HV. DR. TALNAGE. The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun. day Sermon. Subject: “The Dark Side of City Life." » Texr: “And the darkness He called night." Genesis {,, 5. Two grand divisions of time. The one of sunlight, the other of shadow; the one for work, the other for rest: the one a typ» of everything glad and beautiful, the other used in all languages asa types of sadness and affliction and sm. Thess two divisions of time may have nomenclature of human invention, but the darkness beld up its dusky brow to the Lord, and He baptiz»d it, the dew dripping from His lagers as He gave it name, ‘*And the darkness He called night.’ My subject is riidnight in town. The thunder of the city has rolled out of the air. The slightest sounds cut the night with such distinctness as to attract your attention, The tinkling of the ball of the street car in the distance and the baying of the dog. The stamp of a horse in the next street, The slamming of a saloon door, Thehiccough of the drunkard. The shrieks of the steam whistles five miles away. Ob, how suggestive, my friends~ midnight in towu! There are honest men passing up and down the street. Here is a city missionary who bas been carrying a scuttle of coal to that poor family in that dark place, Here is an undertaker going up the steps of a building from which thers comes a bitter cry which ten the first born. Here is a minister of re. ligion who has been giving the sacrament to a dying Christian, passing along in great haste, the messen- ger a few steps ahead hurrying on to the household, Nearly all the lights have gone out in the dwelling. That light in the window is the light of the watcher, for the medicines must ve administered, and the fever must be watched, and the restless tossing off of the coverlid must ba resisted, and the ice must he kept on the hot tem- ples, and the peroatual prayer must go up from hearts soon to be broken. Ob, tae midnight in town! What a stupendous thought—a whole city at rest! Weary arm preparing for to-morrow" toii. Hot brain being cooled off. Rigid muscles relaxed. Excited nerves soothed. The white hair of the octogenarian in thin drifts across the pillow, fresh fall of flakes on snow already fallen. Childhood with its dimpled hands thrown out on thepillow, and with every breath taking in a new store of fun and frolic. God's slumberiess eve will look. Let one great wave of refreshing siumber roll over the heart ol! the great wornment and pain, Let the city sieep; but, my friends, banot deceived. There will be thousands to-night who will not sleep at all. Go up that dark alley and be cautious whera you tread less you fall over the prostrate form of a drunk- ard lying on bis own doorstep. Look about you lest you feel the garroter's hug, Look what you can see. You say, “Nothing. Then listen. What is {t? No footlights, but tragedy ghastiier and mightier than Ristori or Edwin Booth ever enacted. No light, no fire, no bread, no bope. Bhiveriog in the cold, they have had no foo | for 24 hours. You say, “Why don't they beg?’ Lhey do, but they get nothing. You say, “Why dou't they deliver them. selves over to the simshouse? Ab, would not ask that if yon ever heard the bitter ery of a man or a child when told be must go to the almsbhouse, “0b,” you say, “they are the vicious poor, and therefore they do not demand our sym - pathy.” Are they vicious? So much more need they your pity. The Coristian poor, God helps thems. Through their nigat there twinkles the round, merry star of hops, and through the broken window pans they see the crystals of heaven, but the vicious poor, they are more to be pities, Their last light has gone out. You excuse yoursell from haiping tasm by saying they are so bad they brought this trouble on themselves, [ re ply, where I gives 10 prayers for ths inno _ gent who ars suffering I will give 20 prayers or the guiity who are suffsring. ing into the breakers, comes out from his hut and wraps the warmest flaouels around those who are most chilled and most bruised and most battered in the wreck. And ] want you to know that these vicious poor have nad two saipwrec is ~shipwreos of the boiy, shipwreck of the soul—sbipwreck for time, shipwreck for eternity. Pity, by all pity more tae guilty. Pass on througn the alley, Open the door, “On,” you say, "it is locked.” No, it is not locked; it has never been locked. No burglar would be tempted to go in there to steal anything, The door is never locked. Oaly a broken chair stands against the doer. Shove it back, Go in. Strike a match, Now jook. Beastliness and rags. See thosa glaring eyeballs. Be careful now what you say. Do not uiter any insult, do not utter any suspicica, if you vaius your life, What is that red mark on the wall? It is the mark of a murderer's hand! Lok at those two eyes risiog up out of the darkness and out from the straw in the corner com ing toward you, and as they come near you year light goes oat, Birike another matoh, Ab! this is a babe, mot like the beautiful children of your household, or the beautiful children smiling around thes aitars oa bap tismal day, This little one never smiled; it never will smile. A flower flung on an awiully barren beach, O Heavenly Shep- herd foid that little one in Thine arms! Wrap around you your shawl or coat tighter, for ths cold night wind sweeps through. Strike another matoh. Ah! is it possible that that young woman's scarred and bruise] fane was ever looked into by ma- ternal tenderness? Utter no scorn, tter no barsh word. No ray of hope has dawned on that brow for many a year. No ray of ever will dawn on that brow. Bat the light has gone out. Do not strike another light. It would be mockery to kindle an- other light in such a piace as that, Pass out and pass down the street. Our cities of Brookiyn and New York and all our great cities are full of such homes, ari the worst time the midoight, Do you know it is in the midnight that criminals do thsir worst work? At hall past 8 o'clock you will find them in the drinking saloon, but toward 12 o'clok they to their garrets, they get out their then they start on the street, Wateiing on either side for the go to r work of darkness, is lua bur. glar, and the false key will sion touch the store lock, This is an incendiary, and be fore morning there will bea light ou the sky and of “Fire! Fire” This is an as- sassin, and to-morrow morning there will be a dead body in one of the vacsot lots. Dur ing the daytime thess villains in our cities lounge about, some and some awake, but when the third w of She night ar- river, their eye keen, their brain , their strong, their foot fiset to fly or pursue, { away and thoush the wife ba waitine in the | cheerless home? Stir us the fire, Bringon 4 more drinks, Put up more stakes. That i{ commercial house that only a little while jar put out a sign of copartnership will | this reason be wrecked on a gambler’s table, { There will bo many a money till that will spring a leak. A Member of Congress fgambled with a Member-alect and won 1: $120,000, The old way of getting a living is iso slow, The oll way of getting a fortune is go stupid, Cowme, lot us toss up and see wo shall have it. And so the work goes on, from the wheezing wretches pitohing pen. nies in a rum grocery up to the millionaire gambler in the stock market, In the midnight hour pass down the streets of our American cities, and you hear the click of thedice and the sharp, kesn tap of the poolroom ticker, Aft thes» places mer. chant princes dismount, and legislators tired of mekineg laws, take a respite in breaking them. Al) olassss of people ara robbed by this erlme, the importer of foreign silks and the dealer in Chatham street pocket hand- kerchiefs, The clerks of the store take a hand after the shutters are put up, and the officers of the court while away their time while the jury is out. In Baden-Baden, when that city was the greatest of all gambling places on earth, it was no unusual thing ths next moraing in the woods around that city to find the sus- pended bodies of suicides, Whatever be the solendor of the surroundings, thers is no ex- cuse for this crime, Ine thunders of eter- nal destruction roll in the deep rumble of that gambling tenpin alley, and as men coms out ty join the long proocsssion of sin all the drums of woe bea’ tae dead march of a thousand souls. In one year in the city of New York there were $7,000,000 sac rificed at the gaming table, i Perhaps some of your frisnds have been | smitten of this sin, Perhaps some of you | have been smitten by it, Pa, toere may be a stranger in the house this moraniog | come from some of ths hotels, Look out for those agents of iniquity who Barry around about tue hoteix ana ask you, ‘Would you like | to see the city?’ Yes, “Have you ever seen | that splendid building uptown?’ No. Then | the villain will undertake to show you what | he calis the “lions” and the “slephants” | and after a young man, through morbid | curiosity or through badness of soul, has | seen the “lions” ani the ‘‘slephants” he will | be on enchanted ground. Lk out for | thess mon who move arouad ths hotels with | sleek bats—slways sleek bats—and patron- | izing air and unaccountable iatersst about | your welfare and entertainment. You are { a fool if you cannot ses through it. They | want your money. In Chestnut street, Philadelphia, while I | was living io that city, an incident occurred ! which was familiar to us there. [a Chest. | | nut street, a young man went into a gam- | bliog saloon, lost ali his property, then blew i his brains out, and before the blood was | washed from the fl ur by the maid the com. rades were shuffling cards again. You ses { therd is more mercy in the highwayman for | the belate | traveler on waos: Do ly he heaps | the stones; there is more mercy in the frost | for the flower that it killa; there is more | mercy in the hurricans that shivers ths | steamer on the Lomg Island coast than thers is mercy in the heart of a gamuvier for his victim, ! In the midnight hour also, drnakennwss {does its worst. The drinting will ba re. speotable at 8 o'clock in tas evening, a little flushed at #, talkative and garrulous at 10, at 11 blasphemous, at 12 the nat falls off and the man falls to the floor asking for more | drink. Strewa throuzh the drinking salooos of the city-—{athers brothers | busbanis, sons, as goo | as you are by natare, mind, or that 1 am superstitious: but, sir, she sat thers last night just as certainly as yon sit there now--the same cap, and apron and spictacies. It was my old mother-she sat there” Then he turned to his wife and said: + fish you would take thess strings off the me all the time, I wish you would stop tha! annovanes,” She said, ‘There is nothing here.” Then I saw it was deliriom. He said: “Just wheres you sit now my mother sat, and she said, ‘Roswell, 1 wish vou would dc hetter —1 wish you would do better.’ 1 said, ‘Mother, 1 wish I could do better, I trv wo do better, but [ can’t, Mother, you used to help me. Why can't And, gir, I got out of hed, for it was reality, her neck, and 1 said: ‘Mother, I will do het. ter, but you must help. 1 can’t do this a'onel’” 1 knelt down and Fused, That night his soul went to the Lord that made it, Arrangements were made for the obse. quies, The question was raised whether they should bring him to church. Some. body said, *‘You can't bring such a dissolnts mau as that into the church.” I said: “You will bring him io the churcn? He stool by me when he was alive, and [ will stand by him when he is dead. Bring him.” stood in the pulpit and saw them carrying the body no the aisle, I felt as if I could woe tears of blo, On one side of the pulpit sat his little child of eight years, a sweet, beautiful little girl that I had seen Dim hur convulsively in his better moments. He put on her all jewals, toys, and then he would go away as if hounded by an evil soirit to his caps and house of shame, a fool to the correction of the stocks. She looked up wonderingly, Sbe knew not what it all meant. Nhe was not old enough to understand the sorrow of an orphan child. On the other side the pulpit sat the men who had ruined him. They were the men ban's cup; they were the men who had bound him band and foot. 1 knew them. How did they seem to feel? Did they ween? No. Did they my, “What a pity that such a generous wan should be destroyed ™ No. Did they sigh repeatingly over what they had done? No; they sat there, looking as vultures look at the esrcass of the lamb whose heart they have ripped out. co toey sat and Jooked at the coffin Jid, and I told them the judgment of God upon those who had destroyed their fellows, Did they reform? | was told they were in the placss of iniquity that night after my friend was laid in Oakwood crmetery, and they blas- bemed, and they drank, Ob, how merciless men are, especially after toey bave de stroyed you! Do not look to men for com- fort or help, Look to God. Hut there is a man wao will not reform. He says: V1 won't reform,’ Well, then, how many acts are thero to a tragedy? | believe five, Act the First of the Tragedy —A young man starting off from home. Parents ant sisters weeping to have him go. Wagon rising over the hill. Farewell kiss flunz back. Ring the bell and let the curtain fall. Act the Bscond ~The marriage altar. Fall organ, Bright lights, Long white weil trailing through the aide, Frayer and con. gratulation and exclamation of “How weil she looks! Act Thrd—A woman waiting for stag. gering steps, Uld garments stuck into the broken window pane, Marks o! hardship on the face. The biting of the nails of bicodiess fingers, Neglect and crueity and despair. Riag the bell and jet the curtain drop. perhaps Leiter, in the higa circles of society it is hushed ‘up. A merchant prince, if he gels polsy an | uncontrollable, is taken by his feliow | revelers, who try to get him to bed, or take | | him home, where he falls flat in the entry. Do | | mot wake up the children. They have had | disgrace enough. Do not let them know it, | Husa it up. Bat somatimes it cannot be | hushed up-~whea the ram touches the brain | and the man becomes thoroughly frenzie §, Ob, if the rum touches the brain, you can- | not hush it up. You do not ses the worst. In the midnight meetings n graat multitude have been saved. We want a few bundred | Christian men and women to coms down { from the highest circies of society to teil | amid these wandering and destitute ones and kind! up a light in tae dark slley, even the | gindness of heaven Do pot go trom your weil fills | tables with | the idea that pwous talk is gong to stop the gnawing of an empty stomach or to warm | stockingless feet. Take bread, taks raimeat, | take medicine as well as Sake prayar. Taere | is a great deal of common ssuse in what the poor woman said tu the oily missionary when he was telling her how she ought to love Goland serve Him, “04!” said she, | “if you were as poor and cold as am, and | as hungry, you could shiak of nothing else.” A great deal of what fs oalled Curistian | work goes for nothing for the simple reason it is not practical, as alter the battles of | | Antietam a man got out of an ambulance | with a tag of tracts, and be weat distribut- | ing the tracts, and Gaeorge Stuart, one of the best Caristian men fa this country, said | { to him: “What are you distributing tracts | for now? There are 30) men bleeding to | death. Bind up their wounds, and then dis- | | tribute the tracts.” We want more common sense ! tian wors, taking ia Chris | | the other hand. No such inapt work as | that done by the Christian man who, during | the war, went into a hospital with tracts, | and coming to the bad of a man whoss logs | bad been amputat si, gave him a traction the sin of dancing! 1 rejoices before God that never are sympathetic words uttered, never a prayer offered, never a Christian | almsgiving indulged in but it is blessed, i ere isa in Bwitzwiand, [ nave | been told, where the atterancs of one word will bring back a score of echoes, and I have | to tall you this morning that a sympathetic | word, a kind word, a ¢ word, a help- | ful word uttered in dark place of the town will bring | from ail the thrones of heaven. | Are there io this assemblage this morning | those who know by experience the tragedies i of miduight in towa? [ am not here to | thrust you back with one hard word, Take | the bandage from your bruised soul and put | on it the soothing salve of Christ's gospel | and of Goa's compassion. Many have come. { I see others coming to Gd this morning, | tired of sinful life. Cry up the news to | heaven, Set all the bells ringing. Spread i the banquet under the arches. Let the ' crowned neads come down aud sit at the jubilee, I tell you thers is more delight in heaven over one man that gets reformed by the grace of God than over ninety and nine that never got off the track. I could give yon the history in a minute of one of the friends 1 ever had. Outside of my own welcomed was of splendid he had an ardor of soul fection that made ms love him like a brother, 1 miw men coming out of the seluons and gimbling hells, and 3 they : : E Fit } § ! i : i - a il 4 i § . i st 51 | ! 3 g i EN Ail i i of i 1 £ =i i 1 i { : i : Fe $58 Fri i i = i Figh er] Ei i I i : i} i Act the Fourth—-Thres graves in a dark of medicine, grave of the wile that died of a broken heart, grave of the man that diel of dissipation. Oh, what a blasting heath of three graves! Flenty of weeas, bud no Ring the ball and Jet the curtain arop. Act the Fifth—A destroysl sou's eter. nity. No lgot. No music. No hope colling its serpeuts® around the But Woe! Woe! 1 close my eves to this last act of the trageay. Quick! Quick! Riaz tha bell and let the curtain drop. ‘Rejoice, O young mas, m days of thy youth, but koow now that for into seernieth judgment.” “[here is a way that ————————— a” [ndian Seli-Marder and Seit-Tortare. “Uases of suicide, especially by haog- ing, sre rare amoayg the lodisns,” said 1 South Dakota, to the Star represeatative atthe “The only instanzs that I know of where an Indian maiden com. mitted suicide occura to me, ladwan like other maidens, fail in love, la this case she was jilted by a Sioux brave, and Indians will not eater the bappy huasing grounds, which maxes this case the more remarkable, Her lover married another squaw and the dramatic taking off of his first flame did not apparently cause him much remorse. Indians torture them. selves to show their grief, and the mother of this maiden hacked her body and limbs with a kaife io great gashes until every step she took was marked with blood. “Speaking about self-torture joflicted by Indians reminds me of the horrible sight one witnesses when a brave wishes to demonstrate his fitness to go upon the warpath and become a full-fledged war- rior. Before this hooor can be obtained an Indian brave must prove his worthi- ness. This Is how they do it: They cut two deep parallel gashes in the muscles of the chest. A thong of raw- hide is 10serted in the flesh and tied ina loop. This is then fastened to sa bent sapling sufficiently strong aad elastic to raise toe Indian off his feet. Here he will hang suspended by the thong several feet above the grouad, writhing and twisting in his agony, until the thong tears itself out of the bleeding flesh and he falls to the ground, sometimes in- sensible from pain. Frequently the struggles of the tortured man are not sufficjent to tear asunder the quivering flesh, and he bangs there until he be. comes insensible and 1s cut down. Squats and braves are seated around him in & circle, wailing and howling and beating +crums. This terrible ordeal oace passed signifies that the brave has i iz i g : 8 i § It is n remarkable peculiarity of most poisonous reotiles that they seem to have | n great reluctance of putting their dead. ly powers into operation. Before in. flicting the fatal bite the rattlesnake al- ways gives his note of warning, and the same may be said of the cobra di ca- pello the most deadly of the many poisonous reptiles of India. The cobra waraing is unmistakable—~he dilutes the crest upon his neck and gives a hiss | loud enough to be heard dustinctly fifty feet away. The cobras crest is a flexi. ble membrane or hood with two black circulars joined together so as to form a very giod repsesentation of a pair of spectacles, When the hood or crest is in postion its eyes seem to blaze with an impish lustre, and the continued hiss- ing gives the very air a noisome smell, According to the best authorities the | cobra never bites while the hcod is | closed; and so long as that particular | is not erected the creature may be ap- | proached and handled with impunity, | Even though the crest be spread, if | the creature continues in sileuce there is no danger. One hiss, however, is a sure sign that the reptile is angry and search. ing for a victim.—5t. Louis Republic. eet Ree ee Paunelty of Direct "loyal Heirs. The Emperors and Kings of Europ number seventeen, and if the heads of the fainilies of Bourbon aud Bonaparte be added to the male nineteen only nine of these illustrious personages (Great Britain, France, Russia, Prussia, Italy, Portugal, Denmark, Bweden and Greece) have heirs in the direct line, and of these direct heirs only those of Great Britain and the three last named States are married. The hers of Por.ugsl aod Prussia are still children. Of the other States the Bovereigns of Austria, Belgium and Roumania will ap- parently be succeeded Ly nephews, the King of Baxopy and the head of the | Bonapartes by brothers, the King of Spain by a sister, and the King of Ba- varia by an uncle. The heir of the King of Wurtemburg is a very remote bache- lor cousin, now sixty-five years old. The Grand Duchess of Baxe- Weimar, who is | sixty-nine, is heiress of ber niece, the | Queen of the Netherlands, and the poor King of Servia seems to have no her at ali, unless his father will accept the vosition. —Chicago Herald. - EE ——— — BIG PRIZES FOR CATS. “An Interesting Problem, There are a room, 1} Cat is fin « Her, a oat Pia w OBO « # on! on there Afiswmer 11 first you will te free from Set BY “ive 5 oa The ardert valoe 8) 1] enck » ine $20 oor of & valuable gold » and coffee wt « While the firet 1 rect ext § mage s paper will be giver Ci if made by af Hs 3 to Introd tive Mong JATH WIA MOns aN adil Deen seme Wilh your atiawer vake of the marvelous soap, » swustpsid, AH ssooessful SRewers are « to pani oo rice BL. Vor sar 0 telegrams x hig r wonderin 1 Perri ahes of he twenhiy. 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Some shepherds pay the mont “attention to the lattest sheep, For Dyspepsia, Indigestion znd Stomach dis orders, me Brown's Iron bitters-the Rest Tonic. It rebuilds the Blood and strengthens the muscles, A splendid medicine for weak and debilitated persons. One of the best of housekeepers is the woman who hates dirt, Beoecham's Impaired digestion cured > ont a box. Pills. Beecham sno others, Su The thought that he canbe well off with little, never enters the worldling's head. on AA Malaria sured and eradicated from m by Brown's Iron Bitters. which hiiih hort e blood, tones t 4 ner Igost ATs ke’ n chars on penn 1 Meestion, health, giving new energy and strength, The nation has no better friend mother who teaches her children Bo uum. he o Thom. A SPAS with eyes son's rte a rs ———— There are no undertakers in Japan, —— - After the Crip it Restores Health and Strength. oe Zr Myr, Dexter Curtis Is well-known in Wisconsin asa manufacturer liable business man. * Madison, Wie, Jan. 20, 1800, Hound & Co, speak in too favorable terms of in. 1 “Messrs, OC, 1. “I cannot Lowell, Mans, of Hood's Sarsapar have had a bad cough for 2 years, coming on after the grip. I tried physicians, we twice tothe Hot Springs of Arkansas, but «1 did no ir of Hood's Barsapa- me relief at once, The wm go to the right spot. | 6 bvolties, and have taken nearly I sm much better I gost a Dott rilla and it oie dime wen good ERY med to afterward got ail of I, and Wh “Bomany medic anything i aid not sey 4 g in tavor of s Sarsn SwiloUres fully satisfied it was woad an Eo eYer OF Bre 8 ivertised that do 0 good, 1 wi i was { Hoo LE "t irs good Hood's faundiow, { Hous 1*, er evr METI AT Dyxren Cure Pills i Dr. Kilmer's SWANP-ROOT aT rg, Ae dg” Fy ’ MES GERMAN MILLER, Saves Another Life! Suffered for Eight Long Years! Mus Mirien “I had been trou for cight years with ch and heset culti I Mved mostly on milk, as thing 1 at My kid Hyer wore glate: Was 80 min or and noe neither he buat Phy. avs stoma int ress] mo 8G 2B erribi nies I « Im that sat sleep or emt, 1 was troaleg! sdoiany benefit whatever, J st Rinwr's Sw amp-Hoot, ar ued the third hot i og In ey Las made Now i Chong 2 ery way. The we « Rwy a Marvelous Cure in n 1 ondoy every thing that 1 ont, a: sof a good nights aleep, may write mi Miller Springport, Mich can, £ statement A Anyone doubting 1 and I will ALSWYT, Lae “invalids Guide to Consnliotion Free. tor. Klimer & € Reg hereit = -— EY NE R——— “German Syrup” I must say a word as to the ef- ficacy of German Syrup. 1 have used it in my family for Bronchitis, sor ULCERS SCROFULA S | RHEUMATISM S O | BLOOD POISON And every kindred disease arising from impure Lhloogd cured by that never-failing and best of «1! wedicines, >! OC Book on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed fro. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CQ. 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