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Sioux la Mr, item |fuMibli('d in I Advance in regard t... »u Uw providing for tin- stiffrH 1 hut. the vole mi the t!id becuuse of that and ot the law. The Pre-:- nns: The error in tin* pub'oK.e lerred to in the above item e.visis, and if it nl»o exists ill the enrolled copy of tin law fin election held under it would be worthless for the purpose intended. rl word "in,-tie" which e^ual hnilViigists have thought it desirable to have striek en out occurs in sec! ion 1, "f article 1, tlie constitulion. Jt is evident that a 1 iw autliori/.ing a vote upon one sei-liou cannot idh-et another. Section 2, of aiti ele 7, ofthft constitution provides for mb lninsiori to the people of ihe Mat*' the fjuesiion: "Slifill the word 'i-. from the article of tl- iaiing eleeiiotis un.i !i. r.. iage." "icken u re sulT The law under win- in- pi amendment is be voted upon sii.-: "N'ciioc 1, The (jut'.st ion Shall the word 'male' be s'rielo-n (torn section two 2i article wvenil) of the constitution, relating to elections and the light ol eullragc," etc. Tlie difference between tho question which Hie contribution Buys shall be sub milted and that which the law submit is at once apparent, admitting thui. the Meet ion referred to in (lie enrolled copy :i- "one" instead of as "two." This dilleivuee in stuten ii question i-he.d by wine of ili- be.-' torneys in Sioux Kails to be fully bl© of invalidating any election held '.i f.dl upon the question of equal sullnu'e. shull bp ••Shall the word 'tnalu' bo Btrickcn from section 'one' of article seven of the constitution?" It will be noticed tLut l.eri- a'-" 1 i. question provided by the coj.stitut ion for (jubiniHbion is. incovrectly statet!. Anotljer error occurs in t-ection 12, whoie it says: "If irajority of the votes cast ar© in favor of striking out said word, 'males' etc., the plural Leinj^ used in. stead of the singular." If thai lady at the lecture the oUici niuht only knew how nicely Hull's dr i Heni-tt'i-r would remote dimdniti' and ini prwvo the hair she would buy a Lottie. I The American Proteciive Tariff f.enirue has just issued in pamphlet form a com plete refutation of the chums of the Free Traders that our iminufaeturod products are sold to the foreign consumer at a lower pi ice tnan for home consumption. The subject of this document is ''Kxport Discounts" and if you ue^ire a copy en close a two cent stamp to the American Protective Tariff League, 2H W. 2 kl, St., N. Y. This Document is No. 35. In ordering use number only. "Save who can!" was the frantic cry of Napoleon to his army at Waterloo. Save health and strength while you can, by the use of Ayer'a Sarsap trilla, is ad vice that applies to all, both joung and old. Don't wait until disease fastens on you begin at ouce. DO YOU READ The Cosmopolitan, That Bbiuht SP*«Kt.iN« YouHti i a i uik i Mauaxiki:? The Cheapest Illustrated Monthly iu the World. ty28 Ots. A NUMBER. |f2.40 Per Year (En Oc 1889, to 128 Paoks.i The Cosmopoiitan is literally what th«) New York Times calls it, "At its price, the brightest, most varied and bt»st edited of the .d aira/ines." (AN UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY) )VK NKW SI IJS( K1IIKICN. VOU ON VLI.VU o:LV, The ('otsiunpolitnii, 1'er Year, ilcrnlil Ailtatici*. '1'lir prk« of tilt- two ixililiratliiii*, \V« will furnisli biitU fir mil.v. S3 *0 ... 2 All .. 4 40 This offer is only to new subucriberb to The Cosmocolitan and only for one year. •'It haa more articles iu each number that lire read Able iiii'l fewer niniiieusliifi pauvfi, ihttu any of iW lontem piNirii'H liuatun Jour mil. "The COSMOPOLITAN" furnish, s ... TliY IT FOR A- YKAK.g It will be a libend educator to every inembfi* of the househoht. It will make the nights pass pleasantly. It will give you mere for tho ainney tliuu you can obtain in any other form. £3pDo you want a lirst-chiss M.viakink, giving annually lfvjf. puses by U,e ablest writers, with more than 1.7o illustrations by the cleverest :irti»ts .s readable a M:tg-u ine as uioney '"an make—a Mag.i/ine that do*s u specially of live subjects? "The marvel is how the publishers can yive so much for the money." Philadelphia Evening Call. Send $51.25 to this Ollice, «nd socuie both the Cosmopolitan and llerald Ad vance. W hen von need a good, safe laxative, ask ur druggist for a bor Ayrr's Pillh tnd u will find (hat they V'iw perfect sati.'f.icih'U. For indisivutjon, 1 liver, and sick headache there is nothing superior. Leadu physicians jecoiuiueiid I belli. MIS LIFE OF Cllli!' •AGE'S ARY I it- GREA WOR e-0 ...»t i«J ^l. 1 h(! 1'rottf SJivi-ts of "I'mui Alangri' to Tin-one" V Jtmt InlftHtlnj Littravy Wflfk 1» llrl( lll-»cli!jl'll. (Opyrffrlit ti.- Anienean i'ci -in:ion Few persons possess 1 -i- i ])e Witt TaIinago' most distitigui-hiim Hiarae teri-tie something to .-a. an 1 the ability to clothe the thought in lan guage friv-li arid striking. Tho great Brooklyn divine has given us another example of his tireless energy, his great study and his matchless word paintings in his life of Christ—"From Manner to Throne" to be issued in a few days from the press of the Historical Pub- tr* pOHod !L\ "2'' *.v 'i & i f„.\ V-fev. J-It /S XJ- inr! Lr il I '.ARAB IX HAfiFTANTS. lisliin^ (.'(niipany, of Philadelphi i, Through the courtesy of Mr. II. B. S'uith. president of tho company, nm enabltMl to tell something about th© work in advance, for I ha^e seen the proof sheets. The book diners from all other lives It iH hik'ldvl probable, judging fiotn I of tin- 'hrist in this, that it is a simple reveral «*vi 'ent ni-ncurncii-'s in tin* chap- n .native in which no theological ques tei (-Hi, that thn iiyure in the first tions are propounded, no "view*." ev- se it ion ot tho ait should l.na"l." In! tolled, and there is no straining after section .'} ot the act in point, viiJ ed that iho form of the hallo* i- etlcct. 1 used If is ni.'tde up of GOQ pages, with over 400 enirnivings, copies of famous paint-i in^s by the old masters ilhi.itrat ing scenes in tho lifeof Christ and portraits I of the Saviour by many famous paint i ers. In addition then.1 is a splendid panorama of the crucifixion in colors, ten feet iu length, which is a great achievement of the publishers. Asa literary effort the book Is the' most ambitious of the great preaeher'ai lii'e. It fulfills all the requirements of literary style and lmNh. Kaeh fact w:w earefully weighed and scrutinized be I fore put on paper. Nothing v.is taken i for tnaiitc l. It is not tho work an idle hour, but rather the life work of a i strong man still in his prime. It should meet with a cordial welcome. It is not written above tho head of tho average reader. On the contrary, it is a series of magnificent word pictures, so simple that a child would bo interested in i them. Tho reader is taken to every spot made r"markab]« in the Holy Land, and tho guiio i.» like a. delightful elder brother sitting in tho twilight re hearsing the old, old story, ever new. "I have been writing that book for thirty-live yeans," Dr. Talmage tohl me recently, and be supplements this in his preface by saying: "in my American home, on the At lantic. on the Mediterranean, on camel s back, on mule's back, on horseback, under chandelier, by dim candle in tent, on Lake Galilee, in convent, at Bethel, where Jacob's pillow stuffed with dreams and the angels of the ladder landed at the brook Elah. |roui which little David picked up the fianmunition of live smooth stones, four more than were needed for crushing liko an egg^ell the skull of Goliath in (lie valley of Ajalon, over which, at Joshua's command, Astronomy halted on tho plain of Esdraelon, the battle field of ages, its long red flowers sug gest ivo of tho blood dashed to the bits of the horses' bridles amid the shat tered masonry of Jericho, in Jerusalem, that overshadows a! 1 other cities in rem iniscence at Cana, where plain water became festal beverage on Calvary, whose aslant and ruptured rocks still show the effects of the earthquake at tho awful hemorrhage of tho five wounds that purchased the world's res cue, and with my hand mittened from the storm, or wet from tho Jordan, or bared to tho sun, or gliding over smooth table, thia book lifts been writ ten." Dr. Tulmage Is the only author of a life of the Christ who visited the Holy lwmd for tho purpose of seeing for him self the scenes made famous by the birth and crucifixion of tho Saviour, and tliis record of his life is one of the 1 for the first time in Magazine Literal ure.! 'nter,I'r!-' portions of tho bo.xk. I The writer vividly portrays the visit of Mary and Joseph in Egypt: "Over the hills and down through i the deep gorge they urge their way. By A Si'i.KNDin Ii.u sriiATi pKitionic\i, AT A PIUCK IIiTi!i: :n) DKK.mi.D Imi'ossiiu.k. Hebron, by Gaza, through hot saml I under a blistering sun, the babe crying, the mother faint, the father exhausted, i Ilow slowly tho days and weeks pass. Will the weary tliree ever reach the i banks of the Nile? Will they ever see Cairo? Will the desert ever endl When at last they cross the line beyond which old Ilerod has no right to pursue their joy is unbounded. Free at ist! Let them dismount and rest. Now they resume their way with less anxiety, They will find a place somewhere for shelter and the earning of thefr bread, Here they are at Cairo, Egypt They I wind through the crooked streets, which are about ten feet wide, and enter the humble house where 1 have been today. It is nine steps down from the level of I the street. It is such a place as no I reader of this book would like to dwell in. I measured the room, and found it 20 feet long and 7 1-2 feet high. There 1 are three shelving^ of rock, oije of which I think was the cradle of.our Lord. There is no window, and ail the light must have eowe from lantern of As he rippr-uiciift? .Jerusalem the 'Inf. i ting on a patient camel's buck Yesterday on horseback we left ,}ei i .). and liaving dipped in the Deal a we came with a feeling that wo cannot describe upon the .Jordan, a river which more people have desired to bee than any other. On our way we overtook an American, who reqn* ed me to baptize him by immersion the river Jordan. We dismounted the place where Joshua and his host once crossiid the river dry shod. We wore near a turn in the river, and not farolf from where rocks and sand are piled up in shape of cathedrals, domes and bat lenient-. W pitched i and after proper examination candidate lor baptism I selected tious of Scripture appropriate. One our Arab attendants liad a garme-.t not unlike ft baptismal robe. With that garmerit girdled around me I led the candaiat.i down uniler the trees on the bank, while near by were groups of friends and some strangers who happened to be there. After a prayer I read of Christ's, baptism in the Jordan and tho commission, '(In, Bethel, ity. n sible tr events hardly '"tA (in himself, lie !.- Ant ing these words: "Along am amazed beyond expn-ssi bohhe'ss and jaggedncss of tue &eei of the Holy Land. I t.-xp'**ted to si rough, but not Alpiniaii and Si Nevadian in grandeur. w.-n an ndeed, .e depe iieatior ri'iie iiills are amphitheatre*, piled up galleries of gray rock, with interval.-of soil, brown and maroon, until th and bead and heart surrender, ir i 1 lips that for a long while were .'.u i.-osiatory cc»me speechless. Hefoj'e sun'lown will .Jerusalem. I never had s-. high e\prtati jns seeing any place as of i-eeing the holy cily. 1 found my self ringing 'Jerusalem. My Ilannv Home,' while dressing myself morning, I think my feelings maj ^Hirhtly ahi^ t'i tl-.?* c.f Chris', et alou' i '!.•• enly J« i'lK'ti follows a graph'.. picture of tho gn^it city, and the vi.-it(»r's thoughts as his eyes beheld it for the Hr^t tim" i)r. Talmage gives a description .i iti'-m in the Jordari. He says: teach all nations, baptizing them.' The people on the bank then joined in singing to the fa miliar tune that, soul stirring song, 'On Jordan's Stormy l!ank I Stand.' With the candidate's hands in mine we w: 1 ed deep into the Jordan, and I then clared, 'In this historical river, win re the Israelites crossed, and Xaain.in plunged seven' times for the cure of leprosy, and Christ was bnptijrv], which has been used in all ages a- a symbol of the dividing line bet we. earth and heaven, I baptize thet* in ti e name of tho Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. Amen." 'As the candidate went down tinder the w: v and then rose I felt a solemnly th. no other scene could have inspired. A the ordinance w is observed under 11. direction of no particular denomin.i tion of Christians, and no particular church could be responsible for if. I feel it my duty to report what I did to the church universal." Dr. Talmage's description of his de parture from Jerusalem i.- characteris tic "Now we leave Jerusalem for the long journey north through Palestine. A little way out we got on a hill and took the last look at Jerusalem, and I felt and remarked it was the last look at that sacred city on earth, and the next Jerusalem we shall see will be the heavenly. We went on within si^lit of Mizpah and Gibeon, where Joshua commanded the sun to stand still on by Rama, connected with Samuel's history on by the traditional village where tho parents of Christ missed their boy, about three and a half miles from Jerusalem. This is the road over which Jesus came and went from Jeru salem to Nizareth. To-night we en camp at where w is once a school of the prophets, a theological seminary. Elijah and Elisha, were here. Near this Abraham and Lot di vided the land. Hero Jacob, pillowed on a stone, saw tho ladder used by angels' feet, and ho set up a stone and consecrated it. To night the heavens were full of ladders- first a ladder of clouds, then a ladder of stars, and all sii- 9""-^ ... &X: ,'« -(&> -r !1 fl- VLMAOK I'. \I' I 7,!M) Tho doctor has this to say about tra dition, history and fact before begin nins the real work of the book: "Are the places that I see in Pales tine and Syria and the Mediterranean isles the genuine places of ChristIv, pa triarchal and apostolic association,' Many of them are not, and many ol them are. We have no symouthv with localities* s.s th had liseti :. '!t i Hf ft TIM) on tha 1 •vriter i:.' t.iisrepr."seiit. mi-cousrrue, state but reasonable tn-litions Ceri'itlg Jiluees M:meeted with events an apt to be true 1 hav luor" doubt concerning the plae was cri'ctbd n w:uh A '\.\!I 1)ATK. lip and down the heavens are the angels of beauty, angels of consolation, angels of God ascending and d.sccnd ing. 'Surely God is in this place.' said Jacob, "and I knew it not.' But to night God is in this place, and I know it!" w which *iirit bout and entomi--d. contradict each itlerf test them, compare tin buried i that e But ippose tradition# i ..'Then try theta, '.m as yon do doe difficult to e i-nd false, i ':i in-p1"'"1 I),-. not rd tra s. iionv! Tla phis of (*}iri.-n.-i!: mfideN tra\elmg in fiie Holy I.a»'d who are from s'-alp to h'e.'i surcharged \vilh unbeliefs. A tra itio'i may be as much ilivim ii%d as a book. The scenery of i ..•tine is interjomed. intertwisted, i: loe! wit the Scriptural wceurrei The learned Hitter, who has i been charge.l with any weakness of in credulity, writes: "No one can trate without joy and wonder the verilica •on which ceo. Uie Holy L' j#i 1 of an abstract being thai has never existed. 1 human figure live an-i an unbel 1., estine iu t' I iio.: TI. ri\ i.. th costumes With Ma and Ju topocrrap1 of the a difTerei Would wotuh So not only a Chiist of great heart, but al.-o if great head. 'Mo.-t otlici pa. :!ings if our Lord were mudu from mod-'ls. Tins artist had no model He feels that it was an inspiration. I behevt? it wa 1 he (ii-rinan is apt to paint a ierman Chri-t. the Iteiiaji a i Italian Christ, the i"r. ne!,man "H French Christ, the Span.ard i Spanish Christ. I.:t ir was left for our it s ih enough •a Thomas f'e gi\es the folio.., 'lie mi'.rvil'.ujj bar ileal piet.ire. wilh •rward in th. i Mar! insfea i.iuj.-iit he vali trees, :li: Holy i, and Mark The geogru' I •M v .. (Sno!*!* i:\ GAl.tl.RAXS A iiint P. y«m ad uit h. New 'J es!,i: :(ut, A distinguished years ago eame here, and return.- I .- I wrote. "I went to Palestine ii ii.j and came home a Christian." Mv |. timonv will be that I came to Palestl:., a linn believer in tho Bible, and rerun: a thousand fold more eonlirii tie divinity of the Holy Scriptuo Quite as interesting as an i lun•: in tlio bo)k is tiiia announcement "Wandering up and down the el art gallerie-i of Euro ,.. I i1:tve for a face of the Saviour which I wo I like to have in my life of Christ, The one I have chosen in preference to all is that e\-":nted by a modern artist already widely honored. "I have no idea that tho Fourteenth century, or the ifieenth century, or the Sixt-vnth century monopolizeJ the brain, think the best music i vet to be composed, the best sculpture vet to bo chiseled, the best paintings are yet to be presented to the world. We are almost always disappointed with a picture of Christ. It is the uni versal criticism of such pictures. 'While I admire the artistic merit of the pro duction, the picture is not my idea of the Saviour.' Tlie picture is apt to re[ resent Christ either as cflemiiiute or se ven:, weau or awful. To -commingle in one picture streugth and humilify. sud-ring and triumph, the lionlike and the lamblike, the face that Jiowned the be«tonnod lake into a calm, and yet was such an inviiaiion to l-ab\ho.- I that children s I1 from their "moth ers' arms into hi- bosom- thnt w,-\. what I was looking for, and that 1 have found, and that wo present t. our readers. i nCs in whose veins commjngle the bio.,.) many nationalities, to paint for nt'Th-. World's Christ'" Hicssed be his g!un. ous name forever!" The public will !e curious to *-.• the work ol this artist Perhaps the good doctor has 1 new Correggio! There ar* a great many oth i if ures too numerous to even men- j. a newspaper article. The reader, Vv. "1 W I iio'cographeis. Tni. Mi i •w.rk unawtiiteed, Euiartcement 'ybii IIIK i'id 'Ailter Cr.:,-rs a a,t.\ W I think it will satisfy more pconl". than any other face fhat'has'ever belt, put on canvas. The cranial develi ment of th:» picture of Christ is niarv/i ous. and different from anything pi, viotisly produced. We must not forget thar he A fin.- Itut- of AHhus.k and cMiro »"i», T. 11. PLOTNER IU i, #4 vuikvCh aw bf" w-jjj find these for theuiselv«-s. and will p,r..lj ably lay down tlie boo!- ,i ,j: {je proof sheets, with a new knowledge yf the Christ and a higher appreciation of Dr. Talmaye'g splendid ability ponitfui iin, 1 I" OSl'KK COATKS. '•Ml. ^'AL'L •i., I .'.M MAN ftlid Mchiii tween liiwaia-I with fi. Vf!S|lI i Mhne:ipo|t,. rKANS-0,NTlNi. NTAIi til. bk'l.t.M Sf.'.i,, II# truins 1 *ln:d::i ui 'e ago HKKAT T.'A'i IvOl'Tl Ml i.i.s -e.!- -. •w:i, Jl au.t St. 1 '-Mi mt, 1 •. Wwi'. an 1 lujj, 'h'f, ratw ti tlip •'•". MILV i lei- lie.qw, I treiylit, as ejit »t the i I'x.-i li^ir.WA.... "tt Siert* ii» the W'li'l.i, IIU--W 1,1,1. MI i A, V.il. i:AIiPK\Ti.„)lu.„,) in «iei 11 1 i tn t.'B! NEW |.': TOWNS I !,. en ir.-i-1 illiMliT till- .. o I .fit!. N».'Tth l.'uktiM mi I :ati.« unit tiut- intoht-ss HSTiU'iGi: EALlii: LAiTfi t'OLL, ii.iilUi. [^"cS, i i::-':: FALLS ,..! M..« IS: 1' vfrs. r.-iu 1 I lie tin "i "T"L-- "T— N n B.r7 in: 1 f-1 e M.„: ry Of ^'1 8 SB 5. £. C.-J i.iii iv k.'J IW 1"^ FOR THE LADIES! Vn-:!i ^?icnl,"c American. a if'ar, Hpjth- I 5 ^TAinfl ilDrjiuu so:WT r-nr.£ To r« r- n 'i I Nil it J'lii -s I ,r )'»•»f 1.11 llil' gv turn «.!i v STILL ANOTHE di !i. PKOPOoiTiON'. •\Vo win fi tn cv. ii yf i'» i w tln \V KI.M y l'1'.M.H 11.30, u hvt of i:.o WOJ5K6 OF CHARLES DSCKEHS In Twelve Larga Mumtc" nwml»f*r3 I fttm-jus works, *t4i li ono *-»i u,ih niupi-rri-:, i noiajujld AM' riKl!" I r»np»rf!oM, Our Jtnlufli -Salt Meal 1 Plli'n/,,1 Uni-IU f»iiif7l.-nil. I kril tl|i'.lk II.IUK-. I IU",'Jf,„i. prtA Ilarit Ttitus ur.J 0Ii*rT"»is! nn-l fHl K lUr .-l.T »»'«. a Tiiio ol i .''IT: i Thi (till ruri.,s ir Shup B!iJ III" ONCE NORE •iors° a"VI ll" «.y. urr- TRADE MARKS. n. uk is fii,f r^Lr ^!..r.-,! ,, !!•.• Pat Pf •. nr.. i i -li. /'•M'VHU.iit- "I' ilttlnitKHfli. f,r '4'»u'*ly pr. Ml NN VftCAVfe. Mtjl iiiMJAlHV ]S'. Fair!' Vy lioha l«jnh«:ur, »ix:a V itio gr. r» *rtt '. Adclres3 The Weekly Pioneer RS ir:. paul, mimn. PATENTS, ..i ii:J .ivi-sitR and Trmle-Mavks oUai''^ !f• 11 luisiiicjis 11• i 1111*t«-• I I'T II"' 4 V jlii tuiice is oppoxjte .S. I'sitei* .^.j# we ran m-eiH-f piiteiits in h'si 'J111'. •'"-t tlmn ihiiSi* remote trem VI s«'ini nitHtcl, drawing «r jdioto ••"i ipttun We intvis!', it jiat.HiU' •. e ..| i lini ite. tJm- lee it"' ('lie l' lyU# 31! I i IwHik, ''Mow te ',,.u# iKUMfS 1(1 vlielJt s In votir SI'1'' "i to" ii :-nt Iree. .Ad(Ire-?, .. ',i. A. VI "itf* Put-'iit niliec, Wnsl'""*1