DR. TALMAGE'S SERMON The Epidemic of Suicide. “He drew out his sword and would have killed himself, suppo-ing that the prisoners had been fled. But Paul oried with a loud woice, saying, Do thyself no harm." Aots, 16 ; 5 ile € is a would-be suicide arrested in Lis deadly attempt, He was a sheriff and according to the Roman law, a bailiff himself must suffer the punish- ment due an escaped prisoner; and if the prisoner breaking jail was sentenced to be endungeoned for th eo or four years, then the sheriff must be endung- eoned for three or four years; and if the prisoner breaking jail was to have suf- fered capital punishment, then the sheriff must suffer capital punishment, The sheriff had received especial charge to keep a sharp lookout for Paul and Silas, The government bad uot had cone fidence in bolts and bars to keep safe these two clergymen, about whom theie seamed to be something ETRANGE AND SUPERNATURAL. Sure enough, by miraculous power, they ure free, and the sheriff, waking out of a sound sleep, and supposing these ministers bave run away, and knowing that they were to die for preaching Christ, and realizing that be wust therefore die, rather than go under tha executioner’s axe on the mor- row and suffer public disgrace, resolves to precipitate his own decease, before the sharp, keen, glittering dag- ger of the sheriff could strike his heart, one of the unloosened prisoners arrests the biade by the command: “*Do thy- self nd harm.’ IN OLDEN TIME, fered with it, suicide was considered honorable and a sign of courage. Demosilirnes poizoned himself told that Alexander's ambassador had deiranded the surrender of the Athen- jan owators., Isocrates killed himself rather than surrender to Philip of Macedon, Cato, rather than submit after three times Lis wounds had been dressed tore them open and perished, Mithridates killed himself rather than submit to Pompey, the conqueror. Hannibal destroyed his life by poison from his ring, considering iife unbear- able, Lycurgus a suicide, Brutus a suicide, After thedisaster of Moscow, Napoleon always carried with him a preparation of opium, ani one nignt his servant heard the ex-emperor arise, putsomei! ing in a glass and di it, and ston after the groans aroused all the attendants, and it was oniy through utmost medical skill he was resuscitat- ed from the stupor of the opiate. Times have changed, and yet AMERICAN CONSCIENCE 11 nx THE needs to Le toned up on the subject of suicide. Have you seen a paper in the Jast month that did not announce i passage out of life by one’s own behest? Defauiters, alarmed at the idea of ex- posure, t life precipitately. Men loging lage wtunes go out of the world because 3 they cannot endure earthly existence. Frustrated affection, domestic infelicity, dyspeptic impati- anger, remorse, envy, jealousy, tution, misanthropy, are consider- icient causes for absconding from ¢ by Paris-green, by laudanum, by belladonna, by Othello’s dagger, by halter, by leap from the abutment of a bridge, by fire-arms. More cases of felo dle sin the last two years than any two years of the world’s existence, and mote in the last month than in any twelve months, The evil Is more and score spreading. A vulpit aot long ago expressed some doubt us to whether there was really anything wrong about quitting this lite when it became disagreeable, and there are found in respectable circles people apologetic for the crime which Paul in the text arrested, I shall show you be. fore { get through that sulcule is THE WORST OF ALL CRIMES, he il bie. But in the early part of this ser- mon I wish to admit that some of the best Christians that have ever lived have committed self-destruction, but always in dementia, and not re- sponsible. I have no more doubt of the Christian who dies in his bed in the delirium of typhoid fever, While the shock of the catastrophe is very Christian friends under cerebral aberra- tion step off the boundaries of this life, to have no doubt about their happiness, fect safety, kind way lle treated the demoniac of «Gadara and the child lunatic, and the potency with which He hushed temp- ests ¢ither of sea or brain. WILLIAM COWPER'S ESCAPE. No one doubted the piety of William “Cowper, the author of those three great bymus, “Oh, for a closer walk with “God,” “What various hindrances we meet,” “There Is a fountain filled with blood’; William Cowper, who shares with Isaac Watts and Charles Wesley the chief honors of Christian hymno« logy. In hypochondria he resolved to take Lis own life, and rode to the river Thames, but found a man seated on some goods at the very point from which he expected to spring, and rode back to his home, and that night threw hums: If upon Ins own knife, but the blade broke; and then he hanged him- self to the ceiling, but the rope parted, No wonder that when God mereifully delivered him from that awful dementia he sat down and wrote that other hymn Just as memorable: “God moves in a mysterious way His wonders (0 : He plants His footsteps in the sea, And rides upon the storm, “Blind unbelief is sure to err And sean His work In vain 4304 is his His own interpreter, And He will make It plain,” While we make this merciful and “righteous allowance in regard to those who were plunged into mental Incoher- -snce, I declare that that man who in the use of his reason, by his own act snaps the bond between his body an his soul, goes straight into perdition, «Shall 1 prove it? , Revelation 21 : 8: i graph kd shall have their part in the . w ] stone.” Revelation 22 : 16: “With- out are dogs and sorcerers and whore- mongers and murderers.’’ You do not believe the New Testament? Then, perhaps, you believe the Ten Command- ments: **Thou shalt not kill.’* Do you say all these passages refer to the taking of the life of others? Then I ask you if you are not as responsible for your own life as for the life of others. God gave you a special trust in your life. He made you THE CUSTODIAN OF YOUR LIFE, as He made you the custodian of no other life, He gave you as weapons with whieh to defend it two arms to strike back assailants, two eyes to watch which ought ever to be on the alert, Assassination ot others is a mild crime compared with the assassivation of yourself, because in the latter case it is treachery to an especial trust, it is the surrender of a castle you were es- pecially appointed to keep, it is treason to a natural law, and it is treason to God added to ordinary murder, To show how God in the Bible { ed upon this erime, I point you L» | THE ROGERS' PICTURE-GALLERY in some parts of the Bible, the pictiires of the people who have committed this unnatural crime, Ilere is the headl ss trunk of Saul on the walls of Batlis- ban. Here is the man who [ little David—ten feet in stature chasing | four. Here is the man who consulted a clairvovaut, Witch of Endor. Here is a man who, whipped in look- i his servant to slay him; and when the | servant declined, then the giant plants | the hilt of his sword 1n the earth, the sharp point sticking upward, and he throws Lis body on it and expires, the the suicide. Here is Ahit- ophel, the Machiavelli of olden times, Not getting what wanted by change of politics, takes a short-cut out of a disgraced life into the suicide’seternity, There he is, Lae ing [re is cide. a tower, ella Ww takes a griud drops it upon his life he left in his commands his ate! Abimelech, practically a sul- with an army, bombarding man in the tower stone from its place and head, and with what cracked skull he armor-bearer: “Draw thy sword and slay me, say a his post- Has est men Chere 13 the Lx me.’ mortem photograph in uel. But wk of Sam- THE HERO OF 1 Dr. Doane I His GRouU pe is Judas Iscariot, was a martyr, and we have in our day apologists for him. And what wonder, in this day when we have a book reveal- ing Aaron Burr as a pattern of v and mn day when we statue of Georges Sand as the benefac- tress of literature, and in this day when there are betrayals of Christ on the part of some of His betrayal wk it of Judas Iscariot white! bis own hand h the fi4 353 Says On irtue, this uncover a pretended aposties—a so bl makes the infamy Yet this man for the exe- fas Iscariot. yy ane it oy Ali cration © ages, r the Dible is against the aversion hh it loathsome and ghastly ae who have hurled life, and notwith- hristianily Is against It, and iments and the useful lives and illustrious deat its disciples, it £13 + iy tiny 1 ii 1 Ziy patent that suicide wh iy wal ii of is a fact alarmin is on the increase, WHAT IS THE CAUSE? infidelity and agnosti- If there be no be bliss. without reference to how we live and how we die, why not move back the folding-doors between this world and the next? And whenour existence here becomes troublesome, why not pass right over into Elysium? Put this down among your most solemn reflec- tions, and consider it after you go to your homes; there has never been a case of suicide where the operator was not either demented, and therefore irre- sponsible, or an infidel, I challenge all Charge upon ism this whole thin LE. 131 Li verse, There never has been a case of | self-destruction while in full apprecia- ed Jesus Christ or rejected Him, it 1s that, or 1t is the other Why not go clear back, my | friend, and acknowledge that in every case itis the abdication of reason or THE TEACHING OF INFIDELITY, which practically says: “If you don’t | like this life get out of it, and you will | land either in annihilation, where there ard no notes to pay, no persecutions to suffer, no gout to torment, or you will land where there will be everything glorious and nothing to pay for it??? In. fidelity always has been apologetic for self | immolation. After Tom Paine’s “*Age | of Reason’ was published and widely read, there was a marked increase of self-slaughiter. INFIDELITY PUTS UP NO BAR to people’s rushing out from this world into the next. They teach us it does not make any difference how you: live hete or go out of this world: you will land either in an oblivious nowhete or a glorious somewhere. And infidelity holds the upper end of the rope for the suicide, and aims the pistol with which man blows his brains out, and mixes the strychnine for the last swal- low. If infidelity could carry the day and persuade the majority of people in this country that it does not make any difference how you go out of the world you will land safely, the Hudson and the East rivers would be so fall of corpses the ferry-boats woud be im- peded in their progress, and the crack of a suicide’s pistol would be no more alarming than the rumble of a street. i this, | thing. or car, Would God that the coroners would be brave in rendering the right verdiet, aud when in a case of irresponsibility they say: “While this man was dement- ed he took his life; dn the other case say: “Having read infidel books and attended infidel lectures, which obliter- ated from this man’s mind all appre- ciation of future retribution, he com- mitted selt-slaughter!” Ah! Infidelity, stand up and Sake thy sentence! In the presence of God, angels and men, STAND UP, THOU MONSTER, thy lip blasted with blasphemy, thy cheek scarred with lust, thy breath foul with the corruption of the ages! Stand up, Satyr, filthy goat, buzzard of the nations, leper of the centuries! Stand up, thou monster, Infidelity! Part man, part panther, part reptile, part dragon, stand up and take thy sentence! Thy hands red with the blood in which thou hast washed, thy feet crimson with the human gore through which thou hast waded, stand up and take thy sentence! Down with thee to the pit, and sup on the sobs and groans of families thou hast blasted, and roll on the bed of knives which thou hast sharpened for others, and let thy music be the everlasting miserere of those whom thou hast damned! I brand the forshead of Iufi- delity with all the crimes of self-lmmo- lation for the last century on the part of those who had their reason. My friends, if ever your life through { its abrasions and its molestations should seem to be unbearable, and you are tempted to quit it by your own behest, do not consider yourself as worse than others, Christ Himself was tempted to cast Himself from the roof of the Temple; but as He resisted, so resist ye, Christ came to medicine all our wounds, i In your trouble 1 prescribe life in- | stead of death, People who have had it, worse than you will ever have it, { have gone songful on the way. Re- member that GOD KEEPS THE CHRONOLOGY of your life with as much precision as He keeps the chronology of nations, | your death as well as your cradle, Why was it that at midnight, just at mid- night, the destroying angel struck the | blow that set the Israelites free from years were up at twelve might, The four hundred years were not up at eleven, and o'clock would have been tardy and too late, The four hundred and thirty years were up al twelve o'clock, and the destroylug angel struck the blow, and Israel was free, And God knows i just the hour when it is time to lead | you up from earthly bondage. Dy Iis grace make not the worst of things, but the best of them. If you must take the pills, do not chew them, | everlasting rewards will accord with your earthly perturbations, just as Caius gave to Agrippa a chain of gold as heavy as had been a chain of iron. For the asking-—and I to whom I speak in thisaugust assemblage, { but the word may be especially ap priate-for your asking, you may have the same grace that was given to Italian martyr, Algerius, who, down in the darkest of dungeons, dated his ter from “‘the delectable orchard of Leonine prison.’’ And remember this brief IFE one do not know 3 (pe Lic el the that IS SURROUNDED BY very tl but very close up to that ty, and you had of it untii God breaks that rim and separates this from that, To get rid of the sorrows of eurih, do not rush into greater sorrows. Toget rid of a st of summer i into a juogie of Beugal tigers, There 18 a 80 radiant that A RIM, important nm, rim a great better keep out “ un and etern ¢ is sects, leap not tep, at noriern mers as to what 3 the lowest doors Hghta up our | founding astro be, is the waving procession come « home from church militant to triumphant, and you and I have ten thousand reasons for wanting to go | there, but we will never get there either by self-immolation or impenitency. All our sins slain by the Christ who came to do that thing, we want to go in at just the time divinely arranged, and from a couch.divinely spread, and then | the clang of the sepuichral gates behind | us will be overpowered by the clang of thé opening of the solid pearl before us, {0 God, whatever other others may choose, give | Christian's death, a Christian's burial, i a Christian's immortality! ¥ © fry 8 Heavens, ake Lhe conquet nb 24 vy Cauca ssa AI AION A Good Kind of Face to Have. | well-defined nose and a broad face ex- { hibits this great faculty. Moral Courage.—This faculty mani- | fests itself by wide nostrils, short neck | and eyes set directly in front, Language.—This faculty is exhibited in many parts of the face, particularly by a large mouth and large, full eyes, opened wide, Self-esteem, — This faculty shows its. elf in a long or deep upper lip. Large self-esteem gives one dignity, self.con. trol and perfect independence, Firmness. The presence of this fac- ulty, when very large, is indicated by a long, broad chin. Firmness is syanony- mous with willulness, perseverance and stability. Perception of Characteér.—This is in- | dicated by a long, high nose at the low- er end or tip, This faculty is very use- ful, if not indispensible, to a judge in the exercise of the functions of his of- fice, Powers of Observation.—The sitn- ation of this faculty is in the face, just above the top of the nose, filling out the forehead to a level with: the parts on each side of the nose, It is a faculty which enables one to concentrate the mind upon the subject being discussed. Consclentiousness,— This is shown in the face by a square jaw, a bony chin prominent cheek bones, and a general squareness of the features of the entire face, To be conscientious means that one has a sense of justice, honesty of purpose, rectitude of character and moral courage. “Mu, Joxms,” said little Johnny to the gentleman who was making an af- tetnoon call, “can whiskey talk?” ‘*No, my child; how cams you to ask such a question?’ “Oh! nothing, only ma sald whiskey was beginning to tell on you.” The polonaise was never very popular in France, being too slow and . going. It fa great enjoyment to the Germans RELIGION DURING WAR. Why New Orleans Wasn't Dom- barded. a——————— Beforp Butler arrived with his troops, Admiral Farragut steamed up in his flagship, the Hartford, followed by his fleet, and took possession of the city in the name of the United States govern- ment. A company of marines was sent on shore, and shortly after the Blars and Stripes were floating over the cus- tom house, The city was captured but not subjected, and Admiral Farragut, apprehending some attempt might be made to take down the colors, arranged a plan of action in case the attempt should be made, A couple of howilzers were fastened in the rigging of the Hartford, and a man stationed at each one. From this elevated position the lookouts could command a good view of the custom house and the town. They were instructed at first indication of an attempt to haul down the flag to fire thelr guns. A broadside from the Hartford would follow, and this would be the signal for the whole fleet to open fire on the city, The next day was Sunday. Farra- gut, who was a very religious man had ordered all hand below for prayers, only the officers of the day and the two look- outs remaining above deck. Rain were exposed to the weather. The offi- ver, wishing to save the fuses from be- and removed them to place of shelter. custom house, their i ending. Of. an abrupt thelr places, The thoughtfulness officers of the day In removing the fuses caused a sight delay, and be- fore the broadside could be delivered, the lookouls reporied to the admiral that they saw no indications of turbance or unusual excitement in the streets, and Farragut concluded that the hauling down of. the flag was the act of some reckless i { the city revolt of y, a8 i Hi «fi or re tigate the matter first, order to hold the fre, have prevented the total New Orleans if the fleet had menced to il the town. Ie habits 8 son and ¢ wl t was al terward $116 ligious remained on been t t 16 Hindoo Pagoadia at Singapore. of the seen Durning hanging with gre terrifying at the farther end of t ded by mysterious s r before them being streow- Jess Bowers that diffuse far of JEN he open doors BANC y . ' + Wmmps, Lyons, ai on id 41 y heads, appeal ¢ edilice, surrous + fl Yi- wy slot the fragrance i nines it Hindoos are t mes scantily clad 1a sl CVES es handsome ¢ jess: In a dis ance tH riot in $14 a) Woman, beast, There, aithough i gods, they talk and laugh as if ¥ were their boon compan One of them takes an mine flowers, strung together as a gar land, and crosses the court beneath the roseate moon. He goes to a small, so- where stands an idol which seems more ancient than any of others. It is a divinity with six arms, a high head dress and big glass eyes of a ferocious aspect. He is there a small lamp that through re- spent has been lighted in front of him inilies 8, §13 is 1 ful of RR ArMiUl 01 Jossg- Without even casting a look upon fust as ss BA 555.5 Don't Fight the T_ ..n. s—— self, and you c#a rest assured you are you want to keep it up. Horses, like men, are generally set in their ways, only a moderate senses the two general- from morning till night. Well-bred horses are seldom stubborn and unruly, amd in this respect there is a striking analogy between horses and men, Horses docile, sbedient and tractable and unruly in the hands of another. The reason is, the one knows how to manage them, the other does not. Baa dispositions are generally the result of bad handling. A few slaps and jerks, accompanied bya little sharp talk or a few tierce yells, get the most gentle horse clear beside himself and ready to worry and fret the remainder of the day. The more gulet and steady you keep your horses the better it will be for them, yourself and all concerned. “Glassblower's Cheek.” Though the wages or remuneration in glass blowing are very high, the io- dustry is pot popular, Its unpopular- ity is no more than natural, the labor being severe and exhausting, the pain and discomfort great, and the health- fulness being ubpleasantly small to those engaged. It has a characteristic disease-—the glamblower’s cheek just as the white loa and quicksilver in- dustries have their specitic ills, From long-continued blowing, the cheeks, at first muscular, grow thin and lose their elasticity; they then begin to hang down like inverted pockets and finally grow absolutely unusable. It is a mats ter of record both here and in Europe that glass operatives have blown holes through their cheeks, but no living curiosity of this sort can be found the present time, : SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON, Buspay, NoviMpen 4, 1888, Defeat at Al LESSON TEXT. osh, 7: 1-12, Memory verses, LESSON PLAN. Toric or THE QUANTER: Promises Fulfilled, GOLDEN TEXT ror THE QUARTER: There railed not aught of any good thing which the Lord had spoken unio the house of Israel ; all came to puss.——Josh, 21 : 45. God's Lesson Toric: Failing Through Transgression, 1. Disaster, va. 1-5, Lesson | }¢ ber, : Outline: 4 % Distress, va. 6.9, Heproof, va, 10.12, TEXT: = GOLDEN Incline my heart Psa, 119 : 36, DAaiLy Home ness, - LEADINGS: transgression, Josh, 7 : 13-26, from Israel, W.—Josh, 8 : 1.28 Al. T.—=Judg. 16 :4- transgression, F.—Rev. 2 iniquity. wey, J imquity. ~Fsa, fense, T. Success at 1 ha 1-20, EB, [mperiied JESSON 1. DISAST I. Trespass ; Iaras § COMIN wl ¢ voted thing (1 ity shall be ial 18 therein y vourselves from ¢ make : AB), II. Anger: The ang: against Il. Defeat: They ¢ I. Prostrate Suppliants: Joshua rent his clothes, the earth, Jacob rent his ed (Gen, 37 : 34). Moses and Aaron fell Num. 14 5. David fasted, . ...and lay all the earth (2 Sam. 12: 16). Job . fell down upon the grou worshipped (Job 1 : 20), Il. Piteous Lamentations: | Alas, O Lord God,....would that we had... .dwelt bevond Jordan! (7). All these things are against me 42 : 36). How are the mighty fallen in the mi of the battle! (2 Sam. 1 : 25). Would God I had died for thee, O Absa- lom, my son (2 Sam. 18 33), Let the day perish wherein 1 was born {Job 3 : 3). ill. Earnest Inquiries: What wilt t do for name? (9, Wherefore should the Egyptian sayving—? (Exod. 32 : 1 O Lord, wherewith shall (Judg. 6 : 15) Shew me wherefore with me {Job 10 : 2}, Return, ©O Lord; 00 : 13). 1. “He and the elders of Israel.” (1) One in calamity; (2) One in humih- ation; (3) One in supplication; (4) One in deliverance, “Alas, O Lord God, wherefore?" (1) Lamentation; (2) Appeal; (3) Inquiry.—(1) Our refuge in trouble; Le and the ei +34 RATTHENLE, . ,. 3 (Cren., dst hou 8 speak, “3 1 say © thon % long? how { Psa. deliverer in trouble, . “What wilt thou do for thy great name?’ (1) God’s great name dis- honored: (2) God's great name ex- alted, iL. REPROOY, I. Action Demanded: Get thee up; wherefore art thou thus fallen? Awake, awake, stand up, O Jerusalem (Isa. 51 : 47). Shake thyself from the dust; arise, sit thee down (Isa. 52 : 2). Why tarciest thou? arise, and be bap- tised {Acts 22 : 16), from the dead (Eph, 5 : 14). iL Transgression Charged: Israel hath sinned (11). The children of Israel committed a trespass (Josh, 7:1). lis angels he chargeth with folly (Job 4:18), There 2 none that doeth good, no, not one (Psa. 14 : 3). They are all under sin (Rom. 3 : 9). 11 Repentance Enforced: I will pot be with you anymore, ex- copt ve destroy the devoted thing (12). If thy presence go not with me, carry us not up hence (Exod, Cast me not away from (Psa, 51: 11). | Except ye repent, ve shall all i manner perish (Luke 13 : 3), I....will move thy candlestick out of its place, except thou repent (Rev, & ~ ie 35 : 15}, thy prerence i. In LRe 1. “Get thee up.” (1) Inactive ripine- ing condenined; (2) Holy activity commanded, 2. “They have even transgressed uy covenant,” (1) God’s covenant eos- tablished; (2) God's covenant trans- gressed; (3) God's covenant vindi- cated, “1 will not be with You any more, except.” (1) The benefits of God's presence, (2) The conditions of God's presence, LESSON BIBLE READING, PENALTIES OF TRANSGIESSION, the ground # | Sorrow to mankind (Gen, 3 : 1 Job 14 : 1), 4 Shame | | Disquiet (Psa, 38 Temporal reverses Death (Gen, 2 : ¥ 6:23Jas. 1: 1§ (Gen, 3: wom, 6 11 ii. IROUNDINGS, LESSON iR 17] be tw evident tuated 8 uescripll w ook of Jos) Ww 8 utterly « ida iC is In Gispuls at sr hon] ¥ Deew torts a4 south; HIS MN elve of Jeri fo American Inventions in Madrid. The Sp 10 distin i r between Englishmen and Nortl .t placed « L Was annoy SU ppos d out 1 when 1 entered place marked Drinks’ and found-—a American soda founta article positively unkn in Engl The words “Ingleses’ meets the eye every oorner modern Madrid, There are for iglishh hats, Eng- lish cravats, Eng biscuits, English candles and matches, etc. One comes across German goods occasional- ly—a lithographic estdblishment or a | Wagner opera in the window of a music store by the side of ‘Carmen,’ but the English predominates, ever over the French, which bas always hitherto made its influence felt in Madrid, In fact, the Spanish capital has never been a thoroughly Spanish city. Though known to history almost a thousand years, it remained a mere village until Charlies V made it his oc- casional residence, and Phillip 11, in 1560, his capital, and even then it did not grow with special rapidity, for of its 500,000 iuhabitants, 300,000 have been added in the last thirty years consequently a large part of the city has | an essentially modern aspect, resembi- ing other European cities, —]—— gent ine Wa at in Et sd sae ais0 Letters of Ancient Times. A remarkable discovery has been {made in Egypt of tables, or letters, i which compose a literary correspon- | dence of 3500 to 4000 years ago, carried on between Egyptians and Asiatics, { The tablets now in Vienna represent | Jetters and dispatches sent to Egypt by | the governors and kings of Palestine, | Syria, Babylonia, and other countries | of western Asia. The find is remark- able every way, and opens the people of that age to us with freshnessand famil- farity, it is clear that the literary | spirit is very ancient, and Prof. Sayce | surmises we shall yet find libraries of | clay books, One town in Judah was {called “Book Town,” or *“‘Library { Town.” The momentum of this dis. {covery will be marked. Rich men | should hesitate no longer to unearth the | vast treasures of the orient. ———————————— Flowers That Actresses Love, - Mra, Langtry’s love for that flower has gained ber the name of *‘The Lily.” Mrs Polter loves the red rose, Miss Pauline Hall bas a ponchanfor the great ox-eyed daisy. iss Marie Jansen prefers the pansy. Fanny Da. veuport loves the lily, the lotus and the ros¢, Rose Coghlan in summer wears great bunches of golden rod plucked from the hedges about her farm at Youkers, and in winter she wears La France and big Jack roes. Thet orchid is Mme Modjeska’s delight, although she wears the more readily obtai eo roses, Maude Harrison loves flowers of all varieties, This is the year for farmers to sow barley in place of nats