~ SECRET SOCIETIES. Rev. Dr. Talmage Preaches on Or. ganizations That Work for Humazity's Service. WHY SILENCE IS SOMETIMES BEST. {Copyright 18011 Wasnixarox, D. C—A practical ques- tion which is asked in most houses and for many years is here asked by Dr. Tal mage and answered; text, Proverbs XXV, 9, “Disal™er not a secret to another.” It appears that in Solomon's time, asin all subsequent periods of the world, there were people too much gisposed to tell all they knew. It was blab, blab, blab; phy- sicians revealing the case of their pa- tients, lawyers exposing the private af- fairs of their clients, neighbors advertising the faults of the next door resident, pre- tending friends betraying confidences. One-half of the trouble of every com- munity comes from the fact that so many people have not capacity to keep their mouths shut. When I hear something dis- paraging of you, my first duty is not to tell you, but if 1 tell you what somebody has said agaiast you and then go out and tell everybody else what I told vou, and they go out and tell others what I told them that I told you, and we all go out, some to hunt up the originator of the story and others to hunt it down, we shall get the whole community talking about what you do and what vou did not do, and there will be as many scalps taken as though a band of Modoes had swept upon a helpless village. We have two ears, but only one tongue, a physio logical suggestion that we ought to hear a good deal more than we tell. Let us join a conspiracy that we will tell each other all the good and nothing of the ill, and then there will not be such awful need of sermons on Solomon's words, “Discover not a secret to another.” Solomon had a very large domestis cir- cle. In his earlier days he had very con- fused notions about monogamy and poly- gamy, and his multitudinous associates in the matrimonial state kept him too well informed as to what was going on in Jeru- salem. They gathered up all the privacies and poured them into his ear, and his family became a sorosis or female debat ing society of 700, discussing day after day all the difficulties between husbands and wires, between employers and employes, between rulers om subjects, until Solo- mon, in my text, deplores volubility about affairs that do not belong to us and extols the virtue of secretiveness. By the power of a secret divulged fam- ilies, churches, neighborhoods, nations, fly apart. By the power of a secret kept charities, rocilalities, reformatory move ments and Christian enterprises may be advanced. Men are gregarious—cattie in herds, fish in schools, birds in flocks, men in social circdes. You may by the dis charge of a gun scatter a flock of quails or by the plunge of an anchor send apart the denizens of the sea, but they i ather themselves together again f yon y some new power could break the asso cations in which men now stand, they would again adhere. God meant it so. He has gathered all the flowers and shrubs into associations. You plant forget-me-not or heartsease alone off upon the hillside, but it will hunt up some other forget-me-not or heartsease. Plants love company. You will find them talking to each other in the dew. You sometimes see a man with no out branchings of sympathy. His nature coid and hard, like a ship's mast glazed, which the most agile sailor could never climb. Others have a thousand roots and a thousand branches. Innum- erable tendrils climb their hearts and blos- som all the way up, and the fowls of heaven sing in the branches. In « . quence of this tendency we find men com ing together in tribes, in communitie %, In churches, in societies. Some gather to ether to cultivate the arts, some to plan r the welfare of the state, some to dis cuss religious themes, some to kindle their mirth, some to advance their craft. So may one away sSO0n sociations of artists, of grchants, of bookbinders, of carpenters, of masons, of Plasterers, of shipwrights, of plumbers you cry out against it? Then you ery out agmnst a tendency divinely implanted. Your tirades would accomplish™ no more than if you should preach to a busy ant hill a long sermon against secret societies. Here we find the oft-discussed question whether associations that do their work with closed doors and admit their mem bers by passwords and greet each ot! with a secret grip are right or wrong answer that it depends entirely nature of the object for which the Is it to pass the hours in revelry, wassail, blasphemy and obscene talk or to plot trouble to the state or to debauch the nocent, thes | say with an emg no man can mistake, “No!” Ba object the defense of the r class againet oppression, the Improvement of the mind, the enlargement of the the advancement of art. the defense of the Government, the extirpation of crime or the kindling of a pure hearted sociality then 1 say with just as much emphasis, “Yes. » There is no need meet ghts of heart hat we who plan for the conquest of right over wrong should publish to all the world our intentions The general of an army never sends to the opposing troops wmation of the ing attack. Shail we who have enlisted in the cause of God and humanity expose our plans to the enemy’ No: we wiil in secret plot the ruin of all the enterprises of Satan and his cohorts! When they expect us by day, we will fall upon them by might. While they are strengthening their left wing we will fali on their right. By a plan of battle formed in secret con- clave we will come suddenly upon them. crying, “The sword of the Lord and ol Gideon!” Secrecy of plot and execution 18 wrong omy when the object and ends are nefarious. Every family is a secret so ciety, every basiness firm and eve ry bank- fog and maurance institution, hose men who have no keep a mecret are unfit for trust anywhere. There are thousands of men whose vital need is culturing a capac ity to keep a secret. Men talk too much, and women, too. There is a time to keep silence as well as a time to speak, Although not belonging to any of the reat secret societies about which there as been so much violent discussion, | have only words of praise for those asso ciations which have for their object the maintenance of right against wrong or the reciamation of rat or, like the score of mutual benefit societies called by dif- ferent names, that provide tem JOTREY Te bef for widows and orphans and for men incapacitated br sickness or accident from earning a livelihood. Had it not been for the secret labor organizations in this country monopoly would ago have under its ponderous wheels ground the Ia ring classey into an intolerable servi tude. men who want the whole earth to themselves would have got it before this had it not been for the banding to- ne od, h com capacity to ositions of gether of great secret organizations, while we deplore many things that have done by them, their existence is a necessity and their legitimate sphere dis tinetly pointed out by the providence of God. Buch izations sre trying to dis mise from their associations all members 0 are in favor of anarchy and social thos. ney will gradually cease any. © ranny over their members, and will forbid violent interference with he bel t their union or is outside of it will an that Tassad 1 Fogiand "by The pps in En t chester Bricklayers By sociation, Ww, eh ing shillings and sixpence for the first offense, five shillings for the second, ten shillings for the third, and if still persisting shall be dealt with as the committee thinks proper. Let any Christian wife rejoice when her | husband consecrates evenings to the serv- ice of humanity and of God or anything elevating, but let no man sacrifice Jove lifs to secret society life, as many do. I ean point out to you a great many names of men: who are guilty of this sacrilege, They are as genial as angels at the society | rooms and as ugly as sin at home. They | are generous on all subjects of wine sup- | pers, yachts and fine horses, but they are stingy about their wives’ dresses and the children’s shoes. That man has made that | which might be a healthful influence a | usurper of his affections, and he has mar- ried it, and he is guilty of moral bigamy. | Under this process the wife, whatever her | features, becomes uninteresting and homely, He becomes critical of her, does | not like the dress. does not like the way | she arranges her hair, is amazed that he ever was so wunromantic as to offer her hand and heart There are secret societies where member- ship alwavs involves domestic shipwreck. | Tell me that a man has joined a certain | kind and tell nme nothing more about him | for ten years. and I will write his history | if he be still alive. The man is a wine | guzzler, hiz wife broken hearted or pre. | maturely old, his fortune gone and his | home a mere name in the directory. Here are six secular nights in the week. | “What shall I do with them?’ savs t! father and the husband. “I will give four | of these nights to the improvement and | entertainment of my family, either at | home or in good neighborhood. [I will de- vote one to charitable institutions. I will | devote one to my lodge.” I congratulate | vou. Here is a man who saves. “Out of the | six secular nights of the week 1 will de- | vote five to lodges and clubs and associa- tions and one to the home, which night I will spend in ‘scowling like a March squall, | wishing I was out spending it as I have spent the other five.” That man's obitu- | ary is written. Not one out of 10,000 that | ever get so far on the wrong road ever | Gradually his health will fail | through late hours, and through too much stimulants be will be first-rate prey for | ervsipelas and rheumatism of the bert The doctor coming in will at a glance see | it is not only present disease rust | fight, but years of fast living. The cler gyman for the sake of the feelings of the family on the funeral day will enly talk in religions generah The mea who got his yacht in the eternal rapids will not be at the obsequies. T stops. 1 ne ties They have press. ing engagements that dav. They will send | flowers to the coffin, will send their wives to utter words of sympathy, but they will | have engagements elsewhere. They never | come Another test whether your wrong is the effect it occupation. I can which rocietly has on 3 retand i by secret Orn ciety has { dling credit more bale of goods were Al before gency the ran r two mem- death with tips with the social bere, their beaten ball player's bat or cut ; fy prow of i under the swift hoofs of ont he regatta or gom down { the fast horse or drowned in the large potations o £ nac Monongahela. The secret so the Loch Earn. Their business Ville de Havre They struck, Ville de Havre went under! The third test by which yon may know whether the society to which vou belong is good or bad is this: What is its effect on vour sense of moral and religious obli. : Now, if 1 should take the names of all the people in this audience and put them on a roll. and then I should lay that ' ro back of this organ, and a hundred years from now some one should take that roll and eall it from A te Z. there would ot one of you answer. I say that any so- ciety that makes me forget that fact is a bad society. . Which would you rather have in vour hand when vou come to die—a pack of rards aor 5 Bible * Which would you rather have pressed to your lips in the Crex the cup of Belsharzarean ] chalice of Christian com. Whom would you rather have vallbearers—the elders of a bristian church or the companions whose mversation was full of slang and ingen. Whom would vou rather have for | vou eternal companions—those men who spend their evenings betting, gambling, ring. carousing and telling vile stories or your little child. that bright girl whom the Lord took? Oh, vou would not have awar so much nights, would you, if "i had known she was ROINg away so oon? Dear me, your house has never wen the same place since. Your wife int never brightened up: she has never ent over it: she never will get over it How long the evenings are with no one to put to bed and no one to whom to tell the beautiful Bible stories’ What a pity it is that vou cannot spend more even- home in trying to help her bear sorrow! You can never drown that arief in the wine cup. You ean never reak away from the little arms that used to be flung around vour neck when she used to say, “Papa. do stay with me to-night—do stay with me to night!” You will never be able to wipe away from nur lips the dying kiss of vour little girl. | The fascination of a had secret society ia #0 great that sometimes a man has turned | hie back on his home shen his child was fying of scariet fever. He went awsy, | Before he got back at midnight the eyes had been closed, the undertaker had done | nis work, and the wife, worn out with three weeks’ watching. lay unconscious in the next room. Then the returned [ater comes up stairs. and he sees the cradle gone. and he says, “What is the matter? On the judgment day he will find out what was the matter i Oh, man astray, God help you! going to make a very stout rope. You know that sometimes a ropemaker will take very small threads and wind them to- gether until after awhile they become a ship cable, And I am going to take some very small. delicate threads and wind them together until they make a very «tout rope, will take all the memories of the marriage day—a thread of laughter, | a thread of light. a thread of music, a del] a thread of congrat. wist them t t have one strand. Then I aks a Ry ihe hour of the first advent in your house n thread of the darkness that preceded, and a thread of the light that followed’ and a thread of the utiful somrf that little child used to wear whan she bound. ed out at eventide to greet you, and then a thread of the beautiful in which you laid her away for the resurrection, and then I twist all these th to: | gether and I have another . Then take a thread of the scarlet robe of a suffering Christ, and « thread of the white raiment of your loved ones fore the throne, and a string of the barp seraphic | and I twist them all together, and Th ve a third strand. “Oh.” vou amy, “sit strand is enough to hold fast a world.” | No: I will take these strands. and 1 will twist them together, and one end of that rove I will fasten not to the communion | table, for it shall be removed: not to a pillar of the organ, for that will erumble in the ages, but 1 wind it round an round the cross of a sywpathizing Christ and having fastened one end of the rope to the cross I throw the otper end to Po ing moment the union? your mga at 3 taat I am Lay hold of it! Ayo a it! Pull for your life! COMMERCIAL REVIEW. QUeaeral Trade Conditions. New York (Special).—R. G. weekly review of trade says: October 1 opened at moderate redu tions from last year's prices, as general Supplies of heavy-weight goods have been reduced to a satisfactory point and the situa tion in all branches of the industry is such as to engender confidence. Cot tan goods are dull, ne sellers exhibiting a make Propositions, A employed cither North or South shops are producing at ful) with orders arriving iy Variations in cated manipulation terests Reports of undoubtedly exaggera prices prevailed throughout however, and 2.440.021 | corn were taken keted at big profits ills are not fully stead: the corn n stock gamage to were Out week amounting t els against 3.000.897 quotations were abou Wheat prices the movement is | the week were 6,808 2K 5.040,007 last year, 4.873.300 bushels year ago Failures in the United year, and 28 in for the Stat { anada, review i A803 Bradstreet's cial Money was orable bank lays apprehensions as to h interest when the dem move the assun tions. all week statement of Saturday } . El rales r funds propor and 1 , fill Crops €5 Ui LATEST QUOTATIONS. Flour—Best ade Extra, § $100a320 Wheat-—-New Yorl Philadelphia, No re. JOa74' Yori No ex New imbers, per New Eggplant Rose, per bri ¢ bri, $1.00a1. 2: 1 iaad ft arvianag) do. Chills seconds per Shore (Virgin a1 ative, per | New, North $400ab00; do, | $4.30a¢ 00 Pe § #9 Proviss 1 ern Pp 2.20: do per bri Go, 1 Swee rib sides, oi ders, 8Yic: do, under, 8%c: do do. bellies do, ham butts, 8! 10°4¢; Disc do. should 10° aC. do. clear e: sugar-cured breasts do, 12 Ibs and ov ers, bladecuts Glac do d do do. Californa ibs, 13 1244¢; do, 1% skinned, 14¢; vassed and unc do, tenders, 15! to 11 ¢: Mes po Poultry--Hens, 10ato! each, 25a30c; spring Ducks, 7aRti i ive roosters, 1244a1 3¢ ducks, Baroc Hides— Heavy steers, associat salters, late kill, 60 Ibs and up selection, 10%4ai1 dc; and steers, gaodc. Eggs—~Western Maryland and Penn sylvania. per dozen, atic; Eastern per dozen, —a13; Virginia. per dozen, 125 ary: Western and West Virginia, per dozen, 12V5a13; Southern, per dozen 12312; guinea, per dozen, a7, Dairy Products—DButter, Elgin, 21a separator, exiras 20%:a21; do, Agsts, 10a20: do, gathered cream, 1Razo: & imitation, 17418; ladle extra, 13a17; ladles, first, 13a15; choice Western rolls, 15a18; fair to good. 13814: half pound creamery, Maryland, Virginia, and Pennsylvania, 21a22; do, rolls, 2-1b, do. 20. Cheese—New cheese, large. 60 Ibs, o¥atoc; do, flats, 37 Ibs, 974a10%: pic nics, 23 Ibs, 10%4a1004. Live Stock. Chicago—Good to prime steers $5.35a 5.00; poor to medium $4.00a5 25; stock- ers and feeders $2.4004.600; cows $2.75 4.50. Hogs, mixed and butchers $5622 6.10; ® to choice heavy rough heavy $5.60a58¢; i Fie chickens Spring COWS hight ght $575a Sheep, good to choice wethers 28; fair to choice mixed $3 35a Jestern sheep $3.3084.00: year. lings $4.00a4.80; native lambs $3.00a 5.40; Western lambs 84.4045. 40. East Liberty—Cattle steady: extra, $5856.00; prime $5.50a5.70; good $5.20 as5.40. Hogs steady; prime assorted mediums $6.20a6.22%5; best heavy York. ers $6.20; heavy hogs $6.1536.20;: com- mon to fair light Yorkers and pies $6.10 ab.18; skips $4.78a5.75; roughs 84.25 5.78. Sheep steady; best wethers wa a4.30; culls and common $1 5082.80; yearlings $3.0004.50; veal calves $7.00a 725 Next Hest Thiug. Mr. Smithers proposed, had told moved to pity as Mr. Smithers stood ir resolute, with his hat in his hand. “1 hope you will come and see us some time,” she said, for she didn't what else to say. J ut ! you will be married and answered Smithers with much iy hen 1 will come and oachman, and if lope with your dat Then Smithers yard and toward : emotion; ngage as with me vous The Chip Off the Block. soll thing M Cif you ne in oe The Brute Man. I uld Dyspepsin In is most ageravated fora has been effect: silly cared with smal Qos of Crab Or har Water, married other Suence ' ni John Kansas town Sil 8 moving ! » experience to dye with sad Favuiess Dy Roods in the dye Is a by all druggists Pry aang ar Bimply i that is BOCEIRATY Ladies Can Wear Shoes One sire Fane po r new ul altar smaller wil « ng ard ng. Ln y1y% Feat For thie HBowels. matter what ails vou you will # r i anti Leads $a # sowels are 3 care vou with casy satura! movemonis 7 Ww your health hae 8 Candy Cathars mela stamped on it The real estate cents 0 start gedit the gennine, bes kes tad feet tyery IE mitations Heware of lawyer bord man is known by bis deeds FITS permanently cared. No 8s or nervone. ness after first day's Ritne's Great Nerve Restorer, $2 trial bottle and treatise fre Dr. BH. RLixe, Lid, 18] Arch Bi. Phils. we of Iie The man whe knows all abou the parts of speech stulters Mre, Wmnalow's Soothing Sera furekildres teething, soften the gums, redo ses in%amms tion, aliays pain, cures wind colic, 250 8 botils It seems queer that bac weakest strongest on the nan Pieo's Cure i the best moodivine we eves nest for all affections of throet and lungs. Wy 0. Expspxy, Vanburen, Ind. Vel. 10 19800 France bo t Bw I Germany mn 1990 Ww worth of to Rav. H. P. Carson, Scotland. Dsk pve Two bottles of Hall's Catarrh Care cotnpleis yeared ny little girl.” Roald by Druggists, 7 No one has invented any summer mill ners r the sulomolnle Spi “1 have used Ayer’s Hair Vigor for thirty years. It is elegant for a hair dressing snd for keeping the hair from splitting at the ends,”’— J. A. Gruenenfelder, Grantfork, 111, Bhan Horrors of Journalism. Speaking of began the nothing in inmiormation pariic eon W good man like 2 “Hard 1G keep 1 dose of castor ail?” him down,” replied the | “Why is the chiei | riment Hard to keep him down new fire de; “Good nian, Hair-splitting splits friendshins. If the hair- splitting is done on your own head, it loses friends for you, for every hair of your head is a friend. Ayer’s Hair Vigor in advance will prevent the splitting. If the splitting has begun, it will stop it. $1.98 a bot =. All druggists. If your druggist cannot supply you, rend us one dollar and we wif] express you & bottle Be pure and rive the name of your nearest express office. Address, J.C. AYER CO, Lowell, Muss, Sick Headache ? Food doesn’t digest well? Appetite poor? Bowels constipatedr Tongue coated? It's your liver! Ayer’s Pills are liver pills; they cure dys- pepsia, biliousness. 28¢c. 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