{ title: 'The Northern tribune. (Gouverneur, N.Y.) 1895-1929, August 06, 1895, Page 6, Image 6', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070443/1895-08-06/ed-1/seq-6/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070443/1895-08-06/ed-1/seq-6.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070443/1895-08-06/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070443/1895-08-06/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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NORTHER ff TRIBUNE, <K)TJVBB 4. —At this atttKtt when » burg* portion of the is journeying zither by land Bee. Dr. Talma?*, who i s stiil Oil Ida nudstunjufr jin-ach tog and chosen a* tht snb^r Ms sermon for today. Mao Ot-r the text t*iD£ Jtmah t. f \S cant* fc him and said > him: What xn**n**t thou, O ilttr Arise, call spun thy God, if so U- ; God will think cpoc OK, that *> *!< to Ifo into **thr tpimi to be,\ or la«t.n*: now \ or \Us* infinite What is it. ELs *»'cJ is 10 duty and the wind is \bJuwiog great cries, M Crv«rboard with the ttn- believer!' A spies*. Hefroe* tothe hot- tom. H* paid #V for his ticket to Tar afciah whwi he boo#ht the infidel books. Be landed u. perdition. wiU God told Junah tc sjnnnpliiaasiiit errand Ht*wrrcldDOT g\ fle-fhoaght to |rK away froiL bis duty I*/ nmtstnjr to ana. With pat-It under hi* sjni I find him cm fci* war u Joj'pa. s seaport He **** dowc anjciofr the *iuf- ntng and says to the mt-t KIL# around ssj the dock*. ''Which of thee* T«B*^ satis today ? ' The 8a: lor* aL>V% er. *' Y OD - fisr i s a v*s*el flrauf; r< Tarnhifh. I think V yon hurry y«.«n may pt on t**rd her. step* on bt*rci the ncsrh craft. Every fartz.i&jr you ipend in sin satan will swindle yon oat of. He promises yoo shall bare 30 per cent or a great dividend He ilea. He will *:nh ail the capital V\C may pay full fare to some »:nfu« »n<<r*«» ttt nn will never gn to Taj>bui:. .LCATL how t»»uiid3y men will sleep in the n.id*t of Ci4ii#rer. The wr*rit *iimar on t^fi.'^Ueyd. <x*i* )d«-n ii*' tb«- bfrbt he ha<t vw J«na^ He w&» a m**mb*-r of tb* cho/ch. wr.iie they were heathen. The naili'i> w^-re tsxgajrxl m their law- } ful ca^liii^r f« .*nwin# the sea. The mer- NiDereh uu j chant* on fc««ar<i. I euppuae, were fring I down u T;oi-,Kh to barter, but Juciah. Dt.twitiu'tAiiUiLp hi« Christian prof**- *KHi wa* flyiLs from dot v. He was f*«cn<1 a#le«-p u. t&e cabin He has been m titaJeas fvT /«oors—his arms and feet ;L ti:<- hame flatter* a» when he lay dcwL—hi* breast hearing with deep respiration. Oh. how ounld he sleep! What if the ship strock a rock? What if it sprang aleak T Whet if the clnmsv Whet safes how moch the fare is. aiid pays it anchor is wei^he<i. KA:1> are h*-iKted. Md the rising k*>r:ri^ x<- raftie in the iron? bre**ze t»f the Al^itrrranean- (oppa is ao expoM^d barber i&d it dt** 0t take Ice? for the re^.«»e] t< pet on the road sea. The s*:>«r> ::ke vhat they all a **spank:i:** t«reeze.\ and the feoff (if the V^.M-I tr- m the creet of a HI wave i- t xi::larat:L? U thc*e ac exoe i n the deep. Bu: tire utrco? breese sraomev a ?ai«. the pitle a hoiTicaDe. be affrighted jw^ecp-rs ask the cap- in if he ever Kaw tiuythm? like this & ore- * 4 Ob, yes.*'he K»TK J *Tbis is noth- (. \ Mariner* are frlow to admit dan* r to laxid-iuen. Bet after awhile sah g(** the mast, and the reesel fcches s o far \abeatu'i end'* there ii a tr Che will not be righted. 'The cap- • answers few questions, and order* i throwing out of boxes and bandies 1 of so moch of the cmrgt> as they can ; at The captain at last confesses re is but little hope and tells the •eageri that they had better go t o lying. It i s seldom that a sea captain in atheist He knows that there ii a 1 for he has seen him a t every point latitude between Sandy Hook and jeastown. Captain Moody, command- the Cuba- of the Ctznard line, at Son- aerrioe led the music and sang like athodist The captain of this Medi- nean craft, having set the pasaen- to praying, goes around examining seaaeJ at every point He descends the cabin to aee whether in the f wrestling of the ttiw the vesael •prang aleak, and be finds Jonah fc Jonah had had A wearisome ) and had spent many sleepless i about questions of doty, and he Kmnd asleep that all the tanadar > atom and the screaming of the igers does not disturb him. The in lays hold of him and begins to him out of his unconsciousness the cry: \Don't yon see that we 11 going to the bottom? Wake-trpj o to praying if you hare any God to. What meanest thou, O sleep- Lrise, call upon thy Gtd, if so be Sod will think upon us. that we mot\ Thereat of the story I will hearse, for you know it well To is the sea they threw Jonah over- oriental craft should capsize w old become of Jonah? JSo men sleep soundly now amid perils infinite. In almost every place, I sup- pose, the Mediterranean might be sound- ed, but oo line i> ksog enough to fathom the profound beneath every impenitent man. Plunging a thousand fathoms down, you •cannot touch bottom. Eter- nity beneath him, befure him, around him! Recks close by and whirlpools and hot breathed Levanter*. Yet sound asleep! We try t o wake him up, bot fail The great surges of warning break over the hurricane deck, the gong of warning sounds through the cabin, the bells ring*. \Awake!\ cry a hundred voices. Yet sonnd asleep in the cabin- In the year 1 T?5 the captain of a Greenland whaling ve*#»el found him- self at night snrrt'unded by icebergs sod \lay to* f until morning, expecting ev- ery moment to be ground to pieces. In the morning he looked about and saw a ship near by. He hailed it No answer. Getting into a boat with some of the crew, he pushed out for the mysterious craft Getting near by, he saw through Bfsdl than, O sleeper? •rise. thy God, if so be that God upon as* thai we perish If yoahavvaGod. you had better call *po» him. Do you say, \I have nc God?\ Then yo« had bet^r oall upon yottr father's God. When your father was in tzaetofe, whoa did he fly to? Ycc heard him in his old days taU abou? some terrible exposure in a snowstorm ' or at sea, or In battle, or among mid night gairotars, and how he escaped Perhaps ¥0 years before you were born your father made sweet acquaintance with God There is something in the worn page* uf the Bible he wed to read which m*ke« you think your father hao a God. In the old religions books hying around the noise, here marked with a lead that make -yrm thmk your father was not a godleas man, but that, on that dark day when he lay i n the hack room dying he was ready—all ready. But perhaps your fatner was a bad man— prayer less and a blasphemer and you never think of him now without a shod der. He worshiped the world or his own appetites. Do not then, X beg of you. oall upon your father's God, but call on your mother'• God I think she was good. You remember when your fa- ther came home drunk late on a cold night, how patient your mother was. You often heard her pray. She used to sit by the hour meditating as though she were thinking of some good, warm place, where it never gets cold, snd where the bread does not fail, and stag- gering steps never come. You remem- ber her now a s she sat in cap and spec- tacles reading her Bible Sunday after noon. What good advice she used to give you! How blavk and terrible the hole in the ground locked to you when with two ropes they let her down to rest in the graveyards Ah, I think from your looks that I am on the right track. Awake, O sleeper, and call upon thy mother's God. But perhai* both your father and mother were depraved Perhaps your cradle was rocked by fin and shame, and it is a wcjoder that from such a starting you have come to respectabil- ity. Then don't call noon the God of either of yt»ur parents, I oeg of you. Th* G«»4 of Thy CaJUtra. But you have children. You know God kindled those bright eyes and rounded those healthy limbs and set beating within their breast an immor- JHm'knllVtST 80*0. the porthole a man at a Ft*nd, as though 1 **H*T **rbap* i\ the belief that some- no that the devil takes a man > and then sets him down in a poor g place. The Bible says he paid •e to Tarshith. But see him get The sailors bring him t o the *ide ship, lift htm over the guards and ft drop with a loud splash into the fie paid his fare all the way t o ah. hot did not get the worth of ssey. Neither does any one who lis back on his duty and does that |s not right VW aWwrdw of l>i*»ir ^*s«m. • is a yotr. : man wh us:\ - the ear has speut .. ~.-pe ji&rt ..f h^ in carousal What has he gain***; A soiled reputation, a half ttarv m, a dissipated lock, a jietniant , A disturbed conscience. The fes of one or two bad hab:> that Basing tighter and tighter v.!] n until they wear to the bote. id your fare to Tar*shi*h. bet y c sen set down in the n.:c>: of t tiaquietude and perplexity, rundred dollars fox £cx*day h'r-« tandred dollars for wine supper? rundred dollars for cigars landred dollars far fr.lio tx.«t nameless. sg four hundred dollars f r hi* ion! . si of being in Tan&ish new he » middle of the Mediterranean. Is a literary man tired of the ! Ids fathers who lesclve* u sjt into what is called free thin k- t buys Theodore Parker *s work* § \Life of Christ'* for Jackson Daris 4 works to hear inikieis talk at the \ inm ipliirusliini at the tabje Talks glibry of Dand, the , m an old libertine, of Paul as nil i n last and of Christ a* a de- I of a mm. a ftu> weak u. nacta, bat almost as g-oc as Talks smilingly of Sunday as ry to-put s little extra Uacking snd of Cnrisuanf as, for hypocrites and of eterxury to be, ,f \the ererlasting infinite what u it keeping a l<f:boolL He hailed him. No answer. He went on board the vessel and found the man sitting at the log- book, frozen to death. The logbook was dated 1762. showing that the vessel had been wandering for 13 years among the ice, The sailor* were found frozen among the bamm<xk*. and other* in the cabin. For 13 years this *bip had been carrying its burden of corpses. So from this gospel craft today I de- scry voyagers for eternity. I cry: \Ship ahoy! Ship ahoy:\ JSo answer. They float about, tossed and ground by the icebergs of sin. hoisting no sail forbear- en. J go on board. I find all asleep. It is a froaen sleep Oh, that my Lord Jeans would come aboard and lay hold of the wheel and steer the craft down into the warm gulf stream of his mercy 1 Awake, thou that sleepest 1 Arise from the dearf. and Qmrt ibmU give thee lifc Again, notice that men are aroused by the most unexpected means. If Jonah had been told one year before that a heathen sea captain would ever awaken him to a sense of danger, he would have scoffed at the idea, but here it is done. So now men in strangest ways are aroused from spiritual stupor. A pro- fane man is brought to conviction by the shocking blasphemy of a comrade A man attending church and hearing a sermon from the text, \The ox knoweth his owner,\ etc, goes home impressed, but, crossing his barnyard, an ox come up and licks his hand, and he says: \There it is now. 'The ox knoweth his owner and the ass his master's crib,' but I do not know God \ The careless remark of a teamster has led a man to thoughtfclness and heaven. The child's remark: \Father they have prayers at uncle * house. Why don't we have themr ' has brought salvation to the dwelling. By strangest ways and in the most un- expected manner men are awakened. j The gardener of the Countess of Hcnt- I i&gdon was convicted of t:n by hearing i the countess on the opposite side of the wall talk about Jesus Jjhn flardoak wa* aroused by a dream, in which he saw the hist 'lay, and the fbdg* sitting, atd heard his cwn mime called with terrible ernj has:.*. \John Hardoak. come tc judgment' ' The Lord ha*- a thousand w ays (^ waking up Jonah. Would that the m**^n^fT> of men? might new end t:.e:r way d:wn into the sides of the ship, and that many who are uncoL- *ciou>!y r <ck,nr in the awful tempest :4 their sin m.ght hear the warning \What LL.e;iB**T tijMi. Osie*-T*r? Ar ** and call uj<c»n :hy Gfd '*' Aw»if Too L*t*. Ar-i-n : L'-am t:.at a man may wak* I up T«»*' Li*e I', instead of sle*-; in*: j Jonub ii**; >••-*-n on his k-ne*> foufessm-g h^ srns f: n. t*^- rime h*- vett re Uiarri the crufv 1 t.v:tk '/rat (T\Q w-'xuld have ' sav#-d him fr«.m U *n£ thrown ««v#*rb<«ar\l f Bur b* w< ke up v> • late. The temp*-**; : u in f^.J t^.^t and ti«e nea. in rwmi 1 sion. is ^...ui: i'^rf. and nothing will ' St p u r: w * — • * * \r^T*h\ w r«f Jonah. <r* m-^ - ._,* ,. .> • w^i.«- up tot- late. The la*t I nr i.-» -<xt* To* max has no nvTre d*a 4 cy^iig ti-an 1 hav-e of droprr.n*: d- wn tti* mf^nent The rig g:ng is •« wz*ii* with the foam of oeath. fiiw dn.ll the eight is! \I die,\ he saya ,€ yst not ready I push out upr,a this awfui «ML but havt nothing with whirs tc pay my fare The wmte caps' The darkness! Thf hmrTjcnne' H- w kar hsrr- 1 ^esc sV^p- jtng* Wbois days and m-crth* and rmz* 1 am e/uite awak> rx*w J XI IS Tor- is^e. \ ItTia;:^ up H* rrri^r« ?<. $r\. 2m raOL ~^*y brrzf ±.§ sr^l :c the ^erge. Tbry 'g* rf d/wa «-^er U>f The wrtK* r> *vl 7> *^<^t? jew E+ fca» fcrrv*-f A'd V£;4 U* si the r*?& rartied. ace tb* i ronp wsaip^i th» ' «»* t c* r^ tn* ft • I nertt svr> p^s^ar *-j -J* m*m**t er.-rs. \B-*w I „ * ea^sd. and ys ?**»*£ I ^a^^ c^^vn*< s^LadnsssByta««s a^asB, ssnS tW «a«i ftowv ts* swstsw ta« brirst cora Butov, of fuki- • gks*7 of brvaae aud r«t baad tfc* mbtmvm*. iata^jr misdnaii wrrbmd- Tajvaaw tb* ciw^twr uf Ihinniaf faavss TWair !• CK*UL Brtmth %4 ta# oumit-i trumt im iber*. BUMI. Uad tkr •t**r*^ Tt&Hi that dixiM *^ i*>+ boom: grow bar*. ataraUvw* >»vt torir bt«t« u> the •••%• grr|-*y fcjod cki. Appim fiobas, enwmon mini whiW, Bnsd, bias SW •bvrm. W.uacwad gT9,ux vonailj bn*fct ' ^Gnttanag gvkl U^t want i\u*v«»), T»* wki» bm» Stad- FUl lbs Saaxsi np tc tb* brua. Blad. kaad la* mtxmv**, Cfitu taw SOMB ruo< us«r ta* nm mmmmmmtaamsBSB WHtaxa or MtTAU#tA»rf lAdUik sad a»oki> TU1 aad driak tb» cid«r thmt Biuti. bind tke tbmrtm. Bxi f*rtwtil tc ti^« psaviac jtmx, Ck«* tbe bccS with Uutted i««r«a> Thmix ULIT ki told -Jteta bojr* is Oatlag. la When we consider the amount of earthy or inorganic susbtancea, includ- ing some of metallic origin, that we are how it would be for the best you have taught them to say an evening prayer, and when they kneel beside you and fold their little hands and look up, their faces all innocence and love, you know that there is a God somewbejv about in the room. I think I am on the right track at last. Awake. O sleeper, and call upon the God of thy children! May beset these little ones to pulling at thy heart until they charm thee to tife same God to whom tonight they will say their lit- tle prayers! But, alas, alas, some of these men and women are unmoved by the fact that their father had a God, that their mother had a God, and their children hare a God, but they have no God All the divine goodness for nothing. All warning for nothing. They are sound asleep in the tide of the ship, though the sea and sky are i n mad wrestle. Many years ago a man, leaving his family in Massachusetts, sailed from Boston to China to trade there. On the coast of China in the midst b f a night of storm he made shipwreck. The adven- turer was washed up on the beach sense- less—-all his money gone. He had to beg in the streets of Canton to keep from starving. For two years there was n o communication between himself and family. They supposed him dead He knew not but that his family were dead He had gone out as a captain. He was too proud to come back as a private sail- or. But after awhile he choked down his pride and sailed for Boston. Arriv- ing there, he took an evening train for the center of the state, where he had left his family. Taking the stage from the depot and riding a score cf miles, he got home He says that, going up in front of the cottage in the bright moon- light, the place looked to him like heav- en. He rapped on the window, and the affrighted servant let him in. He went to the room where his wife and child were sleeping. ^3e did not dare to wake them for fear < f the shock. B*-nd^!?g over to kiss his child'* cbe*-k. a tear fell upon the wif* 'P face, and wie wakened, and he said, \Mary '* and KM* kn**w his voice,* and there wn an ind'-scribal le scene of welcome and j*y and thanksgiv- ing to G\d X «day I iciow r'jat many < f r n arc «ea tos**4*d aiid driven by HII in a worse st'Tii: than that which cam*- down on the cjiu^t >f China, and yi»t 1 pray Gi*l that y U may. l.k* th^ai^r. live t»* get hrm* iu th* h>o* r <£ many xijans:<gi» „y:urfr>nd* ar*- wait F? to me*t y u. They ar>- wandering wny y-u do not come~ .£w*\-ij**i fr rn tb*- *i:;pv.*rf i> cf earth, may yti a? la>t p iu ! It w ill be a bright night—a r*>ry bright n t»;.t a<- you jut your timm* im it**- ~*\h<4 v,*? door. Oooe in y<z. wi?l fhd t.V old f..m ihr fares swwter th^n v. h« n y t I. saw them, and th-*re it \*... ,.; f A - • that he whowa* y <-zz *z 'h- r ^ r ... your mot-ber*» «»M. and y i.r i. . • r* God. is your rtm n.'^ •• «-•«-•• K -• er. to wDom l*- gi-cy i- ~ r -* throughout all a?*-* v. ? I - * . • - AmesL A Girl Sotfter A little r n>an-» > necoon w;r^ m- \ r- the heat / u*- hrr dcral f r*T ms». * y Lb* bntd ano ^h in Ine hax-^ rebel ofi^ 1 ^rfc JT.XL £ a >>< : /*x*.y p^arary* *-.r j*-d as .V^ A reformer, with east iron tsruscfples of jnstkse, can and plenty of odd |obs to fill in his spare momenta, r^rmness, to- gether with s judicious display of sequential importance, will often the laws of corporations totter, and a pat argumen t bring them to the ground There was a sign in (be window of a Kew York ice cream \parkr\ reading* \Try our strawberry ice cream with the strawberries frocen in.\* Whan those cooling words caught the eye of the re- former on a recent hot day, his wilted spirits revived and he entered the place radiating peace and good will \Strawberry he said beaming upon the presiding he sat back and thought how good the frosen strawberries were going to taste. When the dish was brought, he scanned it closely, but tailed to see any material signs of the berries. \WherearetJ»strawberries'\be ask ad, the genial expression giving way to one of stern inquiry. \There ain't none in dish cream,\ mid Bebe. \Only our quart bricks has the strawberries frosen in, \ \What do yon saeaa. then,\ said the thumping the floor with his in the thai this is bound to fulfill J want eosne with strawberries frosen in. 2 insist upon having it If the public in general consents to be bamboosled by that 4 fake' sign. I don't; so run right along and get me some frosen strawber- ^\mmm-^'f^ Co. < it's Great Maso Clayton or for t) in the habit of taking with our foods, rf4 ^SA^TS^^ ri^JfZ may be a question whether the eating ! wmaawT ^ om M • i»ro*nise tc snd drinking habits of our most enlight- ened people are not open to criticism. The Pacific Health Journal says that it is s well known fact that the habitual use of limestone and other mineral wa- ters wi license goiten The mineral prod- ucts cannot be absorbed into the fluids of the body and thrown out They are therefore deposited in the glandular sys- tem, giving rise to disease of these or- gans. And yet are not mineral waters extolled to the skies? And do not our invalids rush to the \mineral springs\ til over the country, expecting to be healed ': You could not persuade these people that pure water would answer just as well-—in fact, better—though certain celebrated springs, the waters of which, as shown by chemical analysis, tre entirely fre^ from any foreign in- gredient, hare given most wonderful re- mits. ...--.. One effect of the use of mineral OF earthy substances in food or drink is t o break down the kidneys. The habitual use of bicarbonate of Ada in bread, pas- tries, etc., i s no doubt injurious. But how many are willing to eve up their hot biscuits at breakfast or their batter cakes, though very palatable bread can be made, and also light, with nothing in it but sir and water? . Coal Gas la The efficiency cf coal gas In practical navigation has been demonstrated, ac- cording to accounts of recent trials at Havre, and French capitalists are re- ported as having taken the master in hand with a view to its thorough de- velopment In the late trials made by the promoter an iron boat of some 550 tons was employed, a vertical gas motor of 40 horsepower fnrnishing the power, coal gas compressed to a pressure of 1,400 pounds per square inch being stored in steel tubes placed between decks, and a regulator, situated between the gas reservoir and the motor, to re- duee the pressure of the gas entering the motor to the flow ordinarily required Public trials of t|»t craft show that the officer in charge has her incomplete control, changing with ease her course, also slackening or increasing the rate of speed and stopping or even going back- ward almost instantaneously by the use of the rererwl^ screw. Though the cost of power by this system will, as claim- ed, be more econosaieal than any other, the chief saving will be effected by the comparatively small room required for the motor, and the fact is noted as re- markable that pure coal gns, compressed to a pressure as high as 3,000 pounds per square inch, does not show an ap- preciable condensation, A SoUttor't Gold A gold medal has been found on the farm of Dr. Gnstavus Brown, Dicker- son Station. Md . which would seem to have been lost while McClellans army was encamp at that place in 1&62. Some laborer* engaged in digging post j holes unearthed it about lfc inches- be- 1 low the *nrf.;ce. Jt i s about the sise of 1.9LM1Q.. ?' idpiersi Xtn-otie side is s vig- nette of Genera! McCiellan, encircled by the iertf-rs <,f his name. On the re verse bide, landing out plainly and difr- tin^t.y. spiers the name of \Franklin G Puli*:j h^r. CVonpany L, Twelfth Ver mont Volunteers. \ The medal is in the prc*e<*iou of Mr. Jamison, the superin tend* nt of the farm Dickers:*! Station if on t}.+ Menv»p*»ls:an branch of tht* Baltimore and Ohio railroad. 20 m:le> from Washingt n.—Wasijingtca Post \1 tell you we dont sell it by the plate,\ said Hebe, who was beginning to show symptoms of hysteria. \IMlhsve * plete of it,\ said the man, \or the firm must take in that sign and make me an apology! \ The girl then left the field to the pro- prietor, who approached, the customer with a conciliatory smile. \Very sorry, sir,\ said he. \but we are just out of strawberry ice cream. \ \Does the sign come stownr\ \It does,\ ••..'.• j And now the reformer goes three blocks out of his way to pass that store for the sake of experiencing again the satisfaction of an accomplished purpose. —New York Herald Aetaallr StaaUag \Say officer, I wish you'd drive those bqboes away or run them in.\ re- quested the manager of a Market street cyclery. \They're hanging around the door trying to steal our air all day long.'' \Trying to steal what?\ . \Our air—what we use to blow up pneumatic tires with.\ \Do you fellows own the air here* Did you rent it with the premises: You'll be accusing somebody of running off with your sunbeams next I suppose those hoboes grab a handful of air when yon ain't looking, jam it in their pock- ets and run, eh?\ \Well if you don't believe it, just ooxoe back here and watch.\ Tne clerk led the way to the back jwrt of the establishment, where he and the officer concealed themselves behind a curtain. In a moment a big tramp peered in at the door, mopped the perspiration from his face, slipped up to the little rubber hose attached tc the air comprcasoi in the bjjement. thrust the nosxle into his steaming col- lar and turned the stop cock The wind whistled through his clothes, and for a moment he was the picture of content ment Before he could get cooled off two more were anxiously waiting their turn at the nosxle. The officer took him to \the city P^*™ I CTPTnJU/A V and wanted to charge him with petty Jo | avIFf T* A T-r larceny for stealing *ir, but had to make it disturbing the peace—San Francisco Post .Tap* X^tr'm I tt\h*-n inve*r:gst : ng the Vatican'rec- ord*, Poj*- LM Kill said to Dam Gas- j ^net >he Lbrar'iin. \Publish everythirpr ' of inr*-re-t; *--.ery:hinr. whether :t tend^ j to the d.-*Te<.:t <* credit of the ecclesi- astical anthoritie*, for you may be sure that if the g'*7»*ld had been written in our day the rre«arhery of Judas and the denial of M.JVter would have suppressed fr f*ar of scandalising consr lence*. ' ^ Lord Halifax toM the English church union the other day l»wo young ladies attracted attention at the Waldorf today, not because they were over pretty or chic, but mere> on account of their walk. Tbeystmtt about with an ungraceful their daring skirts lameness which was alike in both. As this could hardly be possible the in- quisitive ones who noticed them Sought an explanation from a friendly femi- nine. And what do you think was the matter? Why, boopakirtsl\ \That walk is caused by the wearing of hoops.' * smilingly explained the lady, \and hoops will soon be proper form too. When the modistes tried to force hoops on us a few years ago, we were njat quite prepared for them. Now, with the flaring skirts, /sloping shoulders and big sleeresv the old fashioned hoops com- plete the picture, and we will take kindly to them \ The steel trade will like this announcement better than that portion of humanity which hates to see fashion disfigure the fair ones of this or any other land—New York Letter in Pittsburg Dispatch. * t» kept vail, aad tfeat yes aaaj ba»» uabrotoa rmt t * ^eH» the** thxasra are worta kaowiag. They art Children Ory for Pitcher's CasterlSk ff Yea Wish to tostrs the Hssaisess of your family, nothing will meet all the conditions like a fine Piano or Organ, WHY ? Because no house is completely furnished without a musical instrument, and no young lady has an education that fits her to move in the best circles of society if her musical education has been neglected. this over and would like to knoyr the best instrument to buy and the best place to .buy it, so we say - •: w - . Tfceft Art 8 ted Mrts i_ in most pianos, no doubt about that; Pianos are like people, some folks are pleasant company for a short time, bright, brilliant, unreliable, shallow; others improve xm acquaintance. tOOK CARZFULir AT THIS M8T n lender in ite csam HAZELTON, sfEHUN, BEHRBROS., EMERSON, JTCWBY A EVANS, BEHKING, >:**& WEBSTER. f c Me ait'EIej. v!-? of 08CAIS of aii Rules'and prices, bnt the leader of ,alJ and tas finest organ made to-day is the Making the luyert •MOrtmenttil FDfl PIANOS on *- v .a.i ; oa M •nj More in Nortben '•'<>«- i'ork. l%hr ?\MM (UM U^n (MMU (kt^M aUTO A \Is canpht x^zx last r cried the enrsv^i fara_:*rf\ns be ttasnhsed e>ver the oat the was enjoying hismsslf in middle of the watenaelon I've caogbt yon at last, nan oU thisf yon DO^*7 hay of and care Our Prices are Bight! Our Terms Are Easy! * DONT Experiment! i ^ ^ r ^^^ who Imcrw notnimr of thn s^o^ Usey s^ naflinf ML Hoy reliable s*o6ds» btry of a rel sU Uie store or write for taD Cnil tt* r*» posiasw, :. v . 78 Stat* St,^t»sbmrr, H. T. jH 1 - * : y EMM L KVELU V. J. BAttMH, ^X L -.. ^--^ vy'M: •7»£?-*' II • if > * said the ctdprit as he sjnlaed down the red heart of s fat slolh Geav *f o de La wd hit was ail a aserdent I onsse heah. 1 waa vraikin 'long sis railroad dee ea bones' es oond be, when 'longr eosne a freight train, en fo* I eosid cl'ar da track ds eosrine hit sat- an th owed nsrclean over def 11 is now. a n wben I fell I dssehsah nieres, «n when I eosne so I * datldss fsMitnenenti I dosss stated V —Athnsta Oon NOW IS THE TIME WHEN TOU NEED A VEBY f&. -». -**-*•• ,.«.«! • * « **. J* *.-&*m Summer ;* -ft 7\ ?*££**&' •a—<.«•*? *g iSSWft •^- -^ -_ ^^•••aasl Sa\ vJasn *f*m^^^^^^ V » ^ — llie best is always the cheapest in any line. JLf the <JH\''Sj\* : pioneer clothing store wH] be foand all the newest and '£ latest things in hats, caps, clothing, and gente'fnrmsh- ings. Oar eastern tailoring department is at its best Oome and see us, we wiB do TOD good. \ . .-, - ^ «t afssnrl 1 TUVm JAMES BRODIp ISITC *r. ?- T. \t^Skg**** i*^?\***?*\ •