REV. DR. TALMAGE, The Eminent Washington Divine's Sunday Sermon. the Secret of Comes Mighty Influence Yor World's GoodIt Piaces—=The Christinn Home the Foun- Prayer From the vil. tain of Pious and Gracious Influences. answered thee “I of thunder, Pralms in 81 ‘EXT: pince st midnight, and 2 o'clock in the morning: far enough from sunset and sun- rise to make the darkness very thiok, and the Egyptian army in pursuit of the eseap- ing Israelites ars on the bottom of the its waters having been set up on either in masonry of sapphire, for God oan on wall as solid out of water as out suite, and the trowels with which walls were built were none the less woerful because invisible, Such walls had never before been lifted When 1 saw the waters of the Red Sea rolling through the Suez Canal they were blue and beauti- ful and flowing other waters, but as tue Egyptians them built into walls, now one and now on the otaer, they have bean frowning wa- tars. for it was probable that the same or that lifted them up might suddenly rostrate. A great lantern of wv this chasm between the door of that lantern Bea Blue Max these like look up to aide on must POWs fling them } cloud hung ov tN walls, 1 1 t { the back of the lantern yward the Egyptians, and it growled abled and jarred with thunder; not ke that whish earth er a drought, promising the refreshing sharged and surcharged with 1 [he Egyptian captains mind, and the horses und would not answer hariot wheels got 1 Hght, nn WwW t ¥ ra ler sheers the in sharioteers Dad no in Wf money gl will to part with his bonds wortgages.” One day he wrote {0 minister: “Please to call immediately. have a matter of great importance about which I want to see you.” When the pastor eame in the man could not speak for emo- tion, but after awhile he gathered seif-con trol enough to say [ have lived for this world too long. 1 want to know if you think I can he saved, and, if so, I wish yon w sid tell me how.” Upon his soul the light soon dawned, and the old miser, not only revolutionized in heart but in life, began to scatter bene A ue have, wi ROD e he oh 2 LY tins of the day he became a cheerfu bountiful almoner, | and What was the cause of this change everybody asked; and no one was capable of giving an intelligent answer, In another part of that church sat Sabbath by Sabbath a beautifal and talented woman, who was a great society leader. Bhe went to church be cause that was a respectable thing to do, and in the neighborhood where oho lived jt was hardly respectable nes 0 go. Worldly was she to the last degree. and all her family worldly. She had at her house the finest germans that were ever danced and the costliest favors that were ever given, and though she attended church she never liked to hear any story of pathos and as to religious emotion of any Kind she thought it positively vulgar. Wines, ecards, theaters, rounds of costly gayety were to her the highest satisfaction. One day a neighbor sent in a visiting ecard and this lady came down the stairs in tears, and told the whole story how she had not glept for several nights, and she feared she was going to lose her soul, and sho won- dered if some one would not come around and pray with her, From that time her entire demeanor was changed, and though | hor amenities of life, she consecrated her | beauty, her social position, her family, her all to God and the church and usefulness. Everybody sald in regard to her “Huve you noticed the change, and what in the | world caused it?” And no one could make satisfactory explanation, In the course of | two vears, though there was no general awakening in that church, many such {so | lated cases of unexpected and unac countable conversions took place. The | very people whom no one thought would | bo affected by such considerations were converted, The pastor and the officers of | the church were on the lookout for the solution of this religious phenomenon and what is it?" | At last the discovery was | was explained A poor old man standing in the vestibu one Sunday morning trying to get her breath again before 1s wont upstairs to the gallery, heard the inquiry and told the st, For years had been in the habit of concentrating all her prayers for particular persons in that church, She would ses some man or woman present, and, though she might not know tha per | son's name, she would pray for that pe until he or she was © i to God, her prayers were for that one person that one, She waited and waited for com munion days to an the andidates | for memberfhip yd up whether her pray ers had been effectual It turned that marvel instances of of were the result of that old made and all le of the ahuroh # jeore sie avert out thesn His WOmAan's pray itiead, } wr and unnd rated | That place of the thun fer. There den, unknown, yslerious # most all the moral an sl } Not vr strikos bent and wirzenad and po A little aloud of ¢ ering in the galleries ‘ ns imanity hov- the seo was tae is ATO 18 p ten gome for IWOTr ( mitlio Tal nstrated, ITAVErs ev Bi bie cloth and a is world and | much at- | old folks r re they are in industry and pi farmer, ar mechanie, minister of ie d arnations Th other a merchant, another a physician the Gospel, useful, admired, honored. Whet a good thosa seven sons and | Where did they get the power? wa ty. | haps ne a { another a another a consistent, power for { daughters! | the eolleges? Oh, no, those these may have helped. From their superior mental | dowment? No;Ido not think they had un- | { usual men aliber | rumstances? No, they had nothing of what fs called good Ine i I think we will ef take n train and ride to | tha depot nearest to the homestead from | which those men and women starte i. The | train halts, Let us stop a few minutes at | | village graveyard and see the tomb- { stones of the parents, Yea, the one was | seventy-four years of age and the other { seventy-two, and the epitaph says '‘that { after a useful life they died a Christian | death.” On over the country road we ride the road a little rough, and once down in a rut it is hard to get the wheels out again the | without breaking the shafts, {| we come to the | house, i Let me get ont of the wagon and open | the gates while you drive through, Here | girls many years ago used to play, but {in other hands, Yonder is the orchard, | ripe. There js the mob, where thay hunted i for exps befors Easter. There ia the door- i ill upon which they used to sit, There is { the room in which they had family pray- { ers, and where they all knelt—the father i giris there, i { { : There la the place that decided thous gaven earthly and fmmortal destinies ahold! Behold! That is the secret place of thunder, The ronson wo ministers do not aecoms plish more is because others do not pray for us enough, and we do not pray for ours solves enough, Every minister could toll vou a thrilling story of sermons, sermons hasty and impromptu, because of funerals and stek beds, annoyances in the parish, those sermons directing many gouis to God, And then of ser- mons prepared with great care, and rosearch and toll uninterrupted; yet those sermons falling flat or powerless. The difference was probably in the amount of private prayer offered for the success of those services, Oh! pray for Poor sermons in the pulpit are the curse of God on a prayerioss parish People ‘What is the matter many of them seem dissatisfied with the Bible, and they are trying to help Moses and Paul and Christ out of inconsistencies nnd con- tradietions by fixing np the Bible,” As well let t! fefnns go to irk to fix up Haydn's or Hand “Tarnel in Egypt,” or let the painters go to fixing up Raphael figuration,” or architects : } Wren's Bt, 8 “Transl ing up Christopher t 1 will tell you what is the mat- unconverted are too many Thelr hearts have never bean {God, A in- tne deadest fall perdition, Alans From apol- dogmatios, trying to the. us! BAY, tors changed nero ire for cles! % and YY Are 1 trans ind exegesis ¢ hairs between north and fron rendental ITA TAN "A A N Y a Solution of the § Be Oered in Prizes Vor roblem to taly. je girigis artmen ft n next April at Ts nilar kind are expected | $3 ! ae {il be offered for prot and t od to the cause will th states em the { nited CUT HIS CORN AT NICHT, Pennsylvania Farmers Pleasantly Sur. prise a Siek Neighbor, mense fal &, ITE Wa xin and this w All day Friday Mr. Bands worked as hard as his poor health permitted, and quit very After the moon had risen about thirty neighbors gathered in his corn field and industriously worked until after midnight, when the corn was all in shocks, Next morning, when Mr. Sands went to the field. he was astonished to find his task completed. A. R. In 1895 a number of Indiana Grand Army men resolved to colonize In Irwin County, Georgia, upon the spot where Jefferson Davis was arrested as he was trying to es. cape. They founded the town of Fitzgerald, Within two years they have grown so strong 8 county site from its old place, Irwinviles, to Fitzgerald, The owinind valuation of the county in 1805 was something more than $1,000,000, which has been increased in the last two years to nearly $3,000,000, Georgia's Prosperous OG. Colony, Series of Shocking Crimes, Gustave Muller surrendered himself to Asp proof of the truth of his confession he pre- duced from his pocket four human ears, found two bodies, Muller subsequently jan and fourteen wives whom he had Sheep Ralsing Booming. Sheep raising in eastern Oregon has im- sroved to such an extent that whereas ambs in any quantity could be bought a anxious to sell at that price, 4 THE FARM AND GARDEN. ITEMS OF INTEREST URAL TOPICS, Planting Peach Pits--Have for Enforcing Plants, Eto. Etc. PLANTING PEACH PITS Peach planted s¢ they should bs place. It is shell hardens that the stones ought either Lo tlie kept on after peach 1s Of in a mo that LO commonly sald by exposure or germinating power The real the hell geed is 1m trouble that the in y ! that w vith plenty o meat from nachs ¢ Push the pigs as and sell them when they weig rough feed idly way from 15 to the defnan 0 market caref wanted the and eat u 250 pounds to a {f buvers and furnish ening h what drop four n In fatt during the aat OFS out giop wopks them all the cor will give they p clean twice clean cold M. C. Thomas, Agriculturist walter of i in American BLACK VS. WHITE OATS The popular prejudice in this conn- try is for white oats, as is generally explained because the black oatls have much thicker and harsher chaff But ths ia not always the The block oats sre generally heavier, and for this reason they are mostly grown in northern Burope It is moister European climate, rather than in our dry and hot American summers, that the oat attains its highest excel- lence. The tendency of oats ia to run out in this country, though if only heavy oats are used for seed, and the seed is sown early, #0 that it will tiller, CARe, before the seed needs renewing. When pew seed is secmad, it Is usoally ealled by some high-sounding rame, | Black | wo be Iris geed oats Norway, Russian or h ¢ as good can grown in Maine as any where, and pay more Southern farmers procure Maine oats for seed wl their home teriorate If heavy on quantity ed grown oats beg It never pays to use are f peed alone a graaller will be su { clent Boston C as the plants will spread more SPREADING ' Farmers often Keep he barnvard, under it only iwn manure face of the more frequent ¥ th 0 should be need t i FA ETOW some fertilizing crop.—Farm and Fire- gide FARM AND GARDEN NOTES chickens will The number of motheriess increases each year, and the hen soon bejfinown as aspecialist-—a layer of eggs only. The man who markets his poultry in a thin condition loses a good oppor tunity to make a paying investment | {n a small amount of grain. A flock of turkeys will clean out the should be cut ! before throwing | “x kly de bedding h condi it i185 an on t on Crow? F i nex wih © una a 1 f i i .l las lvoe ck Temperature of Food a iempe rat legrees Fahre at extremely high or exp low temperatures, may do 0 has whe Drinking water Oh degrees, anid vr most swallowed rapidly best gelitzers a WArm whould not be conled to mo red wine is best wine at 50: chan which it temperature allowed, b shou taken colder than degre Coffee and tea should not taken hotter than from 105 to 120 milk is considered cold at taken at ia water should be slightly and Ix than 0 degrees; degrees white pagn¢ LY one liquor at owes 1.4 iG not be | fn short order. In the large tobacco | service. Markets can be found in the swall towne as well as in the large cities, | At present many small towns get eggs | from Philadelphia, prices Deing higher in the towns than in that city. | This fact should induce farmers to sell | nearer home if possible and save | transportation charges. | Siraw may be added to the barnyard | manure becanse it is plentiful, but it is | better to utilize the straw in some | manner before it reaches the heap. It A A HTS best aroma. No Crouse Shooting at Paimoral Neither the members of her famf on the Queen's preserves The supply is so small th only Her Majesty's keepers now show st Balmoral, although in the oid da the Prince Consort used to go out ularly. and it was for his convenien that the luncheon hour on Deeside fixed at 2 o'clock, at which it still j mains. —New York Journal Among the newest jackets are with straight fronts slightly away from the waist line,