—————————————— . - REY. DR TALMAGE The Eminent Washington Divine's Sanday Sermon. Subject: A Farmer's Counsel.” Him that maketh ths seven ~-Amos v,, 8 A country farmer wrote this text, Amos of Tekon, He plowad the earth and threshed the grain by a new threshing machine just fnveuted, as formerly the eattle trod vut the grain, He gathersd the fruit of the syca- more tree and soariflel it with an iron comb Juat before it was getting ripe, as it Was nec. wasary and customary in that way to take from it the bitterness. He was the son of a poor shepherd and stuttered, but before the BE es the Philistines and Syrians and Phoenfeians and Moabites and Ammon- ites and Edomites and [raslites trembled. Moses was an law giver, Daniel was a rince, [salah » courtier and David a king, Texr: “Seak stars and Orion. t Amos, the anthor of my text, wasa poss. ant, aad, as might Le supposed, nearly all | bis pacallelisms are pastoral, his prophecy | full of the odor of new mown hay, and the | rattle of locusts, and the rumble of carts with sheaves, and the roar of wild beasts de- | vouring the flock while the shepherd came | out in their defence. He watched the herds | by day, and by night inhabited a booth made out of bushes so that through these branches he could stars all night long, and was more familiar with them than we who t fs t wd gone the havo tight roofs aver the star briek chimney seasons of special danger} open fleld all the ganelter the carla the stellarfembrol g6H tH Vist the von of lunar light What a life i herds! Poor Amos! night hark to th roar, and the be whit, te-who, nn unwittingly through the hardsmen, go of the heavens | time spread 1 ! some stars advancing and He associated t dawn certain seasons of the year nature, and he ad month by mouth, t of the oconstalia livinity rhythmie But two rosettes socially attracted his attention while se mt r lving on his ba 1 Opt t the mid-night seven stars, and Orion this rustic prophet us it rises about ths 1st of May be associated with the as it the meridian ia nuary. The Pleiades, or saven stars, © wed with all sweetness and joy; Orion, t oral The anclents wers the : hysiognomy and f ieavanly bodies because they thou had a special influancs ug perhaps they ware right. tew hours lifts and iets down the Atlantic ocean and the sisetric the sun, by all selentifle admissio the earth, why not the stars Lave tionate affect? Aud there are some things which make me thiok that it mav not have been all super. | stitution which conneetsd the movements and appearance of the heavealy bodies with great moral events on earth. Did not a meteor run on evangelistic srrand on the first Christmas night and designate the rough cradle of our Lord? Did not the stars | in their course fight againgg Bisera’ Was it merely coincidental that before the destruc. tion of Jerusalem the moon was hidden for twelve consecutive nigh Did it merely Bappvn so that a new star appeared (n staliation Cassiopeia, just before Charles 1X responsible for the Si, ’ recoding sotting with | otic ind Wm fier 1nd He had a p night by } year by 3 SEAS BARD former associated with spring, The latter to winter omes tom past nrOnOr. propor ta Yon aad then disappeared f France, who was Jartholomew mas. sacre died? Was it witho significance that in the Jays he Boman Emg Justinian war and amine were preceded by the dimness of whizh for nearly a it than 4 aror YEAr ZAYe No more though there wars no clouds to Astrology, after al!, may have been thing more than a bri t heathenlsm wonder that Amos yf the text, having bes these two anthems of the stars, the stout, rough staf took icto his ) knotted {Ingers tha pe vised the reoreant { turn to God, the seven stars which Amos gave 7 appropriate for In the first place sea, thal the G Orion must be the so mich a star here an pressed the in+pire one group and saw that hight SEASON, AD kept stop sisterhood ing precedence. From y time Hesiod ¢ the Pleiades the “ses Inughters and Virgil wrote in b Y.asid Orion,” until n have order establish ing: order they may be pigeon! ‘ of the mighty on the do } that all Nations may read i persist. ent order, sublia t teat What a sedative to vou an me, to whom eommunitied and Natio netimes going pellmeli, and ti ruled flend at haphazard, » administration! worlds in certainly keep all and Nations and We had not better fret ant's argument of the te oan take care of Pleiades and the four He can probably wa inhabit, Bo 1 feel very m day when we were going in to get a grist ground, and I, a boy ¢ years, sat in the back pa he wagon, and our yoke of oxen ran away with us, and | along a labyrinthine road through the | woods, so that I thought avery moment we | would be dashed to pleces, and I madea | terrible outery of fright, and my father | turned to me with a face perfestly calm and said: “De Witt, what are you crying about? I guess we ean ride a3 fast ag the oxen can run.” And, my hearers, why should we be | affrighted and lose our equilibrium fn the | swift movement of worldly events, especially when we are sssured that it is not a yoke of uobrokeq steers that are drawing us on, bat that order and wise goverument are in the yoke? In your occupation, your mission, your spaere, do the best you oan and thea trust to God, and {f things are all mixed and dfs. | quieting and your brain is hot and your Beart sick get some one to go out with you into the starlight and point out to you the Pleiades, cr, b-tior than that, get into some observatory, and through the telescope see farther then Amos with tae naked eye could «namely, 200 stars in the Pleiades and that in whet is called the sword of Orion thers is a nebunia computed to be two trillion two bundred thousand billion of times larger than theeun., Oh, be at peace with the God who made that and controls all that, the wheel of the constellations turning in the wheel of galaxies for thousands of venrs without the breaking of a cog, or the slipping of a band, or the snap of =n axle, For your lactdity and comiort through the Lord esus Christ I charge you, “Sesk Him that sonketh the seven stars ana Orion,” ft, Amos saw, ns wo mast sof, that the God who made these two groups of the text wis the God of Light. Amos saw that God was Bot satisfied with making ons star or two or three stars, but He makes seven, and, having finished that group of worlds, makes another group group after group. To the ek un herdaman a Pisiades an It was not yn piace, never contest. wile f Atlas writte slog rider, fone Ther em keeps ATA the seve: The to the ¢ seven $ of rt o Pleiades Ha adds Orion. It seems that God Hikes light so well that He keeps making It Only ono being in the universes knows the statistées of solar, lunar, stellar, meteoric ereations, and that is the Creator Himself, And they have all been lovingly christened, | sach on» a name as distinct as the names of | your children. ‘He telleth the number of | the stars. He calloth them all by their | names The saven Pleiades had names | given to them, and they are Aloyone, Merops, Coleno, Electra, SBierope, Taygets and Mala, But think of the billions and trillions of daughters of starry light that God calls by name as they sweep by Him with beaming brow and lustrous robs! Bo foud is God of light--natural light, moral light, spiritual light! Again and again is light harnessed for symbolization—Christ, the bright and morning star; evangelization, the daybreak the redemption of Nations, sun of righteous. neas rising with healing in His wings. Oh, | men and women, with 30 many sorrows sad sins and perplexities, if you want light of comfort, light of pardon, light of goodness, {n earnest prayer through Christ, ‘Seek Him that maketh the seven stars and Orion." Again, Amos saw, as we must ses, that the God who made these two archipelagoss of stars must be an nnchauging God. There had been no change in the stellar appearance in this herdsman’'s lifetime, and his father, a shepherd, reported to him that there had | heen no change in his lifetime, And these two | clusters hang over the celestial arbor now just as they wore the first wight that they shons on the Edenic bowers; the same as when the Ezyptians built the pyramids from the top of which to wateh them; the same | 18 when the Chaldeans ealoulated aclipses: the same as when Elihu, according | wk of Job, want study the same Ptol the to tha bo the | borealis inder and C Calisthenas rns to Hearse perni $y Pisiades tha 14 {the National Capit rae at the Presidents four months so great werd the antipathies that a roffian’s pistol in a Washington depot expressed the sentiment ol many Hsap- fated off he worid wmriot and drives tar and the h vad is Huzza, and ti thema. Lori Cobham, lauded And had $35.0 rward exeorated aad liv ! the royal the Great after remained unburied for thirty days bso n nas would do the honor of shoveling him under. The Duke | f Wellington refused to have his {ron f mended because it had been broken by an in- furiated populace in somes hour of political axcitemeant, and he left it in ruins that might learn what a flekle thing is human favor But the mercy ol the L 1g to everlasting to t His righteousness : fron’s children of such as keep sunt, and t who remember mandments to do the This ‘soak Him that makath the seven stars Orion Again, i who 108 sank er, 4it8 in its rae | WAS AD] was aft stolen from YOar, SOA Alexander on Kile jeath RIA anos men Him, and y those momant snd mos Baw, a8 wo must soe, that the mada thesa two beacons of the ori. antal night aky must be & God of love and kindly warning. The Pleiades rising ln mid. sky sald to ail the herdsmen aod shepherds | aad husbandmen, “Come oot and spjoy the | mild weather and cultivate your gardens and | fields.” Orion, coming ia winter, warned them to prepare for tempest. All navigation was rogulated by thess two constellations. ons sald to shipmaster and crew, Holst satl for the =a and gather merchan- {iss from other innda."’ But Orion was the storm sigoal and said, Reel satll, make things snug or put into harbor, for the hurrei- | canes are gettiog their wings out As the Pielades were thesweet avangels of the af waz the warning prophet ofthe wi now [ get the best view of God [| « Thera are two sermons [ never want h--the one that tod y #0 lenient, = n » what they will racture His every law it impertinence and n indear His throne, and while they arm apittiog in His face and stabb ng at His heart He takes th His arms aad and chesk, saviog { heaven The want (o preact God as all fire underciond, and wi human Se ny. The he non Oh, had presents i MAY { rabalil Kimoes their (nfuri- tM su thar the on up in ated brow ” i LInRGOm I never roprosonts and th tossing the infloite ag prea WArning God You winter Lat varatat! azntat! i mu MDL just as important as the sg winter pass without sid {es to bind the rivers an war fisida, u wi your apitals and your Christmas frost t anr i then ¥ mass: a ial rms to green was the old Ther tans un tha y tons up Lhe 5 proverh Ht iomatar at three dagrooes fn Dessmber ¥ as May and J * AS 7 stam ust as important wo neal the st & of life Theres are Nt 5 A I tell you as wz do ruined by prosperity t we had our own way would have bean imperscaations ness and worldlineas and disgasting sin and puffed up catilwe would have been xe J Cassar, who was made by sycophants to be. liava that he was divine, and the freckles on his face were said to be : the sunshine in life, bet ins as the stars of the One of the summer awiltest transatiantic voyages by the Etruria was be. | aus#e she had a stormy wiad abaft, chasing New 1} Eiverpoo going io the opposite direction the storm was a buffeting aod a hindranos, It fsatad tning to have a stor ahead, push- us back, but if we be Go childron and toward heaven the sto ! life will y canse ua the sooner int m 80 giad to believe that and and and and sea ars not usnchaloed maniacs (ee #0 upon the earth, but are under Divine supervision! Iam so glad that the God of the seven stars ia also the God of Orion’ It yit of Dante's suffering came the sub. lime “Diving Commedia,” and out of John Milton's blindness came “Paradise Lost ani out of miserable infidel attack cams the ‘Bridgewater Treatise” in favor of Christi anity, and out of David's exile cams thesongs | cf consolation, and out of the sufferings of | ads one her fron jut i the misirais &iraod was demption, and out of your bereavement. your persecution, your poverties, your mis fortunes, may vet come an sternal heaven. Oh, what a mercy it is that fu the text and all up aad down the Bible God induces us to look out toward other worlds’ Dible as- tronofny in Genesis, In Joshua, in Job, in the Psalne, in the prophets, major and | minor; in 8t, Joha's A ocalypse, practicaiiy saying: “Worlds' orids! Worlds! Get ready for them!” We have a nice little world here that we atick to, as though losing that we lose nll. We ars alradd of fallin off this little raft of a world. We are afrai that some meteoric iconoclast will some night smash it, and we wanl everything to revolve around it asd ars disappointad when wo find that it revolves around the sun in. stead of the sun revolving around it. What a fuss we make about this little bit of a world, {ts existence only a short time be tween two spasms, the paroxysm by which it was hurled from choas into order and the "And 1 am glad that so many texts oall us io look off to other worlds, many of them larger and grander and mors resplendent. “Look there,” says Job, "at Mazaroth and Arcturus and his sons!” “Look there” gays Bt, John, “gt the moon under Christ's fost!" “Look there’ says Joshun, “at the sun standing stil above Gibmon!” “Look there,” says Moses, “at the sparkling firmament” ‘Look there” gays Amos, the herdsman, “at the seven wtnrs and Orlon'” Do not let us be so sad about those who shove off from this word undar Christly pliotage. Do not Isat us bam agitated about our own going off this little barge or sloop or onnal boat of nworld to got on some Great Eastern of the heavens, Do not let us persist in wanting to stay in this barn, thisshed, this outhouses of a world when all the King's palaces already oceupio by many of our best friends nre swinging wide open thelr gates to let ns in, When I read, “In My Father's house are many mansfons,” I do not know but that ech world is a room, and as many rooms ns thers are worlds, stellur stairs, stellar gal. lories, stellar hallways, steliar windows, stallar domes, How our departed friends must pity us shut up in thess eram pod apart. monts tired If we walk fifteen miles, when they somo morning, by one stroke of wing, can make circuit of the whole stellar system for goatins! Perhaps vonder twinkling constellation is the resi. group of twelve luminaries may be the celestial home of the aposties, Perhaps that steep of light is the dwelling place of angles cherable, seraphic, archangelic. A mansion with as many rooms ns worlds, and all thelr windows (Hluminated tor festivity! Oh, how this widens and lifts and stimu. lates our expectation! How little It makes the present, and bow stupendous it makes the future! How it consoles about our plous dead, that, instead of being boxad up and under the ground, have the range of as rooms as there are worlds and wel. everywhere, for it is the Father's in which thers are many mansions! God of the seven stars and Orion, the GCsIAsY, text and seek Him 104 come ¥ ia 0 Lord JER f such a vision? I must obey my spook Him, I will sesk Him, 1 now, y mind that it is not the ’" for 1 eall t« s that and that worth 1 # than all inspirad herdsman ' nn each of Fekon. iad studied it} gue, Germany, itils Moro than #0 irops taxed for its o f the Magi, with pr urchase a kKingd Agnes, v masterpiec ire springing 511 fost i ginss tha oh slog the pil { noireling : i seuipture falls back Its a} ts stainsa It Statues ane 1 Statues above statu san do no m faints and against vad stalls and down on pavements which the kings and quesns of the sarth waal., Naveand a ortals combining U Interiaced, As 8 inti wre, but and transept and § of sunrise and sunset, intercolumned grandeur, itside, looking at the d¢ oases and the forest « higher and higher and higher, u: dizziness, I exclaimed ioxoiloey in stone! Frozen pr reciad Ir “Groat many it while standing thers I saw a poor wad put down his pack and his burden ono the nard floor of ral. And tears of deep on vy aves a* [ said to myself, “Theres ua more than all the material That man will live after ths last * man Knoe, lw. that ris “ion ¥ soni rth $Ure roundings pinnacle has fallen, and not one stoas of all sathedral glory shall remain un Ho is now a Lazarus in rags and wad weariness, but immortal, and a the Lord God Almighty. And the prayer he now offers, though amid many su parst iti ns, I believe God will bear, and among the aposties whose soniptured forms stand in the surrounding niches he will at last be lifted and into the presence of thm Christ whose sufferings are represented by the orucifix before which he bows aad raisad due time out of sil his home in a srious built for # t the wil him {ato stars and Orion.’ VIEWS OF BIMETALLISTS. of the Movement. uary number of Nagarins wii yf the timetallio he leaders # an | Germany, and arranged { the visit to Eur Sra A prominsnst ntalin an imp situation in } rian? irope vf the pe of Bepator Ed faleott, of Col io, who isn Secretary League, contrib the situation and the steady wement in Franee, In it be : the French if the Artois ihe tas a Les bn Goung that majority bh Partiament are in favor of him (ito Arendt, a mem of thie Redohetag Prussian Diet, Honorary German Bimetallie League, de England blocks the way . will parti Wh by any other P win leretics 5 great etailiam {f the Baar { the ipate in a Way Foan Pariis ha to be ila slrong sup ord Aldenbam =a DI i ) Lagland, says “There iano d United States by agron soitid themeelives maintain a bi the the German who ye of t a aud the for wld Ea be reasonsble that PHOTOCRAPHIC TELESCOPE. ot fostrament at Asequipa, Pero. Word haa § received Profes sor Batley at Harvard Observatory, aipa. Peru, of the entire f there with the telaacog “, #t been from the BOOBS | Bruce ph sixty centimetres and a foonl length of 541.4 entimetrea, It was constructed bv Alvah Clark & Sons, and then sent to Peru, where it was moanted and used by Professor Balley, With this telescope the Harvard Observatory was preparing fo issue a map of the entire but as the Astro-photographic Congress has undertaken the ame task, the Harvard confine its work to smalley such as the Magellanic *Ky parts of the sky, douds, A number of the completed plates have just arrived in Cambridge and are being ex. amined with much interest by the local astronomers, The images are formed of black dots on a white background. Plates have also arrived of the spectra of very faint stars photographed with prisms pisced over the object.giass of the instrument. UNITED STATES CATTLE LEAD, Interesting Figures of Tmpaortations Late England During 1890. The Chief of the Bureau of Animal Indus try of the Agricultural Department, Wash. ington, Lis receipt of a circular from a commission agent of London, giving the total number of cattle and sheep recsived at Deptford, Eogland, during the year 1808, and the average prices, besides the prices on sach market gay for cattle from the United States, South America and Canada, respec tiveiy. The total cattle ressived from the three gestions wars qa follows, with the sven. age prices in pennies per pound United States, cattle, 146,965, 5.13 per pound, sheep, 19,597, 5,21 per pound. South America, osttle, 42.792, 4.28 per pound: sheep, 234,028, 5.36 per pound. Caunnda, cattle, 26.873, 4.94 per pound; sheep, 30.286, 5.20 per pound. The details present a condition most grat. fying tothe United Btates cattle growers Continuously throughout the year United States cattle have commanded the highest prices, ; Long Wait for an Eelipee. Tha only total eclipse visible in England 235 yours to come will ba in 1990, A WMA OR 0 a le Violent Deaths in 1896, There wore 652) deaths by suicide in the United States (ast year. LIFE IN HAVANA. MUCH MILITARY DISPI BAN CAPITAL. Cafes and Caudily Uniformed Spanish Soldiers- Evening Promenades Filled With The Cay City’s Morning ar Sights While iin ax a whole HE pieiely « shores sitnnlit and odorons 3 et ring but harinless dress full marching soldiers pat plex, ff detachments and He Hike The Cll nard still form oi Prado and sweep down In eng €uthian youths i fas tithe of of youl hard Han fav Ciles witl fa witlow bars along his are all away 10 the wars ow the Iwas and the makls have no sweethearts A bots the average (nban Icoines toa sirong fog Work poont ime He must and the world may wag will while he makes if, Each member of an has particular spot in which to take and if is a very ride thing fog have his «lest, on n= i establishment? his own a nap. another to preempt iL ass anywhore Resin fine ! i iimeedf and business left off a erin few hours fore SIretifies where it their lesia, begin to «how signs of al most inan intelligenie aint’ from thelr varioos aims and begin languid'y to ply their trade The Bllad girl, who pat ipr own eves ont in a fit of plgie, adls on Aer sun Ht joney In tow of her breather. ae man with the horrible leprons pare and terrifying, strelohies hiinsell ont in the shade of a des Taine, in thels amd they GN hiss Slow, ragged amd { 111 ed face, like t Havava landmark in gin 1 ! the eyeing L{ }id 1a ing wloow, «11rd nei heard Northern climes Mug an notgh bh with a 1 } A see testi hig A nglo-Sax this grave) Carmets “ i © 84 sripriod fav foosdiand m0 ® «ial versal, are vers 3 ihe fet in Bhs Bot floors and broad AWMEOE apartments ciate, glass, the Cuban & are weil adapted to the Queen Pours a Coachman’s Tea “The coachman who drives the Queen at Windsor, Balmorad and Osborne, and who Bkewise accompanies her the Thaymnas lime been long in the service and is a favorite. The Queen greets him tiv great aiways with a Frequently when the drives are loug the Queen causes the carriage to be stopped and tea brawed. This is done hy means of 4 spird lamp, and in par. taking of the gentle stimalant with her taellom in attendance thie Queen doos not forge hier conchipan, On one of her daughior, the wid friendly spider, Hired to order ii Spain or the Canary i her. and attempted to pour out the tea for the coachman, the Queen took the cup away from her pader the pretext that she did not know “how Thomas to have his tea sugared and ervamed,” and did 9 Tor him herself. Pearson's Wowekly. Six-Day Bicycle Contests Stimulated to Break Records. BETTER SAFE THAN SORRY Rules for People Hand Firgarms ng ution 8 the you hear abot ge ix believing. The Business of Writing. “A: the age twenty 1 found my. a married man, father of a a family, with po resources but my la. bor, amd Hving from hand 0 mouth, lke a workman, wifile Pendinand VIL bad sequestrated and was spending my property. Now. from hat time—and in fact §t is, perhaps, mnisoal enough for ww to be proud of H-—-having been obliged fo live by my pen and to sup port my family with 0 { have Kept free from all speculative transactions, from all mercantile eangagoments, 1 have done llerary work more or leds well, nl pover 1ierary speciation. A poor man, 1 have ca dyated an Hike a rook man for its own sake, thinking mere of the fotnre than of the presen, Forced by Dard tines i» make a bus ness of writing, 1 ean $mly say that basinees coped erations have never in paiesd fhe value of my work, From tha Lanior of Victor Hauge, ¥ in tw weg