Subject: Victories of Peace=The Many Blessings For Which We Should Be Thankful Machinery Has Lightened Buardens~God Sent the Wheel, {Copyright, Louis Klopsch, 1869.) Wasmixarox, D. O,—This discourse of Dr. Talmage is a sermon of preparation for the national observance and iz an unusual way calls for the gratitude of the people; the text, Ezekiel x., 13, "As for the wheels, it was cried unto them in My hearing, O wheel!” The last Thursday'of the eleventh month, by prociamation of President and Gover- nors, is observed in thanksgiving for temporal mercies, With what spirit shall we enter upon it? ¥of nearly a year anda hail this nation has been celebrating the triumph of the sword and gun and bat. tery. We have sung martial airs and gheered returning heroes and sounded the requiem for the slain in battle, Methinks it will be a heaithful change if this Thanks- giving week, in church and homestead, we celebrate the victories of peace, for noth- ing was done at Santiago or Manila that was of more importance than that which in the last year has been dove in farmer's field and mechanic's shop and author's study by those who never wore an epaulet or shot a Spaniard or went a hundred miles from their own dcorsill. And now sall your attention to the wheel of the text, # Man, a small speck in tho universe, was set down in a big world, high mountains risivg before him, deep seas arresting his pathway and wild beasts capable of his destruction, yet he was to conguer. It could not be by physical foree, for com- elephant’s tusk, and how weak he isl It couid not be by physical speed, for com- pare bim to the antelope’s foot and ptar- migan’s wing, and how slow he is! It could not be by physieal capacity .to soar or plunge, for the condor beats him in one direction and the porpoise in the other, Yet he was to conquer the world. eyes, two hands and two feet were insufll- elent. He must be re-enforced, so God sent the wheel. Twenty-two times tioned in the Bible, sometimes, as In Ezekiel, {illustrating providential move. ment; sometimes, as in the Psalms, erush- ing the bad; sometimes, as in Judges, rep- resenting God's charioted progress. The wheel that started in Exodus rolls through Proverbs, through Isaiah, through Jeremiab, through Daniel through Nahum, through the centuries, all the time gather is the wheel men- what it has done for the world's progress and happiness, we clap our hands inthanks- text, crying, "0 wheel!” to praise God {or the triumphs of maechin- ery, which have revolutionized the world and multiplied its attractions. Even para been comparatively dull, hardly harvest was spontaneous; required, for they slept « manufacturer's loom necessary for weaviog of apparel, for the fashions were exceedingly simple. To could not have required ten minutes a day Having nothing to do, they got into mis- ehief and ruined themselves and the race, It was a sad thin adise, but, thing to be compelied man up and on God i turned ahead, the race advane back, the race retreats, To gratitude cod exalt your show you what the wheel has Jone domestic world, for the agrieultu: for the traveling world, for world. ‘As for the unto them hearing, In domestic life the wheel revolution. has shattered the b prolonged woman's life an urable advautages, 1 bad punctured the ey side pare the garments of in the spring for sunt tumn for winter was ar ex cess, '‘Stiteh, stiteh, stiteh!™ Th Hood set it to poetry, t millions of sons have found {bagonizieg prose. Slain by the sword, we the hero with the *“Dead Mareh" in at ball mast, Slain by the needle, no « it but the watchod winter altar that the chiidren were ragged and eo and hungry or in the almshouse, The hand that wielded the had fo eunniog. seam. The thimble had dropped from the paisied finger. The thread of life had spapped and let a suffering human jife drop into the grave. The spool was all un- wound, fler sepuloher was digged not with sexton’sepade, but with a sharper and shorter implemont—a neadie, Federal and Conlederate dead have ornamented graves at Arlington Heights and Richmond and Gettysburg, thousands by thousands, but it will take the archangel’s trampet to Ind the million graves of the vaster army of women needle slain, Besides all the sewing done forthe house. bold at home, there are hundreds of thou. nds of sewing women. The tragedy of be needle is the tragedy of huager and eold and insult and home sickness and sul- elde—{lve peta, Bat I hear the rush of a wheel, woman puts on the band and adjusts the insten- ment, puis her foot on the treadie and be- gins, Belorethe whir and rattle pleurisies, consumptions, headaches, backaches, heartaches, are routed. The needle, once an oppressive tyrant, becomes a cheerful siave—roll and rumble and roar until the family wardrobe is gathered, and winter is defled, and summer {s welcomed, and the ardors and severities of the seasons are overcome; winding the bobbing, threadiag the shuttle, tucking, quilting, mfMing, cording, embroidering, under-braiding set to music; lock stiteh, twisted loop stiteh, erocket stitoh, a fascinating ingenuity, No wonder that at some of the learned fnstitutions, like the New Jersey State Normal school, and Rutgers Pemaloe insti. tute, and Elmira Female coliege, acquaint. ance with the sewing machine is a requisi- tion, a young lady not being considered educated until she understands it. Winter is coming on, and the honsehoid must be warmly clad, “The Last Rose of Summer” will sound better played on a sewing ma- chine than on a plano, Roll on, O wheel of the sewing machine, until the jast shackled woman of toil shall be emanei- pated! Roll on! Secondly, I look into the agricultural world to see what the wheel has necom. plished. Look at the stalks of wheat and nats, the one bread for man, the other d for horses, Coat off and with a erndle made out of five or six fingers of wood and one of sharp stecl, the harvester went across the fleld, stroke after stroke perspiration rolling down forehead and cheek and chest, head blistered by the con. suming sun nod Hp parched by the merci. Joss August alr, at noon the workmen lying hall dead under tho trees. One of my most Jaiatu) boyhood memories fs that of my ther in harvest time reeling from ex. haustion over the doorstep, the tired to eat, pale and faloting as be sat down, The grain brought to the barn, the sheaves re unbound and spread on a threshing for, and two men with falls stood Sppo- site each other, hour after hour and day aay pounding the wheat out of the k. Two strokes, and then a cessation und, Thump, t Nmp, thump, thump, ‘Pounded ones and then pounded in, slow Edie aA Ah Fe h an the horses al op ond ; £ to be turned oa once turned out, a sen whesis, { in my Behold the sewing o nsewile’s bond : and made terrible austing San knew neadin 1 bay Bad been: Fre ful than the sea island cotton? I take up the unmelted snow in my hand, How beau. titul it is! But do you know by what pains. taking and tedious teli it passed into any. thing like practicality} It you examined that eotton, you would find it full of seads, It was n severe process by which the seed was to be oxtracted from the fiber. Vast populations were leaving the South be. cause they conld not muke any living out of this product. One pound of green seed cotton was all that a man could prepare in one day, but Ell Whitney, a Massachusetts Yankee, woke up, got a handful of cotton and went to constructing a whesl for the parting of the fiber and the seed, Teeth on cylinders, brushes on cylinders, wheels on wheels, Bouth Carolina gave him €50,000 for his invention, and, Instead of one man taking a whole day to prepare may prepare three hundredweight, and the 000,000 bales of cotton were prepared this year, enough to keep at work in this coun- try 14,300,000 spindles, employing 270,000 hands and enlisting $381,400,000 of capital, Thank you, Ell Whitney, and L. 8. chester, of New York, his successor. Above of the world, Thirdly, I look to see what the wheel has done for the traveling world. No one can tell how many noble and self sacrificing inventors have been crushed between the coach wheel and ths modern locomadtive, between the paddle and the ocean steamer, I will not enter into the controversy as to whether John Fiteh or Robert Falton or Thomas Bomerset was tho inven. tor of the steamboat. They all sul. fered and were martyrs of the wheel, and they shall be honored. John Fiteh wrote; “The 21st of January, 1743, was the fatal timo of bringing me into existence. 1 know of nothing so perplexing and vexatious to nan man of feeling as a turbulent wife and buillding. 1 experienced the former and quit ih season, nod bad I been in my right senses I should undoubtedly bave treated the latter jn the same mane ner; but, for oze man to be teased with both, he must be looked npon as the most unfortunate man ia the world.” See the train move out of one of depots for a thousand.mile jour. ney! All aboard! Tickets clipped and baggage checked and porters attentive to every want, under tunnels dripping with dampness that never saw the light; aloag ledees where an {och off the track would be the difference between a hundred men lying and a hundred dead, full head of steam and two men io the locomotive charged with all the responsitility of whistle and Westinghouse broke, Ciank! clank! go the wheels, Clank! clank! eclio Small villages only hear the thunder and see the whirlwind as the train shoots past, a city on the wing, Thrill startling, subline, ma rent speclud a rail train {o lightoing pro 1. v has been rolilug on the Viile the worl eight wheels of the rail ear or the lour carriages or the two wheels onr wwanion wheels the f the gig It was not until 1876, at the Cen- at Philadeiphia that the nincteenth century of miracle of The world could not believe its own aves, and not until quite far on in the eighties the irling, flashing, domiaatiog spectacie of iachine that was to do so much for the business, the health and the The world had needed it v ; Four p, I ke into the literary world ep plished, unded with this than any- is preceded, Bahold the al printing press! Do yom und shake with Now Yok Brookiyn, in, Wastington, and yme of us remember w ran over the eylinde sien of the vill = Western en the r, age iladaipl was one day and ne n has crowded wheel, fanned § BSUS G In inventi aper were at wo Bred. rention and onl yatled ypiog og, taking thelr places, v t ng, elestrot ir Benjamin Franklin's press giving way to t i i vol we Lord 1008 and the W id the Victory press and have been RAWSpADers press, og foe perle Ts ting press fiat her with the rileation © tory. of En son ed § 3 seyelog fiese Dresses send for bat the good accursed predominates. Torn and greater velocity O whesl—whael of light, wheel most ’ of elviliza- On those four whesls—that of the sawing machine, that of the reaper, that of the presg-~the world bas moved up to its pres. ent prosperity, And now | gather on an imaginary plat. form, ax I literally did whea [ preached in Jrookiyn, specimens of our American products, Here is corn from the West, a foretaste of the great harvest that is to come down to our seaboard, enough for ourselves and for foreign shipment. Here is rico from the South, never a more beautiful produet grown on the planet, miogiliog the gold and green, Hers are two sheaves, n sheaf of North. ern wheat and a sheaf of Southern rice, bound together. May the band never break! Hare i3 cotton, the wealthiest: product of America. Here is sugar cane, enough to aweeten the beverages of an em- pire. Who would think that oat of such a humble stalk there would come such a luscious product? Here are palmetto trees that have in their pulses the warmth of southern climes, Here is the cactus of the South, so beauti- ful and so tempting It must go armed. Here aro the products of American mines, senting a vast yield, our country sending forth one year 800.000 tons of it, the coal the iron. This is silver, silver from Colorado and Nevada, those places able yet to yield silver papkin rings and silver knives and sliver casters and silver platters for all our people, . Here is mica from the quarries of New Hampshire, How beautiful it looks in the sunlight! Here is copper from Lake Su. perior, 80 heavy I dare not iit it, Here is gold from Virginia and Georgia. I look around me on this imaginary plat. form, and it seems as If the waves of agel- eultural mineralogical, pomologieal wealth dash to the platform, and there are four beautiful beings that walk in, and they are all garianded, One is garianded with wheat and blog. soma of snow, and I iad she is the North, Another comes in, and Lior brow is gar- landed with rice and blossoms of magnolia, and I find she is the South, Anoler comes io, and 1 find she is gar. landed with seaweed and spray, and I find she a the East, Another comes in, and I find she is gar. landed with slik of corn und radiant with California gold, and I find she is the West, Coming face to face, they take off thelr gariands, and they twist them together into something that looks like & wreath but it 8 a wheel, the wheel of national Jroapasity, and I say in an outburst of hakagiving Joy for what God has done for the North and the South and the East and the West, “Oh wheel!” At different times In Earops thay have tried to got a congress of kings at Berlin or at Paris or st St. Petersburg, but it has always been a fallure. Only a few kings haat. on tats 1 al Int, bat 1 on magioary platform t have bulit we have a Susyaution Yi all the ings Corn, King on, King Rice, King Wheat, King Oats, King ‘tron, King Coal, Ring Bilver, King Oold—and they bo Ph hufots the fing ot ting Ha produstion] Small Nins, There are three crimes which, no | matter what may be the degree of thelr | venality, are regarded by the world as { venal, They are lying at poker, smug- | gling, and understating the age of a | -year-old child. | mother who will not fudge a little ; when It comes to the question of pay- {ing Bb cents for her hoy or stealing i for him a free ride? If the boy be | large for his years, her period of men- j dacity lasts but a short time, but if he be undersized her equlvocation ex- tends far into the seventh year. Buch | a mother never hands more than a nickel to the conductor when she and ; Tommy travel together; he might keep a dime for the two, or take change out of a quarter, The railroad com- panies are beaten out of many thou- sands of dollars by the darling mothers who cannot see more than four years ‘hen paying faree.— New York Press Dellonte Creatures, Herbie, it says here another What is an Jennie octogenarian’s dead. togenarian? Herbie—Well, 1 don't just know what they are, - but they must be awfully sickly creatures never hear cf 'em but they're dying Brookiyn Life OC } Save the Nickels, having. Ask your by investing san got Cross” From saving, comes grocer how you cnn save i150 be. He can tell you just bow you 10¢ package of "Red one large starch, one large 10e package ger's Best printed in Twentioth Ask your obtain these beautiful! Shakespears panes, twelve beautiful colors, or one Calendar, for He this Christmas presents (roe, Century Gir ail grocer for beaut robs § starch: an i sia Beware of Overfeediag, milk is fed to bhables with digestion it must be largely diluted with warm water, Over feeding is the frequent cause of infan- tile dyspepsia, Y hen cow's enfeebled A Notable Silver Anniversary. With tte David C. Cook, « his ol fquarier-cenln isiier af inv se! farting twenis repulation or ass # th $ present yesr Mr MEG, Wil first tenRnind as pat Mug five Years rapes of become one o most shers | two s i grown it few sol § ire i 8 ably known pul ning in 1875 with his periodicals have favor ° til there are { seorglar v seventy-five bring it wit Mr. Cook is suw » give the paper a wider cireuintion { all y snd seventy-five wits for a years snbaeri; sre Jan, 1st will re. onive n beautifal premium picture ontitled Mie Soul's Awakenlag,' same size (13 by IR inches) and style as those on sale at art stores for $1. Orders should be addressed David ©€, « Publishing Co. Probably no man living bas much to improve and ebheapen school literature as has Mr. David ©, Cook, Through bis «id thousands of schouls have been encouraged, improved and made self-sustaining. Mr. Cook is yat a comparatively young man, and it does pot appear at sll improbable that his field of useiuiness may extend over yet another quarter-century, tion bef £0 done so Sunday. Frank Gould receives scores of jetters enterprises in the Philippines, /DrBull’'s\ Cures all Throat and Lung Affections COUGH SYRUP Get the genaine Refuse Re / Dv. Bull's Pills curve Dyspepsia. Trial, 20 for ge English Secret Service Money. he term “secre! service money’ is usually applied to a fund placed at the disposal of ministers to be expended at their discretion in promoting or pro. tecting the interests of this country. These moneys consist of a sum of £35.- 000 annually, included In the estimates, in respect of which ministers are only required to make a declaration that he moneys apent have been expended ‘in accordance with the intentions of parliament.” As ministers are required io give no account of their steward ¢hip it ls obvious w: have no means of knowing how these moneys are ex- pended, The reader, however, who car. ries his mind back to episodes within his knowledge, such as the couapse of the Fenian conspirators or of their la. tar development, the "Irish Invinel- bien,” will have little difficulty in re- alizing how Indispensable a fund of this kind is to the protection of a state, and of understnding the infinite varl oty of uses to which it may be applied ~ Chambers’ Journal, i : The Rolling Passion. From the Cleveland Plain Dealer: The clergyman had finished and the organ was pealing forth the sonorous rapture of the Mendelssohn march. ant bride, and facing the audience she raised her exquisitely bound, though somewhat bulky, prayer book in her at the brililant There was a sharp click. ’" audience, “All right, said the bride, “come along.” And as they marched down the alsle she showed him that the supposed prayer book wasn't a prayer book at all. It was a camera! “It's my own idea, George,” she whispered, “Clever, ‘sn't it? Fike Finding Money. The ase of the Entlsss Chain Starch Book in the purcoase of “Red Cross” and “Hubinger's Best” starch, makes it just like finding money. are enabled to get one large 10c package | of “Red Cross” starch, one large 10¢ puck. age of “Hubinger's Best" starch, with the premiums, two Shakespenrs panels, print. olurs, or one Twen- Calendar, embossed in for this starch and tieth Century Gir! Ask vonur grocer of Michigan director of k of junior 6 salary of The regents of the University have appointed Charles Baird outdoor vith the 7 professor in the university and 2.000, #ihietl Becaty Is Blood Dcep. lean od means a ciean skin. No beauty without it, Cascarets, Candy Cathar putities from the body. legin anish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, beauty for ten cents. All drug: ists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25¢, Sle. Governor Stone, of Penusyivania, thinks the wile should own the home, Deafness Cannot He Cured by local applic y cannot reach the diseased portion There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness Is caused by auin- flamed condition Eustachian Tube 3 flamed you have sa rambling fort hoaring. and when it is entire] Desfaess is the result and uniess the mation oan taken out and this stored Lo ite norma cond. 8 sn, bearin destroyed forever. Niue tues caused by catarrn, whichis poling but as le Samed condition of the Litoous surfaces We will give One Hundre! Dollars for ang case of Deafness (caused by catarrhithatoan not ba cured by Hall's Calasrh Cure, Send ior ciroulars, free F.J.Carxey & Co. Toledo, O ugRists, 5 i 11 wmeily tam 3a Hall's # Walter Camp wipted the athietios at Yale Raid by D 5 ® “» the Dest §®e ated position University Toe Cuanre Constipation ¥Yerever, Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic 10s or Be It CC. C fail 10 cure, druggists refund wouss sh ba ndmaster, has e¢ With military Words of Famous Mission Bar Worker AY. & We Bown Alas iffered from dyspe aia Ha Lslis i» dels st * : Having rf Yeats I0 In sare ejmin § da HEpure anda Don't Tohacos Spit and Smoke Your Lille Away, To quit tet meso cael nd forever, be mag - full of Jie, nerve and vigor, io Ly makes weal men ic take Xo Bac. the wonder word surong. All druggists, 0c or 21. 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All others procuring the Endicss “ited 1t is made trom whoat, HE i : i i ste eP PROS IOEORRRIS esse * * Personally Conducted California Excursions Via the Santa Fe Route. Three times a week from Chicags and ——————————— Kansas Oily Once a week from St. Louis ———— In improve] wide vestibaiel Pullman tourist sissping css. Betis than ever bafore, at lowest possible rates Experienced excursion Also daily service belwesn Thicag and Caltfornis Corres pon fences solicited. osvadnotors E.F.BURNETT.G.E. PF. A, The Atchison, Topeka & Banta Fe Railway, S77 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, N.Y. EEE NNNENeNEENEeRsesREReenD SENSE estes ee sate ss sitasessascssitessssnesses ness § SOON VONIVRROPNONINRIIPPRINENPV RO OSIRNONOROREOOBORRRES TIMBERLAND "a's WANTED. > Poplar, Oak, ; Chestn Walnut, haloes Within tes mies of railrond. Nothing Joes than foe sore tenets conmderad, Bend description a d pre to For timber tracts NT ¥ to represent us Wa this vicinity, having wide scgunisians with property owners and people with wean, If vou oan give good reference thers in Smo yesrly Income. No experience of money reqnited for in forsastion address, H. EK. Kioxs, 10 Wali 82, X ¥. SE 2 DROPSY sma: Br. BB. GREEN ® BONS, Dox 8B atianta. Oa. $10 FOR bl Sa eh 6 to AA AAR STREET Ba vin