta fcftitinl lr V nvi t f nt rr va, K. T lUmt x. wfw. f. 9 r rcr. tfTr. Ml Tl Mllwil i W . 3 btf 14 ST , Kl TWJ. T mmtlmrmml tm'mm mm m-r4 Taijaar r g.-wraCata.j. , mmAm a V. a . . Umnmrm aal.aw uJ0 t-m &m imtr-v mm, Mm. liMilbMaaAbrMr I ta Um ta M r-i 4aa. mtmm .m.-fmwm. IOlaIWIlH, tm If aa 9. THt. Ufl.. mrmtMtmftmm. mm aiil LESSflK II -ro-- BUSINESS $1.00 aaaa- fa raai..a al ia mtt Pa at. a ar mmwvi frmmmx rott oiwm. J awnrMurra OKLAHOMA HOMES. Tm i-mm - a4 T maniltiM ar. Urn 9-i t. t-t&2 tmm mvtmCm pr a.1 TV .r-rm Vaili iiniiif i-. 'ni tit Sturwri uwin Vmm mmU. T)iiurii aa. j w ija. xhut ;fri i ??? Mtmt.lUwkl .V iwr ' 6at VUMMia mWLWmWmW aaCaS aaaVaVat Ma-aaaaai aaa- aaaaaF a w aaraa aaary aaa aamvaaaaaj taara liria y at aVa3rNM . m mtt atrawa a-X i m,mmnrm3m mmtt?mm,;rCwmnm lamfm. mm trnu J. bKaTltY taWt. S fcaa Ja8ia,fe- n-v n tw I-C O r sum- a. ?. co. '" "i33. ararr OTa T a. aa 4V mmtm-immmm lmdk Miff ft L V 1 aaVranf9nsi 100 IasThmaEI Crtilagm mmmtmmmm. laSW Jl Bar ' awapw. atl ., raa mil mM mm.tr aj Ba Wt! j BMlhtM m, m tm-m-rmma-mm a mmS. . ! SJ " gamualiaaa.aataa..a.aai.a SJ 'J laALLEOWLS.7lSOf.Y. I fZtm&? I ta aa yaaacra