the bolivar bulletin. (bolivar, tennessee) 1893-09-08 [p ]. · a salary of s3.000. tillage's...

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A SALARY OF S3.000. will sit beside you by day, and whisper TILLAGE'S SERMON. over your pillow night after night, A Business Colter Ursdntt tleta a Tonl- - tioo m liaok Kiamlntr. God's Intlmato Acqualn tanca with Thomas E. Jertnlnes, late of Napliville, D na- - txxn appointed Bank ..xanuner for tho on't olame the Cook All Earthly Griefs. bUteaof California, Oregon and Washing-Ion- , at a aalarr of ,ifX per annum. Ho is I want to assure you that you are not left alone, and that your weeping is heard in Heaven. You will wandr among the hills and say: "Up this hill, last year, our boy climbed with great glee, and waved his cap from the top;" or "This' is the place where our little girl put flowers in her hair, and looked up in her mother's face," until Tlis Tears of AfBleted Hamaolty are Not take a very Btrong blow to shiver the golden bowl of life, or break the pitcher at the fountain- - Many of you have kept on in life throiigh sheer force of wilL You think no one can understand your distresses. Perhaps you look strong, and it is supposed that you are a hypochondriac They say that you are nervous as if that were nothing! God have mercy upon any man or woman that is nervous! At times you sit alone in your room. Friends do not come. You feel an in- describable loneliness in your suffer a son oi I'mi. IL W . or Jennmps' Business Ctlle(rc, KashTille, and thin ap- pointment can be largely attributed to the Dunincsa training he received from bis falber, as well a to the latter' influence in Wasted Comfort for tho Kepent-an- t, tho Sick, tho Poor and tba Bereaved. aecurlojr poit:ons. Thia is perbana the every drop of blood in your heart Kct. T. DeWitt Talmaffe chose for .THE TIRBT "FUrTTTANS. Few In Numbers, but Dangerous, Desper ate, Determined Men. I have in my possession a detailed ae count of the temper of parties in En- gland, drawn up in the year 15S5, three years before the Armada came. The writer was a distinguished Jesuit. The account itself was prepared for the use of the pope and Philip, with a special view to the reception which an invad- ing force would meet with, and it goes Into great detail. The people of the towns London, Bristol, etc were, he says, generally heretics. The peers, the gentry, their tenants, and peas- antry, who formed the imraese majori- ty of i he population, were almost uni- versally Catholics. But the writer dis- tinguishes properly among Catholics. There were the ardent, impassioned Catholics, ready to be confessors and martyrs, ready to rebel at the first opportunity, who had re- nounced their allegience, who de- sired to overthrow Elizabeth and put the queen of Scots in her place. The number of these, he says, was daily in the subject of a recent sermon "A Bot tie of Tears," baling' it on the text: tingled with gladness, and you thanked God with a thrill of rapture; and you look around as much as to say: "Who dashed out that Ught? Who filled this cup . with gall? What blast Put thou my tears la thy bottle. Psalms lvL.S. ings; but God knows, God feels. God compassionates. He counts the sleep less nights; He regards the acuteness oi the pain; He estimates the hardness of the breathirg. While you pour out Hardly a mail has come to me for froze np these fountains o twenty years that has not contained letters saying that my sermons hare the medicine from the bottle, and the heart?" Some of you have lost your parents within the last twelve months. Their prayers for you are ended. You take up their picture and comforted the writers of those letters. count the drops, God counts nil your I hare not this summer nor for twenty falling tears. As you look at the vials, try to call back the kindness that once years spoken on the platform of any out-do- or meeting, but coming1 down I hare been told by hundreds of people looked out from those old, wrinkled If a baking powder is not uniform in strength, so that the same quantity will always do the same work, no one can know how to use it, and uni- formly good, light food cannot be produced with it. All baking powders except Royal, because improperly compounded and made from inferior materials, lose their strength quickly when the can is opened for use. At subsequent bakings there will be noticed a falling off in strength. The food is heavy, and the flour, eggs and butter wasted. It is always the case that the consumer suffers in pocket, if not in health, by accepting any sub- stitute for the Royal Baking Powder. The Royal is the embodiment of all the excellence that it is possible to attain in an absolutely pure powder. It is always strictly reliable. It is not only more economical because of its ' greater strength, but will retain its full leavening power, which no other powder will, until used, and make more wholesome food. filled with nauseous draughts, and at the bottles of distasteful tonic that stand on the shelf, remember that there is a larger bottle than these, which is faces, and spoke in such a tremulous he same thing. So I think I will keep voice; and you say it is a good picture, filled with no mixture by earthly apothecaries, but it is God's bottle, in but all the while you feel that, after all, it does not do justice; and you would give almost anything you would cross the sea, you would walk the earth over to hear just one mot thorough and influential achool in tee United State. Its graduates nearly always fret good poeitions. Jiaavilie Christian Advocate. flood Position la a Hank. .The followin sr letter explain itself: Me r haxt' Natio!. Uxk. Home, Ol., April 27, 1VI. I rofeor 1C W. Jenninfr, Nashville Dear Kir: No doubt you will be aurprised to hear from me. but as I know you are always glad to hear from your "toys," I will tell you that I have been elided book-keepe- r in above Darned bank. I don't say it because Ian writing to you, but 1 have said to many others that the three months I spent with you was worth as much to tne as was the twelve years' schooling; 1 had rotten previously. 1 have compare, my books ieh I used at Jen- nings' Business College witJl tQO books of several otbrr colleges, which otter young men from this section attended, and they all acknowledged that your course is much more thorough and practical than the schools they attended. Yours truly. T. J. Bmmx. Write for catalog with names of 1,000 students tmm 23 States. Address K. W. Jennings, Nashville, Ten a. Heeixo is not always believing. For in- stance, we see liars frequently. Philadel- phia North America. Thers are thousands of young men stand- ing on the very threshold of life, trying to make a wise decision as to what business or prftfession they will follow. To all such we would say, before deciding tho question write to 11. F. Johnson & Co., Richmond, Va, They can be of servico to you, as they nave been to others. As to riding a bicycle, the men appear more bent on it than the girls. which Ha hath gathered all our tears. Again: God remembers all the sor rows of poverty. There is much want that never comes to inspection. The deacons of the church never see it. word from those lips that a few months ago used to call you by your first name, though so long you yourself have been a parent. Now, you have done your best with your grief. You The comptrollers of almhouses never report it. It comes not to church, for it has no appropriate apparel. It makes no appeal for help, but chooses smile when you do not feel like it. But rather to suffer than expose its bitter though you may deceive the world, ness. Fathers who fail to gain a live lihood, so that they and their children submit to constant privation, sewing God knows. He looks down upon the empty cradle, upon the desolated nursery, upon the stricken home, and upon the broken heart, and says: "This is the way I thresh the wheat, this is women, who can not ply the needle quick enough to earn them shelter and bread. But whether imported or un the way I scour my jewels! Cast thy complaining, whether in seemingly comfortable parlor, or in damp cellar, burden upon my arm and I will sus- tain you. All these tears I have gath- ered into my bottle!" or in hot garret, God's angels of mercy are on the watch. This moment those But what is the use of having so Shooting Pains griefs are being collected. Down on the back streets, in all the alleys, amid many tears in Uod s lachrymatory? In that great casket or vase, why does God preserve all your troubles? shanties and log cabins, the work goes Through all the ages of eternity, E. B. Walthall & Co., Druggists, Horse Cave, Ky, say: '"Hall's Catarrh Cure cures every one that takes it Sold by Druggists, 75c . Thesb are the nights when the man who is covered with glory bas over him all that is necessary to keep him warm. Buffalo Courier. Freshness and purity are Imparted to tar complexion bv Glenn's Sulphur Soap. Hill's Hair and Whisker Dye, 60c. First Moth "Are you going fur V Beo-on- d Moth "I intend to spend the summer on the cape.' Axtose would be justified In recommend- ing Beecham's Pills for all affections of tb liver and other vital organs. "Yo' George Washington Snowball, come right in outen de sun," screamed a negro mamma to her child. "Whaffur, mamma?" "Whaffur! I'll tell yo whaffur 1 Fust thing yo' know yo' complection '11 be tanned as bad as de white trash." Thb Elizabethan ruff will be in vogue in the fall, and the fellow who attempts to kiss a fashionable girl will "get it in the neck." Philadelphia Record. Diner "Isn't this meat rather tough!" Waiter "There's no denying that, sir, but then we serve extra strong toothpicks with It." Boston Transcript. Jcst when the coffee thinks it has good grounds for complaint the egg drops iu and settles the whole business. what use of a great collection of tears? I do not know that they will be kept there forever. I do not know but that All over my body and sxellinKofmyllmbshave caused me great suffer- ing. In the spring X was completely worn out and ate hardly enough to keep me alive. I have been taking Hood's Sarsap rilia, and the swelling baa subsided, the shoot-i- n pains are gone, I have good appetite, am better very way." Mrs. A. O. OiiAjt, 84 Newman St., So. Boston. Get Hood's. on. Tears of want seething in sum- mer's heat, or freezing in winter's cold they fall not unheeded. They are jewels for Heaven's casket. They are pledges of Divine sympathy. They are tears for God's bottle. Again: The Lord preserves the re- membrance jf all paternal anxieties. You see a man from the infamous sur in some distant age of Heaven an angel of God may look into the bottle and find it as empty of tears as the lachary- - malsof earthenware dug up from the an dent city? Where have the tears gone to? What sprite of hell hath been invading roundings step out into the kingdom of God. He has heard no sermon. He has God's palace, and hath robbed the Hood'sffifrCnres HOOd'S PUIS Cure Sick Headache. 25c received no startling provident warn- ing. What brought him to this new creasing, owing to the exertions of the seminary priests; and plots, he boasts, were being continually formed by them to murder the queen. There were Catholics of another sort, who were papal at heart, but went with the times to save their property; who looked forward to a change in the natural order of things, but would not stir of themselves till an invading army actually appeared. But all alike, he insists, were eager for a revolution. Let the prince of Parma" come4 and they would all join him; and together these two classes of Catholics made three-fourt- hs of the nation. "The only party," he says (and this is really noticeable), "the only party that would fight to death for the queen, the only real friends she had were the Puritans (it is the first men- tion of the name which I have found), the Puritans of London, the Puritans of the sea towns." These, he admits, were dangerous, desperate, determined men. The numbers of them, however, were providentially small. The date of this document is, as 1 said, 15S5, and I believe it generally accurate. The only mistake is that among the Anglican Catholics there were a few to whom their country was as dear as their creed a few who were beginning to see that under the act oi uniformity Catholic doctrine might be taught and Catholic ritual practiced; vho adhered to the old forms of re- ligion, but did not believe that obe- dience to the pope was a necessary part of them. One of these was Lord Howard of Effingham, whom the queen placed in his high command to secure the wavering fidelity of the peers and country gentlemen. But the force, the fire, the enthusiasm came (as the Jesuit saw) from the Puritans, from men of the same convictions a! the Calvinists of Holland and Rochelle. men who, driven from the land, took to the ocean as their natural home, and nursed the reformation in ar ocean cradle. J. A. Froude, in Long- man's Magazine. Sweet Charity. Mother What in the world are yot so busy at? Small Son Us boys is gettin' up t charity circus, and I guess ws'll mak a lot o' money too. All the children li interested in the cause. Mother That's noble. Andyou in tend to give it all to the poor? Small Son Yes'm. Our teacher ii going to marry a real nice man, an we all feel so sorry for him we wanti to raise money so he can buy a ticke' for somewhere and run away. Goof News. The World Inn. The above Chicago hotel, under the capa lacnrymatories JNone. These are sanctified sorrows, and those tears were changed into pearls that are now set in the crowns and robes of the ran mind? This is the secret God looked over the bottle in which He gathers the, tears of His people, and He saw a par- ental tear in that bottle which has been for forty vears unanswered. jerman somed. I walk up to examine this heavenly coronet, gleaming brighter than the sun,' and cry: "From what river depths of Heaven were those gems gathered?" and a thousand voice reply: "These are transmuted He said: "Go to, now, and let me answer that tear!" and forthwith the wanderer is brought home to God. ypup tears from God's bottle." I see scepters of light stretched dowu from tho throne of those who 4f Oh, this work of training children for God! It is a tremendous work. Some people think it easy. They have tried it. A child is placed in the arms of the young parent. It is a "beautiful on earth were trod on of men, and in every 6cepter-poin- t, and inlaid in every orPurc CLAIRETTE plaything. You look into the laugh ivory stair of golden throne I behold ing eyes. You examine the dimples in an indescribable richness and luster, FOR IT HAS STOOD Tfl TEST, the feet. You wonder at its exquisite and cry, "'From whence this streaming light these flashing pearls?" and the organism, iseantiful playthings! But 'CFALL 7MB SOAPS "OuflGinLSViM TO0 Mr. Albert Hartley of Hudson, N. C, was taken with Pneumonia. His brother had just died from it. When he found his doctor could not rally him he took one bottle of Ger- man Syrup and came out sound and well. "Mr. S. B. Gardiner, Clerk with Druggist J. E. Barr, Aurora, Texas, prevented a bad attack of pneumonia by taking German Syrup in time. He was in the business and knew the danger. He used the great remedy Boschee's German Syrup for lung diseases. (D on some nightfall, as you sit rocking that little one, a voice seems to fall voice of the elders beneath the throne, and of the martyrs under the altar, Wis "FAIRBANKS IS Tf BEST straight from the throne of God, say and of the hundred and forty and fouf thousand radiant on the glassy sea ex ing: "That child is immortal! The stars shal die, but that is an immortal! claim: "Transmuted tears from God's bottle." Suns shall grow old with age and per- ish, but that is an immortal!" Let the ages of Heaven roll on the Now, I know with many of you this is story of earth's pomp and pride long ago ended; the Koh-i-no- or diamonds the chief anxiety. You earnestly wish that make kings proud, the precious CbaCLOTAES SHELL SWET,0lffi UNEAf SHWE0 a tmb house is ami mm Bright mo wmn FAmmims clairette soap FILLS HOUSEMAIDS &EIIGHT. GATkjirbank &C-O- ST. LOUIS-D- O YOU OSW TOBACCO ? stones that adorned Persian tiara and your children to grow up rightly, but you find it hard work to make them do as you wish. You check their temper. You correct their waywardness; in the flamed in the robes of Babylonian pro cessions, forgotten; the Golconda mines i J"5 midnight your pillow is wet with weep charred in the last conflagration; brt firm as the everlasting hills, and pure ing. 1 ou have wrestled with God in as the light that streams from the agony for the salvation of your chil- dren. You ask me if all that anxietv throne, and bright as the river that is ineffectual. I answer, No. God un flows from the eternal rock, shall If you do, always chew tho best. derstands your heart. He understands gleam, shall sparkle, shall flame for jSB.K-fCw'- - ble management of Mr. Cbas. E. Leland, is having the patronage it deserves. It is not how hard you have tried to make that ever, these transmuted tears of God's bottle. Mil a fire-tra- but is built of steel and nre-Dro- of tile, combininsr absolute safety with daughter doright, though she is so very petulant and reckless; aDd what Li ! v4 Meanwhile, let the empty lachryma A reasonable prices. Its location southwest on trying to be a "Son of Consolation." The prayer of my t ext was pressed out of DaTid's soul by innumerable calamities, but it is just as appropri- ate for the distressed of all ages. Within the past century travelers and antiquarians have explored the ruins of many of the ancient cities.and from the very heart of those buried splendors of other days have been brought up evidences of customs that long ago vanished from the world. From among tombs of those ages have been brought up lachrymatories, or lachrymals, which are vials made of earthenware. " It was the custom for the ancients to catch the tears that they wept over their dead in a bottle, and to place that bottle in the graves of the departed, and we have many specimens of the ancient lachrymato- ries, or tear bottle, in our museums. Wjien on the way from the Holy Land our ship touched at Cyprus, we went back into the hills of that island and bought tear-bottl- es which the na- tives had dug out of the ruins of the old city. There is nothing more sug- gestive to me than the tear-bottl- es which I brought home and put among my curiosities. That was the kind of bottlo that my text alludes to when David cries: "Put thpu my tears into thy bottle." The text intimates that God has an intimate acquaintance and perpetual remembrance of all our griefs, and a vial, or lachrymatory, or bottle, in which He catches and saves our tears; and I bring to you the condolence of this Christian sentiment. Why talk about grief? Alas! the world has its pangs, and now, while we speak, there are thick darknesses of soul that need to be lifted. There are many who are about to break under the assault of temptation, and perchance, if no words appropriate to their Jcase be uttered, they perish. I come on no fool's er- rand. Put upon your wounds no salve compounded by human quackery, but pressing straight to the mark, I hail you as a vessel mid-se- a cries to a passing craft: "Ship ahoy!" and invite you on board a vessel which has Faith for a rud- der, and Prayer for sails, and Christ for Captain, and Heaven for an eternal harbor. Catherine Ilheinfeldt, a Prus- sian, keeps a boat with which she res- cues the drowning. When a storm comes on the coast, and the other people go to their beds to rest, she puts out in her boat for the relief of the distressed, and hundreds of the drown- ing has she brought safely to the beach. In this life-bo- at of the Gospel I put out to-da- y, hoping, by God's help, to bring ashore at least one soul that may now be sinking in the billows of temptation and trouble. The tears that were once caught in the lachry- matories brought up from Hercula-ncu- m and Pompeii are all gone, and the bottle is as dry as the scoria of the volcano that submerged them! but not so with the bottle in which God gathers all our tears. First, I remark that God kees per- petually the tears of repentance. Many a man has awakened in the morning so wretched from the night's debauch that he has sobbed and wept. Pains In the head, aching in the eyes, sick at heart, and unfit to step into the light. He grieves, not about his misdoing, but only about its consequences. God makes no record of such weeping. Of all the million tears that have gushed as the result of such misdemeanor, not one ever got into God's bottle. They dried on the fevered cheek, or were dashed down by the bloated hand, or fell into the red wine cup as it came again to the lips, foaming with still worse intoxication. But when a man is sorry for his past and tries to do bet- ter when he mourns his wasted ad- vantages and bemoans his rejection of God's mercy, and cries amid the lacer- ations of an aroused conscience for help out of his terrible predicament, then God listens; then Heaven bows down; then scepters of pardon are extended from the throne, then his crying rends the heart of heavenly compassion; then his tears are caught in God's bottle. You know the story of paradise and the Peri. I think it might be put to higher adaptation. An angel starts from the throne of God to find what thing it can on the earth worthy of being carried back to Heaven. It goes down through the gold and silver mines of earth, but finds nothing worthy of transportation to the Celes- tial City. It goes down through the depths of the sea, where the pearls lie, and finds nothing worthy of taking back to Heaven. But coming to the foot of a mountain it sees a wanderer weeping over his evil ways. The tears of the prodigal start, but do not fall to the ground, for the angel's wing catches them, and with that treasure speeds back to Heaven. God sees the angel coming, and says: "Behold the brightest gem of earth, and the bright- est jewel of Heaven the tear of a sin- ner's repentance." Oh! when I see the Heavenly Shep- herd bringing a lamb from the wilder- ness; when I hear the quick tread of the prodigal hastening heme to find his father; when I see a sa'Jor-bo- y com- ing on the wharf, and hurrying away to beg his mothers pardon for long neglect and unkindness; when I see the houseless coming to God for shelter, and the wretched and the vile and the sin-burne- d, and the passion-blaste- d ap- pealing for merc3 to a compassionate God, I exclaim in ecstasy and triumph: "More tears for God's bottle !" Again: God keeps a tender remem- brance of all your sicknesses. How many of you are thoroughly bound in body? Hot one in ten! I do not exag- gerate. The vast majority of the race are constant subjects of ailments. There is some one form of disease that you are particularly subject to. You have a sveak side, or back, or are sub- ject to headaches, or falntnesses, or lucffa tasiiy distressed, U would .'cp Hbry of Heaven stand forever. Let no corner Midway Plaisance (60th st.) and Madison ave. is unsurpassed, as it faces pains you have bestowed in teaching that son to walk in the path of upright- ness, though he has such strong pro hand touch it. Let no wing strike it. SATISFIES EVERYBODY. CHEW HORSE SHOE. CHEW HORSE SHOE. the Fair Grounds. Is accessible by steam. Let no collision crack it. Purer than cable and elevated lines. Write or tele clivities for dissipation. I speak a cheering word. God heard every coun graph in advance of your coming for ac- commodations, or look The World's Inn up beryl or chrysoprasus. Let it stand on the step of Jehovah's throne and ITOR DIUOUSKESS, DYSPEPSIA, . SICK HEADACHE, WEAK STOMACH, when you arrive. You will not be Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic: -- AKD sel you ever offered him. God has known all the sleepless nights you have ever passed. God has seen every sinking of your distressed spirit. God remembers your prayers. He keeps under the arch of the unfading rain- bow. Passing down the corridors of the palace, the redeemed of earth shall glance at it, and think of all the earth- ly troubles from which they were de 'Is my son thorough in his school work, Mr. Pedagog 1" asked Bosbvshell. "Yes, he is," said the teacher. "lie shows a ten iency to eroto the bottom of everything. It Is as pleasant to the taste as lem eternal record of your anxieties; and think he will be foot of his class in a few livered, and say, each to each: "Thatis lays." The Death Roll Is Largely Swelled in His lachrymatory, not such as stood in ancient tomb, but in one that glows what we heard of on earth." "That is what the Psalmist spoke of." "There Bv persons careless of imperilled health, and glitters beside the throne of God, DISORDERS OF THE LIVER, TEST-MON- T. I rare tised Brodie's Pills for many years la my family and have found them invaluable in all cases, and as a Liver Fill do not think they have u equal. Ceo. II. Wiley. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. PBICE, 3e. Box. I. L. LYONS &. CO., Proprietors, who "nooh. nooh!" their minor ailments, He holds all those exhausting tears. The grass may be rank Hpon your graves believing, or pretending to believe, that na- ture will effect a change. Nature does ef fect a change, but it is in the wrong direc Si and the letters upon your tombstone defaced with the elements before the once were put our tears." "That is God's bottle." And while standing there inspecting this richest inlaid vase of Heaven, the towers of the palace dome strike up this silvery chime: "God hath wiped away all tears from all faces. .Wherefore comfort one another with these words." ,j V 'A i tjit. ' i 1 Jiu -- r tion. She thus avenges a disregard of her appeals. Don't omit, if you are at all un- well, to recuperate by the aid of Hostetter's Divine response will come; but He who 5 n't c i v-- f hath declared, "I will be a God to Stomach Hitters, a signal remeay ior uys-pepsi- a, nervousness, debility, malaria, rheu thee, and to thy seed after thee," will on syrup. The smallest infant will take it nd never know it is medicine. Children cry for it. . Chills once broken will not return. Cost you only half the price of oth- er Chill Tonics. No quinine needed. No purgative needed. Contains no poison. It purifies the blood and removes all malarial poison from the system. It is as large as any dollar tonic and RETAILS FOR 50 CENTS. Just sm CJof tnr Adult mm tor Child rr-- u WARRANTED; 12, 1888.7 PlJti" MiDtnicB Co., Pari. Tann. f Plea tio4 m tnr iosa or 70-- V Grore'a Tasteless Cblll Tonic. I waa pleased with tba lot from too last nm-too- r. Tha people weradelffchted wlta It. I rave toot Chill Tonlo to some eblldrea who vers pala and swarthr and emaci- ated, bavins hsd chronlo chills (or months on of tberafor a yr.and wit";' ?at, weeks after berinaios with the Chill Tonie tbey were bale aad hesrty, with rea and rosv cheeks. Itaottd llkeaebarm. W. W. 6TIUSON, M. Dm ELY'S matism, biliousness. yV fTr 'I "NTT. CatarrH . 1. .. in "There, mamma." said the small boy. as not forget, and some day, in Heaven, while you are ranging the fields of light, the gates of pearl will swing Early American Sculptors. It is worthy of special notice that ar" he gazed at the dromedary, "that must be hi iii un.ii the camel that had the last straw put on bis when Rush began to model in clay not back, and garlanded with glory, that aack." ' - one of the artists who have given celebrity to our native sculpture had Wttit.r vacation alwavs begins with a V .t" t it always ends with a scarcity of them. Baltimore American. long wayward one will rush into your outstretched arms of welcome and tri- umph. The hills may depart and the earth may burn, and the stars fall and time perish, but God will break His oath and trample upon His promises never! never! M Cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores. Restores tho Senses of Taste and Smell. seen the light of day. Frazer was not born until 1790, nor Ezekiel Augur, of New Haven, until 1791. The latter was originally in the grocery trade; but, failing in that, took up modeling r ac8iawma Again: God keeps a perpetual re POn 8ALB BY ALT. DBTTGGIST8. membrance of all bereavements. These are the trials that cleave the soul and and wood-carvin- g without any guide except his natural instincts; but, like the majority of our early sculptors, with the exception of Ilush, his efforts are interesting only as evidence of what talent entirely unobstructed can throw the red hearts of men to be TRY THE CUKE. H AY"FEVER A particle Is applied Into each nostril and la at ret-aM- Price AO rent t Druitrliru. or bv mall. KLY BROTHEU.S, Oi Warren M.. New Vork. IMKUFACTURED BY PARIS MEDICINE CO.," ST. .LOUIS, MO,, FORMERLY CP PARIS. TEKW. ' THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE THE COOK HAD NOT USED crushed in the wine press. Troubles at the store you may leave at the store. accomplish. It was not until 1805, TF& r czr'xs ra yiijFV u Misrepresentation and abuse of the world you may leave on the street where you found them. The lawsuit that would swallo,w ur honest ac long after Copley, est, Malbone, Allston and Stuart had demonstrated our capacity for pictorial art, that (PLCS P) Hiram Powers was born. The same LI EXCURSIONS year Horatio Greenough first saw the light of day. In the remote wilds 'of -- TO- Kentucky, Hart was brought into this Arkansas and Texas world in 1810, and Clevenger, Craw -- VIA. TUE- - ford and Mills followed in 1812, 1813 GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN, KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and and 1815. Thus we see that, without hereditary genius or predecessors from tends to personal enioyment when COTTON BELT ROUTE, August 22, September 12, October 10, 1893. Ticket food tor main nntll tOtia-- s from date of sale. f or full particular ddr- R.T. O MTTBw.l. 1A., I H H. t TTOW, T P. A., VIES luiHTillr, Ry. CbattanooR-a- . Ten H. J.. I. ?. A., I W. 1. ADAMS. T. P. MpmrliK. Ten?i. I Nahvill.Tenm. rightly used. The many, who live bet- ter than others and enjoy life more,. with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the whom to copy, Rush achieved his artistic results, and succeeded in win- ning for himself a European renown which made him the equal of some of the leading foreign carvers and sculp- tors of his age, and at the same time well earned the title of 'father of American sculpture." Lippincott's H . L.Bhai O. P. T. A., fct. Louia, Mo. VaJIB THIS rartaarcr ta yaavnMk IK Peace Instituto 7"10 B RALZIQH. X. CAROLINA. I One of the areatest female schools of the Sooth. Three M. A. graduates to the faculty. Masle-Pl- . rxtor a fnll rraduatn of Leipste. Assistant, m rftduate of Berlin. t'nrlTledadantaceslneTerr department. Wth year. Opens Pept. 13. 1 Hsnl. fo Catalogue to J as.Dln wiucis, U. AOf LnlT.of Va.) BVX-Jt- X T&1M Tilt trtrj J n n I IV A TT Tbe Specialist, of Memphis', Ulli niAl I Tenn., treats all Chronic, Ner- vous. Blood ond Skin Diseawi, by mall, for $3 09 amontn. Writs for symptom blank trie. cumulation 'may be left in the court room. But bereavements are home troubles and there is no escape from them. You will see that vacant chair. Your eye will catch at the sugges- tive picture. You can not fly the presence of such ills. You go to Swit- zerland to get clear of them, but more sure-foote-d than the mule that takes you up the Alps, your troubles climb to the tip-to- p and sit shivering on the glaciers. You may cross the seas, but they can outsail the swiftest steamer. You may take" caravan, and put out across the Arabian desert, but they fol- low you like a simoon, armed with suffocation. You plunge into the Mam- moth cave, but they hang like stal- actites from the roof of the cavern. They stand behind with skeleton fin- gers to push you ahead. They stand before you to throw you back. They run upon you like reckless horsemen. They charge upon you with gleaming spear. They seem to come haphazard, scattering shots from the gun of a care- less sportsman. But not so. It is good aim that sends.them just right; for God is the archer. This summer many of you will especially feel your grief as you go to places where once you were accompanied by thoss who are gone now. Your troubles will follow you to the seashore, and will keep up with The great wall of China was not Spare Pearline Spoil the Wash remedy, Syrup of Figs. jt excellence iadue to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas- ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical $75.00 to $350.00 ffTY. JOHNSON CO.. Main St., iUcmonl,Vs, built of brick, but of symbols. These symbols are the hieroglyphic letters of her written language. The intractable nature of these hieroglyphics forbid! the study of other languages; the in- flow of outside thought is thus stop- ped, and international intercourse ia effectually prevented. The masons who arvAiu tais raraa Thli Trade Mark U on tis tt WATERPROOF COAT ciSZ.A n h World I A. J. TOWER. BOSTON. MASS. EVIS' 98 ci LYE Beat, Easiest to Use, sad Cheapest. profession, because it acts on tne xkia- - (PATEN-TE- C) neys, jjiver ana uoweis witnout weax- - built the real wall oi enma usea idk for mortar and pens for trowels. The CHICKASAW IRON WORKS. ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug Chinese ideal is immobility. Novelty Sold by drupgists or wni oj man. i t 60c E. T. Hardline. Warren, Pa. fcjj is heresy. Buddha, the immovable, is the god of China. gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man Th ttreniytt and pvrttt Lys made. Unlike other Lye. it being ae ne powder and parked In a ean witti removable lid, the contents arc always ready f.r use. Will make tbe bt perfumed Hani Soap la 0 tr.lnnt-- s u ithovt boil- ing. It ! tlio best for cleansing waste pipes, diinfectirjij sinks, clo-t- , vaxriir bottle. pnint, trees.ete. rfN.Si.MIT (O. When the churches are quarreling Machinery and Machinery Supplies. HBPAIR WORK. OOrCS. KSTASXISKXD 1885. I Wrl te for prtoea A. N. K., F. . 1464 TBX WBITXXa TO ADVERTISERS FJLE.4a tat tba saw tk AvriUcwt la il ufactured by the Ualilorma x ig yrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not cccpt tnj substitute iX cSered. the devil goes off on a vacation. l or thenrcinister5 and elders and deacons and vestrynKB wre Uoic wrJN the lightning express In which you j ;sd away. Qrt tarrying at home, they

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Page 1: The Bolivar bulletin. (Bolivar, Tennessee) 1893-09-08 [p ]. · A SALARY OF S3.000. TILLAGE'S SERMON. will sit beside you by day, and whisper A Business Colter Ursdntt tleta a Tonl--over

A SALARY OF S3.000. will sit beside you by day, and whisperTILLAGE'S SERMON.over your pillow night after night,A Business Colter Ursdntt tleta a Tonl- -

tioo m liaok Kiamlntr. God's Intlmato Acqualn tanca withThomas E. Jertnlnes, late of Napliville, Dna- - txxn appointed Bank ..xanuner for tho on't olame the CookAll Earthly Griefs.bUteaof California, Oregon and Washing-Ion- ,

at a aalarr of ,ifX per annum. Ho is

I want to assure you that you are notleft alone, and that your weeping isheard in Heaven. You will wandramong the hills and say: "Up thishill, last year, our boy climbed withgreat glee, and waved his cap from thetop;" or "This' is the place where ourlittle girl put flowers in her hair, andlooked up in her mother's face," until

Tlis Tears of AfBleted Hamaolty are Not

take a very Btrong blow to shiver thegolden bowl of life, or break thepitcher at the fountain-- Many of youhave kept on in life throiigh sheerforce of wilL You think no one canunderstand your distresses. Perhapsyou look strong, and it is supposed thatyou are a hypochondriac Theysay that you are nervous as if thatwere nothing! God have mercy uponany man or woman that is nervous! Attimes you sit alone in your room.Friends do not come. You feel an in-describable loneliness in your suffer

a son oi I'mi. IL W . or Jennmps'Business Ctlle(rc, KashTille, and thin ap-pointment can be largely attributed to theDunincsa training he received from bisfalber, as well a to the latter' influence in

Wasted Comfort for tho Kepent-an- t,

tho Sick, tho Poor andtba Bereaved.

aecurlojr poit:ons. Thia is perbana theevery drop of blood in your heart

Kct. T. DeWitt Talmaffe chose for

.THE TIRBT "FUrTTTANS.

Few In Numbers, but Dangerous, Desperate, Determined Men.

I have in my possession a detailed aecount of the temper of parties in En-gland, drawn up in the year 15S5, threeyears before the Armada came. Thewriter was a distinguished Jesuit. Theaccount itself was prepared for the useof the pope and Philip, with a specialview to the reception which an invad-ing force would meet with, and it goesInto great detail. The people of thetowns London, Bristol, etc were, hesays, generally heretics. The peers,the gentry, their tenants, and peas-antry, who formed the imraese majori-ty ofihe population, were almost uni-versally Catholics. But the writer dis-

tinguishes properly among Catholics.There were the ardent, impassionedCatholics, ready to be confessors andmartyrs, ready to rebel at thefirst opportunity, who had re-nounced their allegience, who de-

sired to overthrow Elizabeth and putthe queen of Scots in her place. Thenumber of these, he says, was daily in

the subject of a recent sermon "A Bottie of Tears," baling' it on the text:

tingled with gladness, and you thankedGod with a thrill of rapture; and youlook around as much as to say: "Whodashed out that Ught? Who filledthis cup . with gall? What blast

Put thou my tears la thy bottle. PsalmslvL.S.

ings; but God knows, God feels. Godcompassionates. He counts the sleepless nights; He regards the acuteness oithe pain; He estimates the hardness ofthe breathirg. While you pour out

Hardly a mail has come to me for froze np these fountains otwenty years that has not containedletters saying that my sermons hare the medicine from the bottle, and

the heart?" Some of you havelost your parents within the last twelvemonths. Their prayers for you areended. You take up their picture and

comforted the writers of those letters. count the drops, God counts nil yourI hare not this summer nor for twenty falling tears. As you look at the vials,

try to call back the kindness that onceyears spoken on the platform of anyout-do- or meeting, but coming1 down Ihare been told by hundreds of people

looked out from those old, wrinkled

If a baking powder is not uniform in strength,so that the same quantity will always do the samework, no one can know how to use it, and uni-

formly good, light food cannot be produced with it.All baking powders except Royal, because

improperly compounded and made from inferiormaterials, lose their strength quickly when the canis opened for use. At subsequent bakings therewill be noticed a falling off in strength. The foodis heavy, and the flour, eggs and butter wasted.

It is always the case that the consumer suffersin pocket, if not in health, by accepting any sub-

stitute for the Royal Baking Powder. The Royalis the embodiment of all the excellence that it ispossible to attain in an absolutely pure powder.It is always strictly reliable. It is not only moreeconomical because of its ' greater strength, butwill retain its full leavening power, which noother powder will, until used, and make morewholesome food.

filled with nauseous draughts, and atthe bottles of distasteful tonic thatstand on the shelf, remember that thereis a larger bottle than these, which is

faces, and spoke in such a tremuloushe same thing. So I think I will keep voice; and you say it is a good picture,

filled with no mixture by earthlyapothecaries, but it is God's bottle, in

but all the while you feel that, afterall, it does not do justice; and youwould give almost anything youwould cross the sea, you wouldwalk the earth over to hear just one

mot thorough and influential achool in teeUnited State. Its graduates nearly alwaysfret good poeitions. Jiaavilie ChristianAdvocate.

flood Position la a Hank..The followin sr letter explain itself:Me r haxt' Natio!. Uxk. Home, Ol.,

April 27, 1VI. I rofeor 1C W. Jenninfr,Nashville Dear Kir: No doubt you will beaurprised to hear from me. but as I knowyou are always glad to hear from your"toys," I will tell you that I have beenelided book-keepe- r in above Darned bank.I don't say it because Ian writing to you,but 1 have said to many others that thethree months I spent with you was worth asmuch to tne as was the twelve years'schooling; 1 had rotten previously. 1 havecompare, my books ieh I used at Jen-nings' Business College witJl tQO books ofseveral otbrr colleges, which otter youngmen from this section attended, and theyall acknowledged that your course is muchmore thorough and practical than theschools they attended.

Yours truly. T. J. Bmmx.Write for catalog with names of 1,000

students tmm 23 States. AddressK. W. Jennings, Nashville, Ten a.

Heeixo is not always believing. For in-

stance, we see liars frequently. Philadel-phia North America.

Thers are thousands of young men stand-ing on the very threshold of life, trying tomake a wise decision as to what business orprftfession they will follow. To all such wewould say, before deciding tho questionwrite to 11. F. Johnson & Co., Richmond, Va,They can be of servico to you, as they navebeen to others.

As to riding a bicycle, the men appearmore bent on it than the girls.

which Ha hath gathered all our tears.Again: God remembers all the sor

rows of poverty. There is much wantthat never comes to inspection. Thedeacons of the church never see it.

word from those lips that a few monthsago used to call you by your firstname, though so long you yourselfhave been a parent. Now, you havedone your best with your grief. You

The comptrollers of almhouses neverreport it. It comes not to church, forit has no appropriate apparel. Itmakes no appeal for help, but chooses smile when you do not feel like it. Butrather to suffer than expose its bitter though you may deceive the world,ness. Fathers who fail to gain a livelihood, so that they and their childrensubmit to constant privation, sewing

God knows. He looks down upon theempty cradle, upon the desolatednursery, upon the stricken home, andupon the broken heart, and says: "Thisis the way I thresh the wheat, this is

women, who can not ply the needlequick enough to earn them shelter andbread. But whether imported or un the way I scour my jewels! Cast thycomplaining, whether in seeminglycomfortable parlor, or in damp cellar,

burden upon my arm and I will sus-tain you. All these tears I have gath-ered into my bottle!"or in hot garret, God's angels of mercy

are on the watch. This moment those But what is the use of having soShooting Pains griefs are being collected. Down onthe back streets, in all the alleys, amid

many tears in Uod s lachrymatory? Inthat great casket or vase, why doesGod preserve all your troubles?shanties and log cabins, the work goesThrough all the ages of eternity,

E. B. Walthall & Co., Druggists, HorseCave, Ky, say: '"Hall's Catarrh Cure curesevery one that takes it Sold by Druggists,75c .

Thesb are the nights when the man whois covered with glory bas over him all thatis necessary to keep him warm. BuffaloCourier.

Freshness and purity are Imparted to tarcomplexion bv Glenn's Sulphur Soap.

Hill's Hair and Whisker Dye, 60c.

First Moth "Are you going fur V Beo-on-d

Moth "I intend to spend the summeron the cape.'

Axtose would be justified In recommend-ing Beecham's Pills for all affections of tbliver and other vital organs.

"Yo' George Washington Snowball, comeright in outen de sun," screamed a negromamma to her child. "Whaffur, mamma?""Whaffur! I'll tell yo whaffur 1 Fustthing yo' know yo' complection '11 betanned as bad as de white trash."

Thb Elizabethan ruff will be in vogue inthe fall, and the fellow who attempts tokiss a fashionable girl will "get it in theneck." Philadelphia Record.

Diner "Isn't this meat rather tough!"Waiter "There's no denying that, sir, butthen we serve extra strong toothpicks withIt." Boston Transcript.

Jcst when the coffee thinks it has goodgrounds for complaint the egg drops iu andsettles the whole business.

what use of a great collection of tears?I do not know that they will be keptthere forever. I do not know but that

All over my body andsxellinKofmyllmbshavecaused me great suffer-ing. In the spring X wascompletely worn out andate hardly enough to keepme alive. I have beentaking Hood's Sarsaprilia, and the swellingbaa subsided, the shoot-i- n

pains are gone, I havegood appetite, am better

very way." Mrs. A. O.OiiAjt, 84 Newman St.,So. Boston. Get Hood's.

on. Tears of want seething in sum-mer's heat, or freezing in winter'scold they fall not unheeded. Theyare jewels for Heaven's casket. Theyare pledges of Divine sympathy.They are tears for God's bottle.

Again: The Lord preserves the re-membrance jf all paternal anxieties.You see a man from the infamous sur

in some distant age of Heaven an angelof God may look into the bottle andfind it as empty of tears as the lachary--malsof earthenware dugup from the andent city? Where have the tears gone to?What sprite of hell hath been invadingroundings step out into the kingdom of

God. He has heard no sermon. He has God's palace, and hath robbed theHood'sffifrCnresHOOd'S PUIS Cure Sick Headache. 25c

received no startling provident warn-ing. What brought him to this new

creasing, owing to the exertions of theseminary priests; and plots, he boasts,were being continually formed bythem to murder the queen. Therewere Catholics of another sort, whowere papal at heart, but went with thetimes to save their property; wholooked forward to a change in thenatural order of things, but would notstir of themselves till an invading armyactually appeared. But all alike, heinsists, were eager for a revolution.Let the prince of Parma" come4 andthey would all join him; and togetherthese two classes of Catholics madethree-fourt- hs of the nation.

"The only party," he says (and thisis really noticeable), "the only partythat would fight to death for thequeen, the only real friends she hadwere the Puritans (it is the first men-tion of the name which I have found),the Puritans of London, the Puritansof the sea towns." These, he admits,were dangerous, desperate, determinedmen. The numbers of them, however,were providentially small.

The date of this document is, as 1

said, 15S5, and I believe it generallyaccurate. The only mistake is thatamong the Anglican Catholics therewere a few to whom their country wasas dear as their creed a few who werebeginning to see that under the act oiuniformity Catholic doctrine might betaught and Catholic ritual practiced;vho adhered to the old forms of re-ligion, but did not believe that obe-dience to the pope was a necessarypart of them. One of these was LordHoward of Effingham, whom thequeen placed in his high command tosecure the wavering fidelity of thepeers and country gentlemen. But theforce, the fire, the enthusiasm came(as the Jesuit saw) from the Puritans,from men of the same convictions a!the Calvinists of Holland and Rochelle.men who, driven from the land, tookto the ocean as their natural home,and nursed the reformation in arocean cradle. J. A. Froude, in Long-man's Magazine.

Sweet Charity.Mother What in the world are yot

so busy at?Small Son Us boys is gettin' up t

charity circus, and I guess ws'll maka lot o' money too. All the children li

interested in the cause.Mother That's noble. Andyou in

tend to give it all to the poor?Small Son Yes'm. Our teacher ii

going to marry a real nice man, anwe all feel so sorry for him we wantito raise money so he can buy a ticke'for somewhere and run away. GoofNews.

The World Inn.The above Chicago hotel, under the capa

lacnrymatories JNone. These aresanctified sorrows, and those tears werechanged into pearls that are now setin the crowns and robes of the ran

mind? This is the secret God lookedover the bottle in which He gathers the,tears of His people, and He saw a par-ental tear in that bottle which hasbeen for forty vears unanswered.jerman somed. I walk up to examine this

heavenly coronet, gleaming brighterthan the sun,' and cry: "From whatriver depths of Heaven were those gemsgathered?" and a thousand voicereply: "These are transmuted

He said: "Go to, now, and let meanswer that tear!" and forthwiththe wanderer is brought home to God.ypup tears from God's bottle." I see

scepters of light stretched dowufrom tho throne of those who 4f

Oh, this work of training children forGod! It is a tremendous work. Somepeople think it easy. They have triedit. A child is placed in the arms ofthe young parent. It is a "beautiful

on earth were trod on of men, and inevery 6cepter-poin- t, and inlaid in every

orPurc CLAIRETTEplaything. You look into the laugh ivory stair of golden throne I beholding eyes. You examine the dimples in an indescribable richness and luster,

FOR IT HAS STOOD Tfl TEST,the feet. You wonder at its exquisite and cry, "'From whence this streaminglight these flashing pearls?" and theorganism, iseantiful playthings! But

'CFALL 7MB SOAPS "OuflGinLSViM TO0

Mr. Albert Hartley of Hudson,N. C, was taken with Pneumonia.His brother had just died from it.When he found his doctor could notrally him he took one bottle of Ger-man Syrup and came out sound andwell. "Mr. S. B. Gardiner, Clerkwith Druggist J. E. Barr, Aurora,Texas, prevented a bad attack ofpneumonia by taking German Syrupin time. He was in the businessand knew the danger. He used thegreat remedy Boschee's GermanSyrup for lung diseases. (D

on some nightfall, as you sit rockingthat little one, a voice seems to fall

voice of the elders beneath the throne,and of the martyrs under the altar, Wis "FAIRBANKS IS Tf BESTstraight from the throne of God, say and of the hundred and forty and foufthousand radiant on the glassy sea exing: "That child is immortal! The

stars shal die, but that is an immortal! claim: "Transmuted tears from God'sbottle."Suns shall grow old with age and per-

ish, but that is an immortal!" Let the ages of Heaven roll on theNow, I know with many of you this is story of earth's pomp and pride long

ago ended; the Koh-i-no- or diamondsthe chief anxiety. You earnestly wishthat make kings proud, the precious

CbaCLOTAES SHELL SWET,0lffi UNEAf SHWE0

a tmb house is ami mm Brightmo wmn FAmmims clairette soap

FILLS HOUSEMAIDS &EIIGHT.

GATkjirbank &C-O- ST. LOUIS-D- O

YOU OSW TOBACCO ?

stones that adorned Persian tiara andyour children to grow up rightly, butyou find it hard work to make them doas you wish. You check their temper.You correct their waywardness; in the

flamed in the robes of Babylonian processions, forgotten; the Golconda minesi J"5

midnight your pillow is wet with weep charred in the last conflagration; brtfirm as the everlasting hills, and pureing. 1 ou have wrestled with God inas the light that streams from theagony for the salvation of your chil-

dren. You ask me if all that anxietv throne, and bright as the river thatis ineffectual. I answer, No. God un flows from the eternal rock, shall If you do, always chew tho best.derstands your heart. He understands gleam, shall sparkle, shall flame forjSB.K-fCw'- - ble management of Mr. Cbas. E. Leland, is

having the patronage it deserves. It is nothow hard you have tried to make that ever, these transmuted tears of God'sbottle. Mila fire-tra- but is built of steel and nre-Dro- of

tile, combininsr absolute safety withdaughter doright, though she is sovery petulant and reckless; aDd what Li ! v4Meanwhile, let the empty lachryma Areasonable prices. Its location southwest

on trying to be a "Son of Consolation."The prayer of my t ext was pressed

out of DaTid's soul by innumerablecalamities, but it is just as appropri-ate for the distressed of all ages.Within the past century travelersand antiquarians have explored theruins of many of the ancient cities.andfrom the very heart of those buriedsplendors of other days have beenbrought up evidences of customs thatlong ago vanished from the world.From among tombs of those ages havebeen brought up lachrymatories, orlachrymals, which are vials made ofearthenware. " It was the custom forthe ancients to catch the tears thatthey wept over their dead in a bottle,and to place that bottle in the gravesof the departed, and we have manyspecimens of the ancient lachrymato-ries, or tear bottle, in our museums.

Wjien on the way from the HolyLand our ship touched at Cyprus, wewent back into the hills of that islandand bought tear-bottl- es which the na-tives had dug out of the ruins of theold city. There is nothing more sug-gestive to me than the tear-bottl- es

which I brought home and put amongmy curiosities. That was the kind ofbottlo that my text alludes to whenDavid cries: "Put thpu my tears intothy bottle."

The text intimates that God has anintimate acquaintance and perpetualremembrance of all our griefs, and avial, or lachrymatory, or bottle, inwhich He catches and saves our tears;and I bring to you the condolence ofthis Christian sentiment. Why talkabout grief? Alas! the world has itspangs, and now, while we speak, thereare thick darknesses of soul that needto be lifted. There are many who areabout to break under the assault oftemptation, and perchance, if no wordsappropriate to their Jcase be uttered,they perish. I come on no fool's er-rand. Put upon your wounds no salvecompounded by human quackery,but pressing straight to the mark,I hail you as a vessel mid-se- a

cries to a passing craft: "Shipahoy!" and invite you on board avessel which has Faith for a rud-der, and Prayer for sails, and Christ forCaptain, and Heaven for an eternalharbor. Catherine Ilheinfeldt, a Prus-sian, keeps a boat with which she res-cues the drowning. When a stormcomes on the coast, and the otherpeople go to their beds to rest, she putsout in her boat for the relief of thedistressed, and hundreds of the drown-ing has she brought safely to thebeach. In this life-bo- at of the GospelI put out to-da- y, hoping, by God's help,to bring ashore at least one soul thatmay now be sinking in the billows oftemptation and trouble. The tearsthat were once caught in the lachry-matories brought up from Hercula-ncu- m

and Pompeii are all gone, andthe bottle is as dry as the scoria of thevolcano that submerged them! but notso with the bottle in which God gathersall our tears.

First, I remark that God kees per-petually the tears of repentance. Manya man has awakened in the morning sowretched from the night's debauchthat he has sobbed and wept. PainsIn the head, aching in the eyes, sick atheart, and unfit to step into the light.He grieves, not about his misdoing, butonly about its consequences. Godmakes no record of such weeping. Ofall the million tears that have gushedas the result of such misdemeanor, notone ever got into God's bottle. Theydried on the fevered cheek, or weredashed down by the bloated hand, orfell into the red wine cup as it cameagain to the lips, foaming with stillworse intoxication. But when a manis sorry for his past and tries to do bet-ter when he mourns his wasted ad-vantages and bemoans his rejection ofGod's mercy, and cries amid the lacer-ations of an aroused conscience for helpout of his terrible predicament, thenGod listens; then Heaven bows down;then scepters of pardon are extendedfrom the throne, then his crying rendsthe heart of heavenly compassion; thenhis tears are caught in God's bottle.

You know the story of paradise andthe Peri. I think it might be put tohigher adaptation. An angel startsfrom the throne of God to find whatthing it can on the earth worthy ofbeing carried back to Heaven. It goesdown through the gold and silvermines of earth, but finds nothingworthy of transportation to the Celes-tial City. It goes down through thedepths of the sea, where the pearls lie,and finds nothing worthy of takingback to Heaven. But coming to thefoot of a mountain it sees a wandererweeping over his evil ways. The tearsof the prodigal start, but do not fall tothe ground, for the angel's wingcatches them, and with that treasurespeeds back to Heaven. God sees theangel coming, and says: "Behold thebrightest gem of earth, and the bright-est jewel of Heaven the tear of a sin-ner's repentance."

Oh! when I see the Heavenly Shep-herd bringing a lamb from the wilder-ness; when I hear the quick tread ofthe prodigal hastening heme to findhis father; when I see a sa'Jor-bo- y com-ing on the wharf, and hurrying awayto beg his mothers pardon for longneglect and unkindness; when I see thehouseless coming to God for shelter,and the wretched and the vile and thesin-burne- d, and the passion-blaste- d ap-pealing for merc3 to a compassionateGod, I exclaim in ecstasy and triumph:"More tears for God's bottle !"

Again: God keeps a tender remem-brance of all your sicknesses. Howmany of you are thoroughly bound inbody? Hot one in ten! I do not exag-gerate. The vast majority of the raceare constant subjects of ailments.There is some one form of disease thatyou are particularly subject to. Youhave a sveak side, or back, or are sub-ject to headaches, or falntnesses, orlucffa tasiiy distressed, U would .'cp

Hbry of Heaven stand forever. Let no corner Midway Plaisance (60th st.) andMadison ave. is unsurpassed, as it faces

pains you have bestowed in teachingthat son to walk in the path of upright-ness, though he has such strong pro

hand touch it. Let no wing strike it. SATISFIES EVERYBODY.CHEW HORSE SHOE. CHEW HORSE SHOE.the Fair Grounds. Is accessible by steam.Let no collision crack it. Purer than cable and elevated lines. Write or teleclivities for dissipation. I speak a

cheering word. God heard every coungraph in advance of your coming for ac-commodations, or look The World's Inn up

beryl or chrysoprasus. Let it standon the step of Jehovah's throne and

ITORDIUOUSKESS, DYSPEPSIA, .

SICK HEADACHE, WEAK STOMACH,when you arrive. You will not be

Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic:--AKD

sel you ever offered him. God hasknown all the sleepless nights youhave ever passed. God has seen everysinking of your distressed spirit. Godremembers your prayers. He keeps

under the arch of the unfading rain-bow. Passing down the corridors ofthe palace, the redeemed of earth shallglance at it, and think of all the earth-ly troubles from which they were de

'Is my son thorough in his school work,Mr. Pedagog 1" asked Bosbvshell. "Yes, heis," said the teacher. "lie shows a teniency to eroto the bottom of everything. It Is as pleasant to the taste as lem

eternal record of your anxieties; and think he will be foot of his class in a fewlivered, and say, each to each: "Thatis lays."The Death Roll Is Largely Swelled

in His lachrymatory, not such as stoodin ancient tomb, but in one that glows

what we heard of on earth." "That iswhat the Psalmist spoke of." "There

Bv persons careless of imperilled health,and glitters beside the throne of God,

DISORDERS OF THE LIVER,

TEST-MON- T.

I rare tised Brodie's Pills for many years lamy family and have found them invaluable inall cases, and as a Liver Fill do not think theyhave u equal. Ceo. II. Wiley.

SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.PBICE, 3e. Box.

I. L. LYONS &. CO., Proprietors,

who "nooh. nooh!" their minor ailments,He holds all those exhausting tears.The grass may be rank Hpon your graves believing, or pretending to believe, that na-

ture will effect a change. Nature does effect a change, but it is in the wrong direc Siand the letters upon your tombstone

defaced with the elements before the

once were put our tears." "That isGod's bottle." And while standingthere inspecting this richest inlaid vaseof Heaven, the towers of the palacedome strike up this silvery chime: "Godhath wiped away all tears from allfaces. .Wherefore comfort one anotherwith these words."

, j V 'A i tjit. ' i 1Jiu --rtion. She thus avenges a disregard of herappeals. Don't omit, if you are at all un-well, to recuperate by the aid of Hostetter'sDivine response will come; but He who 5 n't c i v-- f

hath declared, "I will be a God to Stomach Hitters, a signal remeay ior uys-pepsi- a,

nervousness, debility, malaria, rheuthee, and to thy seed after thee," will

on syrup.The smallest infant will take it nd

never know it is medicine.Children cry for it. .Chills once broken will not return.Cost you only half the price of oth-

er Chill Tonics.No quinine needed. No purgative

needed. Contains no poison.It purifies the blood and removes all

malarial poison from the system.It is as large as any dollar tonic and

RETAILS FOR 50 CENTS.Just sm CJof tnr Adult mm tor

Child rr-- u

WARRANTED;12, 1888.7

PlJti" MiDtnicB Co., Pari. Tann. fPlea tio4 m tnr iosa or 70-- V

Grore'a Tasteless Cblll Tonic. I waapleased with tba lot from too last nm-too- r.

Tha people weradelffchted wlta It.I rave toot Chill Tonlo to some eblldreawho vers pala and swarthr and emaci-ated, bavins hsd chronlo chills (or months

on of tberafor a yr.and wit";'?at, weeks after berinaios with the ChillTonie tbey were bale aad hesrty, with reaand rosv cheeks. Itaottd llkeaebarm.

W. W. 6TIUSON, M. Dm

ELY'S matism, biliousness. yVfTr 'I "NTT.CatarrH . 1. .. in

"There, mamma." said the small boy. asnot forget, and some day, in Heaven,while you are ranging the fields oflight, the gates of pearl will swing

Early American Sculptors.It is worthy of special notice thatar"

he gazed at the dromedary, "that must be hiiii un.iithe camel that had the last straw put on biswhen Rush began to model in clay notback, and garlanded with glory, thataack." '

-one of the artists who have givencelebrity to our native sculpture had Wttit.r vacation alwavs begins with a V

.t"t it always ends with a scarcity of them.Baltimore American.

long wayward one will rush into youroutstretched arms of welcome and tri-umph. The hills may depart and theearth may burn, and the stars fall andtime perish, but God will break Hisoath and trample upon His promisesnever! never!

M

Cleanses theNasal Passages,Allays Pain andInflammation,

Heals the Sores.Restores tho

Senses of Tasteand Smell.

seen the light of day. Frazer was notborn until 1790, nor Ezekiel Augur, ofNew Haven, until 1791. The latterwas originally in the grocery trade;but, failing in that, took up modeling

rac8iawmaAgain: God keeps a perpetual re POn 8ALB BY ALT. DBTTGGIST8.

membrance of all bereavements. Theseare the trials that cleave the soul and

and wood-carvin- g without any guideexcept his natural instincts; but, likethe majority of our early sculptors,with the exception of Ilush, his effortsare interesting only as evidence ofwhat talent entirely unobstructed can

throw the red hearts of men to beTRY THE CUKE. HAY"FEVERA particle Is applied Into each nostril and la

at ret-aM- Price AO rent t Druitrliru. or bv mall.KLY BROTHEU.S, Oi Warren M.. New Vork.

IMKUFACTURED BY PARIS MEDICINE CO.," ST. .LOUIS, MO,,

FORMERLY CP PARIS. TEKW. '

THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSETHE COOK HAD NOT USED

crushed in the wine press. Troublesat the store you may leave at the store.

accomplish. It was not until 1805,TF& r czr'xs rayiijFV u

Misrepresentation and abuse of theworld you may leave on the streetwhere you found them. The lawsuitthat would swallo,w ur honest ac

long after Copley, est, Malbone,Allston and Stuart had demonstratedour capacity for pictorial art, that(PLCS P)Hiram Powers was born. The same LIEXCURSIONS year Horatio Greenough first saw thelight of day. In the remote wilds 'of--TO- Kentucky, Hart was brought into thisArkansas and Texas world in 1810, and Clevenger, Craw

-- VIA. TUE-- ford and Mills followed in 1812, 1813 GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS.SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN,

KNOWLEDGEBrings comfort and improvement andand 1815. Thus we see that, without

hereditary genius or predecessors from tends to personal enioyment whenCOTTON BELT ROUTE,

August 22, September 12, October 10, 1893.Ticket food tor main nntll tOtia-- s from date of sale.f or full particular ddr-R.T. O MTTBw.l. 1A., I H H. t TTOW, T P. A., VIESluiHTillr, Ry. CbattanooR-a- . Ten

H. J.. I. ?. A., I W. 1. ADAMS. T. P.MpmrliK. Ten?i. I Nahvill.Tenm.

rightly used. The many, who live bet-ter than others and enjoy life more,. withless expenditure, by more promptlyadapting the world's best products tothe needs of physical being, will attestthe value to health of the pure liquidlaxative principles embraced in the

whom to copy, Rush achieved hisartistic results, and succeeded in win-ning for himself a European renownwhich made him the equal of some ofthe leading foreign carvers and sculp-tors of his age, and at the same timewell earned the title of 'father ofAmerican sculpture." Lippincott's

H . L.Bhai O. P. T. A., fct. Louia, Mo.VaJIB THIS rartaarcr ta yaavnMk IK

Peace Instituto 7"10B RALZIQH. X. CAROLINA. I

One of the areatest female schools of the Sooth.Three M. A. graduates to the faculty. Masle-Pl- .

rxtor a fnll rraduatn of Leipste. Assistant, m

rftduate of Berlin. t'nrlTledadantaceslneTerrdepartment. Wth year. Opens Pept. 13. 1 Hsnl. foCatalogue to J as.Dln wiucis, U. AOf LnlT.of Va.)

BVX-Jt- X T&1M Tilt trtrj J

n n I IV A TT Tbe Specialist, of Memphis',Ulli niAl I Tenn., treats all Chronic, Ner-

vous. Blood ond Skin Diseawi, by mall, for $3 09amontn. Writs for symptom blank trie.

cumulation 'may be left in the courtroom. But bereavements are hometroubles and there is no escape fromthem. You will see that vacant chair.Your eye will catch at the sugges-tive picture. You can not fly thepresence of such ills. You go to Swit-zerland to get clear of them, but moresure-foote-d than the mule that takesyou up the Alps, your troubles climb tothe tip-to- p and sit shivering on theglaciers. You may cross the seas, butthey can outsail the swiftest steamer.You may take" caravan, and put outacross the Arabian desert, but they fol-

low you like a simoon, armed withsuffocation. You plunge into the Mam-moth cave, but they hang like stal-actites from the roof of the cavern.They stand behind with skeleton fin-gers to push you ahead. They standbefore you to throw you back. Theyrun upon you like reckless horsemen.They charge upon you with gleamingspear. They seem to come haphazard,scattering shots from the gun of a care-less sportsman. But not so. It is goodaim that sends.them just right; for Godis the archer. This summer many ofyou will especially feel your grief asyou go to places where once you wereaccompanied by thoss who are gonenow. Your troubles will follow you tothe seashore, and will keep up with

The great wall of China was notSpare PearlineSpoil the Wash

remedy, Syrup of Figs.jt excellence iadue to its presenting

in the form most acceptable and pleas-ant to the taste, the refreshing and trulybeneficial properties of a perfect lax-ative ; effectually cleansing the system,dispelling colds, headaches and feversana permanently curing constipation.It has given satisfaction to millions andmet with the approval of the medical

$75.00 to $350.00 ffTY.JOHNSON CO.. Main St., iUcmonl,Vs,

built of brick, but of symbols. Thesesymbols are the hieroglyphic letters ofher written language. The intractablenature of these hieroglyphics forbid!the study of other languages; the in-

flow of outside thought is thus stop-ped, and international intercourse iaeffectually prevented. The masons who

arvAiu tais raraa

Thli Trade Mark U on tisttWATERPROOF COATciSZ.A n h World I

A. J. TOWER. BOSTON. MASS.EVIS' 98 ci LYE

Beat, Easiest to Use, sad Cheapest.profession, because it acts on tne xkia--(PATEN-TE- C)

neys, jjiver ana uoweis witnout weax- -built the real wall oi enma usea idkfor mortar and pens for trowels. The

CHICKASAW

IRONWORKS.

ening them and it is perfectly free fromevery objectionable substance.

Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drugChinese ideal is immobility. NoveltySold by drupgists or wni oj man. i t

60c E. T. Hardline. Warren, Pa. fcjjis heresy. Buddha, the immovable, isthe god of China. gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man

Th ttreniytt and pvrttt Lysmade. Unlike other Lye. it beinga e ne powder and parked In a eanwitti removable lid, the contentsarc always ready f.r use. Willmake tbe bt perfumed HaniSoap la 0 tr.lnnt-- s u ithovt boil-ing. It ! tlio best for cleansingwaste pipes, diinfectirjij sinks,clo-t- , vaxriir bottle. pnint,trees.ete. rfN.Si.MIT (O.

When the churches are quarrelingMachinery and Machinery Supplies.

HBPAIR WORK. OOrCS.KSTASXISKXD 1885. I Wrl te for prtoea

A. N. K., F. . 1464

TBX WBITXXa TO ADVERTISERS FJLE.4atat tba saw tk AvriUcwt la il

ufactured by the Ualilorma x ig yrupCo. only, whose name is printed on everypackage, also the name, Syrup of Figs,and being well informed, you will not

cccpt tnj substitute iX cSered.

the devil goes off on a vacation. l orthenrcinister5 and elders and deaconsand vestrynKB wre Uoic wrJNthe lightning express In which you j

;sd away. Qrt tarrying at home, they