Dr. Talmage Says No Better Medicine Did a Man Ever Take, Forgive the Repentant-~The Perfect Life to Come Cultivate Hope. (Copyright, 1901.) Wasnrxaron, D. C.—In this discourse Talmage would lift people out of de- spondency and bring something of future 134 into earthly depression, The text is ebrews vi, 19, “Which hope.” There is an Atlantic Ocean of depth and fullness nn the verse from which my text is taken, and I only wade into the wave at the beach and take two words. We have all favorite words ex- pressive of delight or abhorrence, words that easily find their way from brain to lip, words that have in them mornings and midnights, laughter and tears, thun- derbolts and dewdrops. In all the lexi- cons and vocabularies there are few words that have for me the attractions of the last word of my text, “Which hope.” here have in the course of our life been many good angels of God that have looked over our shoulders, or met us on the road, or chanted the darkness away, or lifted the curtains of the great future, or pulled us back from the precipices, or rolled down upon us the rapturous music of the heavens, but there is one of these angels that has done so much for us that we wish throughout all time and aternity to celebrate it—the angel of Hope. Bt. Paul makes it the center of a group of three, saying, “Now abideth faith, hope, charity.” And, though he says that charity is the greatest of the three, he oes not take one plume from the wing, or pne ray of luster from the brow, or one aurora from the cheek, or one melody from from the voice of the angel of my text, “Which hope.” That was a great night for our world when in a Bethlehem caravansary the josant Royal was born, and that will a great night in the darkness of your soul when Christian hope is born. There sill be chanting in the skies and a star Pointing to the Nativity. I will not ther you with the husk of a definition and tell you what hope 1s. When we sit down hungry at a table, we do not want Rn analytical discourse as te what bread Hand it on; pass it round; give us a plice of it. John speaks of hope as a ‘pure hope;” Peter calls it a “lively ope;” Paul stvles it a ‘“‘good hope,” a “gure hope,” a ‘rejoicing hope.” And all up and down the Bible it is spoken of as an anchor, as a harbor, as a helmet, as a oor. When we draw a check on a bank, we must have reference to the amount of money we have deposited, but Hope makes a draft on a bank in which for her benefit all heaven has been deposited. Hope! May it light up every dungeon, stand by every sickbed, lend a helping hand to every orphanage, loosen every chain, caress every forlorn soul and turn the unpictured room of the alms. house into the vestibule of heaven! How suggestive that mythology declares that when all other deities fled the goddess of Hope remained! It was hope that revived Jon Knox when on shipboard near the coast of Scotland he was fearfully ill, and he was requested to look shoreward and asked if he knew the village near the coast, and he answered: “I know it well, for I see the steeple of that place where God first opened my mouth in public to His glory, and I am fully persuaded how weak that ever I now appear I shall not depart this fife till I shall glorify His holy name in the same place.” His hope was rewarded, snd for twenty-five years more he preached. That is the hope which sus- tained Mr. Morrell of Norwich when de- parting this life at twenty-four years of age he declared, “I should like to under- stand the secrets of eternity before to morrow morning.” That was the kind of hope that the corporal had in the battle when, after several standard bearers had fallen, and turned to a lieutenant-colonel and said, “If 1 fall, tell my dear wife that d die with a good hope in Christ and that 1 am glad to give my life for my country.” That was thé good hope that Pr. Good had in his last hour when he said: “Ah, is this death? How have I dreaded as an enemy this smiling friend!” No beter medicine did a man ever take than hope. It is a stimulant, a febrifuge, a tonic, a catholicon. Thousands of peo- le long ago departed this life would ave been living to-day but for the reason they let hope slip their grasp. 1 have known people to live on hope after one Jung was gone and disease had seemed to lay hold of every nerve .and muscle and artery and bone. Alexander the Great, starting for the wars in Persia, divided his property among the Macedonians. He gave a village to one, a port to another, a field to another and all his estate to his friends. Then Perdiceas asked, “What have you kept for ourself” He answered triumphantly, Hope.” And, whatever else you and I give away, we must keep for ourselves hope—all com- forting, all cheering hope. In the heart of every man, woman and child that hears or reads this sermon may God implant this principle right now! Many have full assurance that all is right with the soul. They are as sure of heaven as if they had passed the pearl panels of the gate, as though they were al- yeady seated in the temple of God unroll- ing the libretto of the heavenly chorister. J congratulate all such. I wish I had it, too—full assurance—but with me it is hope. © “Which hope.” Sinful, it expects forgivences; troubled, it expects relief; eft, it expects reunion; clear down, it expects wings to lift; shipwrecked, it ex- pects lifeboat; bankrupt, it expects eter- nal riches; a prodigal. it expects the wide open door of the father's farmhouse. It does not wear itself out by looking back- ward; it always looks forward, What is the use of giving so much time to the re- hearsal of the past? Your mistakes are not corrected by a review. Your losses cannot, by brooding over them, be turned §nto gains. It is the future that has the ost for us, and hope cheers us on. We Fo all committed blunders, but does the calling of the roll of them make them any %he less blunders? Look ahead in all mat- of usefulness. However much you fore have accomplished for God and the Mworld’s betterment your greatest useful hess is to come. “No,” says some one, “my money is gone “No,” says some ‘one, “the most of my years are gone and therefore my usefulness.” Why, you talk like an infidel. Do you suppose that all our capacity to do good is fenced in by is life? Are you going to be a lo nger and a do nothing after you have quit this world? It is my business to tell you that your faculties are to be enlarged and intensified and your qualifications for usefulness mul tipled tenfold, a hundredfold, » thousand. oid. Is your health gone? Then that is a sign that you are to enjoy a celestial health compared with which the most fo cund and hilarious vitality of earth is validism. Are your fortunes spent?! member, you are to be kings and queens unto God. And how much more wealth you will have when you reign forever and ever! I want to see you when you get our heavenly work dress on. This little [4 of a speek of a world we eall the earth is only the place where we get ready to work. We are only journeymen here, but will be master workmen there. Heaven will have no loafers hanging around. The book says of the inhabitants, “They rest mot day nor night.” hy rest when they ‘work without fatigue? Why seek a pillow when there is no night there? I want to as been exchan for power of flight and velocities infinite and enterprises in- terstellar, interworld. : I suspect that the telescope of that ob. servatory brings in sight constellations that may comprise ruined worlds which need looking after and need help saintly and missionary. There may be worlds that, like ours, have sinned and need to be rescued, jorhaps saved by our Christ or by some plan that God has thought out for other worlds as wise, as potent, as lovely as the atonement is for our world, The laziness which has cursed us in this world will not gain the land of eternal ag- tivities—so much tonic in the air, so much inspiration in the society, so much achieve- ment after we get the shackles of the flesh forever off. Do not dwell so much on opportunities past, but put your ems phasis on opportunities to come, Am I not right in saying that eternity can do more for us than can time? What will we not be able to do when our powers of locomotion shal] be quickened into the immortal spirit’s speed? Why should a bird have a swiftness of wing when it is of no importance how long it shall take to make its aerial way from forest to for- portant errand in the world, get on so slowly? The roebuck dutruns us, the hounds are quicker in the chase, but wait until God lets us loose from all limitations and hinderments. Then we will fairly be- gin, stone. Leaving the world will be gradua- tion day before the chief work of our men- tal and spiritual career. Hope sees the doors opening, the victor’s foot in stirrup for the mounting. The day breaks—first flush of the horizon. The mission of hope will be an everlasting mission, as mue it in the heavenly hereafter as in the earthly now. Shall we have gained all as soon as we enter realms celestial—nothing more to learn, no other heights to climb existence, the same thing over and over again for endless vears? No! this. and look for ever brightening landscapes, other transfigurations of color, new glo- mingled with fire, becoming a more liant fire. “Which hope.” hear of your son's reformation and others may think he has left this life hopeless, who knows but that in the last moment, after he has ceased to speak and before his soul launches away, your prayer may have been answered and he be one of the first to meet vou at the shining gate. The prodigal in the parable got home and sat down at the feast, while the elder brother, who never left the old place, stood pouting at the back door and did not go in at all. the angel of hope. and they are the inva- lids. 1 cannot take the diagnosis of your disorder, but let hone cheer you with one of two thoughts. marvelous cures are being wrought in our day through med- ication and surgery that your invalidism may vet be mastered. Persons as ill as vou have got well. Can- cer and tuberculosis will yet give way be- fore some new discovery. I see every day people strong and well who not long ago I saw pallid and leaning heavily on a staff and hardly able to climb stairs. But if vou will not take the hand of hope for earthly convalescence let me point you to the perfect body you are yet to have if vou love and serve the Lord. Death will put a prolonged anaesthetic upon your present body, and you will never again feel an ache or pain, and then in His good time you will have a resurrec- tion body, about which we know nothing expect that it will be painless and glorious beyond all present appreciation. What must be the health of that land which never feels cut of cold or blast of heat, Such WHEN MIL KIS FILTERED. When milk is filtered through cotton no cream is lost, but experiments show that the cotton largely prevents the ac- cess of germs to the milk, and that filtra- tion is almost equal to sterilization, NOT A METAL Wool is no longer the leading article leading WOOL IS LEADING that he could burn every pound of wool and then make more money than from the fine-wool breeds. CHARCOAL HENS. It is a good plan to always have some FOR there is nothing that can be fed to hens You can feed them corn once a week which will the place of charcoal. You can char it by putting the corn, ear and all charred TERS. for or home use sold just as soon as they are intended breeding i % large enough, as adice. In most of the poultry markets . i } Of IUCcH « they will bring a better an mquiry tor maie is after they get t Farmers make a | f rosters y r of "4 5 OF pneumonias on the air, your fleetness greater than the foot of deer, your eye- health, in a country where all the inhab- itants are everlastingly well! You who have in your body an en- eysted bullet ever since the Civil War; vou who have kept alive only by precan- tions and self denials and perpetual watch. ing of pulse and lung; you of the deafened ear and dim vision and the severe back. ache: you who have not been free from pain for ten years, how do you like this story of physical reconstruction, with all weakness and suffering subtracted and everything jocund and bounding added? Do not have anything to do with the gloom that Harriet Martineau expressed in her dying words: “I have no reason to believe in another world. I have had enough of life in one and can see no good reason why Harriet Martineau should be perpetuated.” Wonld you nos rather have the Christian enthusiasm of Robert An satisfied if I manage somehow to get into heaven,” replied, pointing to a sunken ves sel that was being dragged up the River Tay: “Would you like to be pulled into heaven with two tugs like that vessel yon all my sails set and colors flying.” apair about the world’s moral condition. tics. They tell of the num but do not take into consideration that there are a thousand happy homes where there is one of marital discord. . They tell you of the large number in our land who are living profligate lives, but forget to mention that there are many millions of men and women who are doing the best they can. . They tell you the number of drunkeries in this country, but fail to mention the thousands of glorious churches with two doors—one door open for all who will en- ter for pardon and consolation, and the other door opening into the heavens for the ascent of souls prepared for transia- tion. From this hour cultivate hope. Do so by reading all the Scriptural promises of the world’s coming Edenizatior, and doubt if vou dare the veracity of the Almighty when He says He will make the desert down in the same pasture field, and the lion, ceasing to be carnivorous, will be- come graminivorous, eating “straw like an ox,” and reptilian venom shall chan \ harmlessness, to that the “weaned child shall put his hand on the cockatrice’s destroy in all God's holy mountain, for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea.” So much for the world at large. Then cultivate hope in regard to your your own longevity, seeing how in other people mercifully reverses things and brings to the unexpected, re- mem the last, and, further, by making sure of your eternal safety through Christ Jesus, understand that you are on lnces and thrones. This life a apna ong, ending in durations of bliss that neither human nor archangelic faculties can measure or estimate—redolence of a springtime that never ends and fountains tossing in the light of a sun that never sets, y God thrill us with anticipation of this immortal glee! “Which hope.” I said in the opening of this subject that my text was only the wave on the beach, while the whole verse from which it is taken is an ocean. But the ocean tides are coming in, and the sea is gettin #0 detp I must fall back, wading out as waded in, for what mortal can stand be. fore the mighty su of the full tide of eternal gladness? “Eye hath not seen nor FE alt ihe Aih Saar eart of man t ngs whic! prepared for them that love him.” fal: where ame time and adjoining rows ap We do no eon for this, as we the growing or cu stalks are not familiar with ring of celery seed But not always is the fanlt in the : or the plants set. have seen it appear in almost every case when the manure used was fresh and not How one may always have tender and crisp celery we cannot say but we advise the grower not to nse fresh manure or any commercial fertil izer which has not a larger percentage of potash than of nitrogen. and when he finds a dealer whose seed or plants give good stand by them every time. And even then he may some corky or stringy celery. ~The Cul results to DER. By dry corn fodder I understand to main coarse feed for the winter, We of which the night and morning roughage is cut corn clover and timothy hay, while the cows when not in stable have free access to oat straw. The morning and evening grain rations are fed, the former after milking, the latter before, both beipg given on a clean floor. Formerly [ fed Later 1 bought a three- horse mounted tread power and a six- teen inch fodder cutter. I have cut in one-quarter, one-half, three-quarters, one one and a half and three inch lengths, and adopted the longest cut for several reasons. I can cut with less power, It makes nubbins of the large ears, thus shelling much less grain than when cut short. The leaves being cut long are more easily secured by the cows. The stubs and whatever may be left are thrown under the cows for bedding, and when mixed with the manure fur- nish the very best fertilizer. In its feeding value as compared with — whole fodder I believe the same amount cut will feed about one-tenth more than if given whole, There a great ad vantage gained by having a quantity of feed on hand, thus not necessitating a trip to the field every day in any and all kinds of weather. There is convenience and pleasure in handling cut feed, to- gether with the satisfaction one always feels when work is being done right, The cost of our cutting is estimated at 30 cents per ton for labor. This does not include the wear on machinery, or the interest on the investment, which, per ton, would be very small. The cost of power as furnished by horse tread | do not regard as anything. The differ- ence between the feed required for a horse at work and at rest for the time we use them, about Sfty minutes per ton is insignificant. I do not cut either hay or straw, but believe it would be satis- factory to cut straw if it were desired | to feed with grain in order to econo- | mize. It is my firm belief that it will] pay the farmer to cut his corn fodder, if | nothing more than for the extra valve he | secures from his stalks by being used | for litter.—Healy W. Alexander, in New | is POTASH FERTILIZERS. Waldo E. Brown for the Cin cinnati Weekly Gazette that the office of potash as plant food is to help form the writes starch, and such crops as corn and po tatoes, which contain large amounts of starch, need more potash than those that | Light need it me ll SOLS ire s0ils Tt It at 4 * 5 iS. 1I¢ muriate gives a goo potatoes on light the quality, Ciay sulphate If used 1 should not come in « pre duces 4 age the fars with fodder con Very often those whe pared will turn their milel and s do that { ground feed, 3 diciously fed, will give you back your money in milk yield, and with a fair | rate of interest thereon. The idea is tod do anything in the way of legitimate supplemental feeding rather than to al low a premature milk shrinkage Barring prolonged droughts, the pas- tures in our most extensive dairy reg. tons might be made to yield upp ting feed much later i the they now do. Rather than one which, nto season than On a limited scale in one portion of | Wisconsin | saw irrigation utilized suc- and flourishing the whole summer. Top-dressing the land with stable com. post by mulching the grass roots helps to subserve moisture, which is fully as important in stimulating the growth of feed as is the fertilizing principle that it imparts. Shade trees in the pasture ju- diciously placed also serve the same end and at the same time shield the cattle from the sun's rays Many pastures, too, are not well sel ected as to character of soil and location, and hence are of little aid in profitably maintaining a dairy herd. The best grass land should be chosen that is, land fertile and capable of re- taining moisture, as occurs where there is a clay subsoil, Once established, a good, reliable pas. ture is the cheapest, and hence the most profitable means of maintaining a sum- mer dairy «George E. Newell, in Amer- ican Cultivator, COLD FRAMES FOR WINTER VEGETABLES. : The frames should be in the warmest possible situation, facing south, or in that general direction. 1 construct my hotheds on a different plan from most others, 1 build a more permanent frame. First I set cedar posts the width of the bed, then nail on boards with an -. elevation of about eight inches on the back The soil is dug out to a depth of eighteen to thirty inches from the glass to suit the crop to be grown. The earth is banked around the frame for protec- tion, I construct frames as near air-tight as possible. It requires less protection dur- ing the severe freezing weather. The sash is thoroughly glazed and every crack is puttied. The crack across the glass is run with mastica. My sash are mostly four by six feet, with four rows of ten inch glass, A bar two by four inches is placed between each sash. It is put down a little below the edge of the top board, but even with the top of the lower edge of frame. 1 use a strip one inch thick the depth of the sash; it nailed on top of the two by four inch bar, overjets the bottom of frame and is even with the top edge. 1 put on a cap board eight inches wide along the top. It is nailed to the back board of frame and the bars the sash This forms a perfect shelter for the sash to under, the frame being built about four inches wider than the length of the sash. is between slide I find this a great protec- much heat escapes and the cra between much c the back board and the sash if constructed in the I figd there is necessity for mat as very little or straw for a bed so constructed Frames built after this plan will cost bout $s per sash I for years. 1 abe With care they will think every farmer a frame, if only a few uce, green pars- winter. If any sur- i f at a A18DOS larmer is last » can have f, etic. ink a fos from his have a vegetal OU use ome r re- Be Killed by an Assassin. t all hands to hang naturally at his side lwwankee Sentinel Fire Engine Chasers. The ambulance chaser is no new fig e¢ in New York life and the class 1s 4 But the chaser of the fire en- competition in New York. This business drummer is always an tate agent, who sends him to interview the In view of the fact that they: may be burned out of their places of business the chaser takes with him a list of vacant business buildings in the tenants None of the objections to this scheme that would be thought of first are valid since it has proved so successful that the fire chaser promises to take a per- manent place in commerce. In several cases, business men watching the de- struction of their places have been known to agree with the chaser to take the new quarters he offered. The enterprise is still in its infancy and capable of developments yet unsus- pected, but it is gaining adherents every day and one firm has already decided to adopt these profitable tactics in refer. ence to dwelling houses and apartments, although it is thought that the method may be less successful when the chasers are compelled to deal with women whe are watching their homes being de- stroyed by fire.~New York Sun, Street Lamps Automatically Lichted, An arrangement has just been made whereby the Berlin gas lamps in the syrect will be lighted automatically and simultaneously by means of an electric attachment. The current will be switche ed on fron: the central station and a spark will ignite the gas, which will be turned on by a special apparatus, PENNSYLVANIA BRIEFLY TOLD. A ———— Latest News Gleaned From All Over the Siate, OF GRANTED. A Media Cripple Could Not Escape From Bura- ing House and Was Cremated- Eighteen Pennsylvania Corporations lucrease Their Stock Durlag October--Norwood Maa Un+ der Ball for Setting Fire to a Barn. LIST PENSIONS Pensions granted Pennsylvanians: ames B. Wilkins, Broadtop, $12; Isaac Byers, New Eagle, $10; Robert Jack, Allenport, $8; Henry Bevilhamer, Saeg- arstown, $8: John Glover, Meyersdale, $12; Samuel Plank, Shade Valley, $8; frank Hulick, Oakdale, Madison McLaughlin, Davis, $10; John Richards, Wampun, 88; Gerrit Heering, Meyers- fale, $12; Lewis Cruse, Hollodaysburg. PB; Adam Manges, Hillsview, $12; Anne Young, Flegers, $8; Jeanette Moody, anton, $20 ” 1 I'he Company and the 11 «11 controlling all int tg directors Philadelphia the traction electric of Allegheny sounty, to increase the bonded debt of the company from $6,500,000 to $22,000,000 and the capital stock from $21,000,000 to $36,000,000. decided Fire destroyed the shirt factory oper- Fidler and Mark Lewis, } s $5000 injured by Assist severely stable of Samuel destroyed it and Marshall Harlan, 3,000, First Methodist in Cart lal roongaie Episcopal was destroyed by l of $30,000 dé NE a Oss > tO € ks CX yuald heard from wit no one was able to aid the unfortunate woman, wansion on East Cour street, Doviestown, belonging to Joseph Mekeal, of Philadelphia, formerly the Shellenberger property, was sold to the Pennsylvania Society for the Advance- ment of the Deaf. The society will tonduct 2 home for the aged deaf. This will be the only institution of the kind in the State, and there are said to be only two others in existence, one in New York and one in Ohio For nine years Benjamin Christine lived in New Castle as the adopted son »f Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Lichenderfer, without knowing that his mother also sived in New Castle. The boy recently earned of his mother’s whereabouts, and ss a result the Court set aside the de- ree of adoption and mother and son were united. The station of the Philadelphia and Reading Railway Company at West Woods was broken into and the in- truders tore up all tickets and paste- board baggage checks on hand and threw them into the stove. Charged with setting fire to the barn of H. B. Ward, at Prospect Park, which was destroyed on November 3, Thomas Alexander, of Norwood, was held in $1,500 bail by Alderman Smith at Ches- ter. As William H. Newcomer, of Hickory Grove, was working in a field, he was suddenly bereft of sight in his right eye, the formation of a blood clot destroying the vision. i A thief broke a plate glass window in Silverman's jewelry store at Shenan- doah, grabed a tray containing three gold and three silver watches and ran off, G. Wilson Smoyer, of Allentown, who, it is alleged, attempted to poison hi parents several weeks ago putting arsenic in their cofee, was acquitted in court on the ground of insanity. A. C. Fulmer, JEopricies of the Mey- ersdale Electric Light Works, sold establishment to H. J. Wilmoth, of Mey- ersdale, for $30,000, John Runko, a miner, of Enterprise, has notified the police that robbers en tered his house and stole i He : ra than A large stone