West and South. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 5, 1893 Page: 3 of 4
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If To* W«
Bfl Love J.
Don't find fault.
Don't contradict poop!:? even if you'rf
sure you are right.
Don't bo inquisitive about tho af-
fairs of even your most in'imatc friend.
Don't underrate anything because
you don't nossess it.
Don't believe that everybody elM la
n you.
>u" ha
i life.
s all the evil you hear.
Don't repeat gossip, even if it doei
Interest a crowil.
Don't go untidy on the plea thai
tverybony knows you.
Don't lie rudo to your inferiors in so*
cial position.
Don't over or under-dren.
Don't express a positive opinion un*
less you perfectly understand what yea
are talking about.
Don't gut in tho habit of vul"Htizinfl
life bv waking light of the sentimcut ol
it. *
Don't jeer at anybody's religious be-
lief.
Don't try to bo anything else but a
gentlowoman —and that means a wo*
man who lias consideration for tho
whole world and whoso life is governed
by the Golden Rule. "Do unto others as
you would bo dono by."—Ladies /Amis
Journal.
Facts for the Travellna Public,
Emigrant*. commeiTlnh men. toarlsts, mar-
iner* ami miners relating to the preservation
of health nader conditions unfavorable to it,
may b.« glenned with profit from tbooft pub-
lished testimony or such persona relating to
the protective and remedial qnalitiea of Hoa-
tetter'a Stomach Hitters, a very valuable
remedy to ttaoso who traverse "tbe briny
doep," or ara subjected to malarial intluences
or out do.tr expoauro With as much cer-
tainty at Or Koch's celebrated lymph destroys
•rganls microbe, the D!
enhenlthful
braski h
disorders canned by poor and
food, and restores tra
nerves and weary brail
iv - and liver conpinin
.)epsi- — —
does
in malaria-tainted air mil
11 prevents and removej
loth'ty"'""" °m*
the ailments that 1J
The CoitofHuman I < I To.
The great monsters of mochanlcal
•kill and genius call for tho sacrifice ol
a great deal of life and limb in theii
construction. 'i'ho greater the en-
gineering foat the more oxtensivc is the
loss of life. In the construction of the
Eiffel tower, for instance, twenty-six
lives wore lost, accord>.g to the official
returns of the Trench Government; bul
it is said that this number would bi
largely augmented if tho names were
given of men who died from injuries
received during tho construction of the
tower, and of others who were killed
and whose deaths wcro not reported
owing to the hue and cry which was
raised after the first two dozen lives
had bean sacrificed on the groat
structure. The number of men who
were injured during tho construction
of the Eiffel tower has been placed a I
6,000. This enormous showing is ac-
counted for by the fact that every in-
jury was reported and registered which
recoived treatment from tho official
surgeons. When a man bruised his
linger he went to a government sur-
geon to have it dressed, and a clumsy
workman thus got on the list a dozen
or two times a year. Serious injuries
wcro a very small proportion of tho
whole. On the gicat Forth bridge in
Scotland a list ol forty lives lost has
been published, but thoro is no rccord
of injuries.— N. Y. Shu.
That Joyful Feeling
With the exhilarating sense of re-
newed health and strength and inter-
nal cleanliness, which follows the use
of Syrup of l-'igs, is unknown to the
few who have not.progressed beyond
the old time medicines and the cheap
substitutes sometimes offered but
never accepted by the well informed
TABERNACLE PULPIT.
i Beaut tfot Sermon fro it This
Oratur—Homeless Children
Cities Likened to the Flowers of
of
other dl-coui-M-N, Itov. T. DeWltt
Taluiace took his bearers and reader*
through an untried region of thought and
found a subject for most practical gosttel-
ization-in 'l b > Gardens ot tho Sea." l'he
textiolected was Jonan ii 5, "Tbe weeds
were wrapped about my head ."
Tbe botauy of the bible, or liod
among the dowers, is a fascinating
subject. 1 bold in iny band a book,
which 1 Iroughtfrom Palestine, bound
in olive wood, and within it are
pressed flowers which have not^only
retained their color, but their aroma;
flowers froiu liethlehem, flowers from
derusahm, flowers from Gethsemain-,
flowers from Mount of olives, flowers
from Bethany, flowers from Siloira,
flowers from tho valley of Jehosha-
pbat. red anemones and wild mignon-
ette, buttercups, daisies* cyclamens,
chamomile, blue-bells, ferns, mosses,
grasses, and a wealth of Uora that
keep me faacinated by the hour, and
every time I open it it is a new revela-
tion. It is the new testament of tho
fields, llut my text leads us into an
other realm ot the botanical kingdom
Having spoken to you in a course of
sermons ab-ut Uod Everywhere; on
the Astronomy of the lllbie, or (5od
among the Stars; tho Ornithology of
the Bible, or Odd among tho Birds:
the Ichthyology of the Bible, or (iod
among the Fishers, the Mineralogy of
the Bible, or God among
Amethysts; the Conchotomy of the
Bible, or (iod among the .-hells; tli
Chronology of the Bible, or (Joel
among the Centuries, 1 speak now to
you about the Botany ot the Biblo, ot
(iod in the t.nrdeus of the r*ca.
Although I purposely take this morn
ing for consideration the least oh
served and least upnreciated of all the
botanical products of the world we
shall find the contemplation very ab
sorbing. In all our theological semi
narica where we make ministers, there
ought to b6 professors to give les
sons in natural history. Physical
science ought to be taught side bj
side with revelation. It is the saint
(lod who inspires the page of the
natural world as the page of th
scriptural world. What a freshening
up it would be io our sermons to prcsr
into them even a fragment of Mediter-
ranean seaweed. \Nc should have
fewer sermons awfully dry if we imi
tated our blessed Lord, and in ourdis
like him, wo would let a lily
ir a crow fly, or a hen brood
her chickens, or a crystal of talt flash
out tho preservative qualities o
ligion.
That was an awful plunge that the
.reant prophet Jonah made when
dropped ov.r the gunwales of the
Mediterranean ship he sank many fath
oms down into a tempestuous sea
Bo.h before an 1 after the monster of
the deep swallowed him, he was
tangled in seaweed. The jungle
the deep threw their cordace of v
tation around him. t'oine of this
weed was anchored to tho bottom of
the watery abysm and some of it was
aflout and swallowed by the great sea
uonstcr, so that wliilo the prophet
vas at the bottom of the deep after he
vas horribly imprisoned, <*nd he could
xclaim.and did exclaim, in the words
of my text; "The weeds were wrapped
about my head." Jonah was the first
to record that there are growths upon
the bottom of the sea, ns well as upon
land. The first picture. 1 ever
handful of
A Qu
• Metnento.
A wealthy citizen of Osaka, Jfapan,
who is the owner of a rich copper-mine
has celebrated in a rather peculiai
manner tho two hundredth anniversary
of the mine coming into tho possessioi
of his family. On that occasion eacl
of his 300or moro employes receive,
•s a memento of the occasion a sural
4 w-tail eoat.
For tho Foil Festivities
At St. Louis, travel via the Missouri
Pacific, the Old Reliable. It makei
fast time and no change of cars. Call
on your nearest ticket agent, or writ*
to H. ('. Townscnd, c«. 1'. & T. A., St.
Louis, Mo., for descriptive folders aud
other information.
When going to Chicago to visit tho
World's Fair, do not forget to take
the Old Reliable Route, tbe Missouri
Pacific Railway. Fast time and close
connections is our m-itto. See that
your ticket reads via this route. For
illustrated folders and other informa-
tion, call on your nearest ticket
agent, or address
Postmarks on lC.igllsh Loiters.
London people havo begun an ngi
tiou in invor of the addition of tho hi
and minute to tho postmark on lett<
m \a dono in American postoffle
Heretofore the English postmark I
had only the day of the month, tho ye
and tho nama of the office.
"HnM
j. rim p*<wt ^mnr ja-
Tho shark manifests a distinct el
for poople of certain rn?o , on 1 will
an Asiatic ii preferen o to a nogro,
a European rather than either.
The pleasant coating of Beeciin
Tills completely disguises the t
without impairing their cfllele
25 cents a box.
At tho present lime thfi colored pco<
pie of tho United States control aboti:
100 weekly newspapers, which have au
aggregate average circulation of 800,«
QUO copies.
iyrap
William McKcchau, Druggist n'.
Blooraiugdale, Midi. "I h v« had
the Asthma badly cvcrKtice I catnt
out of the army sod though I hmc
been in the drug business for fi ftccts
years, and hnv: tried nearly every-
thing on the market, nothing l:m
given me the slightest r-'.icf until r
few months ago, when I used Bo-
sehee's German Syrup. I am now
glad to acknowledge the great good
it has dono 1:1c. I am greatly reliev-
ed during the day and ot uightgoto
slfceD without the least trouble." (i
C" SWIFT'S SPECIFIC •«
eliminating ail Poisons from tin
lllcod. whether of scrofulous r,
origin, this preparation has no equal.
~ rlRhtecn months 1 ha<l ni
lore on my tongue. I wa-
T9- ir. bv best local i-hrslciam
talned no relief; the sore (mutually tret
wv . I finally took t.F , and was entirel.
enred after uslnc •- few bottler."
". D. McLkxorf, Henderson, To-
llood and Blcln Dl?
descended to the deptha in a diving
bell, it was au impreaaive spectacle.
One handrrd buried ships! B* t it la
that way nearly all across the Atlantic
occan Shipiannk not by command
of admirals, but by the command
of cvclone*. But tlie'v all had sublime
burial and the fturroucdinga amid
which they sleep tho last *lecp are
more imposing than the Taj Maitul.
the Mausoleum with walls encrusted
with precious stones ami built by the
< >reat Mogul of India orer his em press.
Your departed ones were buried in the
gardens of the a a, fenced off by hedges
f cora line. 1 ho greatest oba
■ knot
i the land '
! thosi
ed pressed
page.
and 1
lied t hem " ! he Shorn Locks of Nep-
tune. * These products of the deep,
whether brown or green or yellow or
purple or red or iuter-shot of many
colors.are most fascinating. They are
distributed all over the depths and
from Arctic to Antarctic. That Uod
thinks well of them I conclude from
the fact that he has made six thousand
species of them. Sometimes these
water-plants are four hundred or
seven hundred feet long, and they cable
the sea. < ne specimen has a growth
of fifteen hundred feet. On the north-
east shore of our country is a seaweed
with leaves thirty or forty feet long,
amid which the sea otter makes his
home, resting himself on the buoy-
ancy of the leaf and stem. Tho thick st
jungles of the tropics aro not more
full of vegetation than the depths of
tho sea. There are forests down there
and vast prairies all abloom, and (Iod
walks there as he w alked in tho Gar-
den of l'den "in tho cool of the day.''
Oh, what enhancement, this sub-
aqueous world^ Oh, the God-giving
wonders of tho seaweed: Is
birthplace is a palace of t rystal. The
cradle that rooks it is llie storm. Its
grave is a sarcophagus of beryl and
sapphire. There is no night down
there. There are creatures of God on
the bottom of tho tea so eo strutted
that, srewn all along, they make a
firmam nt besprent with sta-s, con-
stellations and galaxies of imposing
lustre. Tho seaf« ather is a lamp-
light, r. The gymnotus is an clce-
tri ion, and ho is surcharged with
eleett icity. nnd makes the deep bright
with the lightn.ng of the sea. The
irorgona Hashes like jewels. There
are sea anemones ablaze with light.
There is the btar-flsh and the moon-
fish, to-called because they so power-
fnlly suggest stel'ar and lunar illumi-
nation. Oh! these midnight 1 mi terns
of tho ocean caverns; these preces-
sions of llamc over tho white lloor of
illuminations th
Mo ca, where no one but God na.- pres-
ent. The sublime report of that en-
tombment ia in t' e book of Deuteron-
omy, which says that tho Lord burled
liim. and of t osc who have gone dow n
to slumber in the deep, the tame mav
bi said- "The Lord burled them.'
As Christ was buiied in a gul-
den. so your ahipwrcckcd friends,
and those who could not survive
till they reached port, were put
down amid irldesence—"In tho midst
of tho garden there was a sepulchcr.
It has always been a mystery what
was the particular node by which
George G. ( ookman, the pulpit orator
of the Methodistclitmh and the chap-
lain of the American congross, left this
life after embarking for Knglund on
the steamship President, March 11.
IsII. That ship never arrived In port.
No one ever signaled her, and on t>' th
sides of the ocean it has for fifty
years been questioned what became of
her. But this 1 know about Cookman,
that whether it was iceberg or contlu-
gration mid s^a, or collision, he had
more garlands on his ocean tomb than
If, expiring o > land, cacli of his mill-
ion friends had put a bouquet on hip
casket In tho ml 1st of the garden
was his sepulchcr.
But that brings mo to notice the
misnomer in this Jonahitic expression
of the toxt. Ihe prophet not only
made a mistake by trying to go t
Tarshiah when God told him to po to
Nineveh, but he mad.* a mistake when
he styled as weeds these growths that
enwrapped him on the day he sank.
A weed is something that is useless
It is something you throw out from
the garden. Jt is something that
chokes the wheat. It is something to
be grubbed out from among tho cot
ton. It Is something unsightly to the
eye. It is an invader of the vegetable
or Horal world. But this growth that
sprang up from the depth of the Me l
iterranean or floated on its surface,
was amoug the most beautiful thingf-
that God ever makes. It was a water
plant known as the red-colored alga,
and no weed at all. It comes from
the loom of infinite beauty. It i:
planted by heavenly love. It is the
star of a sunken firmament. It is a
lamp which the Lord kindled It i*-
a cord by which to bind whole shea vec
of practical suggestion. It Is a poem
all whose cantos are rung by divine
jroodness. Yet we all make the mis-
take that donah made in regard to it,
and call it a weed * The weeds were
wrapped about my head." Ah! that i-
the trouble on the land as on the sea.
We call those weeds that are flowers.
Pitched up on the beach of society arc
children without home, without op-
portunity for unyihing but sin, seem-
ingly without Go I. They are washed
up helpless. They are called raga
muffin--. They are spoken of
raklngs of the world They ar
They are street Arabs. They :
sam and jctsain of the social sei
are something to bo l*lt al
something to be trod on, or soi
to give up to decay. Nothlug but
weeds, lli'ey are up the rickety stairp
of that garret. They aie down in the
cellar of that tenement house They
swelter In summer when they see not
one blade of green grass, and
shiver in winters t.iat allo.v them
not one warm coat or shawl or shoe.
Such the city missionary f und in one
of our city rookeries, and when the
poor woman w..s asked If she sent hei
children to school, she replied: "No.
sir, 1 never did send em to school. 1
know it, they ought to learn, but I
couldn't. 1 try to shame him some-
times (it is my husband, sir, i bat he
drinks . nd then beats me. (Look at
that bruise on my face), and I tell
him tosoj what is comin' to his chil-
dren. Theie's I'eggy, goes sellin' fruit
every night in those cellar , in Water
street, and they re hells, tir. she's
learning all sorts of bad words there,
and don't get baek till Io'clock at
night. If it wasn't for her earniu a
sh111 in' or two in those nlaces J should
starve. Oh, 1 wish tlicy were out of
the city. Yes, it ii the truth; 1 would
rather havo all inv children dead than
on the street, but I c:n't help it"
Another one of those poor women,
found by a reformatory association,
recited her story of want and woe,
and looked up nnd said: "It felt so
hard to lose the children when fey
died, but now I'm glad they're gone."
Ask any one of a thousand such chil-
dren oii the streets: •♦Where do yo.i
live?" and they will answer:
••1 don't live now lit re." They
w 11 sleep to-night in ash-bar-
rels, Oi- under outdoor stairs,
or on the wharf, kicked and bruised
and hungry. Who cares for them?
Gnco in a while a city missionary or a
track distributor or a teacher of
ra/ged schools will rescue one oT
tlicin, but for most people they are
only weeds. Yet, donah did not more
completely misrepresent ^lio lied Alg.e
about h s head in tho Mediterranean
than most people misjudge these poor
and forlorn and dying child
i waifs
ire Hot
i. They
etbing
which is about him in not weeds but
flowers.
As 1 examine thia Red Alga whi>;h
waaabout the recreant prophet dow u in
the Mediterranean depths, when, in
the worda of my fxt, he cried out
"Th© weeds were wrapped about my
head,'* and 1 ara led thereby to further
examine this submarine world. I am
coiupe led to excluim, What a wonde -
ful God we have! 1 aui glad that, by
diving bell und "Brook's deep sea
sounding apparatus" and ever improv-
ing machinery, wo aro permitted to
walk the floor of the ocean and report
the wondera wi ought by the gr at God.
Study those gardens of the sea.
Kasier aud easier shall the profounda
of the ocean become to u-, and more
and more its opulence ot color and
plant unroll, especially as "\ illeroy'a
buiarine boat" has been con
ructod. making it possible to navi-
kte under the sea almoa as wcllason
e serface of the sea and un ess
•d In hia mercy banishes war from
ho o fleets of armed sh pa
rill
et fa
do vi
tho <
IN FASHION'S GLASS.
them. Loie Fuller has metamorphosed
I the science of evening dress not at all
after Carlyle It is the apotheo-
A NEW YORK LETTER ON THE
CURRENT MODES.
to blow up the argosies thut
float the surface. May ueli subma-
rine ships be used for laying open the
wonde. s of God's workings in the great
deep an I never for human devastation!
Oh, the marvels of the water world!
These so-called seaweeds are the past-
ure fields and the forage of the in
nume ab'o animals of tho deep. Not
mi,- species ol ti era mm be spared
from the economy of nature. \ alloys
and mountains and plants miles un-
derneath the waves are all covered
with flora and fauna. Sunken Alp>
aud Apennines i.nd Himalayas or
Atlantic and Pacific oceans. A
continent that once connected
l-.urope and America, so that in
the ages past men came on foot
across from where Kngland is to where
we now stand, all sunken, and nov
covered with the growths of the sea
as it once was covered with growth
of the land. Kngland and Ireland onci
all ono piece of land, but now much of
It so far sunken us to make a channel,
and Ireland has become an island.
Tbe islands, for the most part, ure
only the foreheads of su > ken conti-
nents. Tbe sea conquering the land
all along the coasts, and crumbling
the hemispheres, wider and wider be-
come the sub-aqueous dominions.
Thank Go:l that skilled hydrographers
have made us maps and charts of the
rivers and lakes and sess, and shown
us something of tbe work of the eter-
nal God in tho water-worlds Thank
God that the great Virginian. Lieut.
Maury, lived to give us "I'ho Physical
Geography of the Sea," and that men
of genius have gone forth to study the
so called weeds that wrapped about
donah's nead und havo found them to
be ccronals of beauty, nnd when the
tido receded, thesa scientists have
waded down and picked up
Divinely-pictured leaves of the ocean,
tie naturalists, Pike an I Hooper and
Walters, gathering them from the
beach of l.ong Island sound, and Dr.
Blodgett preserving them from the
shares of Koy West, and 1 '
Kmerson aud <
Boston harbor,
ering them . from Charleston harbor,
and for all the other triumphs of Al
go'ogy, or the Science of Sea-Weed.
Why contino ourselves to the old nnd
hackneyed Illustrations of the wonder-
workings of God, when there are at
least tivo great seas full of illustra-
tions as yet not marshalled, every
root and frond and cell and movement
and habit of oceanic vegetation crying
out: "God! God! lie made us. Ho
made us. He clo bed us. He adorned
us. He was the God of oar ancestors
•nr back to the first soi-growth,
hen God divided the waters which
ere above the firmament from tin
.iters which were under the tirm-
nent, and shall be the God of our de-
•endants clear down to the day when
shall give up its dead. Wo
drapery and color;
woman is merely the pivot, the
animated clotheahorse who inter-
poses her vital energy into this cli-
max of gorgeousuess To the pretty
danseusc. too. ia due the form nnd
Vic*# for N>*t Season's Mode*—A l «nr-r construction of the evening gown, for
th* Fashion for KvcoIuk Dnm. with the extravaganco of riotous color
; has come u simplicity in outline to the
, resplendent garb. Some one has sug-
INew York Letter 1 gested that the dancer s method l e
State secrets aro uot better guarded carried out yet more accurately and
than tho ideas of the leading coutu-! that the limelight man he introduced
riere concerning the coming fashions, into the ball room to throw his magio
It is only by finoasc and diplomacy tints over the assemhly and transform
jralore that one may catch tho straws the soter-sulted Glnderillaa into gay
which indicate the way the wind of parrots nnd harlequins at a lesser cost
modishness may blow. ? o far as one to the husband a purse than now main-
may judge from present indications tains. However, at present we arc
the ineroyablc modes will dominate content with copying her rainbow
the eventual decisions of the committee tinted tissues, her flow ing draperies,
and her quaint conceits in color for
our ball gowns. A pretty example o
this, which, however, loses Its great
est eliarm in black and white produc-
tions. is of flimsy stuff with a sheen o
blended tinis. and made with full
fluttering flounces vandvked with
skirt of rich brocade. The waist h:
sleeves of the tissue, with a bodice
the brocade, crossed by dark velv
ribbons, clasped at the waist and (
the shoulders with jewels. •
Another rich and striking evening
gown is of black aatln, the skirt gored
and trimmed with two
flounces arranged in larg
Tho waist Is all of while la
black satin t elt, and a wide band of
; jotted lace for a finish at tbe
But speaking of ball dresses brings
to mind the quaint prettlness of ti
children's costume hall, given by a
Knglish mayor In honor of tho roy
wedding. Among tho most lnterei
i ir costumes worn was the Spanish
Matador's regalia, worn bv a little lad
who may be mayor himself some d
The suit is of black velvet, gayly *
broidcred with g Id and mock jew<
Tho shirt is of white silk, the scar!
ye low, tho cravat and wrist ruffiei
| fine Ince. And among the littli girls
the vlvandlere dross, perhaps,
most distinctive, with ts scarle
with white revers set with je
| buttons, and its little skirt of blue,
considering the great questfon of t rimmed with a^ band of scarlet
ways and means for draping th '
ay finding them along
tnd Prof. Gibbs gath-
have
hca
his
obeyed:
Lo.'d, dragons aud all deeps
There is a great com ort that rol's
over upon us from this study of the
so-calle l seaweed, and that is the
demonstrated do .'trine of a pirticular
1'rovidence Whin 1 find that the
Lord provides in the so-called sea-
weed the pasturage for a throngeJ
marine world, so tint not a tin or
scale in all that oceanic aquarium suf-
fers need. I conclude .Ij will feel i:s,
and if he suits the ulg<e to the animal
life of the deep, he will provide the
food for our physical and spiritual
needs. And if ho clothes the
flowers of tho de.-p with rich-
ness of robe that looks brijht
as fallon rainbows by day and at
night makes the underworld look as
though the sea were on fire, surely ho
will clothe you: "Oh, ye of little
faith!' And what fills me w tli un-
speakable delight is that this God of
depths and heights, of o.ean and ot
continent, may, through desus Christ,
the divinely appointed means be yours
and miiie, to help, to cheer, to pa
His Deooratloa.
Ho wilkM by Iit al«K they •trolled apart,
Tli rout h ihe lonely Wos*o«itnf ways.
f*r from the buflfa nd rolllu* drums,
Tho ptalm of n aatlou's pr*lM:
far from the crowd* that llnter there
lid tbe *00111 h raws In 1 the headstones fair.
"bey, lor with the reverent throng had beat*
Ae«l In dour remeintrauoe orownrcl
nih^alp-fc end laurel*, and garland trtght
l mound,
e of oomrade* tell
c« fought aud feU.
n *llence. tbej turned
r dream of famo—
lt'ut tho uoblo living i
What Is
lootl Book?
onj that interests
GENERAL MISCELLANY.
ts of Int ermt to the Reading Pok
The wor'd's enpply of diamonds la
twenty times greater than it was thirty
yeais sgo.
Men attending the pan* in aalt work*
e uever known to have cholera, small-
pox, scarlet fover or influenxa.
By tbe tenth census 23,010,030 inhab-
itant* of the United State* wore support-
ed by agriculture, 11,520,000 by com-
Sixty million dollars' worth of leather
i required every year to provide boots
aid alio?* for the inhabitant* of Great
irltain.
The Voice shows by el.iborste tables
1 nt 4,002,'«•' i, 1'J i pound* of grain are
mnually put into beer sol liquor in the
L'utteU State*. t
Assuming the working age to ho from
Jo to HO yean, an-' •■■.Minting only male
workom. 410 peraona in this country llvS
ou tbe labor of every 100 workers.
A good book is
you
One in which the bright rather than
tho dark side of lifo i« shown.
One that makes you sco how mean
are tue sm til rice* of life and how des-
picable aro tho great sin*.
One that glorifies virtue In woman
and honor in man.
One in which tho good are rewarded
nnd the wicked aro made to suffer -
suffering, by tho by, that may bo of the
conscience —or ia a more material war,
a reward riven either on earth, or
promised for Ihe future.
One which convinces you that this
world is tilled with good men and good
Ono that breathes forth Ihe goodness
of a Creator, and rcspucts llis all-gov-
erning laws.
Ono that makea you feel you are
meeting real people—people who clo
thoughts
them.
A good book Is f
bor with pleasure,
iciate with
inine form divine during the next
three months. 'Ihe original ineory-
aldes were a number of French
dandies, who professed all sorts of in-
teresting weaknesses, swathed their
delicate throats In neck-cloths many
times wound around, supported their
feeble frames upon very tall sticks,
nistcoat, t
and long black mits are a part of this
costume, and a tiny barrel of wine
strapped on the side, w-iih one of the
magic wine cups of double tflaaa,whloh
prevents the liquid from spilling,finish
tbe little picture.
llut there are careful mothers of the
old school who do not believe In balls
:1 for the
and wore long-tailed coats with exag- ; for babies, and for them there may
fferatfld revert and .ocke.l hats. It is found Interest and surest,on In the
bv this dresa, then, quaintly attrac- aweet little Dorothy dress of white
tlve and smart, that in. of th. «r dimity, plaited into a. hee walat,
models is inspired. This materia. Is belled with
golden brown hop-sacking, yellow tan crt;
■olored silk, .(told braid, and buttons, an, .th# ^
How
lid, iind buttons, ni
The fcklrt, four and one-half yards si
around the bottom, is fitted iu at the pi
top, beautifully cut aud bung, but un- tli
trimmed. The coat, with its flaring oi
skirt plaited In at the back
very full, has revers of the silk a
strapped back with the gold braid i bl
elbr
bit 1
vhito
hat Is made of nlalted lawn
rer a foundation of green.
More sensible and serviceable still Is
little frock of plaited wool, smoke
thread of scarlet. It is
to sav
who i
mil
r the
sly upholstered castles if the
Almighty in the under-world! The
author of the text felt the pull of the
bidden vegetation of the Mediterra-
nean, whether or not lie appreciated
its beauty, as lie cries out: "The
weeds were wi
Let my aubj
had friends who buve been buried at
sea or in our great American lakes.
Which of us brought up on tho Atlan-
tic coast has not hurl kindred or friend
thus sepulchred? We had the lifeless
honor of thinking that they w. re < c-
nied proper rt sting-place. We said;
"0. if they had lived to come ashore,
and had then expired! What an a -
levintion of our tronblo it would have
been to put them in some beautiful
family plot, where wo could have
' flowers un I trees over them."
od did tetter for them than we
could havo done for them. They were
letdown into beautiful gardens. Ile-
fore they had reached the bo. tom, they
hnd garlands about their brow. 1 n more
e'aboralc nnd adorned place than we
could have afforded n em. they were put
p anted 1
Why, (Jo<
' for th
slu
He
f.thera of sailor boys
vhos
ship went dot
1 aurel Mills or Moti
tifnl on the land, a
nnd terraccd nnd ►
tho depths of the
our foundered nnd
girdled ui
such glor
polls.
'J hey W
nt Aubt
«o°bcai
bunked
x>ped and hung In
•a. Tho bodies < f
unken friends are
. d and housed with
ttend no other Necro-
i life be
the Ske
r dlsappe
Ville <
imped i
ioodw
beach «
beard of, o
of Boston i
C.vmbria, or were run d wn in a lis
ing smack that put out from Ne
foundland. Hut dismiss yourprevio
gloom at out the horrors of ocean e
to nbmcnt.
When Sebastopool r as besieged
t' e Anglo-French va-\ l'i n<- Mer
s hikofT. fonimand-ng the R s-di
navy, saw that t' e only v.-oy to ke
the'English ont of the hartor was
i ink all ol the Russian ships of war
thn roadstead, and so ono hundred \<
feels sank. When, after the war w
over, our American engineer, Gown
The j
[ flov
deep sc i of woe,
society und the i
appreciate their
but
spending the
In the rescue
They
Down in the
flowers. When
h of (iod come t>
nul value, there
races and more
1 more Angels of Mercy
fortunes and their lives
lie
phila
ciful
souls
'hristlan and
but flowers. 1 ad-
friends of all news-
hoys' lodping Ik uses, of all industrial
schools, of all homes for frlondles<
girls, and for the many reformatories
and humane associations now on foot.
How much they have already accom-
p ished. Out of what wretchedness,
into what good homes. Of twenty-
one thousand of those picked up out
of the streets and sent into country
homes, only twelve children turned
ou-, badly. In the last thirty ycHrs a
o man can number of
live b.'cn 1 fted into re-
number that n
the vagrants hi
spcctabiliiy a:
t nristian life.
Homes o: their
bo.ys once and street g
head of prosperous familie
on oa th and to be glorious
J omeof them have been gi
states. Some of tlirm are ti
the gospel. In a'l departments of lif<
those who wero thought to be wecdi
have turned ont to be flowe-ri. Ono o
those rescued lads from the s* reels o
3 another, saying
t are studying foi
f them have
Though ragged
at the
nisters of
upload
he
for the newsboys
iv of them the brigh
or bell
Omnipoten
nco to comf
a enfold nti
What matte
aga
to defend
lion us, and
infinite love to enfold and uplift and
eurapture us. And when Uod does
email things so well seemingly taking
as much care With the coil of a sea-
weed as theoutbroncbingof a Lebanon
cedar, and with the co'o.-of a vegetable
i-rowth which Is hidden fathoms out of
sight as ho does with the tolferinoand
purple of a summer sunset, we will be
determined to do well all wo are called
to do, though no one see or nppreciate
us Mighty (iod! Roll in upon
our admiration nnd 1 oly apprecia-
tion more of the wonders of this sub-
marine world! JS.y joy is that after
we aro quit of all earthly hindrances
wo may tome back to this world and
cannot now fully in-
[ we shall have power to
atmospheric without fa-
we shall have power to
j nqueous without peril,
pictured and tessellated
vhat
stigatc.
ar into tli'
?ue 1 thin
ve into ti
1 that t
?a floor will bi
is to the travel
ham bra, and all ti
deep will tbe
dble
the llo
to us the
to the tourist Chat
opens on public days its cascades and
statuary and conservatories for our
entrance. "It doth not yot appear
what v e shall be." You cannot make
me believe that (iod bath spread out
all that garniture of the deep merely
for the polypbs and erustacca to look
And if the unintelligent creatures of
the Mcdi errancan and the Atlantic
ocean, lie suriounds with such beau
tiful grasses of tho deep, what t
heaven we may expect for our up
lifted and ransomed fouls when w«
ure unchained of t ie flesh and rise ti
realms beatific. Of the flora of that
• Sea of Glass mingled with fire," I
have n power to speak, but 1 shall
always bo glad that,when the prophet
of the text, fling over the gunwales of
the Mediterranean ship, descended
in o the 1 oiling sea, that which he
Mipposed to be weeds wrapped abut
PY EVENING OOWN, A LA I
[B FT
SALT-IIIIEI'M; FLESH CKACKWD OPElf
AND ULUll!
MIm I^rrriB Cufk, IUver Folto, PUrti
County. If'teconifn, writes:
"It fives rao plraautv to exprt>M my faith
In tlio virtue of I r. iMfroe'f tioldcn Medioti
Dlaoovorv. IIp.vIur suffered for threo years
from salt-rhcum, and utter havhif bwa un-
successfully Ueut« ! l y a ii< <m1 physician, I
ti- Kim the use of
tho ' Discovery.'
Tito huuior was In
i- >4® my hands. I was
obliged to keep a
Covering on them
for ni,,i.. Iin mt a
nnd buttons
coat of white
buttons, and
lace and
and caught
front.
ing
aist tucked thri
ull
with brass
towing a cravat of real
vound about the throat
lith diamond pins in
eked hat is of hi
times beneath
t ribbon and
i belt of velvt
i st buttons at
id it
o that you
mt when tho dull
think of with in
tereit and feel that thero aro peopl
with whom you have a most interesting
acquaintance, who are yet only char-
acters of tho imagination.
A good book is one that tolls,in good
English, tho story H has to; sees no
necessity for using foreign words and
does not quote from Ihe Arabic or Ihe
Sanscrit a« if tho author had written it
with an EncyclopiediaBritaunlcabeside
him.
A good hook is tho ono that we wan!
when weary of tho people of the world;
th.it wo cau read out aloud and dis-
cuss; that wo can hand te our <l;\ti-^li-
ters that it may give them pleasure,and
which will only be a steppiugstone on
tho road of taste, not only to better aud
nobler books, but a bettor and nobler
life.
That is a good hook — and.my friends,
fdiere are hundreds of them.— Ladies
JSome J our ml.
Wawtrd.—Salesmen; good pay for
honest workers. Reginners taught;
[<00 new outfits just ready cost 4 years
time and thousands of dollars, but
worth all they coat—the llnest ever
need. We sell direct through our own
salesmen. No middlemen. No Tree
Dealers. Staiik lino's Nub
imk'hakps Co., Louisiana, Mo,
11* was a Fighter.
Colonol Candler, of Qeorgl
good story of his first meeting
vats John Allen, of Mississippi,and how
tho private "worsted' him in a knock
down and drag-out fight.
"1 wss dowu near Tupelo in com
mand of a Georgia company," said Mr.
Candler. "One morning s loan, lank,
gawky country boy, who looked as il
you held him up to tho light yon could
sco Iho tadpoles In him. walked up to
my tent and drswlsd out. 'Csn'n ono o'
your d — n men stole iny hlsnkot so'
I'm goln' to frail h-«-ll eut'u somebody.'
'About this i. oinont one of my raeo
entno up and ssid: Captain, It is ray
lilsnkst he refers to. You know thai
blanket,for you hate slept under It many
Y'cs,' I replied, *1 remember it Of
course it Is yours.'
• Yes,' ssid tbe boy, 'that's Just like
you d—n Georgians. Ono of you will
tidl a lie sud t'other will swear to it.
Now, cap'ii, if you will Jist shed them
stripes I'll whip you quicker'n h—11 will
scorch a festher.'
• 1 couldn't stand that cbsllonge," con-
tinued the Georgian. "I quickly threw
off my cost snd lit into the fight. ^ VVeli,
if it had not been for uiy mou
that fellow would have beat mo
lie simply plowed up the carlli
nnd then offered to whip all ray
by one,but ui
That boy wai
Mississippi
Constitution.
$ m i';.TSf,sr«
i iiufflng. burning
Intonsu that *1
• tlines it seemed ss
if I would go crasy.
When 1 hent the
fingers, the flesh
would rrack npsn
and Meed. It is
^ lo drserllM« tlie Intense psln
i I endured nlsbt and day.
«<tties of tlio Dlacovery '•
After tnking six bottles of tho " Discovery *
1 I'aannot'praise'Dr. Ileroe's Golden Medical
Discovery enough." belli by Dealers.
often equivalent to
getting ill. If loss of flesh
can be arrested and dis-
ease baffled the "weak
spots" in the system are
eradicated.
is an absolute corrective
of " weak spots." It is a
builder of worn out failing
tissue—natures food that
stops waste and creates
healthy flesh.
Pro pared br Kcott ,t Rowne.
d by drtiKfi*1* evorybtrs. .
ffSH
TWiTrsdo MsAH *
WATERPROOF COJT
niu.tr.,.4 in tho World I
A. J. TOWER. BOSTON. MASS.
carlet silk or of white lawn
gold embroidery on the edge Fashion
nd a coL'kado of the Kr,-n, l, color.. gUlrts from
Another new and modish gown is of I oa,.]v Victorian st
amoke-blue serge, with a decoration J . the 1
of black braid on tho edges of its !,„!
belten coal nnd tho full revers which I """w
cross the shoulders. A revers collar
of black satin shows a cravat of white
lace at tho neck, and three old silver
buttons close the front of the gown to
the narrow belt, which buckles with bauii si
an old silver buckle. The shoulder , attention.
tupiire lace will he
but
i not of the
slope out
absolutely
nd button
hip.
f the front.
The largo sleeve is doomed. Thost
of simple coat shape, with slight lul
houlder, and th
will presently occi
And t
i I i
botany
Luke
but flow
• thu g am
bible In
i the
thci
nl a
bind. When the paper is .'i c
in u while givo them a '• cc
and tell them to keep the i
like the ring of the It tier t
boy sent back from Indiana,
had been sent to a pcol ho
New York Kewsb vs' Lod/ii
••Hoys, we tbould i
I fool
that i
bee
thn
as respectable ns any of the country
ir«n. for Franklin nnd Webster an
Clay wore poor boys once, and ev.
fieorge Law and Vaadcrbilt and Asloi
Come out here and make respectnbl
and honorable men, so they can s.n
There, that boy was once a n«wj
boy My hearers, join the Cbr.sti.)
philmthropista who nre cbangi
Hers and l oot b'
*1 oys nnd street A'-ubs und
* iafo those who shall be ltiu
a is unlo God forever. It i;
j that, Jonah fin£s out tlia
eli
Matthew's lares and
John'* vin , and Solomon's cluster
« f camphire. and Jeremiah's balm,
and .lob's bulrush, aud Isaiah's tere-
binth, and llosea's thistle, aud Kze-
kicl's cedar, and "tho hyssop that
springetli out of the wal1,' and the
•Uo-e of Miaron nnd tbe Lily of the
\ alley. ' and the frankincense aud
myrrh ond cassia which the astrolo-
;r--if brought to the manger, at least
one stalk of the Algro of tho Mediter-
ranean. And now I make the marine
doxology of David my peroration, for
it was written about forty or fifty
miles from the place where the scene
of the text was enacted. "The : ea is
his aud he made it! and his hands
formed the dry land. O, eome, let us
worship and bow down; let us kite)
before the Lord our Maker. For 'ac it
our God. and we are the people ot hia
; pasture '' Amen.
' God's if. the good of alh- £7
frill
with black sati
black, with sat n bows and fen*.hers
for their decoration.
Tho craze for zouave or Figaro jack-
ets shows no sign of abutement, but
there Is a decided tendency to split
them up the bac'< or full them in Wat-
teou pleats across ihe front, which
gives them almost the efT«ctof a vo'ue.
A new gown in line black tiousscline
de sole or grenadine, not intended hs
a calling costume, has ono of those
plaited jackets in dull green satin,
with black lace insertions set in he-
fore It is plaited, and black lace ruffles
on its edge. The full black sleeves
nr« draped with lf.ee rosettes, and
have cuffs of the satin and lace in-
sertion. The skirt has a gathered
puff of the g- een about the hips, edged
with full p aited ruffles of lace, and
the waist, shirred at the bottom, is
belted with green satin ribbon
But while tho designers travail
in agony of soul over the in-
vention of something new In this eager
world in which nothing is or can bo
new under tho sun. save that which is
old enough, the belles an I l -aders in
Vanity Fair thread the ma:cs of the
dreamy dance in carelcb* pleasure
knowing th t the earth and the fulness
thoreof is for them, and that they need
take fie thought for the mo row, he-
ather broadly
meshed and scattered with conven-
tional designs in u tcriesof stitches
that look like the patient grouping of
n myriad millet feeds.
No frills no furbelows, no bows, n
bonnets, no openworked stockings,n
delicately embroidero I hose—this 1
tho first und great commandment of
yachting « ress. though with the
and ingenious arrangements yachting
is really an ornamental pastime.where
none of the hardships and all the
pleasures of life are involved Sim
plicity and smartness govern the mode
at the \ uchting rendezvous. Sorgo,
dril . linen, holland, and sailcloth arc
tho materials most in vogue.
The fashion for high shoulders is
rapidly passing away, and with it one
of the chief elements of smartnesH
known to woman's dress. Of course
we are rapid y training* our vision to
see grace and elegance personified
only by flat and sloping shoulders,
but tho unprejudiced observer must
admit that women without much style
of their own to carry it off appear un-
deniably dowdy in the 1#30 fashions.
belief!
dcntli.
illi roe,
ivatu John Allen, the
gressmsu." — Atlanta
How n Sewer Wn* Choked Up.
A large sewer iu Tni-tlnnd, Ore.
to ho reopened recently, as it was
badly choked up. When the work-
men dug it open thoy found the
roots of a shade troo hail forced a
passage through tho walls und formed
a col id mass for lifty font. The top of
the sewer was teu feet below tbe sur-
face.
IGQOD CHANCE!!
il Typewriter for 110, <( a
d«r Is rocelvrd befyro Not Ut
famous Odall Typowrltor I* used U .
Mlntftarn. Doctors, Merchants, Edi
Oateramant OIHcera, 1
print, almplloUy and ^
Sour'spractlca Ordor
age of this exceptionally
of He elesS
il do yoi
[GOOD CHANCEll
03W. Jeckeon ¥t., Chicago.
WEBSTER'S
INTERNA T ION AL
DICTIONARY
Money- Makers.
Aro yoh busy? Are you making
money? If so, stick to it: you are for
tunate. If you aro not. then our ad-
vise is that you write at once to B. F.
Johnson &. Co., Richmond, Va. They
can show yon quickly how to enter
upon a profitable work.
Lost children In Japan do not long re-
main astray. It I* the custom for parents
to labal their children with their addreu-
ca, so that in ease they go astray any
wayfarer may seud thein home.
A Grand Educator
Abreast or the Times
A Library in Itself
Invaluable la the
Hookneller to show it toyoa
PSY
squil
The slupes of s
thi
little
of the hats
n tr; i
and
ng the new models many may be
d out which arc certain forerun
yt the hats that will, n month or
icnce, bo seen in felt n id velvet
icw low and flat crowned hats in
.ii straw with the wide open brim
back on the
__ _ po of tbe ne -k.
aro sure to bo rcprodu e 1 in felt, ijnd
promise t h« becouiMig. There is an-
other hat, called the Harlequin, which
is a mere ridge of straw across the top
of the head with a big velvet bow In
front and a lidcre of flowers nt the
back And there are antiquated
fhopes, like the <ottage bonnets of
inariy years ago, with a large bow of
ribbon In Iront, and strings to match.
-Rua in Lalf a col-
die of an nrtii
r&tiv©
to prove merit
Americans and Lngllshmen
vesting in larn
1 to colTee, tobai
WORN WIGHT AND DAY.
Tho State of Colorado bus let the
rrlgatioa canal 86 miles
long. It Is to cost over a million dollars
1 will reclaim a vast amount of desert
BiAsno
TRUSS
by m.11
The Geriti.il navy has 1,331 officer
1-. .4J men. There arc ninety-one ves-
R-!. of all sort*, of whl jll nineteen are
ironclad, and elghtoen armored cruller.
The rlcheat prlie ever carried ol by the
winner of the derl.T nt«kos was over
£7,000. This f.ll to Kir llevys In 187B,
when thero were ST* «ul« riteri.
Patents, Trade-Marks.
DIRK
Local telegram
mitted through i
of tbe principal i
ceuraatlc tubes m m
ides of Great Britain
t! "#*a$WS.V «.
SEHFS3 M0 HEAD NOISES 6BJ«
iiliESiiwfria
$75.001.' S25o.oo
u. r i CO., nu uifo>D, vi.
■ 1 Thtir.json'J Eya Walir.
W. N.U. infield, Vol.6. No. 40
Educational.
LAWRENCES ATCIKS .
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Copeland, A. G. West and South. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 5, 1893, newspaper, October 5, 1893; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc275746/m1/3/?q=%22Business%2C+Economics+and+Finance+-+Communications+-+Newspapers%22: accessed July 10, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.