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Simmons Liver Regulator will relieve Colic, Head ache, Sick Stomach. Indigestion, Dysentery, and the Complaints incident to Childhood. At any time you feel your system needs cleansing, toning, regulating without violent purging, or stimulating without tntoai eating, take PRCPARIO SY J. H. ZEILIH A CO., Philadelphia, Pa. PRICK, 1.00. 1 MACKINAC. Summer Tours. Palace Steamers. Low Hates. Vow Trip, pot WMk B.iw n DETROIT, MACKINAC ISLAND t.KnM, 0h.boT.wl, Alpma.irarrlaTll. Ceoo. B.nd lMuh, Port Huron, M. Clair, Oakland Uoum. Hans. City. Btcit WMk tttr BiwMn DETROIT AND CLEVELAND SpMUl amUylMp. flurlny Jaly Amroj ' Our Illustrated pamphlets JUtM and Vvmnrion Ttekota will m faruldud by tout Tlo.t Af.nl, or tddrM. C 0. WHITCOMB, O.n'1 Ptu. (.M, Detroit & Cleveland Steam Nav. Co. PITROIT, MICH. . Si&iiLkEepkr. ik L. si IB TALMAGE'S SEILXO;:. ADlsoourse On tha Subjoot of Ooi Ci'ocatlonal Singing. Tha Arinmmtn For nn Airnlniit It The Iullueuc. of Cliuroh Mualo Th Moth, oil, Pant .nil I'ron.Tit Pre centor, and Choir.. Rev. T. DeWItt Tnlmnje tnok for the subject of a recent aermon delivered at the Brooklyn Tabernacle, "Congregational Binglng," taking (or hli text: It eame even to pose, ai the trnmpeteri and lingers were as one, to make one sound to be heard In praising and thanking the Lord. II. Chronicles, V, It. The temple was done. It was the very chorus of all magnificence and pomp. Splendor crowded against splendor. It was the diamond necklace of tbe earth. From the huge pillars crowned with leaves of flowers and rows of pomegranate wrought out in burnished metal, down even to the tongs and snuffers made out of pure gold, every thing was as complete as the God-directed architect could make It. It seemed as if a vision from Heaven bad lighted on the mountains. The day for dedication came. Tradition says that (hers were In and around about the temple on that day 200,000 silver trumpets, 40,000 harps, 40,000 timbrels and 200,000 singers; so that all modern demonstrations at Das seldorf or Boston sem nothing compared with that. As this great sound-surged tip amid the precious stones of the temple, it most faavs seemed like the Blver of Life dashing against the amethyst of the wall of heaven. The sound arose and God, as If to show that he was well pleased with the muslo which his children make in all ages, dropped Into tbe midst of the temple a cloud of glory so overpowering that the officiating priests were obliged to stop In the midst of the services. There has been much discussion as to where muslo was born. I think that at the beginning, when the morning stars sang together and all the suns of God shouted for Joy, that the earth heard the echo. The cloud on which the angels stood to celebrate the creation was the birth place of song. The stars that glitter at night are only so many keys of celestial pearl on which God's fingers pla the mu slo of the spheres. Inanimate nature is full of God's stringed and wind Inntru nients. Silence Itself perfect silenca is only a musical rest In God's great an them of worship. Wind among tbe leaves, Insect humming In the sum mer air, the rush of billow upon beach, the ocean far out sounding Its everlasting psalm, the bobolink on the edge of the forest, the quail whistling up from the grass, are music. While visiting Blackwell's Island I heard coming from a window of the lunatlo asylum a very sweet song. It Was snng by one who had lost her reason, and I have come to believe that even the deranged and disordered el ements of nature would make muslo to our ear if we only had acuteness enough to listen. I suppose that even the sounds in nature that are discordant anfl repulsive make harmony In God's ear. You know that you may come so near to an orchestra that the sounds are painful Instead of pleasurable; and I think that we stand so near devastating storm and frightful whirlwind we can not hear that which makes to God's ear and the ear of the spir its above us a muslo as complete as it Is tremendous. Tbe day of judgment, which will be a day of tumult and uproar, I suppose, will bring no dissonance to the ears of those who can calmly listen, although it will be as when some great performer, in execut ing a boisterous piece of musio, be some times hretks down the instrument upon which be plays; so it may be on that last day that tha grand march of God, played by the Angers of thunder and earth quake and conflagration, may break down the world upon which the muslo is executed. Not only is Inanimate na ture full of music, but God has wonderfully organised the human voice, so that In the plainest throat and lungs there are four teen direct muscles whiih can make over 16,000 different sounds! Now, there are thirty Indirect muscles which can make, It has been, estimated, more than 173,000,000 of sounds. Now, I say, when God has so constructed tbe human voice, and when he has filled the whole earth with harmony, and when He recognised it in the ancient temple, I have a right to come to the con clusion that God loves muslo. I propose this morning to speak about sacred music, first showing you Its Im portance and then stating some of the ob stacles to Its advancement. I draw the first argument for the Im portance of saored muslo from the fact that God commanded it. Through Paul He tells us to admonish one another In psalms and hymns and spiritual songs; through David He cries outt ' Sing ye to God all ye kingdoms of the earth." And there are hundreds of other passages I might asms, proving that It Is as much a man's duty to sing as it is to pray. In deed I think there are more commands In the Bible to slog than there are to pray God not only asks for the human voice, but for the Instruments of muslo. He asks for the oymbal, and the harp, skid the trumpet. And I suppose that, In the last days of the church, the harp, the lute, the trumpet, and all the Instruments of muslo that have given their chief aid to the the ater and bacchanal, will be brought by their masters and laid down at the feet of Christ and then sounded in the church's triumph on her way from suffering Into glory. "Praise ye the Lord ! Praise him with your voices. Pralsehim with stainged Instruments and with organs. I draw another argument for the Impor tance of this exercise from the Impressive nets of the exercise. Ton know something of what secular mnslo has achieved. You know It has made Its Impression upon governments, npon laws, upon literature, upon whole generations. One inspiriting National air Is worth thirty thonsand men a a standing army. There comes a time In the battle when one bugle Is worth thousand muskete. . In the earlier part of the civil war the Government proposed to economise In bands of music, and many of them weie sent home; but the Generals In the army sent word to Washington: "You are making a great mistake. We are fall ing back and falling back. We have not enough music." Then the Government changed Its mind; more bands of muilo were sent to the fluid, and the day of shameful defeat terminated. I have to tell you that no nation or church oan afford to severely economize In muslo. WELLINGTON ENTERPRISE; Many of you are Illustrations of what saored song can do. Through it yon were brought Into the Kingdom of Jesus Christ. You stood out against the warning and the argument of the pulpit, hut whin in the sweet words of Charles Wesley or John Newton or Toplady, the love of Je sus was sung to your soul, then you sur rendered, as an armed castle that could not be taken by a host, lifts Its window to listen to a harp's trill. There was a Scotch soldier dying In New Orleans and a Scotch minister came in to give him the consolations of the gos pel. The man turned over on his pillow and said: "Don't talk to me about religion." Then the Scotch minister began to sing a familiar hymn of Scotland that was com posed by David Dickinson, beginning with he words: Omothr, dear Jernsa'em, When shall I oome to thee? He sunst It to the tune of Dun'lee, and every body In 8ootland knows that; and as he began to sing the dying soldier turned over on his pillow and said to the minister: "Where did you learn that?" "Why," replied the minister, "my moth er taught me that." "So did mine," said the dying Scotch soldier; and the very foundation of his heart was upturned, and then and there he yielded himself to Christ. Oh, It Is an Irresistible power I Luther's sermons have been forgotten, but his "Judgment Hymn" sings on through the ages, and will keep on singing antll the blast of the archangel's trumpet shall bring about that very day which the hymn celebrates. I would to God that those who hear me to-day wontd take these songs of salvation as messages from Heaven; for, just as certainly as the birds brought food to Elijah by the brook Cherlth, so these winged harmonies, God sent, are flying to your soul with the bread of life, (jpen your mouth and take It, O hungry Elijah! But I must now speak of some of the ob stacles in the way of the advancement of this sacred muslo; and the first Is, that It has been Impressed Into Hie service of su perstition. I am far from believing thnt maslo ought always to be positively religious. Refined art has opened plaoes where muslo has been secularised and lawfully so. Tbe drawing-room, the musical club, the orchestra, the con cert, by the gratification of purs taste and the production of harmless amuse ment and the Improvement of talent, have become very forces In the advancement of our civilization. Muslo has as much right to laugh In Surrey Gardens as it has to pray in St. Paul's; In the kingdom of nature we have the glad fling of the wind as well as the long-meter psalm of the thunder. Rut while all this is so, every observer has noticed that this art, which God intended for the im provement of the ear aud the voice and the head and the heart, has often been Impressed Into the service of error. Tar tinl, the musical composer, dreamed one night that Batun snatched from his hand an instrument and played upon It some thing very sweet a dream that has often been fulfilled In our day, the voice and the instruments, that ought to have been devoted to Christ, captured from the Church and applied to purposes of sin. Another obstacle has been an inordi nate fear of criticism. The vast majority of people singing In church never want anybody else to hear them sing. Every body is waiting for somebody else to do bis duty. If we all sang, then tbe Inac curacies that are evident when only a few sing would be drowned out. God asks you to do as well as you cart, and then, if you get tbe wrong pitch or keep wrong time, he will forgive any de ficiency of the ear and Imperfection of the voice. Angela will not laugh if you. should lose your place In the musi cal scale, or come In at the close a bar behind. There are three schools of singing, I am told the Qefjian school, the Italian school and tha Froncb school of singing. Now, I would like to add a foutb school, and that Is the school of Christ The voice of a contrite, broken heart, although it may not be able to stand human criticism, makes better music to God's ear than the moat artlstlo per formance when the heart Is wanting. I know it Is easier to preach on this than it is to practice; but I sing for two reasons: First, because I like it, and next, because I want to encourage those who do not know how. I have but very little faculty In that direction and no culture at all, yet I am resolved to sing though every Bote should go off like a Chinese gong. Gou has commanded It and I dare not be silent He calls on the 1)084118, on the cattle, on the dragonsj to praise him, and ws ought not to be behind tbe oattle and the drag ons." - - Another obstacle that has ?-ei la the way of the advancement of this holy art has been so much angry discussion on the subject of mmlcTfiurs ore" those who would have this exercise oonducted by musical Instruments. In the same church there are those who do not liks musical Instruments, and so It Is organ and no or gan, and there Is a fight la another church it Is a qnestlon whether the muslo shall be conducted by a precentor or by a drilled choir. Some want a drilled choir and some want a precentor, and there Is a light. Then there are those who wonld like (n the eh ur oh to have ths organ played In a dull, lifeless dron ing way, while there "are oth ers who wonld have It wreathed Into fantastic, branching out Into jets and spangles of sound, rolling and tossing In marvelous convolutions, as when In py rotechnic display you think a piece Is ex hausted It breaks out In wheels, rockets blue lights snd serpentine demonstrations. Some would have the organ played In almost Inaudible sweetness, and others would have It full of st a oca to passages that make the audience Jump with great eyes and hair on end as though by s vision of ths witch of Endor, and be who tries to please all will suoceed in nothing. Nevertheless, yon are to admit ths fact that the contest which Is going on In hun dreds of churches of the United States to day Is a mighty hlnderance to ths ad vancement of this art. In this way eoorei and scores of churches are entirely crip pled as to all Influence, snd tbe mualo Is s damage rather than s praise. Another obstacle In the advancement ol this art has been the erroneous notion that this part of ths servlos could be oon ducted by a delegation. Churches have said: "Oh, what an easy tlms ws shall bavs. Ths minister will do ths preaching and tbe choir will do ths singing, snd ws will hare nothing to do." WEDNESDAY. MAY And you know as well as I that there are a great multitude of chnrohes all through this land where the people are not expected to sing. The whole work is done by a delegation of four or six or ten persons snd the audience art silent. In such a church In Syracuse an old elder persisted In such singing, and so the oholr appointed a committee to go and ask the 'squire If he would not stop. You know that in a great multitude of cburohes the choir are expected, and do, all the singing and the great mass of peo ple are expected to be silent, and if yau utter your voice you are interfering. There they stand, the four, with opera glass dangling at their side singing, "Rock of Ages Cleft for Me," with the same spirit that the night before on the stage they took their part In the "Grand Duchess" or "Don Giovanni." ' Now, In this church, we bave resolved npon the plan of conducting the muslo by apreoentor. We do it for two reasons: one Is that by throwing the whole respon sibility upon the mass of the people, mak ing the great multitude ths choir, ws might rouse more heartiness. The con gregation coming on the Sabbath day feel that they can not delegate this part of the great service to any one else, and so they themselves assume it. We have glori ous congregational singing here. People bave oome many miles to hear It. They are not sure about the preaching, but they can always depend on the singing. We have heard the sound coming up like "the voice of many waters," but It wUl be done at a better rate after a while, when we shall realize the height and the depth and the Immensity of this privilege. Another reason why we adopted this plan: Ws do not want any choir quarrels. You know very well that In scores of ths churches there has been perpetual conten tion In that direction. The only church fight that ever occurred coder my minis try was over a melodeon in my Srst settle ment Have you never been in church on the Sabbath day and heard the choir sing and you said: "That is splendid music?" Tbe next Babbath you were In the eburoh and there was no choir at all. Why? The leader was mad or his assistants were mad, or they were mad altogether. Some of the choirs are made up of our best Christian people! Some of the warmest friends I have ever had have stood up in them, Sabbath after Sabbath, eonielen tlously and successfully leading tbe praises of God. But the majority of choirs throughout ths land ars nut made up of Christian people, and three-fourths of ths church fights originate in the organ-loft I tuke that back and say nine-tenths. Miiii.v of our churches are dying of obolrs. Let us, as a church, give still more atten tion to the music. If a man with voice enough to sing keep silent during the exer cise he commits a crime against God and iiiKults the Almighty. There will lie a great revolution on this subjects in all our churches. God will f-om, down by his spirit and rouse up the old hymns end tunes that bave not been more than half awake since the time of our grandfathers. The silent pews in ths church will break forth into music, and when the conductor takes his place on the Sabbath day there will be a great host of voices rushing into the harmony. My Christian friends, it we have no taste for this service on earth, what will we do In Heaven, where they all sing and sing for ever? Let me prophesy in regard to any here who has no delight in the worship of Heaven, if you do not sing the praises of God on earth I do not believe you will evor sing them in glory. I would tbateur sing-lngto-duy might be like the Saturday nitfbt rehearsal for the Babbath morning in tbe skies, and might begin now by the strength ami by the help of God, to dis charge a duty which none of us have fully -performed. let those refuse to sing Who never knew our Mod; Dut ehlldren of the Heavenly King Should apeak their joys abroad. The hill of Zlon yields A thoimand snored sweets, Before we reaoli the Heavenly fields. Or walk the golden streets. Then let oursonns abound, And every tear be dry j We're marching through Emanuel's around To fairer worlds on high. Come, now, clear your throats snd get ready for this duty or you will never bear tbe end of this. I never shall forget hear ing a Frenchman tinging the Marseillaise hymn on tbe Champ Elyseee, Paris, just before the battle of Sedan. I never saw such enthusiasm before or since as he sang that National air. Oh, how ths French man shouted I Have you ever In an En gligh assemblage heard a band play "God Bavs ths Queen." If yos have you know something about the enthusiasm of a na tional air. Now, I tell you that these songs we sing Babbath by Babbath are ths na tional airs of Jesus Christ and of the kingdom of Heaven. When Cromwell's army went into battle, he stood at the head of them one day and gave out the long meter doxology to the tune of "Old Hun dred," and that great host, oompany by company, regiment by regiment, bat talion by battalion, Joined In the dox ology: Praise God from whom all blessings flow. Praise Him all creatures here below; Praise Him above, ye Heavenly host. Praise Father, Son and Holy Onoet And while they sang they marched, and while they marched they fought, and while they fought they got the victory Ob men and women of Jesus Christ, let ns go Into our conflicts singing thepratses of God, and then, instead of failing book, as we often do, from defeat to defeat, we will be marching on from vlotory to victory! A writer in Sature elves an in ttanco of remarkable adaptation in elephants. He observed a young; ono go to a fiinc.o and pull out a bamboo stick, which he broke in ploces, but be threw all the pieces away. This he re pented till lie found a piece that suited Li in. This he passed under his arm pit and began to scratch. Down foil a great elephant leech, six Inches long, and that without a scraper could not have been dislodged. The writer adds that the custom is an established one among elephant. Thoy will also break off bushes, strip them neatly down, and use them to whip away flies. . A Watorbury gentleman was sur prised while out for a drive on ths Wolcott road recently by the conduct of a boy whom he asked to ride. The boy refused obstinately, and when prevailed upon for a reason said he expected a whipping when he got boms and was in no hurry .WaUrbury (Conn.) American. 12, 1886. ? E. M. McGillin & Co., CLEVELAND, OHIO. We have been figuring for the past two months with Manufacturers and Importers of EMBROIDERIES AI To buy a lot of these goods at our prices, which meant very much less than cost. WE HAVE FOUND OUR PEOPLE. Last week, in New York one of our firm closed out the entire Btock of one of the largest manufacturers, and this morning the following goods will be placed on sale. Our prices on these goods are so ridiculously low that we almost hesitate to quote our present prices and their real value. 20,000 yards of Cambric Embroideries, worth from 10 to 20c a yard, will be sold at 25c a strip of 4fr yards; not 25c a yard, but 4i yards for 25c. i 15,000 yards Cambric Embroideries, worth from 40 to 75c a yard, will be sold at $1.00 for a strip of 4J yards; not $1.00 a yard, but 4i yards for $1.00. 1,000 42-inch Swiss Embroidered flouncings, worth from $2.50 to $3.00 a yard, will be sold at $1.50 per yard. 20,000 yards Mull Cord Check, 12Jc a yard; never offered for lees than 20c wholesale. 5,000 yards Cream Momie Cloth, 6Jc a yard; never sold less than 18 cents. 10,000 yards Swiss Satin Checks and Stripes, lCc; never sold for less than 35c. 3, OOOyards of Pin Check Nainsook, 22c a yard; never less than 35c. We have not the space to enumerate the number of bargains we have in these goods. All we can say is this: we have now on sale " Embroideries and White Goods At prices that in a great many cases are not 25 cents on the dollar. 8Samples furnished when requested. All goods ordered by mail for which the cash accompanies the order, will be forwarded FREE to any part of the United States. Small packages go by mail; packages under 50 lbs, by express; larger boxes by freight. NEW FIRM, NEW GOODS AND NEW PRICES I HOTT cSC PETEES,'. Successors to Hoyt & Woolley, will continue business at the ole stand on the north side of Mechanic Street, where will bo found a large assortment of Furniture, all of the very latest designs, consisting of Lounges, Patent Rockers, Cane, Rattan and Carpet Chairs, Upholstered Goods and Bedroom Furniture, All to be Sold at Exceedingly LOW.j PRICES T727 DEHT AHZ2TG A SPECIALTY". We also especially call your attention to our New Zinc Burial Case. It is provided with heavy rubber racking, rendering it Self-Sealing and perfectly Air-Tight. The Casket embraces every feature claimed for by manufacturers of Iron Caskets, and presents a more beautiful and finished appearance. Prices very reasonable. Give ua a call. HOYT & PETERS. ff'T-:, RUCKEYE flULTIVATORS I AAU I pflTARY I A NEW If you want a Plow, Pulverizer, Harrow, Two horse Corn Planter. One-horse Corn Drill, any kind of small Cultivator, Binder, Mower, Hay Tedder, Wind Mill, Pump, or Fertilizers special ly for corn and oats, call on G. E. T0WHSEND, South. Side Mecliaiiic St, - Wellington, Ohio. .'7 ' People. DEPARTURE IN CORN CULTIVATORS. TTu so eSJaeteble Irea Axle i rmnKd so lb width twtwfn whails cn b. eullr changed to suit dlnr.ni wldtbof corn rows. 11m S) Narrew ftkevel. end 6 Heans. Br wins email movm. Ui. (nxind Is l.lt IB bat ter shap. and the cultivation IS more oompl.U. BarHnar.HhOT.lifurnlih.it lldclrad. WlihaHin.l. Onur.lt I. a Krfrt Kellew Caltl.atar. Broad. Ml HM-rtlns AtUslim.ut, U ordrad. Rotary Hhl.lds. narkere Drill". 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