Canadian Free Press. (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 46, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 20, 1888 Page: 3 of 4
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DB. TALMAGE'S SERMON.
|
ÍÜLPIT AND PEESS MADE ALLIES,
The Brooklyn" Divine Shows "Wherein Prac-
tical Religion May Be Sidbservid Tty theS^-
cnlar Press. •
Hj ecial to the Kansas City Times.
Brooklyn, June 19.—At the scrvlce In the
Tabernacle this nioruinjr, the Rey. T. De
Witt Taimare, D. D., took for the subject of
his discourse, 'Tulpit and Press Made Al-
lies." 1J is text waa, Luke xvl, v. 8; "The
children of this world are in their genera-
tion wiser than the children of light." He
Ea!d:
; Sabred stupidity and solemn Incompetency
find sanctified laziness are here rebuked by
Christ, lio «a- s worldings are wider awake
lor Opportunities than are Christians. Men
of the world grab occasions while Christian
people let the most valuable occasions drift
by unimproved. That is the meaning of our
Lord when he says: "The children of this
world nrc in there generations wiser than the
children of light"
A marked lliustration of the truth of that
maxim is in the slowness of the Christian re-
ligion to take possession of the secular print-
ing press. The opportunity is open and has
for some time been open, but the ecclesiastical
aourts and the churches and the ministers of
religion arc for the most part allowing the
golden opportunity to pass unimproved. That
the opportunity Is open I declare from the
fact that all the secular newspapers are glad
of any religious facts or statistics that you
present them. Any animated and stirring arti-
cle relatjug to religious themes they would
gladly print They thank you for any infor-
mation in regard to churches. If a wrong
has been done to any Christian church
or Christian institution, you could go
into any newspaper of the land and
have the real truth stated. Dedica-
tion services, ministerial ordinations and
pastoral Installations, corner stone laying of a
church, anniversary of a charitable society
y ill huye reasonable space in any secular
journal, if it have previous notice given. If
I had some great injustice done ine, there
ik not an editorial or a reportorial room in
the United States iuto which 1 could not go
and get mjsef eet right, and that is true of
anv well-known Christian mau. Already the
daily secular press during the course of each
week publishes as much religious information
and high moral sentiment as does the weekly
religious press. Why then does not our
glorious Christianity embrace these magnifi-
cent opportunities? I have before me a
subject of first and last importance: How
shall we 6ecure the secular presa as a
mightier reinforcement to religion and the
put pit 1
The firtst thing toward this result is ces-
sation of indiscriminate hostility against
newspaperdorn. You might as well denouuee
the legal profession because of the shysters,
or the medical profession because of the
quacks, or merchandise because of the
swindling bargain makers, as to slam-bang
newspapers becausc there are recreant edi-
tors and unfair reporters and unclean col-
umns. (iuttenberg, the inventor of the art
of printing, was about to destroy his types
and extinguish the art because it was sug-
gested to him that printing might be suborn-
ed Into the service of the devil, but after-
ward he bethought himself that the right
use of the art might more than overcome the
the evil use of It and so he snared the type
and tho intelligence of all following ages.
But there are many to-day in the depressed
mood of (iuttenberg with uplifted hammer
wanting to pound to pieces the type, who
have not reached his better mood
in which he saw the art of printing to be the
rising sun of tho world's illumination. If in-
stead of frighting newspapers we spend the
eame length of time and the same vehemence
In marshalling their help in religious direc-
tions, we would be as much wiser as the man
who gets consent of the railroad superintend-
ent to fasten a car to the end of a rail-train,
shows better seuse than he who runs his
wheelborrow up the track to meet and drive
back the Chicago limited express. The sil-
liest thing that a man ever does is to fight a
newspaper, for you may have the floor for
utterance perhaps one day in the week, while
the newspaper ha3 the lloor every day of the
week. Napoleon though a mighty man had
many weaknesses, and one of the weakest
things he ever did was to threaten that if the
English newspapers did not stop their ad-
verse criticism of himself he would with four
hundred thousand bayonets cross the Chan-
nel for their chastisement
Doú't fight newspapers. Attack provokes
attack. Better wait till the excitement blows
over and then go iu and get justice, forget it
you will if you have patience and common
pense and equipoise of disposition. It'ought
to be a mighty sedative that tliorc Is an enor-
mous amount of common sense in the world,
aud you will eventually be taken for what
you are really worth, and you cannot be puffed
up and tou cannot be written down, and if
you are the enemy of good society that fact
will come out and if you are the friend of
good society that fact will be established. I
know what I am talking about for I can draw
on my own experience. All the respectable
newspapers as far as I know are my friends
now. But many of you remember the
time when 1 was the most continuously and
meanly attacked mau in this country. God
gave me grace not to answer back anil I kept
silence for ten years, and much grace is re-
quired. What Í said was perverted and twist-
ed Into just the opposite of what I did say.
My person was maligned and I was presented
as a gorgon, and I was maliciously described
by persons who had never seen me as a mon-
strosity In body, mind and soul. There were
millions of people who believed that there
was a large sofa in this pulpit a'though we
never had anything but a chair, and tliaf dur-
ing the singing by the congregation I was ac-
customed to lie down on that sofa and dangle
my feet over the end. Lying New York cor-
respondents for ten years misrepresented our
church services, but wft waited and people
from every neighborhood of Christendom
cauie here to find the magnitude of the false-
hoods concerning the church and concern-
ing myself. A reactlou set in aud now we
have justice, full justice, more than justice
and as much over praise as once we had un-
der-appreciation, and no man that ever lived
was so much indebted to the newspaper press
for opportunity to preach the Gospel as I am.
Young men in all professions and occupa-
tions, wait. You can afford to wait. Take
rough misreprescntotiou as a Turkish towel
to start up your languid circulation, or a
system of massage and Swedish movement
whose poke* aud pulls and twists and thrusts
are salutary treatment There is only one
person tou need to manage and that is your-
self. Keep your disposition sweet by'cotn-
muniou with the Christ, who answered not
again, the society of genial people, and walk
out in the sunshine with your hat off and
jou will come out all right And don't join
the crowd of people in our day who spend
much ol their time damning newspapers.
Again: In this effort to secure the secular
press as a mightier reiuforcemcut of religion
and the pulpit, let us make it the avenue of
religious information. If you put the facts
of churches and denominations of Christians
only luto the columns of religious papers,
which do not iu this country have an av-
erage of more than ten thousand subscribers
what have you done as compared with what
yon do if \ ou put these facts through the
daily papers which have hiñidreds of thou-
sands of readers. Every denomination must
have its little organ snpported at great ex-
pense, when with one-half the outlay a col-
umn or half a column of room might be rent-
ed in some semi-omnipotent secular publica-
tion and so the religious information would
be sent round and round the world. The
- world moves so swiftly to-day that news a
week old is stale. *Give us all the great
church facts and all the'revival tidings the
next morning or the same evening. .My ad-
vice, often given to friends who propose to
start anew paper, Is: "Don't! Don't! Employ
the papers already started." The biggest
financial hole ever dug in this American
continent is the hole in which good people
throw their money when they start a news-
paper. It is almost as good and as quick a
way of getting rid of money as buying stock
in a gold mine iu Colorada* Not more print-
ing presses but the right use of those already
established. All their cylinders, all their
steam power, all their peus, all their types,
all their editorial chairs and reportorial rooms
are available if you would engage them in
behalf of civilization and Christianity.
Again: if you would secure the sec-
ular press as a mightier reinforcement
of religion and the pulpit, extend
widest and highest Christian courtesies
to the represent ati vea of journalism.
Give them easy chairs and plenty of room
when they come to report occasions. For the
most part they are gentlemen of education
and refinement, graduates of colleges, with
families to support by their literary craft,
many of them weary with the push oi a busi-
ness that (s precarious and fluctuating, eaoh
pna of them tUfl otcbho ol information to
thttiit&nda oí Uirir imwefiion of tta
a aermon or a song or a prayer and thfs great
population that tramp up and down the streets
day by day and year bv year with their sor-
rows uncomfofted and their sins unpardoned.
More than eight hundred thousand people in
Brooklyn and less than seventy-five thousand
in churches, so that our cities are not so
much preached to by ministers of religion as
by reporters. Put all journalists into our
prayers and sermons. Of all the hundred
thousand sermons preached to-day, there will
not be three preached to journalists, and
probably not one. Of all the prayers offered
for classes of men innumerable, the prayers
offered for this most potential class will" be
so few and rare that they will be thought a
preacher's idiosyncrasy. This world will
never be brought to God until some revival
of religion sweeps over the land and takes in-
to the kingdom of God editors and reporters,
compositors, pressmen and newsboys. And
if you have not faith enough to pray for that
and toll for that, you bad better get out of
our ranks and join the other side, for you are
the unbelievers who make the wheels of the
Lord's chariot drag heavily. The great final
battle between tcuth and error, the Armaged-
don, I think, will not be fought with
swords and shells and guns, but with
pens, quill pens, steel pens, gold
pens, fountain pens, and. before that the
pens must be converted. The most divinely-
honored weapon of the past has been the pen
and the most divinely-honored weapon of the
future will be the pen; prophet's pen and
evangelist's pen and apostle's pen followed by
editor's pen and reporter's pen and author's
pen. God save the pen! The wing of Apo-
calyptic angel will be a printed page. The
rrlnting press will roll ahead of Christ's
chariot to clear the way.
"But" someone might ask, "would you
make the Sunday newspapers also a rein-
forcement?" Yes, I would. I have learned
to take things as they are. I would like to
see the much scoffed at old Puritan Sabbaths
come back again. I do not think the modern
Sunday will turn out any better men and
women than were your grandfathers and
grandmothers under the old fashioned Sun-
day. To say nothing of other results, Sunday
newspapers are killing editors, reporters, com-
positors and pressmen. Every man, woman
and child Is entitled to twenty-four hours of
nothing to do. If the newspapers put on an-
other set-of hands that does not relieve the
editorial and reportorial room of its cares and
responsibilities. Our literary men die fast
enough without killing them with Sunday
work. But the Sunday newspaper has come
to stay. What then shall we do? Implore all
those who have anything to do with issuing
it to fill it with moral and religious informa-
tion; live sermons and facts elevating. Urge
them that all divorce cases be dropped and
Instead thereof have good advice as to how
husbands and wives ought to live lovingly to-
gether. Put in small type the behavior of
tho swindling church members
and In large type the con-
tribution of some Christian man toward
an asylum for feeble-minded children or a
seaside sanitarium. Urge all managing edi-
tors to put meanness and Impurity in type
pearl or agate and charity and fidelity and
Christian consistency in brevier or bourgeois.
If we cannot drive out the Sunday newspaper
let us have tho Sunday newspaper con-
verted. The fact Is that the modern Sun-
day newspaper is a great improvement on the
old Sunday newspaper. What a beastly thing
was the Sunday newspaper thirty years ago!
II was enough to destroy a man's respecta-
bility to leave the tip end of it sticking out
of his coat pocket. SVhat editorials! What,
advertisements! What pictures! The mocK
ern Sunday newspaper is as much an Improve-
ment on the old time Sunday newspapes as
one hundred is more than twenty-five; In
other words about, seventy-Jive per
cent improvement Who knows that
by prayer and kindly cnsultatlon
with our literary friends we may
have it lifted into a positively religious sheet
printed on Saturday night and only distrib-
uted, like the American Messenger, or the
Missionary Journal, or the Sunday-Schocl
Advocate on Sabbath mornings. All things
are possible with God and ray faith is up until
nothing In the way of religious victory would
surprise me. All the newspaper printing
presses of the earth are going to be the
Lord's, and telegraph and telephone and
type will yet announce nations born in a day.
The first book ever printed was the Bible by
Faust and his son-in-law Schoeffer in 1400,
and that consecration of tpye to the lloly
Scriptures was a prophecy of the great mis-
sion of printing for the evangelization of all
the naMons. The father of the American
printing press was a clergyman, Rev. Jesse
Glover, and that was a prophecy of the
religious use that the Gospel ministry
in this couutry were to make of the types.
Again: we shall secure the secular press
as a mightier re-enforcement of religon anil
the pulpit by making our religious utteranc-
es more Interesting and spirited, and tbeu
the press will reproduce theiu. On the way
to church some fifteen years ago, a journalist
said a thing that has kept me ever since
thinking; "Are you going to give us any
points to-day?" "What do you mean?" I
asked. He said: "I mean by that anything
that will be striking enough to be remember-
ed." Then I said to myself: What right have
we in our pulpits and Sunday-schools to take
the time of people if we have nothing to say
that is memorable. David did not have any
difficulty in remembering Nathan's thrust:
"Thou art the man;" nor Felix in remem-
bering Paul's poini; blank utterance on
righteousness, temperance and judgment to
come; nor the English king any difficulty in
remembering what the court preacher said,
when, during the sermon against sin the
preacher threw his handkerchief into the
king's pew to indicate whom he meant. The
tendency of criticism in the theological semi-
naries is to file off from our young men all
the sharp points and make them too smooth
for any kiud of execution. What we want
all of us, is more poiut, less humdrum. If
we say the right thing in the right way the
Sress will be glad to echo and re-echo it.
abbath-school teachers, reformers, young
men and old men in the ministry, what we
all want if we are to make the printing press
an ally in Christian work Is that which the
reporter spoken of suggested—points, sharp
points, memorable points. Hut if the thing
be dead when uttered by living voice, it will
be a hundredfold more dead when It Is laid
out in cold type.
Now,as you all have something todo with the
newspaper press either in issuing a paper or
in reading it, either as producers or patrons,
either as sellers or purchasers of the print-
ed sheet I proposcon this Sabbath morning,
June 17, 1SSS, a treaty to be signed between
the church and the printing press,
a treaty to be ratified by millions
of good people if we rightly fashion It a
treaty promising that wa will help cach other
in our work of trying to illumine and felici-
tate the world, we by voice, you by pen, we
by speaking only that which is worth print-
ing, you by printing only that which is fit to
speak. You help us aud we will help you.
Side by side be these two potent agencies un-
til the Judgment Day, when we must both be
scrutinized for our work healthful or blasting.
The two worst off men in that day wili be
the minister of religion aud the editor if they
wasted their opportunity. Both of us are the
engineer of long express trains of influence,
aud we will run them into a depot of light or
tumble them off the embankments.
What a useful life and what a glorious depar-
ture was that of the most famous of all Ameri-
can priuters, Benjamin Franklin, whom infi-
dels in tne penuryof their resources have often
fraudulently claimed for their own, but the
printer who riioved that the Philadelphia con-
vention be opened with prayer, the resolution
lost becausc a majority thought Drayer un-
necessary, and who wrote at the time he was
viciously attacked: "My rule Is to go straight
forward In doing what appears to me to be
right, leaving the consequences to Provi-
dence," and who wrote this quaint epitaph
showing his hope of resurrection,
an epitaph that I had hundreds of
times read while living in Philadelphia.
The Body -
of
Benjamin Franklin, Printer,
(Like the cover of an old book.
Its contents lorn out.
And stripped of its lettering and eliding)
Lies here food for worms.
Yef the wfírk Itself shall not be lost.
For it will (as he believed appear once more
In a new
And more beaur.ful edition.
Corrected nd amended
By
The Author.
That Province intends the profession of re-
porters to have a mighty share in the world's
redemption is sugecsted by the fact that Paul
and Christ took a reporter along with tbem
and he reported their address and reported
their acts. Luke was a reporter and he wrote
not only the book of Luke but the Acts of
the Apostles, and without that reporter's
work we would have known nothing of
Pentecost and nothing of Stephen's martyr-
dom, and nothing of Tabitha's resurrection,
and nothing of tbe jailing and unjailing of
Paul and Silas, and nothing of the shipwreck
at Melita. Strike out the reporter's work
from the Bible and you kill a large part of the
New Testament It makes me think that in
the future of the Kingdom of God, the re-
porters are to bear a large part
About thirteen years ago a representative
of an important newspaper took his seat in
this church, one Sabbath night about five
pews from the frout of this pulpit. He took
out pencil an4 reporter's pad resolved to
caricature the whole scene. Whsu the
musfe fcegiia be began, and «uh n$*c-u
Ua ¿sri&d m Jlifi
mon. Biit he says, for some reason, hit
baud began to tremble, and he, rallying him-
self, sharpened his pencil and started again,
but broke down again, and then put pencil
and paper in his pocket and his head down
on the front of the pew and began to pray.
At the close of the service he came up and
asked for the prayers of others and gave his
heart to God; and, though still engaged in
newspaper work he is an evangelist and 1
a hall at his own expense and every Sabbath
afternoon preaches Jesus Christ to the peo-
ple. And tbe men of that profession are go-
ing to come in a body throughout tbe coun-
try. 1 know hundreds of them and a more
genial or highly educated class of men It
would be hard to find, and, though the ten-
dency of their profession may be towards
skepticism, an organized, common-sense,
Gospel Invitation would fetch them to the
front of all Christian endeavor. Men of the
pencil and pen, in ail departments, you need
the help of the Christian religion. In the
day when people want to get' their news-
papers at three cents and are hoping for the
time when they can get any of them at one
cent and, as a consequence, the attaches of
the printing press are by the thousand ground
under the cylinders, you want God to take
care of you and your families. Some of your
best work is as much unappreciated as was
Milton's Paradise Lost, for which the author
received twenty-five dollars; and the Immor-
tal poem "Hohcnlmden" of Thomas Camp-
bell when he first offered it for publication
and in the column called "Notices to Cor-
respondents" appeared the words:
"To T. C.—The lines commencing "On
Linden when the sun was low' are not
up to our standard. Poetry is not T. C.'s
forte.'
O men of the pencil and pen, amid your
unappreciated work you need encourage-
ment and you can have it Printers of all
Christendom, editors, reporters, compositors,
pressmen, publishers and readers of that
which is printed, resolve that you will not write,
set up, edit, issue or read anything that de-
bases body, mind or soul. In the name of
God, by the laying on of the hands of faith
and prayer, ordaiu the printing press for
righteousness and liberty and salvation. All
of us with some influence that will help lit
the right direction, let us put our hands to
the work imploring God to hasten the con-
summation. A ship with hundreds of pas-
sengers approaching the South American
coast, tbe man on the lookout neglected his
work and in a few minutes tbe ship would
have been dashed to ruin on the rocks. But
a cricket on board the vessel that had made
no sound all the yoyage set up a shrill call
at the smell of land, and the captain know-
ing that habit of the Insect, the vessel was
stopped In time to avoid an awful wreck.
And so, insignificant means now may do
wonders and the scratch of a pen may save
the shipwreck of a soul.
Are you all ready for the signing of the
contract, the league, the solemn treaty pro-
posed between Journalism and Evangelism!
Aye, let it be a Christian marriage of the
pulpit and the printing press. Tho ordina-
tion of the former on my head, the pen of the
latter In my hand it is appropriated that
I publish the banns of such marriage. Let
them from this day be one in the magnificent
work of the world's redemption.
"Let thrones and powers and kingdoms be
Obedient, mighty God to thee;
And over land and stream and main, ....
Kow wave the sceptre of Thy reign.
C), let tliat glorious anthem swell.
Let host to host the triumph tell,
Till not one rebel heart remains,
But over all the Saviour reigns."
SWEET, BUT TOO YOUNG,
J
. ^ *
A liOiid Call for Aged Doctors by
Young Philadelphia Women.
Maidenly modesty and female vanity
have had a sharp struggle among the
youug ladies in this city, and especial-
ly at the fashionable schools, since the
small-pox scare began. Tho young
women dread tho disease, which even
if not fatal, might prove deadly to
their physical charms, and vaccination
was therefore welcomed by all Bufc
tho difliculty was that few of the young
ladies, with visions of receptions next
winter before them, when thoy would
appear in low-cut corsage aud sleeve-
less bodices, cared to have tho dis-
figuring marks placed upon their arms.
Therefore it was generally decided by
the young fashionable females to have
the delicate operation performed upcm
the calf of the leg. This required the
services of the elderly practitioners,
as the ladies were loath to submit to
the gaze of the youthful doctors. A
lady who manages a fashionable board-
ing school near Broad and Locust
streets, last week determined to have
all of I ho young ladies under her charge
vaccinated. Those who were boarders
at the school were to be vaccinated
the physician, an elderly and well-
known practioner, who has usually
been called in to attend such ills as
school girls are heir to. The youug
ladies all protested against tho mark-
ing of their arms, and it was deter-
mined, after a solemn conference, that
each one should be vaccinated on the
calf of the leg. This was entirely
satisfactory until the day appoiute
for tho operation. Instead of coming
himself, the doctor sent his assistant, a
very young man with a blonde mus-
tache, whom the girls declared "looked
too sweet." There was a hurried con-
sultation of tho ladies. "Never!" "I'll
take the small-pox first!" "He shall
not vaccinate me!" Such were the
exclamatious of the girls. The young
doctor was compelled to retire, and
the kindly old gentleman who was his
preceptor was sent for. The girls then
submitted without a murmur.— Phila-
delphia Record.
A Lightning Ping. 1
Down on the docks the other day,
says the Detroit Free Press, they were
talking about a schooner which had
been struck by lightuing on Lake Erie
when the reporter singled out an old
bald-liead aud said:
"CapL II , it seems to me I've
read or heard of your brig being
struck."
••Yes, she was," answered the old
fabricator, after taking time to outline
the lie he was to tell.
"Where was it?"
'•Off Poiut Aux Barques, about fif-
teen years ago. Very strange case
that "Probably tho only one of the
kind ever heard ci."
'•Give us the particulars."
"Well, we were joggiug along down
when a thunder-storm overtook us, and
the very first flash of lightning struck
the deck amidships and bored a hole
a3 big as my leg right down through
the bottom of the vessel."
"And she foundered, of course?"
"No, sir. The water began rushing
in, and she would have foundered, but
there came a second flash and a boll
struck my fore-to'-gallant-mast II
was cut off near the cap, turned bottom
end up, and as it came down it entered
the hole and plugged it up as tight as
a drum. When we got down to dry-
dock we simply sawed off either end
aud left the plug iu the planks."
"Did you ever swear to that, cap-
tain?"
"1 did, but it was before a notary
who afterwrard went crazy, and I have
never been quite satisfied. Is there a
notary here among us?"
There was none, and while the re-
porter was out looking for an official
of that sort the old liars took a drink
and scattered for the day.
An Ignorant Sinner.
She (at a revival): "Is it possible
that the little fellow sitting on the
platform is the boy preacher?" He:
'"Oh, no: he is the boy preacher's lit-
tle grandson.Life.
■ • > .
In this country a hamlet is a place with one
wgekly paper, a village is a pla*e with two, a
tPW is § pkí® wUU osa teUy p*p§r, & ety ?i
S"-~
What's the Hatter With Tour Blood I
Cleveland Fres .
As rnuoh blood goes through the
kidneys as goes through the heart
There is nothing startling about this
fact except it be a revelation. Many
people have but a dim idea of the real
work of the kidneys. They not only
drain the water from the system, but
also the poisonous matter which that
water holds in solution to carry out ol
the system. Over half the time how-
ever, tho kidneys fail to do this work!
What is tho resnlt?
Gradual failure of strength and
health and eventually death by Bright's
Disease or some uususpected kidney
disease.
But particularly in the spring of the
year, when one's blood is tilled with
poisonous waste, as it invariably is at
that time, you feel depressed, tired,
languid, do not seem to have any dis-
ease, but your system does not respond
to the genial warmth of summer and
spring as formeily.
You had better look out!
Tho kidney poison is accumulating
in the blood. Tonics won't do any
good, they simply treat effects. You
can only secure a radical, thorough
renovation of the system by the
prompt use of Warner's Safe Cure,
which is tho only reliable, scientific
specific for the blood, because it is the
ouly known specific in the world for
the kidneys, which are the only great
blood purifiers.
GEO. F. RIDGE WAY, 99Murison St., Cleve-
land, O., Ex-Deputy Sheriff, from urle acid
poisoning of the blood became, at times,
totally blind, and was troubled with great
£riddines8. In 1832, after suffering for
many years, and being distressed beyond
measure, be thoroughly purified bis blood
bv means of Warner's Safe Cure, and says,
I have never had a day's trouble siseé, and
have fully recovered niy health. Warner's
Safe Cure saved my life."
REV. J. P. ARNOLD, of Camden. Tenn., In
'78 and '81 was grlevouslv afflicted with
many abscesses, caused by kidney poisoned
blood. The abscesses were alive for many
months and caused great distress. After
thoroughly purifyinjr bis blood with War-
ner's Safe"Cure in 188*3, he reported that In
1SS8 he was strong and well, over 71 years
of age, and able to preach regularly.
CAPT. W. D. ROBINSON, United States
Marine Inspector for the chain of lakes,
residence, Buffalo, N. Y., In 183.1 had a
slight eruption on his hands. It soon
spread to his face and he was almost blind.
H s body was covered with light, flaky
scales. His skin itched excruciatingly.
For two years he gradually grew worse, try-
ing almost everything imaginable. In 1883,
after having given up hope of recovery, he
began using Warner's Safe Cure. "Twenty
bottles," be says, "completely cured me,
and to-day I am strong and well as ever."
JAMES WIGHT, 296 Filth Ave., New York,
suffered for years from inflammatory rheu-
matism—a blood disorder—but in 1883 was
fully restored to health by Warner's Safe
Cure and remains well to-day.
The four above cases are as good as
a million. They prove what is stated,
that the organ that removos tho im-
purity from tho blood most effectually
is the kidney, and for this whon im-
paired there is but one sound, rational
method of treatment.
Dr. Dio Lewis, who was opposed to
the uso of medicines in geueral,
thought so highly of this romedy that
he said that if he had a serious kidney
disease, he should use it
Ask your friends aud neighbors what
they think of it.
In tho spring of the year when de-
bility is so prevalent, and the seeds of
disease are sown that may have a fatal
blossoming before the fall, the prudent
mau aud woman will give the system
a thorough cleansing and purification.
boycotting a maff in a ohapel.
THE TOMAHAWK LAKES*^
(Oneida County, Wisconsin.) jí
On tbe Line of the Chicago, MilwAtt*
kee & St. Paul Hallway.
new
this
hawk
An Extraordinary Scone at a Catho-
lic Church iu Ireland.
Mr. Cronin, of Detroit, has received
a copy of the Kerry (Iroland) Sentinel
of May 9, from which is taken the fol-
lowing account of an extraordinary
scene in a chapel:
"At Cullen, which is tho most re-
mote part of the parish, and a distance
of about six milos from the town, a
most extraordinary scene was witness-
ed. It appears that on the previous
Sunday a person named Mich ael
O'Kecfle.who enjoys the unenviable no-
toriety of being a confirmed land-grab-
ber, attended mass at this chapel,
accompanied by a police escort, under
whose protection ho has been for some-
time past, and the people who were
preseut left in a body when he put íq
an appearance and remained in the
adjoining fields while mass was being
celebrated. O'Keeffe's latest trans-
action in land-grabbing has been that
of a farm on the estate of Archdeacon'
Bland, over which the redoubtable
Jerry Hegartv, J. P., is agent, and
from which a family had been evicted
heartlessly. One of the most peotiiiar
phases of O'Keeffe's case is that he.
hadn't attended that chapel—some day
or any other—for two yeard previous.
Yesterday, in the little chapel, the
si sht that presented itself was extra-
ordinary, indeed. There was the con-
gregation kneeling in tho chapel yard
and the neighboring fields, while there
were none inside the chapel, with the
exception of some half dozen policemen,
a few little girls, and this man
O'Kceffe. Before the sacred ceremony
commenced, Rev. Canon Griffin, P. P.,
tho officiating clergyman, came out
and asked the peoplo to go inside.
This they positively refused todo, some
of them making use of epithets towards
O'KeefTo, which, to say tho least,
might have been left unsaid. The can-
on, failing iu his exhortations, retraced
his steps into the vestry
t f
Disipline iu the Army.
I heard recently a remarkable story
of United States artny discipline. A
certain commanding officer in one oí
our lonely mititary outposts entertain-
ed a great aversion to a subaltern un-
der his command. It was an open
secrot that this commanding oflicex
had, on more than one occasion, ex
pressed his intention ef ruining the
young fellow. The threat was not
heeded; but sometime afterward the
little post was astonished to learu that
it was the iutention of the command-
ing officer to hold a court martial upon
this officer for having been drnnk
while on duty. This amazed the civi-
lian and soldier, as it was well known
that tho accused was no more guilty
of drunkeness than any of the other
officers. Bat the fiat went forth, and
officers from other garrisons were sum-
moned to attend the court martial.
They assembled at this post; and all
proceeded to get most uproaronsly
drunk. Their sprees lasted so long
that it was impossible to hold the court
martial, and, as far as could learn, the
proceedings were summarily dropped.
If that officer is wise he will ask to be
transferred, and if he has the bravery
he should take an early opportunity to
expose his sample of military life in
tbe distant outposts of the West—San
FrdnHscQ Post,
Chicago, June 4th, 1888.
I have yearly been in the habit of seeking
jw places for fishing in the Northwest, aad
ils awing I concluded to visit the Toma*
Lakes In Wisconsin, and knowing at
this season of the year that many are seek-
ing Information regarding new places, I give
it briefly.
These lakes have heretofore only bee
cesslble over trails some 25 miles from
ten ao-
Eagle
by Tn-
River Station, and been fished only
dlans or by parties who camped upon the
shores at great inconvenience. The Chicago,
Wilwaukoe & St Paul Railway Company has
just completed an extension on its Wiscon-
sin Yalley Division to Minoequa. and
Messrs. Mann Bros, have built a hotel near
the depot, Immediately beside tbe shore of
one of the lakes from which all are accessible,
giving over one hundred miles of shore fish-
ing. The country is so new that tbe ordinary
maps give no idea of tbe number or extent of
the lakes which ean be easily reached from
Niuocqua, in most cases through thorough-
fares connecting these lakes sufficiently large
for boats, and in only a few cases are portages
necessary. The lakes are surrounded by high
lands, generally quite heavily wooded. Mann
Bros, keeps as good a hotel as can be expect-
ed under the circumstances, are expert fish-
ermen themselves, know the entire system of
lakes and will cheerfully give all the Informa-
tion required. They have a supply of boata
and guides and practice no extortion.
I have never visited any place I can so read-
ily recommend as Minoequa for extent and
variety of Ashing, and I have had as much
experience in fishing over the Northwest as
most gentlemen have. The water in all these
lakes Is clear as crystal, and tbe fish are re-
markably fine.
I went tbere May 21st, in company of. Geo,
W. Hale, and we returned yesterday June
3rd. During nine days fishing we caught
46 muscallonge, 102 pike and 893 black
bass. I sent home one muscallonge
46% inches long, and the pike aver
aged the largest 1 ever saw. We caught a
number of small mouthed bass weighing
nearly four pounds each. We caught enough
to satisfy t}s and to cause us to desire a rest.
I propose to visit these waters again within
ten days, when I think the fishing will be even
better than during our stay.
Respectfully yonrs,
j. Frank Lawrence.
People who are more or less whimsical may
find a certain support and comfort In a report
made by a Boston man the other day to a
friend who reproached him with being crot-
chety. "Oh, yes," was the reply. "I know
it, I like it, I cultivate crotchets as at once
the cheapest and the most fruitful source ot
amusement open to me."
Deafness Can't Be Cured
by local applications, as they can not reach the
diseased portion of tho ear. There is only one
way to cure Deafness, and that is by constitu-
tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in-
flamed condition of the mucus lining of the
Eustachain Tube. When this tube gets inflamed,
jou have a rumbling sound or imperfeot hear-
ing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is
the result, and unless the inflammation can bo
taken out and this tube restored to its normal
condition, hearing will be destroyed forever;
nine cases out of ten are causea by catarrh,
which is nothing but an inflamed condition or
the mucus surfaces.
Wo will give One Hundred Dollars for any case
of Deafness (caused by Catarrh) that we can not
cure by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for
circular, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Í2T" Bold by all Druggists, 75 cts.
"I say, Bobby," said Featherly, did you
hear your sister say if she enjoyed the exhi-
bition we gave last night)" "She was pleas-
ed with your part of It, Mr. Featherly. She
told ma that you made a perfect exhibition of
yourself."—Xew York Hun.
A Pleasure Shared by Women Only.
Malherbe, the gifted French author, de-
clared that of ail things that man possesses,
women alone take pleasure lu being possessed.
This seems generally true of the sweeter sex.
Like the ivy plant 6he longs for an object to
cling to and love—to look to for protection.
This being her prerogative, ought she not to
be told that Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip-
tion is the physical salvation of her sex? It
banishes those distressing maladies that
make her life a burden, curing all painful ir-
regularities, uterine disorders, inflammation
and ulceration, prolapsus and kindred weak-
nesses. As a nervine, It cures nervous ex-
haustion, prostration, debility, relieves men-
tal anxiety and hypochondria, and promotes
refreshing sleep.
Excelsior Geyser, In the National Park,
Montana, is discharging a column of water
sixteen feet in diameter and 300 feet high.
The eruptions occur every forty-five minutes,
and last from three to five minutes.
Old pill boxes arc spread over tbe land by
the thousands after having been emptied by
suffering humanity. What a mass of sicken-
ing, disgusting medicine tbe poor stomach has
to contend with.
Too much strong medicine.
Prickly Ash Bitters is rapidly aud surely tak-
ing the place of all this class of drugs, and in
curing all the ills arising from a disordered
condition of the liver, kidneys, stomach and
bowels. _
The woman who nursed Charles Stuart
Parnell lives at Manistee, Mlcb. Her name
is Mrs. Eliza Hyland, and she is now seventy-
seven years old.
«•What Drug Will Scour These Eng-
lish Hence?"
Wicked Macbeth, who murdered good King
Duncan, asked thi3 question In his despair.
Thousands of victims of dUease are aaily
asking "What will scour the impurities from
my blood and bring me health?" Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery will do it. When
the purple life-tide is sluggish, causing drow-
iiness, headache, aud loss or appetite, use
ibi* wonderful vltalizer, which never falls-
It forces tbe liver iuto perfect action, drives
!>ut superfluous bile, brings the glow of
health to the cheek and the natural sparkle to
the eye. All dru: í ^ts
John A. Christ:; up, of Philadelphia, who
Sled in France last mouth, bequeathed $60(-
300 to Kale College.
When everything else fails Dr. Sage's Ca-
tarrh Remedy cures.
The senior Admiral of the British navy,
Blr Pravo Wallis, is 100 years old.
Farmers and Stockmen.
The only remedy that cures galls, cuts and
Grounds on horses and cattle, and always grows
Ihe hair in its original color, Is Veterinary
Carbol isalve. 50c and fl, at Druggists or by
malL Cole & Co., Black River Falls, Wis.
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
The Aged.
" Medical and scientific skill has at last solved the
problem of the Ions needed medicine for tbe n«r-
voub, debilitated, and tbe aged, by combining the
best nerve tonics. Celery and Coca, with other effec-
tive remedies, which, acting- gently but efficiently
on the kidneys, liver and bowels, remove disease,
restore strength and renew vitality. This-medicinsia
Si.oo !
. >•
The Hew Craze Among tho Women
Probably no one thizuc has had ■
fight for its life as the fioxie. Its
Health and Strength
top, xou
can't beat a thing that the' women oommend.
They literally swarm after it, because it áfop-
ports overwork, and helps nervousness and the
fired feeling so quickly, keeps theih off while
overworked, and leaves no more harm than oom-
mon food. At first it was counterfeited badly.
Now the courts have put a stop to that.
f it ells a place heretofore unoccupied, and marts
a new era in tbe treatment of nervous troubles.
Overwork, anxiety, disease, lay tbe foundation of
nervous prostration aad weakness, and experience
has shown that the usual remedies do not mend the
strain and paralysis of tbe nervous system.
Recommended by professiiiinl sad
bend fordnnlan.
Price SI.OO. Sold by draggmtm. .
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Proprietors
BURLINGTON. VT.
Botanic Blood Balm.
B. B. B. is the only Blood l'uriBer that
makes positive and permanent cure of all
Blood Diseases. For females, troubled with
painful menstruation, ovarian tumors, uterine
ulcers, and chronio troubles, its action is
speedy aad sffeotual Quo Si.OG bottle wlU
A recent estimate places the number of
Grange trees set out in California the past
year at 500,000.
"A $2 «ASNINO MACHINE FREE I"
To introduce them we will give away 1000 self-oper-
ating washing machines. No washboard or rubbing
required. If you want one send y our name at once to
The Domestic Co., 41 A 42J Wabash Ave., Chicago, UL
Of the ten children of Junius Brutus Booth
but two are now alive, Edwin and Joseph.
Lamar, Ha
The stone auarries at Lamar are attracting
eat deal of attention, and capitalists from
parts of tbe country are seeking invest-
ments in this growing town.
Our voung friend D. N. Wheeler recently
graduated at Elliott's Business College, Bur-
lington, la., and Is now bookkeper for the
Weir Flow Ca, Dallas, Texas, at $75 per
month. _
JUACOBS ©H
FOR SWINE.
a Eres
all p:
cures
Hog Cholera and all
Diseases of Hogs.
as-GENERAL DIRECTIONS.—Vse freely
in the hog swill. If they will not cat drench
with milk into which a small quantity of
the Oil is put.
Sold by Druggists and Dealers Etrryrchere.
THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Baltimore. Md
ERREOS
IONIO
Is prepared solely for the
Cure of complaints which
afflict all womankind. It
gives tone and strength t«
the uterine organs, and
corrects dangerous displacements and irregulari-
ties. Itisofgreatvaliieln changeofllfe. Theuseof
KERRELI/N FEMALE TONIC during preg-
nancy greatly rclievesthe painsof motherhood and
promotes speedy recovery. It assists nature to
safely make the critical chanre from girlhood to
womanhood. It is pleasant to the taste and may be
taken at all times with perfect Bafety. Price, #1.
FOR PALIS by ALL DRfGOIST*. _
J.5.MERRELL DRUO CO. .SoleProp. .ST.LOU1S.
The best and surest Remedy for Cue of
all diseases caused by any derangement of
the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels.
Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Constipation,
Bilious Complaints and Malaria of all kinds
yield readily to the beneficent influence of
If yon feel tired, weak, worn ont or run down ftwS
bard work, by impoverished condition of the blood or
low state of tbe system, you should take Hood's Sana
parllla. The peouiiar toning; purifying, aad vital*
lzlng qualities of this successful medicine are soon
felt thronghont the entire system, expelling disease,
and giving quick, heatthy action to every organ. Is
tones the stomach, creates an appeUte, and rouses %
the liver and kidneys. Thousands who have taken
it with benefit, testify that Hood's garseparUla
"makes the weak strong.".
Hood's Sarsaparflla
Sold by all drugg:sts. $1; six for S3. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell Mass
IOO Poses One Dollar
TJADWAY'CJ
FIX_jX_.S. ^
Tbe Great Lirer and Stomaob Remedy
For the care of all disorders of the Stomach, Liver,
llowela, Kidneys, Bladder. Nervous Diseases. Loss
of Apnetlte, Headache, Costtveness, Indigestion,
Uitiousless, Fever, ludsminacion of ttje Bowels,
landaft' —
Piles i
1 derangements of the Internal Viscera.
Purely vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals,
or deleterious drugs.
Perfect Digestion
Will be accomplished by taking Bad way's Pills. By
so doing
Sick Headache, '
Foul Stomach BlllouKnesa wtll be avoided and tho
food that is eaten contributo tts nourishing proper-
lies for tbe support of the natural waste of tbe body.
DYSPEPSIA.
DR. RADWATS PILLS are a euro
for itils complaint. They restore strength to the
stomach and enable it to perform its functions. The
symptoms of Dyspepsia disappear, and with them
the liability of the system to contract diseases.
Take tbe medicine according to directions, aad ob-
serve what we say in "False end True'' Respecting
diet. A few extracts from the many letters we are
constantly receiving:
Dr. A. c. Mlddlebrook. Doravilte, Oa.: "I nse them.
In my practice and family in prcfercuce to all other
Pilla"
Mrs. Caroline Montelth, Deer Creek, Ind.: '1 be-
lleve my life has been saved by your mcdlclae. Have
long been suffering with Dyspepsia and Liver Com-
plaint."
II. A. Carr, P. M„ Escambia, Ala: "Best PUls ho
has ever used."
E. Hummel, Boonville, Mo.: Cured him when aU
others failed.
Alice E. Ohaver. Mt. Storm, W. Va.: "I positively
fay that Radway's arc the best PUls I ever had for
a letter stamp to DR. HAD WAY & CO.,
No. 93 Warren St., New YorJc, t>r "1
•False and True.*
It is pleasant to the taste, tones up the
system, restores and preserves health.
It is purely Vegetable, and cannot fail to
prove beneficial, both to old and young.
As a Blood Purifiej it is superior to all
others. Sold everywhere at $1.00 a bottle.
The best Blood Purifier and
Tonic, B. B. B., Botanic Blood
Balm, Absolutely the quickest,
cheapest and most effectual
Blood Poison Remedy on Earth.
l prescribe and fully en-
dorse Big O as tbe only
specific for the certain cure
ox this distase,
O. H. 1NGRAHAM, M. D.,
Amsterdam, N. T.
We bave sold Big Q for
many years, and it has
£ven the beat of satis*
ction.
D. R. DYCHE k CO.,
Chicago, I1L
81.00. Sold by Druggists*
PRIVATE DISPENSARY
The Iargsst initituttonjn the^
It ,
uted Dc
lyslcal at
luiekly, i
liently, and privately cured.
lent,
KAL VfEAK-
_ ed Dcvelop-
eataL Physical and gex-
pirma.
west where
Bess, Gleet. Stunt
ú Menta J _ ■
Debility are quickly,
■ta rlvateiy
With men too frequent evacua-
tions of the Pladder is an evi-
dence of the 2nd stage of Seyual
"Weakness. Cures guaranteed.
Medicines by express. Call or
send stamp for particulars to
DR. JACOBS, P. D., 1115 Main St.. Kansas City, Mo.
ft
EW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY,
°fMUSIC Boston^ Mass.>
the
OÍ én~Kiñi«isT JVni- irt , Órarori, Literature, Prentk,
Qtrmanmnd Italian Language*, Etiglith Brancke*, Gymn**-
tiei, ate. Tuition, #5 to gif.: board and room with
neat and Electric Light, S5.CU to J. Mper werk. Fall
Term begins Sept. 13. IfcsS. For Imirtratcd Calendar,
giTina full inforniatlon, addrc- E. TOLfU¿L, Director,
vanEliu Sauare, Boston, Mac-s.
''OSGOOD"
V. S. Staadard Scales.
Sent on trial. Freight
paid. FullyWarranted.
3 TON $35.
Other sizes proportion-
ately low. Agents well paid, illustrated Catalogue
free. Mention this Paper.
OSGOOD & THOMPSON, Bingfcamton, N. Y.
WELLS, &c.
8end for our natalogne, l¿c., nn Well Boring an®
Coal Prospecting Marhinrs. dtr.
LOOM IS & NYMAN, TIFFIN, OHIO,
PMPP IIAIIE0 Attheratetheybavebeenffo.
rlffcb lllllllfco hig the Publio Domains * ill
UmmmSSmJSmSmSSSmm allbe pone in 6 years. Now la
•on H Sich Lui M Ch* Sua akaM • M A1ycr a<
•Mis to Ml to OMMrmt Wton ta «ra. btm i
year
Ito IfaMltnran Sich Lui m Ch* Bu ahM «a M
Wkal toMvMalS to left to cmmratf Wton umm U«4« am b* u
ali StM*i and Xmritmim, nad IO
ari kmSt* tto toaatiM birntno, a Hrtnrmiu Pumai at < Ca'Mt
■MS SMna TU£W£STiaM WOULD. ClUoa*«,ill
MllA TTS HI THE BEST.
■ V I ni V Stationers keep '¿em. Standard quality,
■■ 111 %Jall cities. Saumlc do*. lOccnteby mad.
■ ESTERBROOK.
86 John
Hew York,
PHFP By return mail. V
Ellfe p Moedy'a New Talla
■ llbb CmtUmrn. MOODY A
Fall Description
TalUr VyaUwa of Dreaa
* 00.. Cincinnati. &
Carat la
1 TO 6 DATS
Mfdmly by the
ChssletlOa.
Cincinnati
Ohio.
Inter-State Investment Co.
Pnld Up Capital, 8 50,000.00.
Refer to American National Bank. German Ameri-
can National Bank. Merchants National Bank, Na-
tional Bank, Kansas City.
Make Safe and Profitable Investments in
Heal JEstate in Kansas City.
IOO West Ninth Street, Kansas City, Mo.
rested and cured without Un knife.
_ook on treatment sent free. Address
F. L. POND. M. D., Aurora, Kane Co„ XU.
PATENTS
■ opinions on patentabil
R. 8. Sc A. P. LACEY,
| Patent Attorneys, Washing-
ton, D. C. Instructions and
I opinions on patentability n ca. 20 y rs. exi*crlence.
$65
A MONTH A FOARD for a Brijrfa
Yaaas Men or Ladle* in each county.
P. W. Z1KULER & CO., Chicago, Illinois.
BATTLE OF
Whca la Cklaage I*
GETTYSBURG VXZISJZ?'
I flnre relief
¿.iSTHIiL
Ktowell A Go*
PISOS CURE FOR CONSUMPTION
KIDOEB'8 P*8TILlE8.Sa^
■■■■■■■■BHHEaDl-'haiJcstjwn,
Ml M Live at home and make more money workln * for ot than
liUUJt at anything elae in th« world Either HI Cosily nutSt
VKEE. Tarms rill. Addrew, TklcS Co., Auguiia, Haina.
PAimS,OlLS,MÍS? AffiSSliíf!
9atañas' Mitiitus,«10 Delaware SU.KaaiaaClty.
CM
OKB Cured. No knife, ligature or eaust'rs. Fee
when removed. Dr. Jacobs. Kanaaa City, Mo.
ap«n 18 a doy- Sample worth fl.M FKSfe c.ta«a
not un?e? tne nonis'a feet. Write Bre water
^Ulifsty Rein Holder Co., Holly, Mich.
o Al n *• verts SSH per lh. rattl *a Bya Sal a la
UULU Sioeei bat la ealS at SS eaata a hem by '
W. IS. U.-R.C. gt o No ag
Vis applying to any of the abov
advertisers, do not forget to say that you'
«aw tbe advertisement In tbia paper
ARM AND HAM MER
To Hou*ekrrper*and
Farmers.—It is impor-
tant that the Soda you
use should be White and
Pure same as all similar
substances used for
food. To insure ob-
taining only the "Arm &
Hammer" brand Soda,
bay it in "pound or
half pound" cartoons,
which bear our name
and trade-mark, as in*
ferior goods are some-
times substituted for tho
"Arm A Hammer" brand
when bought ib bulk.
Parties using Baking
Powder should remem-
ber that it sole rial
property consiste of
9
GO
pqus
Koonfula of the b*st
king Powder, earing
carbonate of s oda. One
teaspoon ful of the "Arm
& Hammer" brand of
Soda mixed with soar
milk equals four tea-
b^st
ring
twenty times its cost,
besides being much
healthier, because it
does not contain any
injurious substanres,
suchas alum, terra alba
etc., of which many Bak-
ing Powders arc mads.
Dairymen and Farmers
should use only tbe" Arm
k Hammer" brand for
cleaning and keeping
Milk Pans Swct and
dean.
BRAND SODA
TO MAKE ...
A DELICIOUS BISOUIT
YOUR GROCER FOÍI
TAKE) NO OTHE&
***********
The man who haa invested troin
to tire dollars m a Kubbcr Coat, and
at his first half hour's experience in
a at<>rm finds to his sorrow that it it
hardly a better protection than a mos-
quito netting, not onljr feels chagrined
at beiiis so badly taken in, but also
feels if he 4ocs not look exactly Uto
at< * d (not style) a garment that will km
WET
(not style) a garment that wiiTfceep
him dry in the bankst storm. It is
called TOWEU-S FISH BRA3ij>
"SLICKER," a name familiar t-j ever/
Cow-boy all over the land. With them
DWIGHT'S "SOW BRAND" SODA
V;
i Y^..
•,
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Harm, L. V. Canadian Free Press. (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 46, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 20, 1888, newspaper, June 20, 1888; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth183656/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hemphill County Library.