TINE FOR REJOICING. Rev. Dr. Talmage Talks of Peans of Praise for the Victories of Peace. The Triumphs of Husbandry Conquests of the Pen. WasnixaToN, D. C.—This discourse of . Talmage is a national congratulation over the achievements of brain and hand during the past twelve months. The texts are: I Corinthians ix, 10, “He that ploweth shall plow in hope:” Isaiah xl. 7, “He that smootheth with the hammer;” Judges v, 14, “They that handle the pen of the writer.’ There is a table being spread across the top of the two great ranges of mountains which ridge this continent, a table which reaches fron Atlantic to the Pacific sea. : nation, and South the aviary, from every under peal h chards o Broy eR » come from the Eas the North and ti Un it are lands, birds from every the 1 smoking the York, the orange , the vinevards of Ohic and the nuts ed from New England woods, } bread is white fr the wheat fields of Illinois and Michi the banqueters are adorned with California gold, and the table ia agleam with Nevada silver, and the feast is warmed with the fire grates heaped up with Pennsylvania coal. The hall is spread with carpets from Lowell mills, and at night the lights will flash from bronzed brackets of Phila- della manufacture, Welcome, Thanksgiving Dav! we may think of New England theology, we all like New England Thanksgiving Day. What means the steady rush to the depots and the long rail trains darting their lanterns along the tracks of the Bos- ton and Lowell, the Georgia Central, the Chicago Great Western, the St. Paul and Duluth and the Southern railwav? Ask the happy group in the New England farm house; ask the villagers whose song of praise in morning will come over the Berkshire hills; ask all the plantations of the So hich have adopted the New Eng { art a day of thanksg day of na- tional i ple, 1 appie¢e or- Whatever 3 tae gilent in worship their doors swung the church aisie a = thumped as the leaders bade them “ arms!” This custom of having the fathers, the husbands, sons ard brothers at the entrance of the pew 1s a custom which came down from olden time, was absolutely necessary that the father ¢ brot } it at the end of } pew fully med to defend the portion of the family But changed! 8 against any © IOUS &ervices, mand of the States, we gath ing and holy Stir your so while [ speak « fully open, I sre of Lhe when it the chu he now th thanksgiving ries of God and in the conquests tions, re: all the Phos extolled husba y © went * consyg was a form r or that u Ive vole twelve vole ticularly cmnnatus low or that Noah Pe became a shi in the field plowing " oxen when the mantle I on him or that the Egyptians in their paganism wor shiped the ox aa a tiller of their lands, To get an appreciation of what the American plow has accomplished [ take you into the western wilderness. Here in the dense forest I find a collection of In- dian wigwams, With belts of Wampum the men lazily sit on the skins of deer, smoking their feathered calumets, or, driv- en forth by hunger, 1 track their moceca- sins far away as they make the forest echoes crazy with their wild halloo or fish in the waters of the still lake. Now tribes challenge and council fires blaze, and wa whoops ring, and chiefs lift the toma- hawks for battle. After awhile wagons from the Atlantic coast come to those forecasts. By day trees are felled, and by night bonfires keep off the wolves. Log eabing rise, and the great trees begin to throw their branches in the path of the conquering white man. Farms are cleared. Stumps, the monuments of slain forests, crumble and are burned. Villages appear, with smiths at the bellows, masons on the wall, carpenters on the Fousetop. Churches rise in honor of the Great Spirit whom the red men ignorantly worship. Steamers on the lake convey merchandise to her wharf and carry east the uncounted bush els that have come to the market. Brin miher wreaths of wheat and erowns o rve, and let the mills and the machine of barn and field unite their voices to cel: ebrate the triumph, for the wilderness hath retreated and the plow hath con quered, : : : . Within our time the Presidential Cabin. et has added a Secretaryship of Agricul ture. Societies are constantly being es. tabli-® 1 for the education of the plow, Jouri: « devotad to this department are circulated throneh all the country. Farm. era through such culture have learned the attributes of soils and found out that al most every Held has its peculiar prefer. ences. Lands have their choice as to which product they will bear. Marshy lowlands touched by the plow rise and wring out their wet locke in the trenches, Islands born down on the coast of Peru and Bolivia are transported to our fields from th and make our vegetation leap. Highways by this plow are changed from boggy sloughs into roads like the Roman Appian Way. Soon until there the farmhouse stands. In summer honeysuckles clamber over the trellises. n cone side there stands a gar den, which is only a farm condensed. On the other side there is a stretch of meadow land with thick grass, and as the wind breathes over it it looks like the deep green ocean waves. There goes a brook, tarryving long in its windings, as if loath to leave the spot where the reeds sing, shadow of the weeping willows. In win- ter the sled comes through the eracklin snow with huge logs from the woods, anc the barn floor quakes under the thumpings of the flail or the deafening buzz of the thrashing machine. Horses stand beneath mow poles bending under loads of hay and whinny to the well filled oat bins. Comfort laughs at the wind rattling the sashes and clicking the icicles from the Caves, Pra have | th m ise Cod for the gre irvests that 1 this Ia Some of i been If the ancients in their festiv present. ed their rejoi s before Ceres, the god- dess of corn and tillage, shall we neglect to rejoice in the pr he great God now? From A to Pacific he American nation celebrate the victories of the plow. I come next to speak of the conquests of the American hammer. Its iron arm has fought its way down from the begin- ning to the present. Under its swing the city of Enoch rose, and the foundry of Tubal Cain resounded, and th8 ark floated on the deluge. At its clang ancient tem- ples spread their magnificence and char- 10ts rushed out fit for the battle. Its iron fist smote the marble of Paros, and it rose in sculptured Minervas and struck the Pentelican mines until from them a Par- thenon was reared whiter tha a pal of ice and pure as an V Damascus and Jerusalem Venice and Paris delphia and wre but the I « Und lings have Nehoolhot aAsyiums antic let ner have ther hand, 1 he wing, I thean land. They fly sw 2 eave Dermal a opon t public A% & snow of an Alpine #1 £h but he noiselesaly ih the strength unparalleled mu eis ication of ! brea and evening telegrs wire rakes, gather 3 news wn and of the ¢ world, and men write to some pu ae ] make a pen out of a thunder- her m or our huge the the nati bolt. It needs great energy and deeisic persevera 114 man to be i It seems to me that + sopics long ! Y Y box or, tease f pOme poetic muse, c npos itles for the papers and chemistry have been so improved that he must be a geninsg at dullness who knows nothing about them On one shelf of a poor man's library is more practical knowledge than in the 400. 000 volumes of ancient AMlesandria., and education is possible for the most indigent, and no legislature or congress for the last fifty years has assembled which has not had it in rail splitters and farmers and drovers or men who have been accustomed to toiling with the hund and the foot. Lift up your eves, 0 nation of God's right hand, at the glorious prospects! Build larger vour barns for the harvests; dig deeper the vats for the spoil of the vineyards: enlarge the warel ew: houses for the merchandise; multiply galleries of art for the nictures and statues. Advance, O na- tion of God's right hand, but remember that national weaith, if unsanctified, is sumptuous waste, is moral ruin, is magnifi- cent woe, is splendid rottenness, is gilded death! drunkenness wallows in them! for the harvesta if greed sickles them! swallows it! misrule walks them! (God defying erime debauches it! safely is in more more fres schools, more good men and more good women, more consecrated print. the Son of God, which will all wrongs and introduce all b But the preachers on morning will not detain with long ser mons their hearers from the home group, The housekeepers will bo an if the guests do not arrive until the ands are cold. Set the chairs to the table--the easy chairs for grandfather and grandmother, if they be still alive; the high chair for the youngest, but not the least. Then put out your hand to take the full eup of thanksgiving. Lift it and bring’ it toward your lips. your hands trembling with emo- tion. and if the chalice shall overflow and trickle a few drops on the white eloth that covers the table do not be disturbed, but let it suggest to you the words of the piatmist and lead you thankfully to say, ‘My cup runneth over!” (Copyright, 191, L Klopseh. } sasedness, He Mad Another Brother. Judge Crouse, Indian agent at White River, Arizona, in a letter recently to L. J. Rice, related a story told him at the fort. Some time ago an officer stationed there accidentally shot and killed al friendly Apache. The officer regretted the occurrence as deeply as if the victim had been a white man. A human being was a human being to him, whatever his | color. Besides, he feared that the In- | dizng might not regard the shooting as | an accident and serious trouble might €nsue, The Indian had a brother, who came | around the fort threatening an outbreak. | He refused to accept the accident theory, | and intimated the United States had put | its foot in it through the action of its | military representative, and had canceled | all the friendly relations which 1sted be the republic Apaches. He hinted at the w the de had ex- | and the] ar path and | eded tween y world off grief; for instar Ihe bereft brother 1 3 winch 5 ive o him to the terms reaty officer in be sat lot things the mourning d not asked for. The Ind :xpected gifts and the hie and, mounting, turne id said: "Me got another | the officer 1 he Of threw 1 J il ! bl understood | ormation i that i be raised | al and fa- Length of a Drenm. does a dream sv ng it as and dear when the age. 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