Newspaper Page Text
REV. DR. TALIR 6 B.
TILE ‘BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN¬
DAY SERMON.
" — ]
Hnbjcfl! •*Concord and Discord.”
I
Tsxt: “ Who laid the corner-stone thereof,
when Job i the morning Hart sang togetherf
xxxvUi., 0 , 7.
: £ssm
!ncttie'nlie*tiio^sid vvr*trowel or iron hammer
that emote the w^uare piece of granlt* into
sanctity. Wo remember mime venerable man
who presided, retneml^aUo wielding ths trowel or ham
mar. Wo the music a. the
choir stood on the scattered stones and
timtwr of the building about to be con
struct,-,!. The leaves of ths notebook* flut
u-red in tho wtiul am! were turned over with
tt great rustling, and wo remember bow the
i.u»», baritone, t> uor, contralto and soprano
voices commingled. h|»f*rlai They had for many days that
r*hfanting tho the programme, laying.
it might lx-worthy of corner stone
In my text tho poet of Uz calls us to a
grandcr this ceremony—the tempi# laying of world. the founda- Tho
lion of great of a
, orncr stone was a block of light, and the
and trowel the was embankment* of relisttial crystal. of cloud All sUxei about the
on
nugidic cUoristcrK, unrolling their librettos
<>( overture, nml oth. r «„i i,U clappe,l shin
mg cyiulials while the ceremony went on,
mid Lot, th.- architect, by stroke of light
after stroke of light., dedicated this great
cathedral -.f a worlil, with mountains for
pillars, flowering anl fields sky for for floor*, frescoed and ceiling, and and
sunrise
midnight aurora for upholstery. “ Who laid
the cornerstone tlu-rf” thereof, wlwm tiis morning
stars s-tng tog
Th« fa< t i? that the whole universe was a
musical romnlfto ftt-l •n’l', an utibrokoti dithyramb, a
|K,rtf lio. The great sheet of im
mcn ity had ls*en *pr> ad out, and written on
it were the stars, tlu-smaller of them minims,
the larger of them sustained notes. The
in.-teors marked tho staccato passages, the
whole heavens a gamut, with nil sounds,into
nations tho worlds and modulations, musical interval, the space trembling Irtween
a of
Stellar liglit a quaver, the thunder a bass
ci. f, the wind among trees a treble clef.
That Is tho way fio I made all things, a per
feet harmony.
But orm day a harp string snapped in the
great orcln- tra. One day u voice sounded
out of tun-. (>ne day a discord, harsh uad
terrific, grat' d upon the glorious antiphony.
It wa* s.n that made tho dissonance, ami that
liiirsh ills ord has Issm sounding through the
centuries. All the work of Christians, and
philunthropisU, to that discord und and reformers all of things all ages, back i*
into slop tilt- Imrmony g.-t
fierfe t which was heard ut
the morning laying of the together. t urner stone Before when I the
Star* sang get
through, it |ibiin that if I nm i* divinely discord hi-lped, ami righteousness 1 will make
«in
is harmony
That thin s in general are out of tune is as
jilnin a* to u musician'* ear is the unhappy
' In .It of clarionet und bassoon in un orc-nes
t ral romlering.
Thu w<u Id’s health out of tune: Weak lung
and Un- amosphcic in collision, disordered
•sc awl noon lay light In quarrel, rheumatic
limb an I dump w. tl,or in struggle, neural
gi.n, und pneumonias, and consumptions,
hoods nod epileftsi' d eitk?». S m flocks W here swoopti|K>n Had neighbor
an you one person
with sound throat, and ken eyesight, and
nlert ear, and oasv respiration, aud regular
pulsation, lion, and steady and supple limb, and find prime hundred digits
who have b»j nerves, you because a
to verv careful this, or
tlmt. or the other physical function is disor
dorcil.
The human iutello t out of tune: Tho
iiidgmi-nt wronglv swerve. 1 , or the memory
leaky, or the will weak, or tho temtior in
tonal. flumnmblo,nnd Domestic the life well-balanced mind exi-cp- only
out of turn?: Not
here ami tliere a conjugal outbreak of incom
putil.dity of filial ti"ni|H-r outbreak through the divorce
court*, or tv about a father’s
will through th • Surrogate'* t ourt, or a cose
of wile lieui ing or husband poisoning through
the crimin.'il loiuti, but thousand* of fam
ill< § witU Jum» outside utttl elumiar y capital; within.
tlicir Kocdfty Moi'icty hands tin) out oiii of «; tui tune: other's Labor und
t on oil tMifh each tiiroats. Spirit of
caste in keeping struggle those dbwn in the social scale
n to get up. and putting those
who are up in anxiety lest they have to come
down. No wonder the old pianoforte of so
ciety is nllout of tune, w hcii hyisavisy, and
lying, and and subterfuge, and double dealing,
sycophancy, have for and ti.uoO charlatanism, being anil re
xenge the keys and years hanging *
away at stamping tlie (ledals.
<111 all sides there Is a perpetual shipwreck
of Imrmoniivs. Nations in disi'ord.
utilizing for it, that. so wro tla< ng is tlm feeling chosen of nation
aiHl.lcstru-.lv.., mil ion In symliols this are fierce
country, where our
skies are 1 nil of robins und doves mid morn
ing lurks,so have forour national symbol the
fierce an I iltliy i-.igD, as Iminoriil a bird ns
cun be found inn!. tlw« orniihnlogieal cata
logics, Iambi lu follow (beat I' ritm th’ 11 . wiicrethey symbol have
and jit.ii. deer, dr is the
iticreilc In Hus in, where from bo
tween her li'.zen north ami blooming south
all kindly I 1 Is dwell, they choose the alavor- growl
ing ......rami m woilds l,era!dry
He llgiiiv it tlv dragon, which is a winge.1
serpent, ferocious .-mil dreadful. Andsofond
is the world or i onteution that we climb out
through tlu> h-iiMivv and spnU I .ipti/.o one of the
call it Mu planets w,t , tic of and battle, wegiv* and
war.
I - the eigiit li I,, of the zodiac the name
of the sc-. : I on, a < leatare which is chiefly
«s'l"l .rated I-: , - de t II .• sthi:; Bat, after
nil, thr -\- *yml o'* .'xpre-sivo of lie?
tvav tint I b-i ! I t.-l ,,i Discord
'vide n i I It' i n i!.: "li'i* ing the seas.
I Mltpp ' - \ .1 ■ !i i\ 'Vi’i, y
bit e v I . u other drv
i;>i»N : , an 1 I. w in«|.ly grocery,nen
«fMv Hi- gi.'. orvnien on the
.-i-ii "liter and Ii-dv m'm ,’ful will T
p It mini t IS <>,, that cooWng
' “ 8 " '
•' ,. , ,
m it , i.r&r«±sr
*.................. “hi™ 2 i
...... ' '
“Hliot h the ties tl at bin |.
tier lie ir - to Cliri* I m l au.
, cin;V,'V'„', . , 1 7 ';.'.i .
• ,
tl) v. it. U ' V,'‘ th.........ling ! *' ; dtii-ang —ids together, corm-r
.
H,is!,nl I ", i,md’i’ Jirt 7 - ",’r : 1
tl «t f hn ,.R,th
.... i'iiiUi i I . 11 ' 1 1Sl " r If ' 'W, tlM
tl «
I'mi I ..ays: “T|i t , whole cre.ati.m zroaneth”
Slid while the night ingoK and the wood
I n k. and tho can 11 -x and th ■ plover, sonic
lllIICH S "; > 1 ) NWl >.tl ' tint! tli-.i'iiotvs hays
l-l-ll 1VI in. ... , -'.' i" L'.'iis ! it' 'mthe
is lout, I thnt 111 is'n key of
I* and thnt th- conn .nnt Iuumo in the
wmp.d -hoir. yet s,nuts,nan’*gun and the
it itiiiiial blast oft-ii 1-ave them rutllwl and
=
i
:r-t -crV s ' r ' .ut one night he handed to
n .ik h stvet ' >.l t"m‘; t U ie’thnt" tl„.'tnlKS rep"
a w 'ii - in.-om.it ion, i„d trknl to
V on-tls, „i, ith-ff,o,u was written
11 tm.’s .11 >-t (Minus piece, ontitlwl
1 n d‘*.-im ing-iiiim* but
f it v .......;V i'VJfiKf*
i ii I o.» V tl »i* '
f JV l . It’'! !<*, «•*»111
wmr.tn, are dtalMlic
1 -b;' nro ihtnon.n mmutaay, art grand
III o •li «'f nrt-■ allegro of p*Tiliti<m.
Hut H »»» Dii” world thitigH in genera! aro
u.u of turn* to our frail imp. how nui li morn
>•* to t*aiH i hi,' ••lie and dtsitU" It takei n
l.’i ■t' t i*t fully tui to appreciate di.*.'t,-n*-ini'nt
Mitt ml. Mitttv have tut capacity to detect
« l.-fivt of tiiusiv’al execution, and, though
tli w.-rc in one liar «* many offenses
ii aiu-t ImrniiMi" iv n* could croud in i*’tween
lb lo.v. r 1 "t the ii is* and »h liighe: t; of
t - • H I a 1 I. i! wil l’d give the •tent tin di-c.mt
t. rt w lii!. .hi the forehead of the elucated
H tt't i* id* of drat ion would *tvi 1 out
ii - r.-uft of the hnrrowing tlissonancu.
'.’ ole mi aunt ttt- »:»* p.-rfortuing on a
Im.iho .lofin nnd bad hi*t -1ftt -k tins wrong chord,
Sebax isu B ich. the iinmurtul com
I o*...-, mu.-iv l the room, and the atnateur
rn ■o in oinliarniHcinent. and Uach riethed pant
th 'host, who *:..ji|»*l forward to greet him
hm l In-fore the ke. Iioard had etntiptxl vibrat
r
"Tl........ Then Bach turned and cave *alu
lotion to ,ln> ho«t who Imd invited him.
but the worst of all discord* i* moral di
e.-rd If ws-irtv and the world are painfully
•fi-onlant to inq*’if.-et nmn,what must they
lie to ni perfect G.vD People try to define
wimt sin i». It vein, to me that sin i* get
ting out of harmony withtiod, a disagre.*
m»nt with Hi* holims*, with Uis purity,with
Ills love, with Hi* eontmunds; our will clash
ng with Hi* w ill, th,. unit,, dadiittg agam*t
Hi* infinite, the frail ogatnrt the pur taut, the
-at-l again HIM 'restop. Hitfi If a toousmtd
iiniHk'i iiH, with lint**. rnrm*t a-piston,
atj-l trumoet, and violonrello. nml luuitboya,
and tromfions, and all the wind and stringed
in trumentH that ever gathered in a Duswd
;v; and o*t .lMth« oTtunj'im ptac*
ni M ild with shrieking, and
grating, and rm.pin< sounds, th«*y could not
make *ui'h a pan b-monium a* that which
"‘h'vs in a sinful soul when God listen* to the
play of it* thoughts, passions and emotions—
d.scord, lifelong distnirtl, maildening iliscord.
The worlil jwty* more for discard than it
does for <-onsonano«. High price* have ls*>n
Other $82.', to hear har in Bo*ton, and an. .titer
fffflO to liaar her in Providence. Fabulous
price* have been paid for sweet sound*, but
rrim«r -?!■ ^ Vaw.fifo.ttJo, . The
Mie American rival war over and
w«r dsbtj of urofesred chrtttlan nation*
wm
and ntm, crushed aad flaat tr hearts, oars d rttteo, aiwi CHI
IDisoaitl «ar
Hatan asks. Discord
But I have So tell you tl
that the morning stare as M
at the laying of the sm
atone is to be resumed agi__
gr eatest overture was oompeasd a
the °InTlU
in music where
th* places whore he awakened. S
bo stars u"™ U-xt. more °hu of has t he grandly been world’* asleep, rendered existence but it HmuTe by will than the swahpa i &£ ^n‘ by tha
mm s •
intemationaltt^ to be attaned, Hsrais
ana ‘ ^ m, wnat way I but by wb “* fort*
olden timo the choristers had a tuning
[® J* r a” „ k n 7 hack P® w or music rack aiw put
‘to the ear and thenstart thstuns, aad afl
the other voices would join- In modeAar
chostra the lea<Jer has a complete instruosent,
attuned, and be sounds that, and an
tho other performers tarn tho keys of their
instruments to make them correraond, and
w»n«! tlie bow over the string, and iMlea,
a,u ^ sound out over agaio. nntXl all the keys
* re .screwed to concert p.tch, and the dls
cords molt into one groat symphony, an d the
curtain hoist* an l the baton taps, and Midi
cm-.st dl-t# and are the raptuml I'eri with Rossini’s Kchumaan’a “Phra- Mrter”
or “Htabat
or f-a-hs “Mngniflcat” in D, or Gounod's
L«* icmptlon. ■
Now, our world can never be attuned by
an would Imperfect not do. instrument. Heaven has ordained Even a Cremona the ohly
indrument, and it is ma<leput of the wood of
1 the cross, an I tho voices that accompatffit
are importod voices, can tat rices of the first
LhrUtmns night, when heaven serenaded the
‘'a rtl1 with “Glory to God in the higbert and
on eirth ticace, good will to men. I-esS-we
] rt »rt too far off and get lost in gene rally* ,
we had hotter Iiegjn with ourselves, get our
own ani ^ ' ^ ^ ,l ^annonv with the
eternal attune Chrirt. u-t, to chord Oh, for our His will almighty with his spirit will,
to nmdulate our life with his life, and bring
us into unison with all thnt is pure and sslf
sacrificing and all heavenly. broken and The twisted, strings of our
i nature are and th*
,,ow '» *° H *ack it oannotevokeanythingmel
lifi«»ma The i us tinmen t made for heaven to
play on has liecn roughly twanged and strucll
*'y influences worldly and demoniac. O.
paster hand of Christ, restore this split and
fractured ami despoiled and unstrung nature
until it shall wail out for this sin, and then
thrill with divine pardon,
Hie wholo world must also be attuned by
the same power. A few days ago I was in
rail banks weighing scale manufactor tory
°f t < rmont. Kix liumlred hands, and they
have never had a strike. Complete harmony
between labor and capital, the operativesof
s.-ores of years in their beautiful nomas near
u y ,tl0 mansions of the manufacturers, whoso
invention and Christian behavior made the
great, enterprise, Ko all tho world over labor
“»'* '* < “P'tal liav,! will heard tie what brought is called into euphony- “An
ni!iv ' the
vil Chorus,” composed by Verdi, a tune
clayed v mighty by hammers, stroke, great and and with small, now
w itli now heavy
stroke, Is-ating world a great iron anvil. That U)
i w hat the has got to come to—anvil
chorus, yard chorus, stick crowbar chorus, chorus, shuttle chorus, pickax
trowel
! chorus, gold mine chorus, rail track chorus,
locomotive chorus. It can be done, and it
W 'H done. Ho all social life will bo nt
tunetl by the GoRjoi harp. There will
*"> as many classes in society as
no ' v . I,ut tl1 ® classes will not be regu
lfstv*d by birth, or wealth, or accident,
but by the scale of virtue and benevolence,
,,n 1 l* , °P ,e Wl, l 1,e ass'gne*! to their places
,ls ccllenf,. K'»o>. So or also, very good, or life most ex
commercial will lie
attuned, und there will bo twelve in every
doflm ami sixteen ounces in every pound,
and sound apples at those the bottom top. of and tho silk barrel goods will will be
as as on
not Is? cotton, and sellers will not have to
charge price because honest people will more than the right
otaer* not pay, aud goods
W| d come to you corresponding with the
sample hy which you purchased them, and
coffee will not tie chickoried aud sugar will
not lie sanded, ami milk will not be chalked
and adulteration of ftxxl will be a State’s
prison tun**l, offense. Elections Aye, in England all things shall beat
) and the United
Htntos will no more be a grand carnival of
defamation and scurrility, but the elevation
of In righteous the Sixteenth men in a righteous way.
century the singers, lowest called
the Fischer brothers, reached the bass
' thrilled ver recorded, I-a and Bastardella, the highest note ever
voice had was by of three and Catalini>
a compass and a half octaves,
but Christianity is more wonderful,for it runs
all up and down the greatest heights and the
I it deejiest will depth* everything of the world's necessity, bring and
<s>inpass and it in ac
cord with the song which the morning stars
! *'iig All the at xacrad the laying m.isio of the world's homes corner-stone.
in and concert
halls and elmreiies tends toward this consum
mation. Make it more and more hearty,
Brig in your families. Sing in your places
business. If wo with projier spirit usa
'boss faculties, we are rehearsing for the
Heaven is to have a new song, an entirely
'*o.v song, but 1 should not wonder if, as
: '"metimes oireartli a tune is.fashioned out of
mu,v tunes, or it is one tune with ths varia
at ions, have so some of the songs of the redeeme.1
nny 'arth, and playing thrilling through them tbs songs of
the great anthem now of the saved, as coming through
l harjK’rs with their harps, and accompanied trumpeters
»y
with the strains thatr tru Apts, Antioch, we should bear some or
of an.l Mount Pisgah,
and Coronation, and lR>nox, iu»d St. Martin's,
and Fountain, and Ariel and Old Hundred.
How they would bring to mind the praying
Circles, ^hf-'l/mV^rth and communion days, ami the tthrist
weiniuTlel farewell l ' UI< eurtii n,Rv r.'.!! 1 ! l.l?
‘bat when we bid to we lire to
bi, ‘ f,ir ‘7 el i to al ! U T‘ Fran.liol.UKs.rel
I , l ^ No'l' 'T'ATit* "ft
us get out of the one and enter the othor.
After our dreadful civil war w,es over, and .a
torn of some of Ins music, to he retid.-r?. 1 on
tli:,t o0,nHi,,n ' 1 accoinpaniel him to tho
| lmnn,«r'Kl5™
The mastcrpltvcs „f all ag-s render d hour
after hour, and day after day - Hu, Ids
“Judas Maceabu'us," Hitolu's “List ^ Ju lg
i fc^on ^ surri “i'orouluhmMush ' re h
and up in that biUowedaailnst
the heavens. The mighty cadence within
wor « accompanied on the outside hy th?
j g j c discharged by elertriuitv tbuulerimr ustouudaS
their awful bars of harmony that
! *l|I ^“'nrtunes nations. I bowed my heal an l wept.
could'not JvEJ endure'* 11 -)*'' it° ( ’ !K "'uTi'-iaii ' ,;a itin
ing I felt I chorm', ail
the voices were in full and tlu
baton* In full wave, and all the orchestra i.»
£ tho^owere'of^hecitv^ofiel > nn<1 a l * u,, i , 11 ~ a ^lidr’nrik'stK , unv,ls U! '' 1 ^
srSsSS !
our nuti.lnal iiir the “si a ,- 7*n l mortal.‘an ri .!i ii ,n
nor.” It was too mu-h for « 1
quit* "' enoughfor faintwl an immortal, to latar, an l
r aajd ' 1 1 under '“'T its - on « sped womanly spirit, be with re
power, away to
’
u lzn-d “'ri". onr flmi li~' }MlZ i n tt,.
SSS?*.J5 SI..1 all
«S t£ tSsL«“.J™
tlw organs t hat ever 'iwaudk-d rmtiteln / of
sorrow snund only a grand march 0 joy, and
rcsum'rtion T.„r“d dcati. t and^ “iuS, < all’the°eann»ar' X that*ever ImUt
ho
eternal earth and victory, minstrely and over ali the acclaim of
of heavon there will l«j
hearl one voire sweotwr an l mightier than
V..I C O ni'n>t B-innii, a"yi„g "l tli-cmi, nm Vlt.lm Und
OiniVM. th. gtmd the first '
and the la*t.” Th-n at iU-> In vingof th > top
together.”
- - - ---
Hf XlUtM S HtlllttO.
— —
Tho Parkersburg Va. Journal says’
* "Iioin > ^ng the mamed. wife ooiiple of tho from Ohio of
is neagro raoe
and tho Imsbiiud of thu Caucasian. Tho
very ()„, ), peculiar l> feature of the case is that
llH J H ! „ ( l dl>f TVt ,a know Hint l t hia 118
„.;/„ t luu , wioreti ,i . ttloou , in - i her . i
’ veins. -
,,,, 1 hey are both quite young, and have
li'on imirriod less than a year. I
The trirl formelv lived* in this citv
where she was 08 eninlovod e “'F ln y i1 « ns s a a domealm ilomeslio,
“ « m ® , here onginaUy from out the
Baltimore nul Ohio Kiulroad, aome*
whore in tho neighborhood of Clark*
burg. She is a little nood-lookinw brunette
and b^'SwHlS^IuiS hIioxvs but tnu» of her h£moihX African
^
whs W,M * of l *f the the darkest darkest eltony, eltony, as us is in well well
known by plenty of people lu this city. !
The young man is tlio son of a »
'
t( u " f larnier in , Uhio. )( • lio met , tt,„ tho giri M r !
* w ‘ re » became attached to her, and about ;
, R year they married. It is i
said ago were
that he lias never had the slightest
br, do haa adr ?P of <»L>rod blood in
, *''‘ r V, IUS . as she has , been Very careful
.
*° tsttneeal the fact from him. they live
hnppiJr together, his case illustrating
A d _?! 11 ]**, wbfare |« n 0 I J n ~2 ’
! ,!s a a dtta a tlinn folly to
*
r TEMPERANCE.
Ow Thanksgiving Bay.
fial songs in rap to rs rise
Where Andmerrtss plenty’s dailySantecThenT' star lit banner flies.
“>i when we dreamed a cloud was near,
A bow spanned the bright hemisphere!
KwssrsssUfys — ._ 1 | 1
And winnow* from hig thought* the tana
., '
fwaa hands of angels unawares.
hZ?^ tewolng “1 fields l- bronzed labor tills
M d £ 5 fr 5 ? " ted ’
uS Baling ttS^SS fruitage andS W ”
the from tto dust
’
—. , ,
Our Foodmfwcontinentso^ktaCT^ ~am. 11
’
With faces sad and garments torn,
Wa Us to bow the not Cross, here; where our homage Mercy brings j
clings.
W« By rtriving best can for shqfr our brother grateful weal. zeal
our s
the wounded heart that bleeds,
A?oK w^audT^h"needs.
Good thoughts are bla-t when coined in
deeds.
QeorgeW. Bungay,in Temperance Advocate,
i
Prohibit ion in Kansas !
Here in Kansas, after Prohibition was
adopted form their a* duties long as officers neglected toper
and suffered dram-shops to
continue in business there were speakers,
shop b^toenfb^e art,*treoause, they saiil: “It is inqiossi
the law.” Three years ago at
least fifty newspapers in Kansas were abus
ing the prohibition law and tLe pleading the
cause of the rum seller a Hut law is en- ,
forced, and th^ notone paper in Kansas now a«l
voeates reestableslin-.ent of the grog.
.‘, n tbi * ‘ ci 7 ot
stm rera, w railroad ar. beingVuvislfbuildiiig construction extending, is in |.rog’ the
people all ahead busy, happy and hojH-ful, with a
prospect most encouraging, and not a
wall without licensing dram-selling. We have
a dear, proud sober, of, preaperous city that all of us
are and nothing has helped us more
tom our banishment of the saloon—IbpeAd
Drunke Abroad. ' i
mcK.
are'th^tonics^bwdiscusrimi'hi^itprnathiiial a^ffl S^^ SSSSyiSrS
learn that we have at length such a congress
for the consideration of inebriety, or what
we prefer to call drunkenness, lir. Norman
msetingwTthe\\v2m?nster^T<mn°Hafl,^on the 6 th inst. It is lamentable find
to that in
all civilized countries this vice—or, as the
iSI&d! Congress prefers to cisU it. this disease—is so
affected ae™a„rFra^a«v others; and “dS5? still,
ns what is sadder
they the s re the most morbi blameworthy uncivilized in carrying
mat rite* to peoples,
which are being demoralized and destroyed
perienco iwlly!"'Mon of that in Australia fellow
subjects say our
drink far beyond anything in
this country, and beyond their own
P°I ati< 8 t V, < ‘ n ^' J '" IU S a ,*f°- Cheva
M iu Tt , , lk , U
storfT siat<d e>mgnM tbBt bi
Austria drunkenness was increasing
everywhere on a dangerous scale. Dr.
fapidity. reformers Everywhere and noble there are who temper
once men set a
splendid The leaders example of medicine of sobriety every and where self-denial. by their
SZXIS psthologhal oI5ra^thLXiy-1£S? and other medical studies de
kidneys, brain l bladder. What is ltver!
un< to be
done fascinating? against a Dr. disease T. D. so Crothers deep and thinks a voice that so
in the United States the time is not far dis
i tant when the drunkard will be taken from
I ! his home and from the street, and miaran
ttned in special hospital*. The inadequate
j Habitual is about to Drunkard's expire, and bill of few our weak own attempts country
a
{ i at these strengthening not radical it remedies. are to be Another made. But j
are sug
gestion at the Congress was that school
children should bo taught the effects of
| drink on health and national welfare,
Thfs is to.be commended. Mere general
intelligence might have Is I not expected. so much a SjMcifi.- safeguard infer- as
: wen
mation drilled into the young of all the Kuro
j pean schools seems loudly called for. The
medical profession can do mu. h. Statesmen!
aad royal families have a grave responsibili
ty in brought heavy indictment home to them this this by Canon month’s mouth's Farrar Con
a in Con*
Mmporarti Ueriew, entitled “Africa “Africa and and the tho
countrymen DfljalrTrade,’’ " of of which which Livingstone Livingstone is is sal sa.t reading leading Stanley. Stanley. for for the the
and and
Equin.d, liqntand, (nrin-iny—i U.nmmy-s siieoially siRx-mlly the chief chit Oermany— Ueimmy- riqtri-setitti
anffthe n*-the I’nital t’liitt-d States, State*, tne f nTnsentn
tires “Gliristiaidty of that religion tho of mighty which Chnnningsuid:
is piwcr U'iore
xThfch intemperance is to fall, ’ are pouring
rum and other spirits into Africa a- fast us
Mar stlint heartless traders can do it, without re>
from their nil-rent home, mid against
t«»Heous cry of the hapless people and chiefs
’ of the country, who let f that it will destroy
them, and that it is a vyoiw curse than the
slave trade, which our lathers did so much
b> exb'rminat", L "‘ l '
A . Lv p ... , ..... ‘ * .. '** .
T^rance j m H it ‘ ,r ° n ^ ,n tho iovth *
iratteman, what to do an invalid, who wanted to know
to get his strength lie thought
"hen I told hint that was not the object in 1
making beer, to have tho substance of the
grajw sugar. All the ahstlml ustsl for drink
mg is nude in this w.,v. Wh liter the alcohol
i» m beer, or wine, or brandy, or whisky, the
«ut“ you how Jsthcstarcj,"changed
into 8 U Kar? To understand this you must
know that sugar and starch ure composed of
th « elements of nutter. There are |
which water is composed—oxygen and hydro
gen—united i{»ori with h irB^. these in starch, change it
{Iiri-* Jiras Uga whciTit sprouts*'’byW
t hnt into sugar rrfthe
sorbing Thojtarley the is moisture or water gnaind.
sprouted Afti^lt^^’VTTt for this purpose. It is
wUh"wX^ h ^rotftJ ° ttkTn ft'is’then “"J
cruAtriaKrmeXl an d the are o U wstir
lagar in warm and
tlu is changed into alcohol. This makes
* ,,u
ing, taTjff^oraffi^id^oX^f^fha and gives it its bitter taste. The beer
S^tyofit 2J.2? ^ t | « i«,m if hi takes
Si one makes h fin drunk ’ the other
As to htartupid nutriment, anything
or to give
SKSat'?5CtLST« 8^J5Sa^TS5KR!«r a ' V“
Drinking beer takes away the strenrth-it
don't give any. Where much is used, as it is
.ImnsTife^i>rniHiii , ii S {V* "ininfn ”
takes off five yeare. and insures only the best
“ Three who drink mn-hbeor took thick
and full; this wcilled t^r-l,lout, if taken
with sick n«« th^y ofU'n (licsmMctilv. They
h« e not the ihanoe of recoxery that ^ other
want to be healthy and strong h and live many
„*! k w£i®ofV '1 n.* - °D 11 ,> P 1!i et,t,> " < } r ? 11 0 tban 1
_
The Maine Plan the Rest,
Tho British Medical IWss and Circular
conuneuts a* follows u|k>ii the tnodern fa*hiou
to Great Britain of bouoriug brewer* and of
«t advance* ” !
gr of Into years, government
no view*, inatter have what shown* their themselves particular pohti<-ai
«nd ta our mind unduly, extremely in confer
honoreon the gener.,us
nn of ® th.. driuk-liaflic. princely There is representatives
which has become familiar from hardly a name
bottles and casks, but is embellished sving it on
the aklition of a title of now sort, though by
dlWcnlt some it
* a to sre on w hat grounds.” TV
M a )n « P 1 *" °f putting the brewer,, in prison
1 i* a great improvement upon the prevalent
~~National British urage Thmf&rttnoe of conferring a< ivocate, title* u^on them
1 !
—— -
® r ' Talmagc Not Mttcb Dismayed,
n J* i , i ' or ^ FotVv;—If the Supreme Court : '
That vidnkw will arouse the nation. Jt will
be the death -knell of the liuuor im mr.
T. Dx Witt T ALU AGE.
BnoogtYW, r. October Octobw 22, 22. 1R#T.
Tt-mperance News and Notes.
Chicago has so-called frontage! “high license” and
eighteen mites of saloon
Whitman County, Georgia, ha* majority. recently
been carried for prohibition by 400
1*0,000 Texas, good, says clean, the Safe white Ballot, ballots voted in favor about of ]
^ rot* wo. made uta even J
ma Ujt, intoUkMrtTMd retpeota
RBBIWW ►IPB?' W. w • ,
ttU Aim GABDEK.
pie orchard for more than forty years,
u«Jl CT "# k !!l*“? glem PPK tpee “ **“*
length of tuns from blight. Several
rV ......, 2 ^“Xi^’S. nffjwi. 1 . e ') t tsirs ° cut
f ?
lire or die. £ In one or two ”.£?££ vcors from
that Mm. !•
then I have paid Sf no attention to it, and
consider it minor importance. The
pear kill blight the is quite different, for when it
» n« w wood it does not stop
there » like the detraction ft PP le trae blight, but
goes on to the of the tree.
Some varieties of apples are worse
affected than others, even when they
» re all mixed through each other. I
hftv ® “ever known the blight to injure
the vitality of a tree, but it makes it
look bad.
-
Light and Flavor.
to As conforming showing that light is not necessary
ha?e or flavor-development of
that completed their growth,
" e bad, savs a contributor to the hew
York Tribune , that grapes inclosed in
bags of thick paper, or even in begs .
covered black with printers’ ink, from
carl v June til1 gathered in Oc tober, have
|ftter - and
color more refined flavor than
those left uncovered. Pears ripen better
in a cool room, and covered with a cloth,
than on the tree, and their color is finer,
7 IoD h ^ ?f r aro If T k ‘ ss P»cked - ! ia ¥ e just t0 as rot soon ’ aud as kec they P
-
«siddy 1 detach , at the natural suture when
lifted to the horizontal, and laid in some
close material which ‘ ,2 will ./iLi not ®Liho. impart
or nduce mould sifted <oal ashes,
f< », J r example, or roasted sawdust—and
whe ^, thR *«“P e * atur e and a.r
» is H|)t to shrivel anti lose it. flavor with
its juice. Winter pears should l>e left
on the trees as late as frost will permit.
..dhor'eiimc^rnt'rcp.s'nLo^ p ew know what excellence thev have
stored. winter lfgood sorts, well grown and well
_____
Weeding Out Poor Stock.
What kind of stock the farmer sells
lias more to do with success or failure
than any other one item in farm manage
ment ‘ We think most farmers are learn
than ;?<!*»•* formerly. m«p It ; rUc„l„ is no longer „n ,hi. easy point for
the butcher or drovers to ride through
the country nick-ino nut the choicest
and leaving .paying the farmer a trifle the more scrubs. for them, The
reverse of this is now so often the case
that the business of buying cattle and
other live stock in the l ast lias to some
extent gone out of fashion. It is easier
to order dressed beef from the far West,
or butcher bring them the here live stock on cars and
»“»'«" "»«><■ ?{.bh » * 1 - bn.
ers are often left with the animals net
worth keeping, and yet not easy to sell.
Unless a farmer is a pretty close calcula
tor this condition of affairs may continue
> ca r aft er >' eur ’ uutil the s ‘°P k ha «, the
saying . is, . “more than eaten its head
It is easy to see that such animals must
Ldni eHV lJo mTta^wXVZcl matter how good the crops Ul
m:i y , be whatever is fed to inferior am
mals brings ; little return. In olden times
there was less competition and a larger
margin of protit. Then poor stock did
nut so much, for m-ryliody had
less of . With the
more or it. improve
ments that have now been made in do
rncstir rnostK- nninialit aninuil*^ it it in is mnrn B' 01- '' nB«o..or« necessary «l.n.. than
ever before to oet and atep tno <),,, I...A uest.
it n costs more too tnan it useu to, though
creased not proportionubly excellence more than its in
warrants. The farmers
w ho complain ,f that to!, peditrreed stock of
, b rond itn ns B ( .<ists much UCH ; nn re lls •*
productiveness. , 1 his • ’
• especially „ true
1 is
of cows for milk and butter. Man v
farmer can well afford to sell off his three
f ollr or j la ]f a dozen ordinarv anim-ils
an< * P»‘ „, lf ,holr pnee in one. J he progeny
lrom the one wnj be worth for raising
more than from all that he previously
had He will save expense Jil of feedinir
s , lllpr rnuous fl uol , a iU amials 1 i m ..is and extra M tr.. labor )..b„r 111
care and milking. One thoroughbred
cow may thus be the foundation of
valuable valuable herd. herd,
j{ It '| l is ,j„. the K snme „„ with all other firm «»;
,nala m 1 , - v good farming , can « 1 be done 1
-
w ith . , poor horses. If the team inefficient,
is
the fact hinders all farm work and causes
it to be dont at a loss It is one of the
disadvanta'rcs of ro.itinnin.r lot.., tt...
farming bus ness, that unless the # fanner
18 pretty wide awake lu? will soon find
his stables filled with animals post, their
best service. No one would buy such
i, ors ,. s tola--dn f-trmin.r sees’ with hut deimef- lmvin,,
them, the farmer n yearly
at ion of value which he vainlv attempts
to recover. A year ago n home that Tern
readily have sold for #150 is now
he will be an old horse, salable, p.rhaps,
for #50, yet really not worth taking as a
,ni,st l "' in hard stress indeed who will
depend on him to do a season’s work on
„ in , al> not mcrelt
t« Other ton stock, "that
poor beginners mainly start out with.
They nobody take the leavings of the rich
onV ever cxceptio"\o made monev bv this i" method aS; ;
The !
past their prime, of good blood and not
valuable past breeding age. Sometimes from such
young stock may be bred and
the profit on the you no animals more
As a rule, however, nil animals much past
their prime should be disposed of as soon
possible. Old horses that have done
faithful service ni3y be killed in some
painless ill-treated manner, by rather tlinn Killing sold to with- be
strangers.
out usin fattening, thc saving only the hide and
4 f rareass ns manure, may often
l»e a better means of disposing super
animated cows than trying to winter or
crease their through’every poverty as has been the
u ' ual rulc iratJ. age and in
every country .-Cult
_
an _ .. , fn _
’ * ‘ ar * 11 • 0 ’ "*•
■»»"■*«<=« • A . rf S. C V‘ b l e "?*'.)* P ■ 0, ** 00d ,,1 “ e
Remember und plant tomatoes in
sandy soil, not in rich loams.
Sweet potatoes are asserted by some to
be better than corn for fattening pig*.
Dandelions in the pasture are recom
incndwl by tU( , AVr/A British Aarkul- J
.
’
. ..
of 'f an h of f the V. E Atlantu. ^
»» I op-corn is said to he better for poul
men.
Mr. A. 8 . Fuller thinks the Japanese
persimmon likely to prove a valuable
'iit - • tho , u Southern States, but
‘ r in too ten
tier for the North.
l-ine manure is better lhan coarw, .ml
, '“‘n* are the best agents for breaking it
u l'- Scatter wheat over the pile and keep
the fowls scratching,
11 It *■ is sutreested suggestea that ttiat muen much iwmr poor hotter butter
»s . made in farm dairies beeausc farmers
do not provide their wives and daugh
ters with improved r appliances '
bc nature . . plaster . to attract
* °» is
moisture from the atmosphere, and if
any absorbed nitrogen exist therein it will be
and held for nlaut * use
According to 3fr. Berckmans, in peach
yellows are unknown Georgia and
other Southern Sat^muchVdo States and he thinks it
!fttc.^ha« ««»“« tne utsease. t od o w«t h
Prof. Stover says a ration of thirty
pounds of the pumpkins flow and improve per ciw, the daily, quality will
increase
of milk. More than this quantity should
uot be given.
Some insects are carnivorous in their
habits, and feed upon those which d -
stroy our farm crops. For example, the
ferocious “lion-beetle” preys upon the
detractive cutworm.
A fcw ycar8ago lM) p^, of
P®r auatun wa* cowiderod a large yield
I« «llogl# «w, bat novr i m w jire
• ?-;• he •*
.
MBSs putting all his under for
kedTand strew cow
buying liberally of wheat
bran
Tto.« loot practical method, of
improrring dairp stock, Tiz.: By iocrcas
? nd Rt ?? e a by ^reeding. The last w
, “ d
P™?"* ivcr y 41 ™' the ........ mfachief which .
«« tV <»*» «■ ball worm plays in the corn
flc,d - It « well to know that among the
natural ^ rd the enemies h d of £■ th» Ba wonn ? ti are the>lue oriole,
*. .°.™ " ,’ “° pe
the king bird and the quail. l
L. 8 . Coffin says, don’t feed so much
dry hay. Run hay through the feed
cutter, mixed with ground grain, and
moistened. This will keep a horse in
better condition than if fed twice the
quantity without preparation.
A practical farmer solidity says that in setting
posts where great is required he
uses gravel and then small stones in to fill around
the posts and runs thisi water
lime mortar, thus virtually imbedding tB\
post solidity. in rock, preventing decay and insur
mg
Some experiments in the feeding of
cattle earned out by Prof. Wrightsou, at
the College or Agriculture, Downton,
the England, afford additional evidence of
off superior for the butcher economy of finishing cattle
at an early age A
beast intended for the block should never
be allowed to go back,
s- In i 6CCUring driving transplanted trees it is ad
V Pl m/ainst *T «itftkf»^ flnwn
*1 the the 8,de of t *1 thl °
roo,8 > near ‘ sUl ♦ »- l .. ^
three galvanized wires fixed toacollur at
a conve nient height f up | the t:ee, ’ and fas
ten them t0 8tun dr vcu in th e pround
...X.'tw'wn 'bat have been milked Tn’.'il to the very ' !
are 11 worth much to the butcher,
a cow o{ “bout thirteen years of age
Jr n -’ any her profit life by fattening, for in
proportion as becomes exhausted
so will digestion gradually fail.”
Experiments by Professor II. Shelton,
affair °! tk * K 1 , bat.finely-cut an “ s S , t:lte < r olle corn ' t fodder ; have demon- is much
It” att ; ract,vt ; and P tt,atab c an, »l'' s
than that c “ t lnto ( °T? 0r k ‘ n t' ths - 1 h ' :
t l 1 ?’ . f S“of cent.. oitnat h°,^ cut °™'o one
* . nt 'h, , do per cent.; tuo inches, I per
~
ccn t
Farmer Stahl of Quincy, 1U., says the
best soil for wheat is magnesian lime
atone, or a limestone clay, but it can be
profitably grown onnearfvevervfertile- lacking
drained soil On soils silica,
the straw lodges; lacking in lime, the
berry j 8 not plump, lie aids, growing
wheat on undrained land is foolishness,
not drained naturally drain the land
"'tmcinllv.
NfcliN ^ A>I) Mil l,ii I OK llOHEN.
Very pretty arc the narrow stripe*, two
or three inches apart.
Plush velvets and brocaded velvets are
seen in stylish wraps
Felt i9 to hc a ‘»-h than beaver
plush for hats this season,
I p »tti ... has h a dnnis«*t«. dupl.c.i.e in m paste Oi every every
l )rccl<nls 8 t°ne sni' po i sc^se .
Some stylish lwu-e dre ses have lace
in combination with fa a y w ,o!s.
Fall hats of silk beaver pin li ar« worn
by young ladies with their co-tuinc
*
i-_;___ L'niijue fashions in outer ____ garments
were never more in fax-or than at present.
,, Sleev ItCTCf> r es ‘ tucked with „ llu inch im . u wide M1 tucks
c n u i:.fu 111 lc k‘ ris urcsses .1 01 f fi nne n
work t
-
Long the garments heavily braided are
among f most elegant 0 of this sc ison's
novel ie8 ,,'n
Tlw * he , f tun puilta or mutton lig ,,, sleeves .
are stll ‘ ver y stylish on little girls’ tine
woolen costumes. I
A tty fashion Kislnon has ins snrim.r spuing d.'.-ino di.nng 1
pr. lip „„
” ,e l >as * season of wearing the corsage
Lauquet tiicked into the velvet bodice. {
Flowered flowered morns fabrics bid bid f-.ir lair to to be be gren
cra]ly worn and arc in wools, silks and
satins, orin*'s. all in beautiful designs and col
0 ’
An . « el , beeves . „ „ arc very gen rally „ seen
on which the graceful long the co-tu itc mantles
arc among mat stylish things ” I
shown this scaso'i ' 7
n-i 1 ‘* c Gr(,t, n 'l ic,n Heeve is more becoming , i
than the mutton leg and more artistic ;
j j, nr.dtv on soft woolen cute- i
*
r : for 1
'
,! clt» being in vogue the , belt , , buckle , , |
. naturally thing of beauty ami
ls a many
P rett y <l e ;ig n 3 are seen. Ironic of them
“ r( ‘ beautifully jeweled.
There is a fancy for large effects in
trimmings of costume, and velvet plush
marked contrast in colors.
Marie Augustin Dcspcissis, of London,
tubes and flues of steam boilers.
Thcrc were ladv doctors in la,»« W
SEdtoOhn 1 .^.^n?
fSh “**I
Very , low , crowned , bonnets , , 1,uve ap
peared at last, but it is safe to ass, rt that
»‘ ^ fn\ly make Uvo them sea-ons general. and per- j
a ps more o j
VVholc dresses of black or colotcd |
Xyons velvets will be much worn this
winter, and the handsome new plushes I
The polonaise is now’ made even more !
graceful and becoming than ever, and is
by far the most hygienic of gannents,
since no pressure comes on the waist. ,
Uloves of light gray and mastic kind
with the seams lapped and finished
about the wrist with a strip of h'ack
leather, and having several rows of black
stitching arc unite the newest
There is a <> rent virietv in the sleeves
f Matching dpe9 a suit entire from head to
o ot r 7 \ wrap, hat gloves, ihocs and
stockmgs-is though considerable again to be the mode,
opposition has liven
made againstthis expensive fashion.
run j, e G f colors allowable in
l«.l™-n.».lo »lre.-t COM, 111 ,™ i,so»icli,t i
don smoke, nijH^rti three four dark u.- i 1
or greens,
Gobelinc blue, and a new and peculiar j
crimson.
Dress skirts now appearing have the
appearanee of ungored fill gathered ;
They arc, in fact, just that (the
front and sometime; the side breadths
being slightly gored 1 . mounted on well
-Mrs. La Gieer, Topeka's female law
ye.-, has succeeded in building up a good
paying practice. 8 he i* a first-rate
abut thirty-five years of age and rather
good-looking.
There is a fancy for making o a’ ilv that
sort of fancy work which is of lasting
nature, since it has been found that it is
a w-ste of Libor to make too elaborate
attempts on frail fabrics. Now the
handiwork must needs he lasting enough *
for an heirloom.
The statistics of the accounts of Mont
Blanc show that sixty-one vx’otuen in all
made the ascent; Lng'ish women, 32;
French women, 15; kussian women, 4;
American women, 3; BwUs women, 2;
and Danish, Hungarian, Italian and
Austrian, one each.
Fur is to be a popular trimming fo
indoor and morning aresscs. Chinchilla
fur is also to be popu'ar for trimming
gray velvet, with which it forms a grace¬
ful contrast. Bands cf beaver or skunk
form artistic trimmings for •norii' r g
dresses of pale blue or white cash mere.
The craze for Russian fashioi s which
has been varying in France f jrayear or
mote is now at it* brig 1 ., and it is
reasonable to expect th,e; will be seen
in America the »uin.r- reason. The
Russians and debght flowin i'. draperies, n?e'% fabrics and gen¬
erous 3 which taken
effects. together can dm fail to produce pleasing
Non*Lwoaten* Ten srlvania c qte ts to
hgv^ the bitfgsit j 1 ^ vioilfi jn
fh. • offil- - cJfiSM
: ; .:
•CUNTIFIC ANB INDUSTRIAL. !
There are many points op the earth’s
surface below the level of the sea. Three 1
Death Valiev nfr-Ii;/,,. £rt£?‘3s
the Northern “ Califomw, „• 159 feet, and
part of the Sahara Desert,
from fifty to one hundred feet below sea
level. i
rs has been asecrtainml “ tX.t that *v„ the 1 horse ____
powei required to run a machine shop in
which seven hundred men-were employed
was 185.05, of which 06.81-horse powei
ana r n “ SlwL'^S'i'T such things .is were not machine 1
tools, leaving 08.24-Rorse power to run
the machine tools, or n trifle less than
1 -horse power for ten men
Th. Thakore 9,h,b. of Mo„l,
a dominion. most interesting There is custom in his Indian
village at the head of each
one man who is resnousible for
the he peace Ttcacc and knnn.it- honesty of . the community.
It a burglary is committed tins man must
hunt up the thief, and if he fails to find
him is compelled to pav for the stolen
goods out of lus own nocket 1 '
One ot the , latest attempts to harness
the forces of nature for the service of
man is the adaptation of a windmill for
Jh, thus t.j.l.g obtained .1 being , cl,n«mo. store tho 1 in .Icclricit, suitable
batteries, and afteiwunl used in li«dit
ing beacons for the benefit of the niari
time interests. thi There is V!, a station T- f
tbis this kind kind near ne-ir the mouth of the Seine,
and considerable success has been oh
tained.
In climates h.ving . dUt^enc. .1
seventy cold degrees in temperature between
hot ami seasons, a railroad track of
ascertained. Of totuse, the length of
road remains the same, hut expansion hn»
tlie effect of forcing the lengths of metal
o ng up of space bet w een the rails of
nearly a yard in eacli mile.
At a recent meeting of the Edinburtr 7
Ttovnl oya Rox.il S/w>:,.t7. .ot.ttx, Piofessor r>„ 1 ait
communicated some results on tlie com
press'!hi lity of water, of mercury, and of
glass. The average compressibility of a
twenty per cent, aqueous solution of
common salt per atmosphere for the first
100 atmosnheres is 0.0000310. It dimin
ishes rapidly with the percentage of salt
in solution. The compressibility of com
nion lead glass is O.OOOOJ’7 at a tern
perature of nineteen degrees C.
The classification of the fishes found
in the Sea of Galilee has led to the
strange belong discovery the that these fishes do not
to Mediterranean system, but
are peculiar, and belong to the fish sys¬
tem of the great inland lakes of Africa—
Tanganyika, ing Nyassa, and the neighbor
waters. A writer draws the inference
that untold ages ago the Jordan Valley
was filled by a lake which xvas joined to
the Red Sea, then a fresh-water lake,
which in tun was in direct comtnuniea
tion with the great lake system of
Central Africa. *
A St. Louis mau has invented an auto
iuatie grain scale. It consists of a box
with inclined partitions placed on an or
volving dinary scale. Within this box is a re
Attachca pan supported the on a rocking lever.
to lever is an upright upon
which rests a \-ibrnting valve for the pur
pose of cutting off the main flow of grain,
that Extending disturbs down from this valve is a rod
the equilibrium of the grain
when the pan is fu 1 and causes it to dis
charge the itseil. The grain pours through
main opening until the pan contains
almost level the which required weight;' then the
o;t the pan rests rocks and
partially cut- off the How. The grain
now runs in a very t-mall stream until the
weight is contp'eted, when the box de¬
scends aud the scale beam rises, break¬
ing the electro electric circuit, which, acting on
the - magnet, causes the supple¬
mental valve to cut oil the grain com¬
pletely.
How Cigars Ait Made.
Th. * * u M tobacco aN w ur leaf i. is received at f the ,,
factory , m bales, and the first process is
to dampen or “blow” it for the strippers.
The stri dirts are usually '-ills tliono-h Vic
boss *>oy are art emnlovcd tmpitjcti also also, T i hey cv recent dvc
tne. business dampened is strip tobacco the leaves, leaves and from their the
to
center stalk that runs through the middle \ * “V
. , f T . . . ,
i’i ’
requires some . ,1 iicxuugv, vv men can only 1
be acquaired by practice. An expert
stripper seventy-five cams $1.2-, a aml>l day, the less ex
L. cents VC. ' The 1 stalks k!
thrown into * 1 ’ 10 c
1,1 „ • ‘
„ ,ul to Ult norists . . gardeners , for
a,u *
, fumigating . . and the leaves
made into purposes, bundles, arc
up to be distributed
among the ci"armnkcrs 8 at the various 'arums
„ '
Lvcry day , each . cigannakcr . receives a
certain which he weight of tobacco leaves, out of
must make a certain number of
cigars. thousand, From eight to tiftce.i pounds a
weight the a cording to their si-e, is the
ot of ordinary sizes.
" lc toos a egannaker consist of a
1 .3 uki rs, a.nt a pot of
f u ?' : Taking up some of the broken
has bu ten lu. A . panish cigar
? akva - v9 ro s d «wn, while a
Si”, s;.! o’nSinJtS™
all one wax, !? .""' and k j n(; so "‘° as f™" to run "V" from T." the f
end of the cigar. Then the fire burns
with the wejl grain, and the cigar is said to
smoke When a smoker has « cigar
that won t draw, W all probability .t was
made by a novice, and the filler was nr
ranged, topsv-turvy, or against the
grain.
P. binder, •' w, in hich oimnarx ti^ars large smooth next nut leaf, on a
w is a to
cnveo,) tk ‘ b er ’ a ” d **‘7' P ut ° n 7 c
wiapiter, a narrow strip of smooth leaf ,
rolled round and round obliquely toward
Ike top, and fastened therewith a touch
'** ^JP^l °ii| ^ 11181 t r^ vvork,, \! l “V ‘:‘n h making ? Wr i“ ,> *
ivu “ r J ", 1 ^ h 7’ w,thout f a kn(1( : r ’
*^ hen wel, ” ,ttdc tj “ 8 proves to be the
S .
c r
the fillers are made in a mould, from #8
to #15 per thousand is paid. After being
made the cigars arc taken to another
beneh, where they arc assorted accord
in ing to color, branded, after which laln-led they are packed
boxes, utid stamped,
»n 1 |ll.c„lh«.vsrcrc.idjforlhcii,»rkM._ »».«..
----
How 11 Man Eats.
It lias been calculated, says Richard
A. Proctor in ti e Cosmofiditn,, that on
the average, each man who attains the
age of three score and ten consumes dur
mg the course of Ins life twenty wagon
loads of food, solid and liquid. At four
spond to of an food average day, of about a hundred
ounces per or say someone
hundred and twenty ounces per day dur
era doctors agree in regarding one hun
dred and twenty ounces of food per day,
corresponding bquid food, and to five or six eight half-pints pounds of
seven or
° f .f ol,d ils ,n excess of the real
da,| y requirements of a healthy man or
w 0 J? 5 et an pro ’ , ia ., >l most . of . us take . , more
v
than this, in one way or another, during
the day. Dr. I,anl<ester, from an exten- 1 i
sive analysis of the dietary of soldiers,
sailors, prisoners, and the better paid j
classes of artisans and professional men | !
in London, found the average daily
quantity of solid and liquid foot! to be one !
hundred less and take forty-three much less; ounce*. but Doubt- j j
many unques- j
tionably many take mentioned much more than this,
When some one before Sydney j 1
Smith the twenty w.ig,»n loads of food
calculated turned to Lord for each Durham, man’s who allowance, like him- he j [
self was corpulent (and not xvithout suf- |
ficient reason), with the quaint remark;
“I think our w agons, Durham, must be
four-horsed ones. ” There arc members
of the London Corporation, to seek no
further, whose wagons must be six
horsed ones, and well loaded at that.
Look Ahead
When cold winds blow
And we look for snow.
And the nights are long and murky,
The-i k-t us ebrer,
For thewasot’s near
7* ME N WHO W IN.
five * m tizri l £Wi? ? c' , zr ****
a e
, . , _ . . .
“
willing A vloSe to rtudent place large ot human matters nature of trust is rarely
hand* in the
of another until he has seen ths on#
A hom 8 to trust He looks for the fresh
health and vigor, the honest, (rank counte¬
attractive “sore and manly form, He and in feet all that is
in men. doubts the dyspeptic
with sallow akin, drawn out features, the
*Hl«nt weak and irritable nature. He feels
“ Shakespeare makes Julius Cesar say:
“ s^3i~rs3 , jK, , s*.'s' %«
VonCs-stus b*ib ie«n B u «
■ and hnngrv look;
lie think* too much; tnch men »re oangeroai'.”
Hsdoe# not doubt the honesty of the poor
unfortunate, but fears disease of the body
It may be m.usti-e to thj w eak, but if the
“a** wrapped h**,* up 10 * in the his mental m sery, strength, lie cannot or if take he in is
fhe situation of the world, does not sec that
ideas are broadening, and that isms and
Plow teachings are advan ing! How can an em
Ta d hope for success from such a man?
and S Ml y*r*pbv look, the wax-liko complexion
ow features show disease. The far
V >ln * 1114,1 noU# a11 f»w*e signs, and knows
that the great light of man, the brain, is af
fected. or will be, at no distant day.
He dlsca rJs F°° r victim of disease who
'JThSWSK , £ , 3St£*2SSl
mo.lical aid. Locking the broad ideas of the
successful man ot the world, he trios tho
8ame medical treatment that he has tried
m f?y before. The samo bigoted coun
ed *al»w>UKht,thesninedriigsareailniinister- by the old family
same trieud that treated
Mm months and years before, and his parents
before him, and in such a way he drags out
daily, tion8 of and hoars remedy from every side, proelama
a known ns Warner's safe
dyspepsia t)h;o, suffir«l for nearly thrae years with
in its woivt forms, having periodi
l-al s l ,ells ot verti k°, fainting and cYiills. He
nil the remedies lecommended without sue
ct««, until I w as induced to try Warner saafe
{ ure \ 1 us ^ 1 tb IT hav# Rained
twenty pounds and feel like a new man.”
buclianian as wa liavo described, n;no
times out of ten, unconsciously to himself or
to his physician, has a kidney disorder, which
is fMt wasting bis body and lito. He sees the
“nd h*eara it proclaimed fro'® >m the flt e every bouso house '“ r turn, tons. tops,
and “>d yet vet he he dot does not use d, n, because un-auw it n. is is said sma
by Ins illiberal physician that it is not proles
sional, and not admitted by the code. Mean
while while the the man mau of of the the world world presses presses forward, forward,
cares cares not not a a fig fig for for this this or or that that school; school; his hi.s aim aim
in life is success, and hi looks hopefully hopefully for- for¬
ward to the world beyond, believing arid
J.Tti!” for the 1b, world beyond. .„ tbi * worl,l - Rlld t0 his faith
The Modern Ilahy.
An influx of ‘’over-Sunday” visitors
having filled eight seats at Adelaide’s
tibloTvith young men,she refused to cat.
Being quest ioned, the four-year old inito
replies: “I am not at nil pleased at such
a crowd of men being cut here. They
takeaway my appetite! - ’ (She seems
likely to survive!,
Papa to Adelaide (whose mamma is away
for u few days)—“We Adelaide?” miss mamma nw
J hesitatingly 1 ' 11 /- ‘f 011 ! 1 w0 \ I t know, Adelaide,
cion ]>apa;
Fpbably you do; but she fusses so, I
I think it tries mv nervous system.”
A young lady to \»hom Adelaid’e was
! 111 Tvh attached bore th - name of G'race.
.Hearing it for a few times, the young
i creature commented: “Mamma, isn t
i ktraco a senou? name! It makes me think
of prayer. ’
At auother time a strange child Wits
introduced . to the tiny hostess, with in
, junctions to his entertainment. With
^ a*
ampere checked by: dignity, “My dear,I the suggestions were
children all life !”—American havejplayed with
tine, iny Maya
Cai.ikornia’s newgox'crnor, Robert \V.
Waterman, of San Bernardino county, i*
an extensive farmer nnd successful stock
breeder. Maine and South Carolina a'so
have governois noted as farmers and
stock breeders, and both make Excellent
lulers of the people. They are all mem¬
j , bers of live farmers’ organizations and
actix'c workers.
; “Captain, entirely out of
xve are am¬
munition,” said the orderly sergeant of
a company to an Irish captain at the but¬
tle of tha Wilderness. “Antirely out:
said the captain. “Yes, entirely our.”
“Then sasc firing!” said the captain.
Robby . church for the first time;
was in
and after he had dropped a nickel into
the cue contribution tonmouuon box nox, he nc turned tuine.i to „ his bis
mother and whispered audibly: “Ma,
that man did not ring up my fare.”
1 -------- -
Among the people of to-day, there are few
, iS3 Prick e £r y Ash V'ho Bark have and; a. a Ifcrries, hoatdofthe is house!,oM merits of
»
J^Tiave {hem u,V .-inrerVei The^so!e^reliance VM.hn'ni ^ M i'“ “f 11 ',” oi
; hi rheum uic
and kidney diseases, Pri.-klv Ash Bitiere no-.v
takes the place of the old system, and is more
bcl ‘ < ‘ flcia l in a11 l ruul,l<;t l of tlll! * nalu IV ‘
M^'&ronti! Iren 1 no Pii,M.-5//mpf. ue* mi - f^m'^wilvh Moisture: In
| L Zc-lU ng\" 1 ^ of
, y
removes the tumor <. It is -nuaiiv - . .-nrious
*"W«1lwaljl skin M**"*-*- fm. swavnk .x
- Pusao tare i|
tyeS feaTS NOSG Aea
f -sr-.r,.T
‘aawsia the com, aut the iwarias is
w '"* IM /; <,U '
•*«»* unromfortaWe digchantr, U.i hreniu and !<>m
j S
s^ar,^ which fm,„ «„e ».m.«i tt,« im„ur
lty from which catarrh arises. toaes>ud restores tt.e
<nwased organs to health and b, urns up tho whole
« r,t8 "- N -n-Be sure to get only
Hood’s Sarsaparilla !
TcXS&VZ I
-- L QO - Po , a es Ono Doiiar_
rm j
IT IS,APUREIYYEGETABlE Pr<CPARAJ!0Pj
, yi) JjPRICKtf SEK MA ^ic;ilYASH^-“ MLN
Bjstffl - C i? AKE- BUCH u
OTHL'it EqUA.lYEfriCIEMT REJSEOiES
i| Kflin It has Curing stood *11 the Diseases Test of Years, of the
KL00D, LIVES, 6T0M
W^S^K1C ACH, KIDNEYS,DOW¬
IS«£ ELS, ftc. It Purifies the
Blood, Invigorates and
E QITTFit^ Cle&aoes the System.
fj I-_^^_^™_Jl OFTHeIl . _ DYSrEP 6 IA,C 0 NSTI
| AiLDiStASES "I FICKHEADACHE mfi
I LJVER ? disappear 10TJ3 COMPLAINTS, at ones under 4 c
| ! KIDNEYS STD MAP H f fi its fccnsScialinflneace.
! ^ | ItisnuroD-a its^eathartic M-diMne
as ercuer
^0^ S ^CT| csMv beyerare. take^hv^hild! It is pleas
BY 1 ’-*’ ii ro-i«{«n?., 1 ^ y ihutt
tn
a-r.K»ci:u:..iV..Ns* ’m*
THE YOUTH’S COMPANION-SPECIAL OFFER.
Sut* Inr/e A-lv♦-rti-HHiciit In Previous Number of this l'ajK*r.
FREE To any New Subscriber who will CUT OUT and send us A $2.50
this Slip, with namo and P. O. address and $t.7B in
Money Order, Express Money Order, Registered Lottor or
TO JAN 1 Chock, for a year’s subscription to the Companion, wo PAPER
will send the paper free each week to «lan. 1 st, 1888, and
9 for a full year from that date to Jan. 1st, 1889. ir ordered
1888. at once this oflfor will include tha FOR $1.75.
Double Holiday Numbers
For Thanksgiving and Christmas. —- - .n
Twenty pages eaili, with Colored Cover* and Full-page Frontispiece Pictures. They will be onnuually attractive this year.
I Addres* PERRY MASON & CO., 4ffTemple Place, Boston, Mass.
- - --
O ri hat Wealth !
Wife of young hundred literary niuu—“Why,
George! A dollars for that
magazine story t How long did it take
you t., write It?”
Young husband t nonchalantly)—“Oh,
t don't know. A couple of days, I sup
po-e. ’
day! Wife That's (exultantly)—“Fifty three hundred dollars a
dollars a
week, and twelve hundred a month.
Twcl-e times twelve is one hundred and
forty-four—fourteen Ss?«Ss*r^ thousand four hun-
Aa I assert eat An set.
The arrest of a suspicious character Upon
^K!?;j*K5?!^ bed a traveler, fired a house, u iSSiK. or murdered u a3S: a
fellow-man, k aft important imPpMahMs funottort of the a
shrewd dot votive. Kviffi fhor# if checked, will
arrest blight of a destroy disease which, life. not Tn* frequent
and a human ds
COU gli, loss of appetite, general languor and or pains,
announce billty< pallid the skin, approach and bodily of pulmonary aches con
mimpticn, manently cured which by b f»r, promptly Pierce's arrested “Golden and Medi¬ per¬
cal Discovery,” Sold by druggists.
It takes 14,3)0,000 gallons of oil* yfar to keep
the railtvays of Great Britain going.
I'ontumptlon, Sersfsls, (Usersl DeMllty#
JouglL Shd^ronchltls, ts of (AlMrsi;
Chronic can be cured
^"iSSrl Please read the following! “I mud 8 ft,.'
Kmulsion for an obstinate Cough with Hemor¬
rhage, Loss of Appetite, of EmHclatton. left, Sleep*
lcssness, &c. All these have now and 1
balfevo your Emulsion has saved a case of
well-developed M. D., Lone Star, Consumption."—T. J. FlNDLEt 1 ,
Texas.
There are 18.0U0 fcnialf Students In the vari¬
ous colleges of this country.
“I Uea't Want Keltef, But Cure."
is tho exclamation of thousands suffering from
catarrh. To all such we say: Catarrh can be
cured been done by Dr. tn Sage’s thousands Catarrh of cases; Remedy. why not It has in
yours? Your danger is in delay. F.ncloso
stamp to World’s Dispensary Medical Associ¬
ation, Buffalo, N. Y., for pumphlet on this dis¬
ease.
______
The English friends of Sir Charles Dilke are
trying to reinstate him in social circle*.
Consumption Surely Cured.
To the Editor:—I’lcaso inform your readers
that I! have a positive remedy for tho above
named disease. By IM timely use thousands of
hopeless cases have send been i>ermanently bottles of cured. remedy X
hhall be glad of to two readers wbo my have con¬
ritEK to any if your thelf Express
•^^.’WfSSSjifaSE'iTtU sumption they will send me
1 SL, N. Y.
The Hpeed ot Heat nml Colil.
It lias been asked which travel* faster,
heat or cold; and unswered heat. Because any
one can catch a cold. It therefore follows
thnt every one should keep Taylor’s Cherokee
Remedy will of coughs, Hweet colds Gum nnd Mullein, which
cure and consumption.
in A operation iiroccsa of tho utitizlug Warm fire coal damp mine. tvs fuel Is
ut
B - cak lun irs, sniltingof blood, consumption
n<1 Addvess, lured ' affections, for treatise, cured with without pnysi- in
10 cents
mi>.*. World's Dispensary Medical A ssoc:
at it -in, Uiifi Main street, Buffalo, N. Y.
The i uc National .National Alliance Alliance holds noias its iu annual meet
ing next year al Meridian, Miss.
-----
lln unlit era, XX ive* mid .’Jollier*.
Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, free;
i utvlv sealed. l)r. J. B. Marchisl, Utica, N.Y.
KIDDER’S
i
A St It E ( I RK I (Ilf
INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA.
Over 5,000 rhysicUut have «e*it us th«lr approval of
niOKSTYLlN, IndlgcstloD aaytna Th^y that have It Is the preparatlou
• or that ever
We have never hoard of a ca.se of L’yipepMa whirl
IUKSTYLIX was taken that wa* uot cured.
FOR CHOLERA IKFANTUM.
IT WILL CURE THE MOST AGGRAVATED CASES.
IT WILL STOP VOMIIINO IN PREGNANCY.
IT WILL RELIEVE CONSTIPATION.
•vhlch For Slimmer the direct Complaint* reaulta and of Imperfect Chronic Dlarrhura, dlgeatioo.
r.r# lmmedUt*
''IGESTYMN will effect an cure.
Take DYOE6TYLIN for all pains and disorder* of
t»e s'omaeh drupelst ; they for DIOKSTYMN all come from (prh Indltfestlon. larR« Ask
<»’ir If fiend e * d;»llar I per
*»tfic). he doe* not Iiove it ou« prepaid. to u«
1 we will send a bottle to you, express
• not hoaltate to scad your money. Our coiue 1«
llublo. RutaMlshed KIDDER twenty five years.
Wills V. .V CO,,
f:»n tiffin it rhiu S.'t J ohnS|„ N. V.
Ely’s Cream Balm
is tlio best buffering remedy for children
TlAY-fiVER^ j from
Cold in lli iit), Siiufilrs
OR
ATARRH.
vot^j^.*WAppl M'q l l.:iv Brqs.,2S6 v Balm Greenwich into each M., nostril. Y.
N.
MARVELOUS
DISCOVERY.
\\ holly ur.llke nrt)ff«*inl «y»itrin*.
Any br ok lonrnod In onr ri oiling*
Recommended by Mark Twain. Richard P. Proctor, Dknja
the Scientist, Hons. W. W. Aktok. Jcdaii
kin, l)r Minor. &<•. ria sof l<*' Columbta Law stu¬
dent* ; at Meriden ; W.V) ft Non* I :•; H50 ut Uln*nlu
C'oIlKge : twociasM’s of foHi f.t Yule; Colleg*. 4o f > at Uni¬ and
three versity largo of lVnn, clast-os Phil.*. ut ; ><v (^hatuuq'frt at W’eUe*lajr Lnivcrrwty, Ac.
Prospectus post f;:k;; from Kcflr Ver*.
PROF. *1.7 Klfth Ave.,
JONES
HD
iuoa.rnni'uT " E L T
i“.n i.?"r..”“.f°i".,in,. w .1
Br «
t«s..».j 860. 4 s«-s«
9 If niN<;n.4,1lTON. 18US «f N. T.
.
5100 CflflA Asa lO 100 ARtONTH eanbs
! V) ao knts ^ j&tZrrU
rtets^N
flUtHlo IvflIIIUUMAj.fliNKS and iuio
flBhg A TI .Q!- V 1 Kl ^
„ .. ■ .
SSOLDItKo A AI AICDC P u ,* c ! lf V ' n *' v
uSK.\v"5fi , :™i-ii^wwa^Ki
wMlWlii lew RSCCOOU, «..» RSS»9«S cl, »t hiobmt
r ;
«»
WORK S'HSSS TSrtiSSS?;
^ «• <>• »ck«. . , au ,
DATE NTS Obtsincd Send «t.iir.p f *
t
I HAH, Patent Att orney, Wusiiingtoli, 1>. C. I
_____ _
I Vl)ll S nt hom c»n We furnish n-yby iaat«riAl working and for (
E« us; no canvassing. Seat I OO for tanipli. piy
w^ll for nat mfactoiy \v »r*c. d ¥ Mw.
r. O HU('K A t'-O , bu Rr-unliri Nt ., Htwt m.
pATENTS;^^vV;S I
S5i $230a^»ji!
Uhl Brewster Safeiv Hein Holder Co.. II Ilv. Mich. |
PISO'S CURE FOR CONSUMPTION
/ i OLD i’i worth $ kK) i»*r lb. P*tt t'a Kya Sa!v® i-d
VT wor:h $ I, OiiO, but is J»\»!(l at *A»c. abn by tlorert.
1888—EVERY LADY SHOULD TAKE 21-1888
PETERSON’S MAGAZINE
THE BEST AND MOST POPULAR LADTS-MA6AZINE IN AMERICA.
Ainonar ITS CONTRIBUTORS ar* .Frank Loe 1U •ncfllct. RMhcc.i IUn;;i.^ l'.v, if*. Minn M. U
Me C lellffntl, IM gar Fawc<*f t, Alice llowuian, Mi». Lucy lf. IIoofMr, i»j .1 ll«*t m rIL it.
JTS STORIES, NOVELETS, ric., are mlniitto.l t » l* the b( Si I'Ul-ttDj.vtJ,
ITS STT*KIj-PiN(ilt.\VlNtiS are tlao Ducat IMibllfel.cl hiimvIu i •.
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vil)z l.c ko h.xdly taken In, but aUo M |gik ■ V*B ■, ■ the mdv |n-n. ct X. i.d ami XV.drriiruof Si-.cker.”
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WEBSTF/T' VARIOUS tH
UM trnrs i
WCTWNA OFBIMBINGi
Besides muuy other valuable feature*) W Coatsins
of A Word.*, Dictionary 30110 Enxrevlnss
A Gazetteer 118,000 of the World
locating and describing 2."),000 Places,
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of nearly 10,noo Noted Persons,
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«old by all Booksellers. Pamphlet free.
C.iC. MLHRGMEC0., l’ub’rs,Springfield, Mass,
CLEVELAND.
A
J m J
.A /tl ;
mm
w
S u c¥.'-?»»’AWfflSSa- arid Nr*. Cleveland,
CORRECT curds PORTRAITS of President
(in ie x If., t-n po*t-p.ild for GO C.ts. |>rr pair.
II. A. JACKSCN, 033 PEARL 3T., N. Xf,
wlilcb Is now rccoR-vzci! I.y Ihn medical world as
diseases. Not nitty >'.*•* It c-o-c! all other methods
In glvltif! qulclt permanently. ii-I'if. hot it Thousands Eh-obitely have rurss[the been
worst cases (’otivilicb ami reiirlttslvc proof w ill
cured by It. In til p.v?c * Tri-atlse, sent free.
be found my
Dr. B. W. HAIR, ^NciNSATiTuma;:
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