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Show TUn DAHjTT TIUBUHI2: GAIT LAKE CIT1T. TJTAII SUOTAY 31011X1X0, BECJEMBEK 27, 1891. of people wre through, car rhitg 'f WOLCQTT'S i places portable everything rjlt fo i it ax d Four of the leading wr destroyed and; tbe principal rj. j.and oct and furnituie shoe.' t; " i ! by tbe Government to tb effect that pork Maher and Jack:' Dempsey, announced for Imported from the United States' must January, will also b prevented. Mitchell and Slavin called at police headquarter henceforth be carefully Inspected, owing to to-dto see Superintendent Murray, but tbe fact that soma of, the meat has been tbe latter bad gone found Infected with trleblnse. home. Mitchell expressed his disappointment at tb Superintendent's THIS BATTLE OF TRENTON". action and thought It harsh. Lumtey did not see why the Corbett-Mltche- ll fight should not come off. It was to be a scientific exhiAnniversary or Washington's Cross bition, and simple. Jim Corbett held pure ins: tbe Delaware River. tbe same views, lie said that, notwith1 tbe standing TatSTOV, N. J.. Dee. 24. To-dthis, he would insist on fighting one hundred and fifteenth anniversary of and this to a finish and before some reputL. the revolutionary battle of Trenton, and It able club. was made notable by laying the cornerstone Mnrpny Declines to Meet McCarthy. of a monument to the memory I of WashingDec 26. Johnny Murphy of this Boston, ton and the Continental troops,' who, after eity to-ddeclined to carry oat the! agreecrossing tbe Icy Delaware during Christmas ment made by him to fight Cal McCarthy ot New York at the Olymple Club at New Ornight, surprised and rooted the Hessians.' Governor Abbott laid tbe stone at noon leans for a purse of v 92600. while a salute of forty-fogone were fired. An indoor meeting was held at Taylor Opera House, at which General William J. Sewell presided. After a short Introductory adRev. Dr. E. G. Robinson. Brown Universidress. 'United States Senator McPberson. ty's it a little remarkGeneral Uoraoe Porter of New York, and able that the two thinks bodies cow most clerical of tbe Navy Robisoa spoke. rapidly multiplying, through the addition Tbe monument cost about $60,000. ot proselytes, should be tbe two that la so many particulars, doctriual and ecclesiastical, ar so nearly antipodal. He refer to BUCKLEY ON 'FRISCO POLITICS. the Episcopal and tbe Baptist Ministry. There are plenty of denominations," he which a duly accredited says, "among; THE QCESTION WHO BIIAXZ, BUX clergyman can pass without question, and be at once recognized as folly qualified for THE DEMOCRATIC PART V. any and every function of the Christian From no one of these, however, A Iot af Reformer Who Are Willing? to Ministry. can any clergyman, whatever his endowReform Hesves and Earth Provided ments, attainment or character, pass either withto tbe Episcopalians or the They Get Offlo- -A Persecuted Kan. new out an avowal of certaia Baptist,: radically principles; and the principles to be avowed to gala admission to one, debar him hopeLondon, Dec 26 -- Tbibohk Dispatch other. And lessly frott admission to tbe San Francico Chronic' e Series. Christo1 to these two it yet. enough, strangely pher A. Buckley, the famous blind subdivisions of tb Christian Church, the whose most opposite In all Protestant Christendom, of San Francisco, politician movements for' some time have been the Immigration from other folks are most a mystery, arri ved here on Wednesday night continually flowing." from New York on his way; to Wiesbaden, The two most interesting debate of tbe tie Is supposed to have left San Francisco recent Church congress at Washbecause of a revolt In his party following, ington, Episcopal think: the Churchman, were those on bis rivals having succeeded In getting an evolution and socialism. Tbe debate on indictment against him by the ' grand jury, socialism was sprightly enougb to call down from one of our New York dailies. thought It appears from tbe following Inter- censure churchmen, complains the editor, are view that tbe Supreme Court of California These danger of setting society on fire with their checked this ambition of th unruly m'em-be- ra in Ignorant talk, and before they know it will by throwing tbe indictment out of have prOvoked a breaon of tbe peace. Hut court. Buckley consented to an interview bad this editor been present at the debate question, remarks the Churchman, he with a Sun correspondent and gave a most In would found both bane and antidote remarkable account of the state of affairs in within have reach. If Prof. Gould's genuine easy California. When asked about tbe San Fran- eloquence was a little impetuous in its adcisco trouble tbe blind man smiled and said: of and Mr. Christlau vocacy "It's a little party fight, that's all. We Bartlett's well aimed aociallsm senteuces somewhat have a lot of reformers In 'Frisco wbo are too denunciatory of things as they are, the ' U ready to side of the question enjoyed the supother RXrORM BUTIN AND EARTH and Mr. port of Mr. Alsop's clear dialecticThe latter provided they get office. If they are not Kirkup's merciiess1 ridicule. kick, which is made the congress hail rlug with inextinpermitted to run things, tbey natural. The question IsJ whether the guishable laughter, in which evon tht vicDemocratic party in Frisco is to be run by tims found themselves compelled to joiu. ao ex Chief Justice of tbe Supreme Court The Timet is mistaken in its interpretation of this debate. The speakers of whom it witb an itch for office, a reformed stockbroker and an undeveloped young man who complains were ot the roeliorlst rather thau bangs bis hair and put up forI a newspaper, of the revolutionary type; and iu no or whether tbe party is to be run by me. instance was there auy suggustion of; a reTbe indiffereuce of the citizens is sueh tbat sort to force as the ultima rutio iu the solupolitics has every show there. Public spirit tion of the problem. Is a so much weaker force than private ambition that a managing man has a good Rev. John McNeill, an English game to play if be ha got brains enough to mist preacher, home from a lately returuod a it. Thus which has newspaper play got visit to this country, ot his impressions gives sucof is behind not money it, but plenty an to the churches American interviewer, ina of makes lot talk about public cessful, tier a things: saying uoing other terest In order to Increase Its circulation. churches have and that there you rne been with It bas always ou good old 'gospel are prosperous WHKN IT COULP MAKS ANYTHING. on the other band you havo Hues; but now thinks to force tbe public by fight- places wbere it is s'unpiy a case of ru,nuiug ing me. That's the way we do things out a church.' with good music and at attractive West," and Buckley laughed, while a couple program in place of sound old guspei preachof Englishmen present at the interview also ing." Upou which the New York uottrcer it very funny. comments: Wuat Mr. McNeill says uoout thought "When did you leave San Francisco?" churches and attractive programs well set us tuinuing, beir.uso it is "I left on the 1st ot September to take a runnlug may then go emineutly wise for us to see oursmves as trip over the Canadian Pacific and to Wiesbaden, which place did me a lot of others see us iu our religious lifo. i At the good last year. I went to Montreal to make same time we think it posltne that in this a visit of two months. After I left. William country and age we may have auded to tbo T. Wallace, justice of the Supreme attractiveness of the features of religious, Court, now bead of the Superior Court in worship, without dltuiulshing their spiritualIu the eyes of some persons religious 'Frisco, took tbe la Into hi own hands. caHed a grand Jury of his own and bad me ity. is pruseut iu proportion to what we soiidity Indicted for bribery. It seemed that a man may perhaps call reilgioussimpiicity. Their earned Mayne had got a streetcar franchise ideal is to be touua iu the more simpie from the Board of Super vl&oc Ou his church structure, church interior and orucr books was an entry of 250 shares to be deof church worsuip so characteristic of curly livered to Buckley aud Fire Commissioner American times aud of old country iiun-eo- ij Sam Kainey. when thy were called for. I till within recent years, raiher know nothing about the matters, us I was in thanfortuity, in the present age where more oraao Eurspe when the agreement is alleged to structures aud a more ornate worship prehave been made. This, took place two vail. We can understand the couvicuou, months after I left. for it is perfectly iute.iligibie, but cauuvi WAIXACB IS A RICH MAN admit that it is logical. and always has had an itching for office. Last year he wanted the nomination for the The Baptist Watchman is evidently a for ' several rea- - tritle nettl&tl supreme bench I refused at the comment cxeileu Uy Dr. sons.. One was that- the party wouldn't Robinson's series of articles. In its columns have him. Auother was that were on the theological drift in the orthodox made against his integrity withcharges affidavits. I churches. The liberal churches," believe, by a local paper, when be was once it retorts, are altogether too ready to before a candidate for office, had never been pounce on any; restatement of Christian satisfactorily answered, so far as I knew. doctrine or. experience as a movement la lie couldn't have been elected, and he their direction. But whatever drltt of couldn't get over 100 out of. 600 votes in tbe thought In evangelical churches there may convention. When I refused be was bitterlv be, it certainly is not toward the "liberal angry and swore. In presence of the superior churches." 'A'hey do not grow. They do judges at San Jose, that ha would put roe not hold their own. Wo hazard the asserIn jail. This he tried to do in selecting a tion that never In tbe history of religion in grand jury by overriding the law a he had this country were the great aoctrlnes of the explicitly laid it down himself1 when Suof our Lord, ana ot his work for mau preme Judge. I don't think that amao of deity and in man as the only hope f of human tht kind, whose first Idea of reforming a redemption, preached with such triumphant olty is treachery to l is friends and the emphasis from tbo pulpits, of evuiguucal v il iver re- cuurches, and embraced so heartily by gratification of personal form a eity to any great spit extent. congregations as at the close of The same thing Is! true of the newspaper. evangelical this year of grace laUl. UTE BILL. I1EV dry-goo- ' ay crockery lousdi, two banks, the public library and t'hamber of Coiumerc rooms, tlie Cohweb The Transferred Indians to iU and a variety of small Shops, office, fin on the two etc. Tht property destroyed Colorado to Mali. ; raoat Important corner In the city. A DLIZZAItU IK NEOitASKA. - tt 1 and Intense ..Cold lilockade tbo Union Pacific. Poow, "Wind Omaha, Deo. 2G. All day y aster day a fcllszard prevailed throughout Nebraska. Tbe western part of the tate was la tbo storm's embrace several boars earlier. The weather turned Intensely cold, the wind aw at a terrific rale, and snow fell In trout quantities. Traffic on all railroads la seriously retarded, and la insny cases alor g the wettern dlvsioa of the. Union Paclto trains are blockaded. Tb snow drifted furiously. Varmers ,feel- - partially comIn the pensated for tbe 1oh of their stock fact of having their winter wlisat well protected.' In the interior portion a heavy fall f snow occurred before it turned so cold. proConsequently the wloter grain.! tected. The storm extended, throughout and tbe DaKansas, Colorado, kota. In, WyomingWyoming tbe less of stock 1 rea complete portedblock large, wb 'Jad e. train unusually i, Frca ay - PUT KIBOSH THE OM FIRE-EATER- S. ! ,. j TnE OPEItATOIX'S: FAUIiT. 23y ; Ilia Neglect ' Fatal , Head-En- d j Colllalon Occurs. IsnrxMisra.. Mich., Deo. 86; .By a bead- nd collision on the Dulutb.' South Shore & Atlantic Railroad, tbe .conductor, euglneer and fireman were Instantly killed and Eo- and abrakeraan seriously ftneer Uaney Tbe wreck Is due to a blunder of the; operator "at Champion,: who failed' to bold tbe train a Instructed. . The Grippe in Montreal. De has a firm grippe foothold- on Montreal and now claims 1000 oases. It affects the victlmsiin a different way than before. Pains in the stomach and headache la followed by weakness in tbe lower limbs, but tbe attack! only lasts In most cases from, four d aye to two weeks. Tbe Street 'Company, tbe police are the worst sufferers. force and fire Itallway brigade Out of 37S Dies on tbe police force fifty-ar- e are laid up with It. MONTBEAt, Deo. 28. - , Found Frozen to Death. Gni.no Jcmctios. Colo., Deo. 26. Special to Tnrfacna.j Tbe body of Joseph C Barton of Philadelphia, Pa., was found y. Ife bad been frozen to death on tbe range west of here. Ills wife was found close beside bits la a comatose condition. Two children, who left to cross the mountains a fsw dsys ago, are still r missing, and It Is thought they, too, have met death la the :l i deep snow. to-da- f1 in Dakota.. Dlltisrd Deo. 2ft. The P., Yesterday's wind and snow sterna abated about midnight and the mercury went down several degrees. It was twenty below sera! at day light, the lowest this winter. It has been intensely eold ail day, but la more moderate No Afore Victims Have .Died. Yomslbos, N. Y., De. 26. No more victims of the dreadful disaster on the New York Central road, on Christmas evo, at Hastings, have died. The condition of the Injured people la tbe hospital remains unB. XXpaoN, ' to-nig- ht. . ''! changed. i Government Officials Take Pains to Contradict !: tbe Specnlatlona of Warlike Correspondents Blaine, Dined by tbe Chilean Minister Connecticut Governorship. I I V; r ..." ; i vV- i - - - .r l.rv-- .VfAiuiSQTQyi. ent, J : :v Deci 25. ur -- fSpeoial to Kx-Secret- -y Tara-cr- E. Senator Wolcbtt has prepared a new bill which be will Introduce when Congress reconvenes after tbebollay recess, for ratification of the agreement recently made with the Southern band of Cw Indians in southern Color ad o The measure Js to take the place of a bill that tbe Senator reintroduced at tbe opening of the present session in relation to tbiamatter. The new bill bas It provides that tbe Important provision following district be set apart for tbe absolute and undisturbed ns and occupation of tbe Southern Ifte Indians: Commencing on the north ban of the San Joan river, wbere it crosses the line between Colorado anl Utah, thence running north seventy-fiv- e mries, whence due west to tbe Colorado river, thence southerly to the San Juan river, where It empties Inte tbe Colorado river, thence easterly alone the north to . Juan of bank the j San The United tbe place of beginning. States reserves and maintains lrom the tract one square section for agency buildings and also reserves tbe right to grant the right of way to railroads and other like purposes that may be necessary.; Tbe United States is to pay $50,000, In ten annual lnstalljbents, to the Indians, and to furnish twenty thousand dollars' worth as sheep as: soon as the Indians are relocated on tbj new reservation. It is Buckskin that Ignablo, Charley provided and Morino, 'chiefs of certain of these tribes, be paid $5000, Ip five annual payments, in consideration of the provisions. Tbe Southern Utes are to remove to tbe new reservation in Utah, and cede and relinquish all tbe rljthts ; and interest they may have to tbe United States, except tbe tract provided for their; use, and especially to relinquish all claims to tbe Southern Ute reservation In La Platal county, and now occupied by tbe Ute band, wblcb is to be and sold to the highest bidder, un der tbe direction bt (be Secretary of the Interior,! after this tictf becomes a law. .Tbe Secretary of tbe Interior Is authorized to appoint a commission of three to appraise the property and improvement of tbe settlers upon the land embraced in tbe pro- f posed Utah reservation. A KIBOSH OS FIRE-EATER- j , , above-describ- ed ' apprehension, of .war between the United States and Chile thai may have been caused by alarming newspaper publications. Sec- &tScnTtHSs BY I Us Itecegnlaes the Mistake Mis Men Made In Attacking; (the United States Trjopt, as it Deprives II I m of Asylum. f faA. Deo. Louis, ex-chi- retary Tracy this ntornlng said tbat tbe warlike stories were without foundation, and that there wis nothing in tbe situation to warrant their acceptance. lie added that not a single vessel pf the Navy was under orders to proceed: to Chile. Assistant Secreasked to extary Soley was subsequently plain the departure! of the "Charleston" from Honolulu far Valparaiso on tbe ,17th as reported 'from the Hawaiian Islanda. In reply lie said that he did not believe, tbat the "Charleston' had taken any Such course; aud be whs sure that she was not The officials at the State frolng to Chile, of Department) 'were au news, but took such optimistic view of tbe situation as to warrant the belief, strengthened by! the fact that Secretaries In conlilaiue and Tracy had been sultation with tbe President, tbat some news of a most reassuring character had been reAnierlcan representatives ceived from the Chile. MEXICAN GKNKHA1V 5IAKCHINU TO JOIN TIIkI RAtOKR. q8t. There cah be no doubt of tbe desir. of tbe officers of the State and Navy Departments to allay any to-nig- Tort-Dtspa- special from Laredo, Tex,, says: News today from the seat of trouble Is to the effect that more fighting wis engaged In, with slight losses on both Sides, Last night it was reported that the revolutionists had Com ar ago, and that General Can-ducaptured Is on tbe march with 1000 men to join Uarza. There Is some talk to the effect that a Geueral la the Mexican army baa declaredt for the revelutlonlsts, and will march wlth In tbe soldiers la his command to Join the inPROTECjXIOK OP SEALS. vaders. These reports are meager, and cannot be traeed to any particular source, but the rumors are credited by some. Guards Should Be Posted, on the Islands at Each Rookery. OARZVfl ASYLUM DESTROYED. Washington,! Dee. 2S Captain Coul-socommanding the revenue steamer He Reoosnlxea tbe Mistake Made In U 8. Troops 'Bush," has made a report to the Treasury Attacking al to-d- - ; j I I n, Department of tbe cruise of. that vessel in Alaskan waters from; October 19th to December 5th. j lie said that tbe weather has been boisterous ; nearly all the time, and considerable difficulty has been experienced in executing the orders ot. tbe Department In regard to; the collection of data In to the prevention of sealing- and tbe on the seal landing of mall andj stores ' Islands. Captain Cpulson says be Is eonvinoed that if It is necessary to guard the rookeries on St. Paul and Stl George Islands until December 1st, it would be tha wisest policy to place an officer of the Revenue Marine on the inlands In charge of a number of men, to act as leader in organizing a company or squad of natives for a regular patrol only be required guard. These nien would to beat the Stations or rookeries on the lee side of the Islands, as It is Impossible to laud on the weather side in bad weather. In calm weatbec the guard should be placed at each rookery. ( The Rio tOsAHPa CiTT, 'jTe., Main body ot the revolutionary party, pur-ape- d by Lieutenant Laagborne. rode through without stopping anywhere, to where Garsa was, near the Rodando ranch, in; Zapato county, and reported the occurrence to him of the killing of Corporal Edstaom.', Uarta Is reported to have said that their action In attacking the troops pt thisof Government a revolution placed a quletuson his hopes Inasmuch as he now had no against Mexico, asylum when pursued by the Mexican troops, lie atones assembled what men he could and crossed Into Mexico near the ranch above Mler, and it; Is said that he contemplates attacking that place or Camargo or Guerrero la the next few days. These report are given for what!' they are re-gs- rd - I Ar-rler- os " worth.! K ,;. j j ww urlians, jyeo. se. j.ne ttctyune' Laredo special says: City Marshal Ygleslas, ! ; ' who, as deputy United States Marshal, accompanied Captain Uardle'a company on the scout down the river; returned He reports that Captain Hardl Is pressing close on the trail of 100 of Garza's men. who were driven' back ito this side by the Mexican troops last Wednesday. Into several Tbe marauders scattered " bunches and took to the brush. Ygleslas atates that the reason Garza did not show up la person daring the last movement was that an old wound had reopened and oausod him to keep quiet. , r Oarxa'i Gang VTIjl Be Indicted. Mexican Minister, has received through the oClolal dispatches oon 9 ruiatory of the en- gaeement between Bourke and a detach-tueutGarza's band of revolutionist. The General says that If captured Garza's men will be Indicted for violation of the neulaws and for murder, as they killed trality j United States soldiers, i ; MbRB jWAll 8PECUL ATIONS. The "Sanj Frauclaco" Puts to Sea With a Bif; Lioad of War Material. to-aig- ht. San FnANCisco, Deo. SS. The cruiser "San Franosco," the jttagship of the Pacific, al Brown, put to squadron, with sda'thls afternoon. It Is stated that the cruiser might put into the Bay ot Monterey for sua practice, but. the fact that tbe cruiser baa unusually large quantities ot ammunition aboard, udded to the fact that a number bt sailor and marines left hero on tbe Paclfio Mail Company's steamer Jose" last Wednesdays for Acapulco. where, it Is understood, they will be dratted Into the cruiser Charleston," when she arrive to the belief that tbe from Honolulu, loads Francisco? 1 onj the way to join the 'Sn Charleston" at Acapulco, whence both ; vessels will proceed to Chlie. Rear-Admir- : j of , ( Gone to Head Off the Raider. Blaine Dined by the Chilean Minister. Eaolb Pass, Tex., Dec. 24. Sergeaat . WAsmNOTOS, Deo. S3, The Chilean MinFink, with elzht men, left this morning for ister and Mrs.; Montt gave a dinner this on the Rio Grande, Croasing-In honor of Secretary and Mrs. miles below, looking for Garaa. Jete evening ' , Peng-uatch- i forty Politico .Manuel liosaa left Piedras on a similar mission, 'with a uompany of Ioxlcau rursls, for the same crossing. It Is probable that Garza will attempt to enter Mexico at tbat point with part of his band. Watch Company Aesijrne. SO Neg-ra- s tAa execution for Lakcastbr, Pa.. Deo. the Farmers bout $43,000 ha been issued by National Bank of this city against the lvey-r'uStandard Watch Company of this city. of aa as-- a' Vi- e company Is cow in the; hands ' ' '' no " atte. ):::. f I j Widow. ' riarrled a Wealthy FhakciscO. Dec. 3.4Mrhall Cush- I "o Wanamaker's stiuaater-Gener- al vat secretary, was married here ye.ter- t:jrty McUrt.le Palmer, a wealthy ,i r I- - ? 1 1 cf Washii'ton, D. C i : - . Blaine. The invited! guests were Senator 'Morgan,' Senator Stewart. Representative MoCreary, the Mexican Minister and Mine. Grace of New York, tbe Romero, tbe Minister from SaArgentine Minister, lvador Ron.' J. W. Foster, the Spanish-MinisteMr. Trumbull and Mr. Der Campo ot the Chilean legation.' ex-May- or r. , t sine Sick Statesmen. Washington, Representative .T , Deo. 28. Wright of Pennsylvania is recovering from his attack of la grippe. Congressman. Mills's oonditloa remains I j unchanged. I There has been no notable change in aad he U still 8peaker Crisp's. onndlUoa. confined to bis room, i - The Connecticut Governorship. New IIavxs. Conn., Dec. after2S.-T- l'ost?r Improve, ;crst-,r- y vrjPr?. Foster ' noon it was given out case T fcer 5n: lr At 1""-J ( - named the Examiner j hitherto 'called by the other papers. "Buckley's Morning Organ. This I the property of young 11 curst, son of Senator Hearst. He a good enougb young fellow but feather-headeHe is baudled, however, by men wbo are not good enough for reformer. This young fellow owes me every possible debt f gratitude. I made hi fatbor United States Senator. When tbe vacancy In the Senate from California occurred I had arranged with General Stone-mathen Governor of, California, for the of another man. Stonemau appointment wanted a, renomlnation for Governor for himself. This was ail settled, when a friend of Hearst's came to me and said that Hearst wanted the appointment. .There was no reason for my consenting, but I consented. o;t condition that this friend would fix tbe niutter with Stonernan and relievo me of my obligation to the latter, which he did. I got nothing for it from Hearst. I was told , that he. 1 d. n, , -- . put $100,000 Into bis rionT I Rev. Dr. Theodore Cuyler relates this Inreminiscence ot the late Professor teresting Phelps of Andovev. In bis old age be said: I wa onoe a blue Presbyterian; I thought a sin and Romanisui of the Episcopacy devil. 1 now hud a great aeal ot piety where Christ is owned as the everywhere beliving head. I work cause I must work Congregationally somewhere, and am neither wise nor strong enough to work and am not fool enougb to throw alone, nine-tenth of iuy power for good by away to work In ecclesiastical solitude. trying But I could work just as well In bait a dozen other organic forms of church life. There Is an Episcopal temperament, and a Methodist temperament, and a Calvialstio temperament, from which sect grow by natural evolution. At the core ot character they mean little more than red hair or a birthmark. The Master will know his own only . by the name in the forehead." ' i for renomlnation and when his term expired, but I never got one dollar ot It and did all I possibly could to him. The Examiner, 'since tbe young fellow bas been tbe ostensible bead of It, has always been with us when there was anything to be gained. When Hearst, Senior, wanted the nomination for Governor In 1832. the only way he could hold off the railroad company, which 1 a very powerful factor In California elections, was by a combination of hi fight with their, he lending his strength to the nomination of their man, Humphrey, for Railroad Commissioner. Young Hearst came ito me at San Jose last year, when Steve White wa aeeking aa endorsement of the Democratic State Convention forth United States Senate, and wanted me to use! my Influence to pull White down. I couldn't do thts. White being a personal friend of mine and making his fight quite independent of" me. Because I wouldn't do what' I couldn't do, young Hearst, who had been getting advertising Information and political aid for a long time through me, turns an enemy and re-elect- re-ele- ct i by-pat- Of the abstracts of four Episcopal given Sunday at Boston In reference to Dr. Spalding's allegations of rationaiistio Jdls-eours- es heresy in that church, the Universalis Christian Leader remarks: These. It is instructive to note, deal la concessions rather than in denials, virtually endorsing the truthfulness of Dr. Spalding's specifications, one of tbe number, however, making the the heresy was special reason pointhethat not have deserted the endanshould why gered ship.- To mind strongly; tinctured with humor, the two event the Episcopal Cburoh expelling Rev. Mr. MacQueary for heresy, and Dr. Spalding expelling the church for heresy, tbo bill of particular coming In close connecbeing very similar tion must evoke a smile. these speakers have wandered into hs in the past. Professor Tucker's clear statement on this occasion is worth noting: Jesus was not a seeker after God. His soul was full. Ho had God.. He was God. It was' sublime consciousness that enabled biru to say: -- I am conie that;, they might have life.'" 'j .'! In the course of an extended review of the case of Father IIu.il of BostonTt be ChurvJimar. says: We are profoundty. Impressed with tbe value of brotherhoods. There is great need in the church of men who shall he specially devoted, or If not that, specially free from the entanglementsno of the affairs of this life. It may be that express vow of poverty is needed in addition to the ordination vow. But there is need of unmarried clergy, even though the ordination contemplates and presupposes the marIn almost every city, riage of tbe clergy. and In many a new missionary field, and in many an old'and Impoverished part of the need of just such men as country there isbound Father Hall, together by special vows, and enabled to live and work on much smaller support than is required by the married clergy. Of thJithe successful work of Father Hall and bis two assistants is a sufficient proof. But it Is not necessary, and in our opinion, not desirable for these devoted men to bold themselves in obedi-len- ce to other thau their bishop. "The theory of atheistic evolutions that the world of matter was evolved from primitive star dust and that life aud mind were evolved from matter without any creative act of God. and that alt: that is can be accounted for without tbe existence, and agency of God, bas found little sympathy among the great majority of thinking men." of St. says the Central Christian uidoucate Louis (Meth.). "sind the great mass of mankind have an ineradicable faith in tbe existence of Ged as the creator of all things. Geology uultes with tbelstip evolution in putting a new interpretation on the six days of creation. But whether those days were twenty-fou- r hourf each, or so periods of ot time, is not an essential of many ages Christian faith. So Biblical criticism bas modified or superseded many beliefs about the Scriptures; but it has not Impaired faith In their divine inspiration and authority in all vital questions of doctrine and duty. Nor does it follow because Christians are less strenuous than formerly about certain and creeds ot tenets of dogmatic theology man's making, or because the! five points of Calvinism are made less- of. or because church organization, or church questions of millinery, or church ritualism are esteemed of less vital Importance tbai formerly It does not follow from all this that faith In the essentials of religion bas weakened. On tbe the removal of these burdens and contrary hindrances to faith has a tendency to produce greater loyalty, to hi ai who Is tbe fountain of faith. Tbe faith jot the church may be less dogmatic than formerly, but it Is none the less fervent and true on tbat account. Decline in teal for creed is no evidence of decline la faith. For these reasons wo do not share la the alarm which so many seem to feel over tbe departures from certain tenets ot ancient creed and the decay of reverence for the elaborate systems of which men! have framed dogmatic theology deduce? from the Scripto and professed tures. ' Nor have we any fearjthat the new methods of Biblical criticism; will destroy of Christianity." faith in the essentials ' ' :r told of the origin Annually the old story Isnow la the followof Christmas. It appear This: name, now ing condensed foyna: popularly given to the day;on which oar applied Lord's birth is celebrated, originally been to a solemn festival supposed rto have who died Instituted by Pope Teleiphorus, the original about the year 13S- - It contains Christ and mass. At idea of the festival first Christmas- was a movable feast;, soma churches celebrated it in April and May. About the fourth century. Cyril, bishop of L to Issue an Jerusalem, urged Pope Julius the day of Christ's investigation concerning birth ; the result was a general agreement upon December 24th. Some of the fathers doubted whether the proof was complete. From that time the church has celebrated It on the same day. whether tbe day, accordthe world, comes In part of When ing to tbe the Gregorian or winter. summer ealendar was formed, the Greek Church had would not Latin, and separated sofrom theChristmas Iwltl be celetbat accept It, other! parts of tbe brated in Russia, andChurch la any of Its world where tbe Greek forms prevails, twelve days later. - 'I ' " - there any class ot men who "If desert the requirement of their entirely avowed profession It Is the class of tbe says Edgar Fawcett in a recent reclergy." view article. And it Is a Jewish paper which is no administers this rebuke: "There STABTS IN TO. DOWN XK." The formulas, confessions, and catemovement for social, political or educational '"When are you going back to San Fran- reform which Is not headed and officered by chisms which modern put with equal cisco?" clergymen, so it Is simply stupid to arraign forth, as crudely as earnestly, ' are all to real and narrowness, likely "About March. I think. I'm going to put them as hypocrites." or more of crucible revision, Into tbe cast be In two months at the Baths." S m into the sea of oblivion." according "What shall you do on your return?" widow minister is likely of The a "PeoPresbyterian Is to the to conducting classes ot women la Bible don't know that rt here Chicago Living Church (P. Ej. and "I anything history do know believe, not do. I think I will let Wallace, the Examiner In Evanston do what, they ple Oakland, near Chicago. know that they are not to believe wbat they and Lynch run the party for a while, to see Tbe fee for tbeand course for each parson la $10, did in tbe days before the foundations were make out of It. They may wbat tbey can classes are attracting much attenfind that it 1 not so easy as they imagine. and these nothing. upheaved. Many of thoto bv"ic-va remark Bible and tion. poetry, history most popular pulpiteer is b? who says: own The when Is their Reformer, underpinning more be made can paper, WookJ that all this Christian drearaJwere a trl3e shaky, are likely to be disap- Boston religious or Brown- true! history Interesting than English But who can tsil? There 13 so pointed," be surprising much beauty poetry, and it would not ing's in it. but we cannot accept e If devout and enterprising scholars should superstition. Well, lot us toat on cowu TX1ZJ FAllIUS CAN JiOT FIGHT. discover this fact and suca classo should be the stream of time; who knows whither it will tear us? - Hut there are tires polats The New VorZ: Police Will ?Xot Allow multiplied. vmizjL t're;?' tlr 3 i t'-sa-cfr tl s wl.l Contest. the Corbett-riltche- ll ruroi was a very c.oestlon, That 'tiiTeiEyij'f?."; s pi.l: VI Ut! la Cicd's1 wt:eo t Nnr York. Dso. 3. .Eurtrlatecdint cf rrja XTsw Ycrk rcl'.rious y arvzl, ct v l4t" 3. til. f y.zT Yc'i tr.iCur. It" y Police Hurray anncucced tbat at- I ;v. C. II. TirL' C tc c' .. or-: ra I'r t!y: "yterli'tcf iui i ta revive its tempts were bslrt t .: ( t ? ' ' . .t- it J.A IKT I.. . II 7 .: Is to-d- ay 'V-:--:- " seat-found- ers . e -- -- to-da- y -' -- ao-cs- l'.i "knccM- -. i . wns the "New Orthodoxy, and as Tucker of Andover, pounded by Professor aud by Rev. G. A. Gordon of tbe New Old South Church In this city, would not. differ widely from tbe Metbodistic doctrine of a free salvation : whild there was a reverent acknowledgement from the heart' of the divinity of Christ, whatever intellectual sn-T- tIv h's -- , The report of the last meeting of the Unitarian Club in this city, says the Boston of Methodism. Is stimulating readjournal ing iu more ways thau onev ' The subject ex- rlt by counsel enthat' the Surrem Court Is gaged In the divided in the Morris vs. Duck'ty quo warranto suit. ' r T.'lr Don't ef THIS 13 A SKNSATIONALi PAPER jj nt grow-in-dtgua- rf to-call- ed ay ' Dec. 2ft. The pagan element, projected across the comes to the front and presumes centuries, to stand sponsor for our Christianity. In the congregation, too. you will find a class of crude, good people who think scolding denunciation a brave way ot preaching? The man who fails to do it. they think, bas come short of delivering the whole gospel and clearing his own soul. :Thoy erfjoy the rude way. of everybody's sin hitting, in aown. Hit theirs, and no people but their will squirm so quickly ; they will at tbe first sentence. But. realty this kind of preaching will do neither these' people nor any one else the least good. It will tend to lead them from the true temper of the Master, and to cultivate iu tbem a of ceusoriousuess and uuklndnests. spirit scold. " S. WAsiiiNaroN, DeciCG. the'-wors- t. j non-ooufo- by - -- ap-prais- ed (Heel Works, Industry to tbo manufacture of years ago, devoted was almost totally desteel, high gradeAre Loss, fl 23,000. stroyed by Tbe clerical scold Is thus pictured - r ort Zion'g Herald: Some preachers, sad to say. are scolds, and of all scolds tbe clerical one is the most uncomfortable and It cannot be denied- that to nur poor human nature, scolding is often easier than giving forth our message in iov.o and seriousness. It follows tbe grain of nature. It acoords with whatever In us Is unsanctified and rude. ' The Government Trying to Allay the Steel Worlcs Darned, ' Deci 28. Tbe Carpenter Warlike Feeling. Biioisai Ts., ao established three GARZA JOINED self-supp- ay ! jll of epigrams then added: "Intellectual activity upon (Christian themes is no Christianity any more than working allying trapeze la church Is godly exercise. Rev. Dr. George Constaatlne. who died la the qity ot Athens, was. says the recently New York Irvteptnaent, a remarkable man. Born la Athens la 1833. he was educated at Amherst College and returned In lt62 la the employ of the American and Foreign Christian Union. After A8SI he removed from Athena to Smyrna and was connected with the American Board. He was the founder and the president of the Greek Alliance, whose object is to stir the evangelical Greek churches la Asia Minor to and evangelistic work. His sermons inaggressive Smyrna made a great impression upon the peeple and it was due to them very tbe Greek authorities in 1666 largely that, undertook to drive him away from tbe city; ' they stoned his boose, 'b?t did - him no in: if. jury. Thanksgiving Day mark&d one Innovation in the West. Gentiles and Jews met In union services at the invitation ot Hebrew congregations' la Milwaukee and Chicago. Rabbi Hecht of Temple Emanuel, Milwaukee, spoke from the text: "May there be peace within thy walls, prosperity la thy palaces." At Zlon Temple, In the vicinity of Union Park. Chicago, a similar service was held, tbe Third Unitarian Church joining with Rabbi Stolts's people, lie spoke on the Immigration problem in suob wise as would be worthy of any modern Puritan. i H'i t: -- - 1 -. --- r c t i" rrsvt! t i ' ' t' -- . s - rfit"t7 i i - a, !3a f4- - c- - j -- - n - 3 t , t .ti i ( jl'i . c - The nineteenth can no more rob us of these than centary the seventeenth: andas the she church,' holding them with firm grip, does, performs for tbe Protestant world the office of conserver, savior, and custodian." "Belief as to the resurrection oC our Lord." says the Boston Watchman (Bapt. ), termed tb article of a "may beorJustly a falling church. if Jesus rose standing from tbe dead, not Only 1 It easy to accept Id tbe New tbe record of the supernatural Testament, but to accept Christianity itself as the gladitldlngs ot Infinite mercy to men; If the record ot the Evangelist can be resolved into an hallucination of the disciples, or a myth, tbe faith of the New Testament may bo readily classified with the ethnio reTb modern church has won no ligions. more signal triumph in the realm ot apologetics than In its defence of the historic trustworthiness of the resurrection of our Lord. Of course, there are those who deny it. bat w risk nothing in saying tbat any impartial studeut of the long debate will be amazed at tbe way skeptical position after to position has been taken, at tbe deviceswill which assailants have been driven, and rise from the study with his own faith in of Jesus and in the glorithe resurrection ous consequences involved iu it confirmed.' Commenting upon the "new orthodoxy and Unitarinnism." with especial reference to the recent addresses of Lyman Abbott aad others before the Unitarian Club pf Boston, Geor S. Merriam writes as follows in the Boston Christian Reglster, (Unit.): "The difference, then, seems to us to b at bottom a difference of intellectual method. apOrthodoxy, even In its newest phase, proaches the problem ot existeuce from tbe side of God. Dr. Abbott put tho sovereignty of God at the foundation of hi thought as emphatically as did Calvin. His reasoning moved out from tho personality and character of God as Its center. Man's origin, nature, obligation and destiny were inter-of preted primarily from the conception CJod. Modern Unitarlanlsm, we believe, is aud uear disposed to look first at the known facts. It studies man. Its aim 'mid hope are to reach God through man. In the realm of humanity, aud in the material universe encompassing humanity, it finds a field for study which is substantial, fruitful, inexhaustible. In other words. Orthodoxy starts troto a metaphysical concepand tion, embodied by the imagination, sentia with religious profound enveloped ment. UnltartarOsm starts from tbe world as observed and human life as experienced, a profound reenveloping these facts inroot of the difligious sentiment. The ference was touched by , Professor Tucker when he said that be 6eeiued to discern in Unitarians a greater receptivity towards new facts than he founci in the orthodox. of new That is just it. Tha vast Inrush facts in our generation what we broadly name 'science has profoundly pressed the Unitarian mind. And In the readjustment of the mental attitude it reaches out for the firm ground of actualities; it studies nature and man. Orthodoxy, conscious of a priceless love and hope Inherited, and possessed under such symbols as 'God and 'Christ.' broods over these ideas, refines and purifies tbwui, and then tries to Interpret the unis verse in accordance with them.? 1IE OWNED) THE ROAD. The Experience of a New Manager With an Old Conductor. ' - v Among tbe first railroads built in the United States was a line about twenty miles in length. For many years It was run in a cheap way. with one locomotive, one engineer and two or three freight cars. Finally! a uew general manager was appointed. He bad been in the office but week, states the Atlanta Count ilution, when he sent for tho one looe couductor, who had held ths position ever since tbe road was bulit. "I would 44ke to have your 6ald the general manager, whenresignation;" conductor appeared. -- My resignation?"the Inquired the conductor In astonishment. Yes; sir; "What for. pray?" "Well, I want yours." to make some c'hanses and get new blocd In the line." was the general manager's reply. "I wou'tlresign." answered the conductor. "Then X will be compelled to you. a step which, for you sake. 1 discharge had hoped I would lie suved from taking." man. you will not discharge me. I Young own a controlling Interestjn the stock of this railroad, and elect the;?1 president and board of director. I shall have you Mred." The old conductor did really own the maof the stock, and. as he said, put In jority his own board of directors and president. The Armour Ifisslon. The late Joseph Armour bequeathed $100,000 to establish a nissioo enterprise la a neglected part of Chicago. 1 he carrying was committed to Mr. out of t his bequest Philip D. Armour, who, although not a member of any church or even professing Christi:vjQ, has added to his deceased brother's benefaction the sum of $000,000 In the erection of a commodious ftsr tbe mission aud another for anbuilding Industrial Training School. Both these structures are perfect lit all their appointments, furnishing eveey facility and convenience for carrying ou work. Over 2000 perous of all ages are here under too Instruction of.fuith-fu- l teachers iu the Sunday-schoo- l, the The purKluderga rten- and N Ight Schools. pose of Mr. Armour and tbe teachers who. ore engaged in this enterprise, is tiot to remove tho scholars Instructed from their present sti rroundiugs but to improve their minds and brishteu their lives iii the homes where they rehide. Mr. Armour has built In a most substantial manner .a Mock of three-stor- y buildings containing 131) flats, and the rents are all devousd to the support of the work of the mission. Tixis modest man. whoso name is known the ..world over, and the volume of whose weekly transactions amounts to millions. Is present every Sabbath, the most interested participator in tbe great work tbat is bdog accomplished through his muuilleeut benefactions. :. uil-si- uu lie Did Ilia llest. Here Is one of Stockton's best: A Jew lu New York was engaged to defend lawyer a man for murder, and after looking into the case concluded that the outlook was very gloomy for the prisoner; in fact his CJnvleifn seemed certaiu. When the jury were gotten together it was found that there wese eleven Irishmen and one Polish Jew in the box. The lawyer, feeling quite desperate, Jew and said: m sought out the Polish "I'll give you 5500 if you'll get tbat Jury On the subject of the proposed Congres-to trlng In a verdict of mauslaughtet unOf Religions at the Columbian Exposition, derstand, "Deeply-interestinmanslaughter." the Chicago Standard (Bapt.) says: The juror promised to do his best, aad and instructive would It be If:; sure enough after staying out some time, men of these so widely differrepresentative returned a verdict of manslaughter. the jury were to races assemble, and day faiths ing The lawyer was overjoyed- and almost after day," not-focontroversy, not to magembraced tbe Polish Jew when he asked tor not to Intensify alienations, nify todifferences,manifestations his money. comof the consider but But tho juror looked sorrowfully at the mon moral'and spiritual life,' and prove to in bis band and said: $500 rooted how each other bow real and deeply "I dinks you oubt to make it atousand. in the very nature of man Is. above all. the "A thousand? The devil; and why?" brotherhood of the race. Doubtspiritual "Vel, yer see. I had an awful" time getless there would be at first the collision of der jury round. Dose 'leveu Irish fel- -' ting Its system,-eacperiod counting system with of its right lows wu&i all fer' acquittal." Atlanta Jourby centuries, and each confident Mohamme.. nal. to universal sway. The Jew, the such a dan, the Brahmin would not come toEach Stern Justice. of conference asking to be converted. There was once a robber In Cairo, says are wbo millions to the could them point Charles Warner, who, climbing Into adherents of his own fal tin, and each could a window,Dudley and fell his leg. He comtbe argument plained to the Cadibroke urge all that is of force in form and asked for justice of faith from the owner from antiquity. Each other beoaqse the window easewould have reason for itself sufficient for ment was defective. The Cadi sent for the those who maintain it. Not tb argue tbese owner, who laid the blame on tbe differof . . , nor K to n fn, t h. u r nunf Carpenter. a .1 Til faril magnify grounds claims, ence, but with a view to know each other t he blame on the mason. Tbe mason 'blamed another more a pretty girl, who in passing attracted bis better, perhaps to judge one a way eye by the to also, prepare leniently, perhaps, gown sbe wore. The - girl more blamed the pretty wbo for better mutual understanding and the gown. Tbe dyer in time to come for dyer bad no excuse dyed friendly intercourse to offer, and the Cadi-- ' we tbe as theae suppose may purposes such sentenced him to be bantred la his own door Congress of Religions to be held." wny. Every one was satisfied, but presently the executioner came back and said he ' Sesurrectlon, From the Dead. couldn't bang tbe dyer because the door was too low. "Then," said the Cadi, "go get a Students of nature have recently discovered tbat there Is no such thing as birth or shorter dyer and hang him. W must have death among the lowest ot living beings; justice though th heavens fall." ' those beings are single cells; and when one ' ' The Uallc Line. ot them has completed Its period of life. Billiards has been suggested to boos itdoesnotdie.it simply divides itself into two cells. Nothing of its old material is church attendance in New York, but the cast aside; there are merely two new beings ministers are slow to take the cue. ViCe where there had been but one. And each detythUt Recstrd. of the new beings lives Its own life, and then divides in its turn. And so on. till a single A SOLID SCAB. cell has increased to a million or billion ot BABY Life can thus Independent individuals. multiply Itself indefinitely without blrtn or Disease of Bln'od and Sklml death. But. when we rise on ofstep in crea- Tort urine Doctors Fall. , Cored tha Alauy traces death. In tion, we find the firstsingle-celler Cutlcura Kemeaies. by d creature this higher stage the divides as before, but it divides now inter- - I have a sister troubled with blood or skin disThe outer covering of the ceilseemsr when-abonally. one It commenced old. to have become so hardened by use tbat it ease. one doctor and then another, and We would try can no longer be divided and fitted to the it seemed like they wre glad to get rid of it. new lives. Therefore, it bursts; and the When they would commence.- they would say It new XJreatures come forth," leaving the thin Is easy dried up and cured, bat at last thy could not be eured. It ran on about say itWe shells behind them, but fashioning all of would two years. had tried all the doctors around, its contents Into their new lives. And and I saw your advertisement they had failed. when we climb another step higher, where in tbe aud wrote you for dircotlens and paper, roe a copy cf ypnr book at onoe. W the first rude organs begin to appear, we you sens find the outer husk of organized form cast then got Cuticura Remedies and ud It. It sores and healed them rigbl aside at death. The new lives make their dried up the Her fae; head and parts of hr body were aaway. solid own organs. But all of tbe inner life of the scab. Tbe vy it would commence it woult Death, then, goes Into tbe children; parent small-a the skin, then beeom in its original form. 1 only the brushing raise a small and itched so that she got no rest aside of tbe old and useless material, the night orpimple would sbe and day, woohl come scratch them, an4 out of them and outer husk, the shell of life. It Is supposed ,yeliow matter and Itching. I fern tasy sure life first began on this globe, it would keep spreading that, when what I know ot the Cuticura Remedies cell. As long' as it from are began with tbo single the best medicines for scrofula, or blood remained la that , low form there was no they that anv one can use. lite bad remained forever oi skin diseases death; and, if warid GEOKGE G. GARTOX. . would hav been forthis Point. stationary, Deeator, Co., lews.1 ; High ever deathless. Rut death was given to us that we might have life more abundantly. Therefore, human Instinct 1 entirely justiThese grateful testimonials tell the story of fied in feeling, as it does, that death is not great physical suffering, of mental anguish, by the end of ail things, but the beginning of reason of humiliating disfiguration, of new and higher things. Religion has threatened dangers happily and speedily anj nded, RESURRECTION. THE IX A. BIGHT TO BELIEVE by th Cuticura Remedies, the greatest Ski BlooJ Purifiers and Rumor Remedies th from tbe dead, since Soience herself has a Cures, ' , , bas ever known. faith full of sueh resurrections. Tho whole world the-neBlood and Skla Cuticitra Resolvent, a from is resurrection of tbe glo.be life past Purifier internally (to cleanse the blood of all Imis preceding deaths. toNot every death purities aud poisonous elements), and Cuticura, a resnrection higher life, but every tbe great: Skin Cure, and Cuticura Soap, an ex- -, Bkla Puriher and Beautitier, externally death may b. Every death is an open quis'ue the skin and restore tbe (to clear door set before the dying creature, leading cure evt-rdiease and humorJJ.f tbo skin, halri, downward or upward according a its past and blood. with of hair, from Infancy toscalp age, life baa been aspiring or declining. Death from pimpis toless scrofula, when the best pbys is tbe crueible. as it were, through which ciam, hoiitals and all othr remedies faiL that she Nature passes all her , products, Sold everywhere. Price, Cutlcnra, 50c.; Soap," of may burn away tbe dress or tbe gilding Resolvent, $1.00. Prepared by the Potter tbe past, and start each being just wbere it 25c.; Boston.. deserves to go. Science and religion, then, Drug nd Chemical to Care fcikin Diseases," 64 l for "HowCorporation. f"S'n are agreed that there will be a resurrection 100 and testimonials. pags, 50 Illustrations, from tbe dead. Tbe only chance for a disblack-head- s, YotighV chapped red, niMPI.tS, exact the Is la way conjecturing agreement n4 oily skin eured by Cut leur Soap, rll.l from Is man to In which rise again. Judging NO RHEUI.1ATIZ ABI P-t- f might think the analogy of the past, we come his resurrection, would only In thatnew ; lav ona inmate the Cntlaars h life of his children. Ia all the past tbe Anti-Pai- n Plaster relieves rbea-death has been brushing aside the parents m no. tcisuo. nip, tiuncT, muscular life. Death to o sins. The firtt and only higher to raise tbe children and chest g is still doing the same thing among roeo. instantaneous strengthening plaster. race. The the human aad tbos elevating babe Is the ever re-cry of the new-bor- n IES. U. J. BDILER'S of resurrection to higher posted trumpet life. Aad. If - this is all the resurrection there Is, our immortality will be In tbe race, and set In tbe individual. Tbat is tbe way PERFECT AND when we the resurrection of man appears, Harmless Face look backward. But it is wise to look forBlesch. It reward as well as backward. Is it reasonable stores and preserves to think that life 1 to end in nothing? that natural tbe freshness the all the leaves and branches cf past ages, bloom cf youth and all the higher lives from past deaths, are to and Is the only Face human years of culminate In a lew brief rouse Bleach which will not our long-in- s existence just enough to, irritate or injure wthe iVIa. decreases for a still higher existence, just enough It risk la. PtitM pilaris. ' a few pebbles on tha to enabl us i-to "v,; gather c7'i, -f ocean Ho and then tfce shore of plunge sal.ownes. unnatti' l J ) as Into a&nihiiatioo? Xo tier creature, ff jf IrccVl .ow.C. i ' ,. so far as naturalists can see, his ever hoped 4? r - - u' i rr-- i' to rij3 above earth atdali. It all creatures soft i 1 Smooth "3 tv jstte: w H '. : :.:;MfiAV , thus feoped and toyed vainly. tea raan own to reasons hi distrust see good tt tii; r hae-it bo: is. Rut wbat all tka lower creatures aeiicste tad ralsl; e r.;. . or 1 .?.-.-kers ; witfcereJ. sahww have boptl nJ trss varied tor the havesi lag i In assoni wtaotm tn. ; All th.elr deal res have bea at t ' f ' U:T ?." ; to t Wlfi'.f. ' t!5l earth. Ataofl thee aa bet if I ri is ab?o- eratlat-.r-lute BEE3Sfl tO a tLr't O f 1 s - r h 1 V, 1 r . : - yr ut - - -- ) amp-unde- Cuticura Remedies. , la-de- ed and-soal- p y paia-kllHn- i FEBCKLE LOTIOIT. A Cvr tl recf, -- tj-zir- j . Sf-:-'- - i s . - tt-t'- ( c-- ' c-- j 6fr ,i to n-if'- i rinrj 1 ti it sls-iir- i . . i |