~ ws wm REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S DAY SERMON. SUN- Subject: ‘The Mission of the Frost.” is Text: “By the breath of od frost given,” Job xxxvil., 10, Nothing is more embarrassing toan organ- fst or pianist than to put his finger on a key of the instrament and have it make no re sponse. Though all the other keys are in full play, that one silence destroys the musie, 8o in the great cathedral of Nature, waited and lost. While fire and ball, tion, if the orchestral damaged frost made no utterance the rendering would be hopelessly and the harmony forever incom- plete. Iam more glad than I can tell that the white key of the frost sounds forth as mightily as any of the other keys, and when David touches it inthe Psalms it sounds forth the words, ‘‘He soattereth the hoar frost like ashes." and when Job touches it in my text it resounds with the words, breath of God frost is given,” As no one seams disposed to discuss the mission of frost, depending on divine help I undertake it. This the first Sabbath winter, The leaves are down. has gone out of the air. The birds have made their winged march southward, The landscape has been scarred by the autamnal equinox, The huskers have rifled the corn- shocks. The night sky has shown the usual meteoric restlessness of November, Three seasons of the year are past, and the fourth and last has entered, Another element now comes in to bless snd adorn and instruct the world. It isthe frost, The palaces of this king are far up in the arctic. Their walls are glittering coneelation, Windsor eastles and Tuflleries and winter pa and Kenliworths and Alhambras of foe, temples with pendant nandeliors of fee, thrones wf + on which eternal theaters on whose stag dr tmintizes eternal winter, HM dee, crowns of ive, sepulehers of jee mountains of jee, dominions of ice ster frigidity ! From those hard, white, portals King Frost deseends and waves his silvery scepter over our temperate zone, You will soon hear his heel on the skating pond. You already feel his breath in the night wind. Iv most considered an enemy here to benumb and hinder and slay, I shall show you that the frost is g friend, with benediction divinely nounced, and charged and surcharged lessons potent, beneficent an The B sn tie alinde and we must not ignore it, of God frost is given, First I think of frost gins his work on the on the window panes, ith all manner of col aod pencil of erystal in his right hand, sits down belore the humblest hush in the latter part of September and begins the sketel } Now he puts u the foliage a faint pallor. and thea a tous brown, and then a hue of orange, and fame of fire, The beech and ash and oak are turned first into sunrises and then into sun sets of vividoess and splendor. Al ithe are penciled by one, but son whole forest in the course shows great velocity of work, Weenix, the Datel painter, couid make in a summer day three portraits of life sige. the frost in ten days can paint ten mo tains in life size, It makes the last dave of an automaal wool the days 0! its ehinfest glory— Luxembourgs in the Adirondacks Louvres in the Sierra Nevadas, Vaticans in the White Jiguniaing The wor: of painters you must see the right fully app preciate. but the paintings frost in all lights are enchanting from time when the curtain of the morning Hiftsto the time when the curtain of the night dr yp, Michael Angelo put ne representation of the | judgment, bu frost represents univers Me nfl: Td upon 3000 miles of stretehed our grandear Leonardo da Vinei put upon canvas our Lord's last supper : admire, but the frost puts the gleamis ices of the imperial gle per of the dying year lengths and breadths When Titian first gazed upon Correggio, he was wrought up iuto ecstacy that he eried out, “If [ were Titian, I would be Correggio.” and so and overpowering are the autumnal scenss of our American jorests that nature might well exelaim to ano a were not the stinlight, I would be the fros: RBugzendas, the on n painter, from weaknese in his right hand learnad to paint with bi frosts paints with be and them more skill than all the Rembran Rabens and Wests and Poussins ani Durers and Paul Yeroneses and gathered in one long art gallery. Bu: the door of that great museum of autumsal oo’ oring is now closed fora tw sivemonth, another spectacle just as wonderinl is now open, I put vou on the alert and ask vou to put your children on the alert, . Tired of working on the leay the will soon turn to the window ve. will soon waken on 8 cold morning that the windows of your home have the night been adorned with curves coronets, with exquisiteness with i with almost supernatural spectacle you will appreciate waat my text says as it decinres, By the breath of God fros is given, You will see on the window pane traced there by the frost, whole gardens ot beauty —ferus, orchids, daffodils, heliotropes, china asters, fountains, statues, ho unds on the chase, rosbucks plunging into the stream, battle scones with dying and dead, eats- falques of kings, triumphal processions——and as the mornin =un breaks through vou will see cities on fire, and bombardment with bursting shell, and illuminstions as for some great victory, coronations and angels on the wing, All night long while you were sleepin the frost was workine, and You ought not let the warmth obliterate the scene until vou have admired it, studied it, absorbed it. set it up in your memory for perpetual refresh. ment and realized the force and magnitude is of aces stlen~e r + eternal cold piilars of ive, arches chariots of ice, isl aming oming ro. ’ with i 5 v ible sowve nes as a pain leaves an Wit Ir his je! [3 ¥ VEY 6h ol a in sing his the ation ries of the in the | of the and Alleghanies a sket great ne fores ther . Imboriog ¢ loft brut has in Itean i Albert Cla les frome You God frost is given.” Ob, what a Gol we have! What resonirces are implied by the fact that he is able to do that by the finger of the frost fifty times in one winter and on a hun dred thousand window panes for thousands of winters | The great art galleries of Yenles ani Xa- ples and Dresden aro ecarolully guarded, and governments protect them, for once lost, such as no human art could ever produce, hundreds of thousands of them, only for four or five hours, and then rubs them out, making the place clear for a display just as magnificent the next morning, No one but a God could afford to do that, It would bankrupt everything but inflaity and omni potence, Standinz here between the closed doors of the pietured woods and the opening doors of the Srausdgured i ndow Hint, I want to etre my folly an Jous olly of longing for glorioas things in the distance, while we neglect appreciation of glorious things near by. “Oh, it I could only go and see the factories of lace at Brussels BAYS SOM One, Why, within thirty feet of where you awaken some ber morning you will see richer Ince interwoven for your window panes by divine flagere. Oh, if I could il, ihe fac. tories of slik at Lyons! I" says some one, Why, without leaving your home on the h side of your own house on Christmas you may see where the Lord has spun threads about your windows this way and that—embroideries such as no one but God can work, ! sion in expenses to look at that whish is not | half as well dons as something we can ses | by crossing our own room, and free of frost, will soon be busy at | your own home! Next I speak of the frost as a physician, | Standing at the gates of New York harbor autumn before last, the frost drove ! the cholera, saying, ‘Thus far shalt thou come and no farther,” From Memphis and i New Orleans and Jucksonville he smote the faver plague till it reeled back and departed. The frost is a physician that doctors cities, | Nations and continents, world. Quinine for malaria, anti-febrile for | typholds, sulphonal for sleeplessness, anti- | spasmodic for disturbed nerves, but in therapeutics there is no remedy like the small pellets prepared by the cold, and no physician so skilful or 50 mighty ns the frost, Scotland has had great physicians, but her greatest doctors have been the Abernethies and Aberorombies that have come down over the highlands horsed on the north wind, | Enziand has had her great physicians, but | her greateat doctors have been the Andrew Clarkes and the Mackenzies who appeared the first night the fields of England wera rimmed with white. America bas had its | great physicians, but her greatest doctors have been the Willard Parkers and Valentine Motts who landed from bleak skies while our fingers were benumbed and our ears | tingled with the cold. Oh, it is high time { that you add another line to your liturgy! It is high time that you make an addendom to your prayers. It is high time that you enlarge the catalogue of your blessings. Thank God for frost, It is the best of feldes, It is the only hope in bacter It is the medicament of continents, It is the salvation of our temperate zone, It is the best tone that God ever gave the hi man race. It is the only strong stimulant which has no reaction. The best commentary on {it I bad while walking near hero ons cool morning with my brother John, who spont the most of his life as n missionary in Chins, and in that part of it where there are no frosts, He sald there was a tingiing glad- ness in his nerves indesoribable, and an almost intoxication of delight from the fact that it was the first time for years he had felt the sensation of frost, We mplain of it, we scold it, we frown upon it, when we to be stirred by it to gratiiudeand hoist it on | a doxology jut I must go farther frost as a jeweler, As the rain, 80 the frost is frozen dew, forms it from a liquid into a erystal, the dew glorified. In thethirty-eighth « ter of that inspired drama, the boo God says to the inspired dra sowtatie interrogation. "The hoa heaven, who hath gendered ity Job if he knows the frost, He inquires about that Job eal line, An the parentage of a raindrop in YO4Urs ago gave a suggestive “Hath the rain a Almighty is catechising He practically says father? Do you know its ther? In what eradie of the leaves did we wind rock it? ‘The houry {rost of heaven, rive hath gendered it 7 Heo is a stupid Christian who much of the printed and bound Bible that he riecls the Old Testament « he fields, reads the wisdom and Kindness and 1G yd written in blossoms on the n sparkies on the lake, in sl the m MWA, in frost is the Jew sk nothing more wonderful in all ryvstallography. Some morning in Decem 'r a whole « tinent i= found besprent with diamonds, the result of one t's work by this jeweler, Do 3 wke the deprocistory re nark the frost is impermanent and will last two orthree hours What of that Wa into London tower ani look at Crown jewels of Eagland, but weare ina procession that the guards Keep moving on, and five minutes or less are your only opportunity o looking at those crown jewels, but at the rown jewals bestarred of the frost parks and flelds youn may stand to look deliberntely and for bourse, and po oaeto tell you to move all iol- ought an l speak snow is frozen God trans. It i= shape { Jou, if with ry frost of God there asks the He gene eal ot parentage its pedigrees iv up the God hal Su zrests stu frosts inute t r slope asked about words that text for a sermon, But now the Lord Joi about out “Poy me fathe r the frost, wi know its inks a0 LH of orchard, the sy, groates] Ferre is ars I'he ser { the earth frost, mga the ¥ ir in and disder Kings ties regains ! it of heaven! Lrative days has t wireetn {1 a¢ *hkrouzh sliver and if the 5 rich enough throw pearis, st th King of frost the uly king riel throw opals and sapphires and d Homer dmioribes kines of amber given to Penelope, frost necklinoes a continent, The cary precious stones given to Harmonia pinions of orange jasper and white m stone and Indian agate, bat it was a mis’or tune to any one who owned or inherited and its history, genorntic generat was a history of t the regalia of frost is the goo SYery morning that owns it, Ihe imperial bh somild not afford the (Une sis after disaster, Lu i fortune of isehold of Louie XVi diamond necklace which ha { been ordered for Queen Marie Antoinstte, and it was stolen and taken apart and lost, but the neckiaes that the frost puts on the wintry morning, thoa rh made 8% Many br:lliants as the withersad glass blades, is easily afforded by divine opulence and is naver lost, bul after ifs use in the eoronstion of the flelds is taken nek to heaven, © men and women, accustomed to go into ecstasy when in foreign teavel you eome upon the historical gems of Nat. ons, sailed the Mountain of Glory, o! Light, or the Crown of ] Eye of Allah, or the Star of Barawakx, or the Kobe -noor, 1 implead you study the jewels strewn all round your wintry home and rea. lizathat “oy the breath of God frost given,” But I go a step farther and speak of the frost as an evangelist, and a text of Seripiure is not of much use to me unless I can find the gospel in ft. The Israelites in the wil. derness breakfasted on something that looked like frozen dew, and the dew evapor- ated and left a pulverized material, white and looking hike frost, but it was manna, and of that they ate, So now this morning, mixed with the frozen dew of my text, thers is manta on which we ean breakfast our souls, You say the frost Kills, Yes, it Kills some things, but we have aiready seen that it gives health nnd life to others. This gospel is the savor ol lite nuto life or of death unto death As the frost is mighty, the gospel is mighty, of | be 0 or the the Moon, or the Nea 1) { descends from heaven, {| God frost is given, gospel is given, grace of God purifies, As the frost bestars | the sarth, 80 grace bejewels the soul. Asthe By the breath of | otherwise would beinedible, so the frost of | trinls ripens and prepares food for the soul, walnut and chestnut and bickory opea, and | the luxuries of the wood s come into our laps | or upon our tables ; so the frost of trial takes many a hard and prickly shell and erushes ® ath that which stung the soul now sit There are pastngay ot Seripture that once were cnigmas, puzzles, riddles and phposdi. bilities for you to understand, bat the frosts oftrouble after awhile exposed the full mean ing to your soul, You said, “I do not see why David keeps rolling over in his psalm the story of how he was pursued and perse- cuted.” He describes himself as surrounded bY boss. He says, “They compassed me ut like bees ; yaa, they compassed me about lke bees," ou think what an ex- Aftgerating thing for him to exclaim, “‘Out u Fhe Sapa of hell have I cried unto Thee, And there is 80 much of that style of lam- entation in his wEtings you think he over- foe It, pu after awh the frou gon POMS Upon you inthe shape of persecu and are attick With this censare and stuck with that defamation, and stuck with ome | Jattehood, and Hes fo swarms are red sboat aur ny using vid meant when passed me about like ag id Yoo, hey his | Sompasd 10 bout ix been,” and you go and feel What opened all thos: chapters that hitherto hud no appropriateness? Frosts! For un long while the Bible sosemeld lopsided up to the consolatory, Why page alter page after chapter and book after in the Bible taken up with allevia- with pacifications, with condolence? The book svems like an apothecary store with one-half of the shelves oceupiel with balsams. Why such a superfiuity of ba. sams? But after awhile the membransous eroup carries off your ehild, or your health gives way under the grip, or your property Is swept off by u bad fovestme ut, or peranns all three troubles come at onee-—bank- ruptey, sickness an | bereavement, Now the consolatory parts of the Bible do not soem to disproportionate, You want something off almos: all the shelves of that snered dispensary. What has uncovered and exposod to you the usefulness of mach of the Bible that was before hidden? The frosts have been fulfilling their mission, Put down all the promises of the Bible on for study, and pat on one side the table a man who has never had any trouble, or very little of it, but pile upon the table beside him all encyelopadias and all diction. aries, and all archmologies and all come mentaries, and on the other side of the table put a man who bas had trial upon trial, dis. aster upon disaster, and let him begin the study of the promises without lexicon, with out commentary, without any book 1o ex. pinin or help, and this Intter man will under stand far more of the height and depth, and lsngth and breadth promises than the learned exeget opposite, almost sub merged in sacred literature he has the advantage over the other because he has felt the mission of the frosts Oh, take the consolation of this thet ye to whom life is and a disappointment, and a a pang. That is a beautiful the Hebrews which i, then of bricks is doubled, book be 80 of those one 41 a struggle gantiet and provers and “When the tale Moses comes, Mild dos sickness, but violent and so I stand drops that will if you will only take it is: “In the world bat he ng BAYS, medicine will y for mild patos need strong d ou and count out alleviate your worst the medi ma of PRA over t eclne shall bave have endure on greatest of 3 Forge. What mi issing John Banyan's ‘ Mle an, frosts of im Fhe greatest is the I SRO ihe graduste trial fits and vou will seo and edu wiional, which baltic axes always noticed in o wd had son by # is 80 proveroial ymething {say o ay wife alway portunity ¥ svn d gos proce fed 1% ’ Ny « the 0 Ta Pants wr, Or, may breath of hn serve the 1 hard kn Bwhiie though vou it now. that hy the g Gol frose iv rae of your pining Taxes after inte lovin I» i ot Owen in o tent, For many ya selebrated the grace and wilt Arabian b : bition of horseman was just outside t Arabia inte] Aral i» know wher Araldan raow got fl and postr 3 Vi | Mohammed, with 30.000 a the march, cou 1d for them f water for three da Comin A river wa 3 sight 30 000 he ite alt ing. an ympaint, ols yy ind fran OPEes wonderfa: #xhi. Yer Witness Jorofa ley n steed no » thes their wd frows VOR BYAIFY Bot & drog r 10 the tog With a wil yr the st reas turies ago fa hill the spins Sart od araed host was seen af Mohammed's commas 100 orthe bh or An ad t £ reese | ail the 30.000 the river ex with thirst, wheeled y fine Nothing in human bris os exonis that bravery and ssi! arabia i war horses I Mohamned chose those flve onthe wad apt fis wee i batt ie sell saor sacrifice rv and ae five svien ki 1 alee use, and from Arabi em Ages equestrian world, And jet war of troth against err eas aoninst sin and heaven agains teat war horses are fed Ir ' under pany and self denial and swered the gospel trampet ato fine, Out of great tribulation great fires, out of great they And let say It will not take 301 10 make up to you in the next all vou have sulleral in this Ae § braven He may say, man one of thous rowernd and « palaces that ridge of gold overlooking the sen of ginss, Give this woman = home among those amarant hine blooms and bet weon hows fountains toming in the everlasting sunlight, Give her a couch manopied with rainbows to pay her for all the fatigues of witehood and motheriood and housexeeping, from which she had no rest jor forty years “Capbearers of heaven, give these arrived souls from earth the costliest Lever. ages, and roll to their door the grandest shariots, and hang on their walls the sweet. =! harps that ever thrammed to flaggers seraphic. Give to them rapiure on rapture, celebration on eeiebhration, jubilee on jubi. lee, heaven on heaven. They had a hard time on earth earning a livelihood, or ing six children, or waiting on querulous old age, or battling falsehoods that were told about them, or were compelled to work after they got shortbhreathed and rheumatic and dimsighted, * Chamberiaing of heaven! Keepers of tha king's robes! Banqueters of eternal royalty | Make up to them a bundredfold, a thousand. Lhoreea for the me say thas gront dencen CRM long world for snter frosts, -_ ¢ the or Hive this otnaded swaddling clothes to shroud, and thos wlio, whether on the hills, or fot all in the ol the frosts stand up and wave their scepters?” And 1 looked and, behold ! nine-tenths of tha | that on the coldest nights the aurora is and that “‘by the breath of God frost is given.” A Ferocious Little Fish, In an article on “Jamaica Fishing,” in Outing, the author says: The only drawback to the use of the tuck net is tho liability to ensnare those ferocious little cannibals, ‘‘tripe-eat- ers,” so called because they soon pen- etrate to the abdomen of any suimal they attack, and speedily reduce it to a skeleton. They usnally £0 in swarms, their jaws wide open, tearing whatever comes in their wai. especially the meshes of a net, which the oy ich render useless, This bloodthirsty lit- tle creature is of a bright orange hue, shading towards the back ay ash color, while its gill-covers are tinged with red. 5 ASA. The largest bell in the world is the Kremlitt, ast Moscow, Russia; 432,000 pounds, | A TENNYSON STORY. Was Not Only sn Great Poet, bot a Good Business Man. A capital story, which Is authentic, Is told atout the laureate and his wonderful “The Hevenge,” says a correspondent of the Leeds (England) Mercary., It was first published in the Nineteenth Century In 1878 or 1879. On the eve of its publication Tennyson in- vited between thirty and forty of his most intimate friends to his home in Eaton Square,in order that he might recite this patriotic plece to them. It is well known that Lord Tennyson was an excellent man of business Had he written “Paradise Lost” he would have been both very hungry and very cold before accepting £10 for the copyright. in existence which, right to publish his works at a cer- tain price, ends with a declaration that, whether his offer or not, he (Lord Tennyson) would not accept “a blessed less! In fact, he was very much like a certain Leeds banker who, when asked by a cust to cash 4 draft for a large amount over the ounter replied: “We do for nothing for nobody here” in Wemyss Reld's “Life of Lord Hough- ton” there is an amusing letter from the late laureate which compares the writing of poetry for nothing to the milkirg of he goats When the re- eital of “The Revenge” in Eaton Square took place there was much fingo feeling about in shion society in London, and not a few in persons were among the select AS Lhe proceeded in SODOrous tones, rendered attractive by his Lin- coinshire accent, the few upon his words he the las He quite late poein, Hner athe fected audience. his rich and aii the more poet favored Ww he S43 13 4F h 0g reached island cra GL EVETINO? present were ment ana Amaze added the th Lie ate A Child Enjoys The pleasant Save ing eect of he need of 8 Tr. gen! action and of Figs, father or mother tat hyraug when in MERI: be cos five or bilious, the mos gratifying result bread ow oly known and bottie. 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Hn, of Court, Walker county, Georgia hinks enough of German Syrup send wus voluntanis sing it hes 1 thus use and le, what they worth the eiion of th It is above suspicion your German Syrup my Coug 233 ir AUT God and and WOInan physionl wreck that i At Druggistis. 50 cent and $1.00 Size, svalidy uid 10 Real msaitatdon Kilmeer & Co, - Bia from RK. Y. Very from 4 of Sra In hamton, the Superi 101 a strong | andor and ed ey 3 gem tg ucauon PHOTOS phirATIamEs 430 Nic smm———— Min, Red ‘* 1 have used Sherman, Biaine, Depew Russell, lave used Butier. Congling, Whitelaw Reid, he SAVS, Horace Greely, Daniel Webster, Bis. hs and Colds on the Throat BE ATE rst Toe and Lungs. 1« an recommend it for are munted in A tyle. Abo them as a first-class medicine, Take no substitute, arti € put 201 am, « — POY compieie for 19 cents @ | i or sismps AUR TS, i HOY AND GIRLS are relling co ng money WIFT'S SPECIFIC» For renov ating the entire system, eliminating ail YVoisons from the HOt SH & CO. 4 Exchange Building, $ Biogd, whether of scrofulous of Boston, Mass malarial origin, this SA bas no equal, and SH “ For eighteen months 1 had an eating sore on my tongue I was treated by best Jocal physicians, bat obtained no relief | the sore gradually grew worse. 1 finally took 8, 8 8 . and was entirely cured afte: using a few bottles.’ C. BB. McL EMORE, Henderson, Tex. ? cp — Treatise on Blood and Skin oases mailed free, Tue Swirr Srectric Co, ANA, Ga. purity of material,” “excellent favor,” FAMILY MEDICINE] and “uniform even oop |GENTS Sn So. aa] | MALTERBARER® Ph, DORCHESTER, fuss, or commision 10 hal $ PEC 1A 1: OFFER. ~To advertise our “Victron eal Ink Erasing Pencil. Agents ag a per i Uotom Proc, on reeeipt of your photogra reek, Monre Bras Mig Uo X wo, La Crosse, | and se. (mote wr ste ) we will re: a y CHANC | BEAL ey LLY LO LOMED nd FRAMED. usands A Presche { same price We have Poels Presid ts, Aciresscs ents 6 ‘THE JUDCES WORLD'S COLUMSIAX EXPOSITIO Have made the HIGHEST AWARDS Medals and Diplomas) to WALTER BAKER & CO. On each of the following named articles: BREAKFAST COCOA, . Premium No. 1, Chocolate, Hin. Vanilla Chocolate, . . . German Sweet Chocolate, Coco Butter, « + « « « + For FLAKE & CA BN Peart Siren. Almay. BRU any Boggy oh to pr in 3 twats with my « ow y mail, pais, AGENTN. BRINK. Boom viite. O PATENTS INGE © & { i until Patent obtained. Write for Inventor's Guide 3 weekly & board wanted, mechanic B ——" PRON, 0 MP foe with tools: references, 325 ¥ Ta ow York. PIERRE chanoes for small investments, i Tada — mr Juw 4 howeagin next ten MENT RAVKE 10 thousands in Cram RYBRITVES.