North Georgia times. (Spring Place, Ga.) 1879-1891, June 06, 1889, Image 1
W, > ■ 'ft % • c<£: as ft [ ■ r ; TH GEOR I "N -1 ■ ■ ■■*: IA TIMES. ‘ ■ Ji'Snl'"" 1 "'' REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN¬ DAY SERMON. Subject: “A Poisoned Dinner.” Text: "So' they poured out for the men to eat. And it came to pass, as they were eating of the pottage, that they erted out, and said: O thou man of God, there is death in {> pot. And they could not eat thereof —II Kings iv.. 40 . Elisha had gone down to lecture to the sta¬ tute in the theological seminary lit Gilgal. He found the students very hungry, as stu¬ dents are apt to be. It is very seldom the world mates targe provisions for those who give themselves to intellectual toil. In order that tiioso students may be prepared to hear He what Elisha says, he first feeds then* hunger. knew very well it Is useless to talk, to jprea'oh. So Elisha, to lecture with hungry men. principle which recognizing Christian tins common sonso cognize, sends every out to get ought food to re¬ servants for these hungry students. They pick np some good, healthful herbs, but they liappon to pick up deathful also some coloquintida, a bitter poi¬ sonous, herb. They bring a’d those herbs, stir they put them into the boiling pot, they of this food them up, and then a portion dents and their is professors. brought to Seated tho stu¬ the table, at one of the hungry students begins immediately hold of of to eat, and he happens to get some the coloquintida. He knew it by the taste. He cries out: “Poison, poison tho I ” Q thou man of God, there is death to whole pot! Consternation is thrown over tho group. What a fortunate thingit was that this student so early found tho colo qmntida will by in the mixture at the table! You reference find this story Is precisely as I have mentioned it. of Well, and to our day there are great caldrons sin death. Coloquintida of mighty temptation and is pressed into it. Some dip it dip out, it out, taste, and reject it and live. Others the taste it, keep on and die. Audit is business of every minister of religion, and every man who wishes well to tho human race, and who wants to keep the world back from its follies and its sufferings, to cry out: “Beware! poison, poison! Look out for this caldron! Stand back! Beware!” Km has done an awful work in our world. It has gone out through all the ages, it has to 1 *™ Up a groat caldron of trouble and suffering; poisoned—poisoned and pain, and the whole race is intod, in body, poisoned to poisoned in soul. But blessed be God that the Gospel of Jesus Christ is the antidote, be and where there was siu there shall there pardon, shall and where there was suffering be comfort, and where there wae death there shall be life. Sometime ago, you will remember, I per¬ suaded you of the importance of being chari¬ table in judgment of others. At the same tune I said to you briefly what this morning I wish to say with great emphasis, that while we sympathize the with tho sinner wo must de¬ nounce sin, that be while we pity tho unfor ”"«ust vehement against trans fcmfe a jagged tiling that needs to ; garland !\ I gwy it handled. You have no right to with fine phrases or lustrous rhetoric. You-cannot catch a buffalo with a silken lasso. A group of emigrants settle to a wild region, The next day a wild boast comes down from the mountain and carries off 0110 of tho chil • oren. The next day a wild beast comes down from the mountain and carries off another child. Forthwith all the neighbors band to gethor, hand and they go out with torch in one and gun to the other to hunt theso mon store light down, to find their hiding ptaco, to up and ransack the caverns, and to destroy tho invaders of their houses. So we want now not merely to talk about the sins and follies of the world, we want to go behind them, back of them. Down into the caverns where they hide we need to go with the torch of G od’s Word to one hand and the word of God’s eternal Spirit in tho other to hunt out and stay these iniquities in their Muing places. Ur, to como back to tho fig¬ ure what suggested the by my text, wo want to find are caldrons of sin and death from which the iniquities of society are dipped out. I. In tho first place, I remark: that un¬ •caldrons happy and undisciplined homes are the ot great iniquity. Parents harsh and eruel on the one hand, or on the other hand loose to their govern¬ ment, raising wickedly loose to their government, ■are home where up scolding a generation of vipers. A and fretful ness are •dominant is blood relation to the gallows and the penitentiary 1 Petulance is a serpent that crawls np into the family nursery somotimes and crushes everything. Why, there are parents who even' make religion disgusting them for to their children. They scold exasperating not loving of Christ. their They have an house is full of way the doing duty. The and war whoop of contention, from such a place husband and sons go out to die. into Oh, the is there a Hagar leading away Ishmael desort to be smitten of the tliirst and parched fell of the sand? In the solemn birth hour a voice to thee from the throne of God, say tag: “Take this child and nurse It for me, and I will give tfceo thy wages.” At even even angels , of . God hover _ that do over a, ot Jesus? they hear the children lisping tho name O traveler for eternity, your Htae ones gathered under vour robes, are you leading taking them theux on the right the road, or are you out on dangerous wind experienced tog t>ridle feet path, off Which their in¬ the howling may of slip, the wolf and up and which comes the sound of loosened ledge and tumbling avalanche? Blessed Is the family altar at which the children kneel. Blessed is the cradle m which the Christian mother rock* the Christian child. Blessed is the song the little ones sing at nightfall when sleep is closing the toy tho the oyes pillow. and loosening Blessed tho is that hand mother from on Whose evory heart-throb is a prayer for her children’s welfare. The world grows old, and the stars wiT. cease to illuminate it, end tho waters to re¬ fresh it,and the mountains to guard it, and the heavens to overspan it, and its long story of siu and shame and glory and triumph will soon turn to ashes; but influences that started all in the eternity—blooming early home roll on nnd all the roll up waving through all tho triumph, exulting to to all joy, the in song, or shrinking back into all the darkness. Fath¬ er, children mother, t which way are you leading your A houso took fire and the owner was very careful to get all his furniture out. Ho got all his books out and he got all liis pictures out, and he lie got all ms valuable papers out, but forgot to ask, until it was too late: “Are my children safe?” Oh, when the earth shall melt with fervent heat, and the mountains shall blaze, and the sens shall children blaze, and the earth Will shall blaze, children will vour your ctn: be safe? your be be safe? safe? Unhappy and undisciplined homes are are the the source source or much of the wretchedness and sin of the world. I know bright bright there and and are exceptions beautiful beautiful Christian Christian to it sometimes. home homo From From a a a a husband husband or or a a son son will will go go out out to to die. die. Oh, Oh, how long you had that boy to your prayers ! He dees not know how many sleepless nights JSSSWIS? his waywardness. Oh, SS. it i* hard, after K you SPRING PLACE, GA„ THURSD JUNE 6, 1889. have toiled for a child, and given him ever, advantage and every in kindness, ingratitude) to have him pay yon back As one Sabbath taOKjtog a father came to the foot of the pulpit as I stepped out of it., and said: “0 in son, my son, son!” There is many a young man pro bis mother, who would strike into the dust any man who kithself, would insult her, who is at this mo¬ ment by his evil doing and his bad habits, that) mother’s sharpening heart. a dagger A to plunge through htox from ai Ho went bloated telegram and brought scarred ar. into the room and he stood by' the lifeless form of his mother. Her hair gray; it had turned gray in sor¬ row. Those eyes had wept floods of tears over had dolie his wandering. him That kindness still white hand many a and had writ¬ ten many a loving invitation and good coun¬ sel. He had broken her old heart. Ho. came into the room and threw himself on the casket and he sobbed outright: “Mother, mother 1 ” but those lips that had kissed him in infancy and uttered so many kind words spoke not; they were sealed, Rather than have such a memory conic on my sou), I would prefer to have roil over on me the Alps and the Hima¬ layas. But, while sometimes there who are sons turn out very badly, coming from good homes, it I is want to tell exception. you for your encourage¬ ment a great Yet an unhap¬ py and undisciplined homo is the poisonous caldron from which a vast multitude drinl: their death. H. X remark that another caldron of in¬ iquity is an indolent lifo, Ail the rail trains down the Hudson River yesterday, all the rail trains on the Pennsylvania route, all tuo trains on the Long Island road brought to these cities young men to begin com¬ mercial life. Some of them are hero this morning, 1 doubt not. Do you know what one of your great temptations is going people to to be? It is the example of indolent our cities. They are to all our cities. They dress better than some who are industrious. They have access to oil places of amusement—plenty of money, and yet idle. They lmng around our great hotels— the Fifth Avenue, tho Windsor, the Brunswick, House—all the Stay vesant, hotels, tha Giisey our beautiful you find them around there any day—men who do nothing, dressed, having never oam anything, should yet well Why should plenty, work? Why why drudge I walk? you and toil in bank and shop and office, or on the scaf¬ folding, along or well by and the do anvil, Hot work? when these men get so Some of them hang toothpick around In the city halls of our waiting great for cities, crumb to fall their from mouth, tho some office holder’s table. Some of them hang around the city hall for tho city van bring¬ ing criminals from the station houses. They the stand disgrace there and and gloat suffering over it—really of these enjoy they get out of the city poor and creatures as van go into tho courts. Where do they get their money? That is what you ask. That is Whitt; I ask; Only four ways of getting money—only four: by stealing inheritance, by earning it, by vast begging multitude it, by it; and there them are living a by in¬ among us who get not heritance, it. I do not or like by earning to take the it, responsibility nor by begging of saying Now, how these they men get areij it! constant temptation. A young man, through the intercession of metropolitan friends, gets a place in a bank or store. He is going to leave his country home, That morning they are tip (early to the old homestead. The trunk is on the wagon. Mother says: “My son, I put a Bible to the trunk, I hope you will-read it often,” She wipes tie the tears away with her aprea. “Oh,” says, “come, don’t you tie worried, self. Don’t I know how to take me.” care of my¬ be worried about The fa¬ ther says: “My son, be a good boy and write home often, your mother will be anx¬ ious to hear from' you.” Crack! goes the whip, Five and over have the passed lulls goes and the dissipated wagon. life has years done its for on, that a work young man. There is a hearse coming up to front of tho old homestead. The young men of the neigh¬ borhood who have stayed on the farm come to and say: “ Is it possible ? Why, he doesn’t look natural, does ho ? Is that the fair brow we used to know ? Is that the healthy cheek we Used to know ? It can’t be looking possible that is him.” The parents stand at the gash in the forehead from which tho life oozed out, and they lift their hands and say: “ Oh, my son, Absalom, my son, my son Absalom; would God that I had died for thee, oh Absalom, my son, my son!” I .orenzo de Medici was very sick, and some of his superstitious friends thought if they could dissolve a certain number of pearls to a cup and then he would drink them it would euro around him and of they the gathered disease. So all tho they beauti¬ went ful pearls they coulil find, up and they dis¬ solved them In a cup, and the sick pensive man drank draught. tjjom. But I Oh,' tell it was of an ex¬ you a more ex¬ pensive draught than that. Drunkenness puts mto pearl its of cup domestic the pearl happiness, of physical the pearl health, of re¬ spectability, the pearl of Christian hope, pearl tho of hot an everlasting lips. hear an, and it to I toll vou the djam shop is the gate boll, liio trouble is they do not put up the strong drink is sold. One is the “restaurant,” and another is the “saloon” and another is railed J’iW ” a^ another'is room” Whataname to give r ono of places! A “sample room r I saw a man on the steps of one of those ‘‘sample ropms” other day, dead drunk. I said to myself: BamP y0 “ respects, indKtTmy'toSuy,’ I and I have am very generous, grand and generous a moral nature to overthrown to that way.” Let me say har.e P t“g ^ 0 tion, the the fattest brightest lambs prospects. for its This ehooscs sacrifice. brightest hand of dnmkonness garlands are torn by off this the brow of fish *CWs^H^od^'er^Shfri^thf orator, Edgar A. Poe, answer! Junius Brutus Booth, answer! Oh, como and look ovor it whito I draw ranT^teftog, 8 ^ “^ d^&%^’m^ P eII 0 passions. of appetites and There are —might I not say thousands?—-of young to 8 KTS this house this lEWriSUS morning-young ‘ 5 men tempted. Perhaps you may this moot be addressed on the first of your coming to the great city, and I you this brotherly counsel. I spoak not to perfunctory nay. I speak as an older talks to a younger brother. I put my on your shoulder this day and commend to Jesus Christ, who himself was a young rnd died while yet a young man, and sym pathy for all God, young men. Oh, appetites bo by the grace of of your passions I 4. . . . eptakevs and are they vo-y^pt generally to close rollup with a tlon, to what they have some to say. imagery doso witli express peroration miglitier than a SKTi 1 ' £7 bath woo? who hath babbling? who without cause? They titottarf^ to^ a^^toe not upon ^tho mne when it is red. when the it movoth itself aright S in the cup, for at last it biteth Uke serpent and sttogeth like an adder.” This is the other quotation. Make up your mind as to which is th e more impressive. I think the last is tho mightier: “Rejoice, O young man, in thy youth, and let thv heart cheer thee In tl» days of thy youth, and walk thou to the sight of thiue own eyes; God but know thou that for all these things will bring thee into judgment.” the Why bank, should I tho toil ofle&or and wear the myself store, out or the In or shop, or the factory? These men have noth¬ ing to do. They get along a great deal bet¬ which ter. And that is the temptation fall. under They begin to a great many with young these men these idlers, consort men, an:l Tho number they go down the to same cities awful who steeps. of men our are trying to get their living by their wits and K y sleight of hand is all the time increasing. A New York merchant saw a young man, we of his clerks, in half disguise, going into 1 very low place of amusement. Tho mer¬ chant said to himself : “ I must look out for that clerk; he is going in bad company and going A few to months bad placas; passed I on,and must look out morning for him.” the one merchant entered his store, and this clerk of whom I have been speaking came up in assumed consternation and said: “Oh. sir, the store has beou on firs; I have put out the fire, out there are a great many goods t:rt: we liavo had a trreat crowd of neocle coming and going." Then tne merenans took tho clerk by the collar and said: “I have had enough of this; you cannot deceive me; where are those goods you stole?” The young man instantly confessed his villainy. O tho numbers of people in these great cities who are trying to get their living not honestly! And they are a mighty temptation to the in¬ dustrious young man who cannot understand it. While those others have it so easy they have it so hard. Horatius of olden time was told that he could have just as much ground as *»e could plow around with a yoke of oxen in one day, He hooked Up the oxen to plowed the pi ow and he cut a very large circle and 1 un til tie camotothesamo point where liostartod, and all that property was his. Butlhavototell you to-day that just so much financial, just so much moral,' just so much spiritual pos¬ session you will have as you compass with your from the own morptog industries, of and lire just the so much as your to evening of your life you can plow wound with your own hard work. “Go to the ant, thou slug¬ gard; consider her caldrons ways and be wise.” Onu of the most awful of death to-day is on indolent life. Thank God that you have to work. III. Once more I remark: that the dram shop is a great caldron of iniquity in our time. Anachavsis said that the vtoa boro three grapes: the first was Pleasure, <the next large revenue to the government, >... support your schools and your great institu¬ tions of mercy.” And then I think of what William E. Gladstone said—I think it was the first time he xvas chancellor of tlie ex¬ chequer—'when traffic came to men htos engaged and said to theii*' tho/X’utoous business ought to have more consideration from the fact that it paid sneh a largo revenue to the English “Gentlemen, government, Mr. Gladstone said: the don’t‘worry yourselves millions about SA revenue; ad give me thirty 10USb c£ sober ' v 8 reY0UWi “ .” — 1 - Wo might in this country—this traffic pm- ished—have lass revenue, but wo would have mo re happy homes, would and have wo would fewer have people more to peace, and we the penitentiary, and there would be tens of thousands of men who are now on the road to hell who would start on tho road to heaven. But tho financial ruin is a very small part of it. This iniquity of which I speak takes overythtog that is sacred out of the family, everything that is holy -soul in religion, and tramples everything it that under is infinite foot, in Tho tho marriage day has come. Tho twain ire at the Gay altar. feet Lights flash. and Music down tlie muncs. drawing-room. Did go up vessel launch ever a on changes, such a bright Dingy and beautiful No sea? firo. The On scene broken chair sorrowful garret. wife. Last hope a a gone. 810 Poor, forsaken, trodden of being under drunkards foot, knows all tho sorrow a was Drunkenness, and the next Misery. Every saloon above ground or under ground is a fountain of iniquity. It may nave a license for while, and it but may after go along while quite the respectably cover will a a fall off and the color of the iniquity will be displayed. “Ob,” “you ought to be easier says such some traflto one, when it such on a oavs a wife. “Oh,” she' says, "ho waS tho kindest man that over lived, ho made was no noble, he was p-vgecd! God never did n eranoev the drink m.-rn than he was, but the ditok she it, will .lid it l” Some day press her hands against her temples and cry: “Oh, my brain, my brain!” or she will go out 011 tho abutment of the bridge tho some glassy moonlight night and look down on surface and wonder if under that glassy surface there is not some rostfor a broken heart. Tho Gills of the*Fish. __ Lift up thegill covers and under them will bo seen a soft, dark-red mass, not unlike a slice of raw liver. This is a p8r fc 0 f the gills. Leavo them for the P resent ani °P. en mouth To all appearances it is rat-lier a smaii mouth m proportion to tho size of the fish. Nothing worthy of notice will be seen at first, the only objects within the mou ' h b f “8 tongue which is quite projections arranged in “successive rows and teeth. looking this like time long the and water very will slender have By much discolored and bo Looome must clran^ed, tiuuully a slight dark-red beneath stream the eon- gill oozing from covers. Before placing the fish in fresh water take it to a lap and allow a 3 tream of water to flow into its mouth an d out at t{«® S d \ covers. How is this? puling, The , scarlet lino of the head is disappears rapidly and in a few minutes altogether. It does not belong to tho Cl. th™ °norm“i color of tho herring’s head. The living fish is of a pure silvery white, ns I linve often had the opportunity of seeing, The red hue only B \, ows ltse lf after the «* •■■■'»“ r™* 9 ~S*S au “. 18 ^ UQ extrayasated blood, Again look under the gill covers. The gil]s j to axe be there, blit so altered dark, as scarce- red y which recognized as the masses were seen before. They j, ! ,ave lost 1085 all a1 ' their * n ® ir color °° lor ’ the ln ® water ater hav- na washed the blood out , of ,, them, and . mg pale they are now gray. Moreover, are composed evidently of several not solid layers, masses, eaoh but layer are being formed of a vast numlier of deli cate^ plates, leaflets, or laminae. Long man s Magaiine. ------- ..... JSS«SSJ3?W.%. „, mn AS > «pr‘ 8 n«y. ' ' ' RUflAN ■W- ' POLICE. - The Despotic Peace Guardians of the White Czar. * Under Surveillance from the Cradle to the Grave. From GcOrge Keqnan’s article in the Century we%uote the following.; “There is probably no country in the world where the public power occupies a wider field, plays a more important part, or touches th^private personal life of ihe citizen at mbre points than it does in Russia. In a country like England or the Uaifckl States*! where the people are the governing pdwer, the functions of tho police are simple and clearly de¬ fined, and lire limited, for the most part, to tho prevention dr the detection of crime, and the maintenance of ordor in public places. In Russia, however, where the poo pie are not the governing •power, but hold to that power the rela¬ tion of an infant ward to a guardian, the police occupy a very different and much more Important position. “The theory upon which the Govern¬ ment of Russia proceeds is, that tho cit¬ izen not^only is incapable of taking part in the manarremant of the affairs of his country, hifproyiaco, or his district, but is incompetent to manage even th 3 af¬ fairs of his-own household; and that, from the time #hea ho leaves his cradle and begins the struggle of life down to the time wltap Ms weary gray head is finally laid under tho seal, he must be guided, directed, instructed, restrained, repressed, regulated, fenced in, fenced out, braced up, kept down, and made to do generally what somebody else thinks is best far hffu. The nat ural outcome of this paternal theory of government the concentration of ai linisti authority in. the hands ‘ officials, lufes an eaormt the Matters o! to ‘the of Russia by . 1 ! ir of the Interior through tho imperial police, If you ate a Russian, and wish to establish a newspaper, you must ask the permission of tho Minister of tho Inte¬ rior. If you wish to open a Sunday school, or any other sort of school, whether in a neglected slum of St. Petersburg or in a native village in Kamchatka, you mifet ask the permis¬ sion of the Minister of Public Instruc tion. If you wish to give a concert of to get up tableaux for the benefit of an orphan asylum, you must ask permission of tho nearest representative of the Minister of the Interior, then submit your programme of exercises to a censor for approval or revision, and finally hand over the proceeds of the entertain¬ ment to the police, (0 be embezzled or given to the orphan asylum, as jt may liappon. If you wish to sell newspapers on the street, you must get 0 permission, 1 ’ be registered ° in the books of the police, and wear a num bered brasi plate as big as a saucer around your neck. If you wish to open a drug store, a printing office, a photo¬ graph gallery, or a book store, you must 1 gel permission. If plioto you are a ra P , her and , desire , . to , change , the ,, loca & tion of your place of business, you must get permission. If you are a student , to public ... ^.horary to consult ana go a ! Lyell’s “Principles of Geology’’ orSpen ' cer , g . Social StatioJ| » you wiu fiad that you cannot even look at such dangerous _ arid incendiary volumes, without special , pl rwrm lesion \ if y° u are a physic.an, you must get permission , before ydu can prac txce, and then, if you do not wish to re spond to calls in the night, you mu3t have permission to refuse to go; fur thermore if you wish to prescribe what aro known in Russia as “pawer fully acting medicines, you must have ^ ^are V™™™' to flU your 0r prescriptions. the wil1 If ’ y° u are a peasant and wish to build a bath-house on your premise3, you mud U „ you „„„ wish • . to . tUre.h ... out your grain in the evening by candle¬ light, you must get permission or bribe the police. If you wish to go more than fifteen miles away from your home, you must get permission. If you are n foreign traveller you must get permis¬ sion to come into the Empire, permis¬ sion to go out of it, permission to stay in it longer than six months, and must notify the police every time you change your boarding-place. In short, you cannot live, move, or have your being in the Russian Empire without permis¬ sion. Vol. IX. New Series. NO. 18. • ‘ The Law as to Party Walls. •-. S ftxty waH*ta tear iFthe wall divld ing lands of different' proprietors, used ' a for the support of structures on t«t^ sides. At common law an owner who erects for his own buildings which ^OOipie of being used by an adjoining proprietor, cannot com¬ pel such proprietor, when he shall build next to it, to pay for any portion of the cost of sixth wall. .On the other land, the adjoi^tg proprictoiyhas no right to make any use of such wnH without con¬ stant of tiie owner, and. this consequence maybe the erection of two walls side by side, when-one * oultT-answer all pur¬ poses. jgj § XC^us ' 1 W - Often Wburad by an a .o^h« v ' f:/p-«ach credji' J irniWor laid, coin mon use, 1 other’s the parties to fixvxae the expense. If only one is to Mira At the time, he gets a return frbjn .-'tiio other party of half what it -coste-> him. Under such an agreement each has Sn easement in the land and this of the aimligalSSijesYt'hp o^i^iyehite the title walls in stand, sales and descent. if, the wall is de stioyed by deeay dr accident, the ease¬ ment is such eontingeofey is provided for by a deed. mt equally; Repairs butf id ^ ' |iilisareto lias occasion bo horns*' to strengthen or improve them for a more extensive bul 7 J at’ffrst pontem plated, he cat "del thfftolher to divide the cxi HU. In some tho rights iu paity waU Wk uni one By' may un doubtedly acquire, - prescrip tion, on a WatraHw % another, which : he has loqg.been allowed to use for the support of his own stj-ucturo. —Building Newt. - -r Happy Poverty of th esc. It is a question lS »t whether te Japanese pr are- not tlul on less .. < s| t^a : ■ ? winter the poor cold, hnag.ry. aad dir in theiri I Sta poor of this coun can be nsttaalv clean in their jflopr jrad a few dish dn|^n. use. Plain, charcoal brazier,.iaT^Ra them and much cheaper n the real articles in England. Instead of splash¬ ing through raiu and mud to their la¬ bors barefooted or in leather shoes and suffering from cold and wet without fire, the Japanese walks on wooden sandals, removed from the ground several inches by slats on the solos, and is able to eater the house with dry feet, and never hav¬ ing known any other way than the art of sitting on them to keep warm, is soon comfortable. The rice straw and oiled paper make rain cloaks and Umbrellas, and a Japanese must be very poor indeed who cannot avail himself of the luxury of an occasional hot bath. Every street corner has a bath house, where every evening the water in the great tubs is heated to nenrly boiling heat, and for loss than a cent nn indi¬ vidual can avail himself of it,as the same water does for the evening, bo there dozens or scores of bathers .—Mail and Express. A Country of Small Things. Japan, says Mr. Frank G. Carpenter, is a country of the little. “Tho men here are from five feet to five feet five inches high, and the women aro smaller. Notwithstanding the fact that they raise themselves three inches off the ground on their wooden sandals, I am continu¬ ally looking down at them, and a fair sized American girl towers above them like au Amazon. Japanese trees are dwarfed, and, in fact, all nature seems to bo made on tho six by nine plan. The chickens are nearly all bantams, and the cats, with thoir bobtails, look like kittens compared with our American tommies, and the horses aro ponies. The houses of the common people are but one story, and the rooms look like chil¬ dren’s play houses. The couutry, though as big as several states, is full of picturesque scenery, but it is the pretty rather than the grand, and you have beautiful bit* rather than sublime land¬ scapes. It is the same with everything. If I ask for a cup of tea at a little way¬ side tea house, it is handed to me in a little piece of 8hell-like china, no bigger than an egg-cup, and the little Japanese beauty goes down on her knees when she brings it.” Barkeeper—Look here, you, I say, otop working that lunch counter. Tramp (reproachfully)—I ain’t work ,ng; it’s a pleasure .—NeviYork Bun. Dearer Every Day. They say I would cease to love her When her freshness showed deoayj They were wrong, for as the rive* Asp!*; Wears its channel more away, <34 De per grew my lovo, and clearer Seemed her beauties in display. She grew older, she grow dearer— Dearer every day. Had I loved her for her beauty, Had her heart been simply clay, Then might mine have ceased its worship But her truth’s resplendent ray Eille-i iuy smfl and draw ma nearer To the fount where sweetness lay. Still the older, still the dearer— Dearer every day. Age has laid its hand§ Na^. upon heiv* *v Do I realize it? Her youth’s bloom niy heart remembers— Years her faithfulness portray, And It shall be’mine to cheer her, s ° har ^ nter Ma V Deakr everyday, . HUMOROUS. $ Tho sforst form of writer’s cramp is being pramped for funds. The real estate man is aolgpwt of words,, ho is a man of deeds. > A dentist refers to litefe Collection of . (g|rscfed teeth as •P 3 - ’Death is like ation; it never takes without JEM |g a mark. What thej jfct yonag man who has in¬ herited mj^p heeds is an heir brake. PerhapsqUihe potato didn’t have any eyes. nld not be so ofteu mashed. •’Nltot ^|P®imals “reigning had cats kings, and we dogs” would meant. know When a man . is Jost-'in thought he really doesn’t cafe to have anyone look for him. • ■ -The laws .Regulating the copyright system,mejely provide for a form^of pat cot right. . n Molt Sabies are given to’ •gum; cbewing-gum is ran ■ seute f fail ” hardly 1 %m-" a as can as !<«*»?’. phrase. The barber may not have fought and for ' painted. ft * ft-; 10 croeks among them. “See how dusty these chair* are, Mary!” “Shure, mum, it’s because no¬ body’s sot into ’em tho day.” Fine Distinction—Western Tourist— “Got much stock on hand! ” Ranch¬ man—“Nope, got a right smart bunch on foot, though.” One of the latest fads of the fashiona¬ ble world is the wearing of watches In umbrella and parasol knobs. Keeping a watch on an umbrella is an old fashion, however. It’s owner would lose it, if he didn’t. Miss Britely: “Do you liko pork chops for breakfast, Mr. Nevergo?” Mr Ncvergo: “Pork chops? Oh, ah, ye*, much indeed.” Miss Britely: “If you’ll excuse me a moment, I’ll tell mamma to get some. I think I hear her starting to market.” Wife (reading from paper): “Thi* paper says that peanuts are injurious to the voice.” Husband: “Is that so? I never thought there was so much virtue in a peanut. I wonder what they cost a hundred-weight?” Wife; “I'm sure I don’t know. Why?” Husband: “I was thinking of laying in a stock of them. Do you like peanuts, my deart* ■ p Rabblt Brains for Teething Infinite, The natives of Arkansas have many curious customs and remedies for the ill* that man is heir to that few people out¬ side of the State would ever think of adopting. Among others is their relief for the painful teething through which every baby has to go. When their children become frosful on account of prospective teeth the parents hie them¬ selves to the woods, and, if possible, catch a rabbit alive. If they are unable to do this they shoot one, and then they remove its brains. Taking a large quantity of the brains, still warm with the blood of the animal, they put it in a piece of cheese cloth, which they then rub over tho babies’ gumi. This pos¬ sibly would not appear to those who have not been educated up to it to be a very desirable method of bringing relief to the baby, hut it is a very effective one, and has never been known to fail; Gen¬ erally six or seven mothers who ere blessed with teething infants, get to¬ gether and go through in unison. Till* is supposed to hasten the attainment of the desired result. I