solves with the idea that the Lord would be 80 ploased with the gift He would forget the swindle. Now, as such a man may not have any liturgy in which to say his prayers, I will coznposs for him one which he practi cally is making: “O Lord, we, by getting a ‘corner’ in breadstuffs, swindled the people of the United States out of ten million dol. lars, and made suffering all up and down the land, and we would like to compromise this matter with Thee. Thou knowest it was a scaly job, but then it was smart, Now, here we compromise it. Take one per cent. of the profits, and with that one per cent. you can build an asylum for these poor miserable ragamufling of the street, and I will take a yacht and go to Europe, for ever snd ever, a/men "REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN. DAY SERMON, Subject: “Faith Without Works.” TEXT: “Faith without works is dead,” Jas. ii. 20, The Roman Catholic Church has been | charged with putting too much stress upon | good works and not enough upon faith, I] charge Protestantism with putting not | enough stress upon good works as connected with salvation. Good works will never save a man, but if a man have not good works he bas no redl faith and no genuine religion. | There are those who depend upon the fact | that they are all right inside, while their | conduct is wrong outside. Their religion for | the most part is made up of talk—vigorous talk, fluent talk, boastful talk, perpetual | talk. They will entertain you by the hour | in telling you how good they are. They come up to such a higher life that we have ; no patience with ordinary Christisns in the But this practical religion will not ouly plain discharge of their duty. As near as I | rectify all merchandise, it will also rectify can tell, this ocean craft is mostly sail and | all mechanism and all toll, A time will come very little tonnage. Foretopmast staysails, | when a man will work as faithfully by the foretopmast studding sail, maintopsail, miz- | job as he does by theday. You say when a zentopsail—everything from flying jib to thing is slightingly done, “Oh, that was mizzen spanker, but making no wi voy- | done by the job™ You can tell by the swift age. Now the world has got tired of this, and | ness or slowness with which a hackman it wants a religion that will work into all the | drives whether he is hired by the hour or by circumstances of life. We do not want a new | the excursion. If he is hired hy the exeur religion, but the old religion applied in all | sion he whips up the horses, so as to get possible directions, | around and get another customer, All Yonder i= a river with steep and rocky | styles of work have to be inspected. Ships banks, and it roars like a young Niagara as inspected, horses inspected, machinery in it rolls on over its rough bed. §¢ does noth- | spected. Boss to watch the journeyman ing but talk about itself all the way from its | Capitalist coming down unexpectedly source in the mountain to the place where it | watch the boss, empties into the sea. The banks are so | sounding the punch bell to prove his hobesty steep the cattle cannot come down to drink. | as a passenger hands to him a clipped nicke It does not run one fertilizing rill into the | All things must be watched and inspected. | adjoining fleld. It bas not one grist mill or | Imperfections in the wood covered with | factory on either side. It sulky in wet | putty Garments warranted to last until weather with chilling fogs. No one cares | You put them on the third tine. BShoddy in when that river is born among the all kinds of clothing. Chromos. Pinchbeck and no one cares when it dies into the sea, | Diamonds for a dollar and a half. Book But yonder is another river, and it mosses | bindery that holds on until you read the its banks with the warm tides, and it rocks | third chapter. Spavined horses by skillful with floral lullaby the water lillies asleep on dose of Jockeys for several days made to ite bosom. It invites herds of cattle, and spry. Wagon tires poorly put on flocks of sheep, and ys of birds to « sos poorly shod. Plastering that cracks there and drink. It has three grist mills on | Without any and falls off one side and cotton factories on the | Plumbing that needs to be piumbed. Im other. It is the wealth of two hundred | perfect car wheel that halts the whole train miles of luxuriant farms. The of | with a bot box little practical religion heaven chanted it was ! in the mechanism of the world, 1 tell a mountaing, and the ocean shipy my friends, the law of man will v in from the sea to bail it as it ox wn to | Te tify these things w the Atlantic coast I'he one vading influence of who lives for the other Jesus Christ that will man who lives for other the better Do you know how t Yes, this practical religion will also go into city of Jerusalemn was agriculture, which is proverbially honest, but two brothers whe to be rectified. and it will keep the one brother had farmer from sending to the New York mas bad no family ket veal that is t and when family said, the farmer farms on shares it will keep the family man who does the work from making his cheer | half three-fourths and it will keep the farmer sheaves fr from building his posts and rail fence on his set them ove neighbor's premises, and it will make him about it 1 shelter his cattle in the winter storm, and it brother has a large will keep the old elder from working on Sug ficult for him to su) day afternoon in the new ground when no- help him along. and | will take some of the | body sees him And this practical religion sheaves from my on n farm in the night time | will hover over the house, and over the barn, and set them over on his farm and say noth- | and over the field, and over the orchard ing about it Bo the work of transference Yes, this practical religion of which 1 speak went on night after night, and night after | will come into the learned professions. The night, but every morning things seemed to | lawyer will foal his responsibility in defend- be just as they were, for though sheaves had | ing lonocence, and arraigning evil, and ex. been subtracted from each farm, sheaves had | pounding the law, and it will keep him from also been added, and the brothers wers per. charging for briefs he never wrote, and for plexed and could not understand. But one | pleas he never made, ani for percentages ho night the brothers happened to meet while | never earned, and from robbing widow and making this generous transference, and the | orphan because they are defensaless Yeu spot where they met was so sacred that it | this practical religion will come into the was chosen as the site of the city of Jerusa shysician’s life, and he will feel the responsi. lem. If that tradition should prove un- | bility as the conservator of the public health, founded it will nevertheless stand as a beay- | 8 profession honored by the fact that Christ tiful allegory setting forth the idea that | Himself was a physician. And it will make wherever a kindly and generous and loving | him honest, and when be dows not understand act is performed that is the spot fit for some | 8 case he will say #0, not trying to cover up temple of commemoration lack of diainosis with ponderous technical I _- e often spoken to you about faith, | ties, or send the patient to a reckless drug but pow I speak to you about works, for | store because the apothecary happens to pay “faith without works is dead.” I think you ; a percentage on the prescriptions sent will agree with me in the statement that the And this practical religion will come to great want of this world is more pract the school teacher, making her feel her re religion We want practical religion to g sponsibility in preparing our youth for use into all merchandise. It will supervise the | fuluess, sod for happiness, and for honor, labeling 0 goods. It will not allow aman and will keop her from giving a sly box to a to say a thing was made in one factory when dull head, chastising him for what he cannot it was made in another. It will not allow and sending discourgement ull through the merchant to say that watch was manu the after vears of a lifetime This practical foctured in Geneva, Switzerland, wh it was religion will also come to the newspaper manufactured in Massachusetts, It wil men, and it will help thom iz. the gathering allow the merchant to say that wine of the news, and it will help them in setting from Madeira when it came from Calif forth the best interests of society, and it will Practical reiigion will walk along keep them from putting of th store she and tear off all the tags world in larger type than virtues, and make misrepresentation. It will not allow | its mistakes than its achievements the merchant to say that is pure coffee when Yeu, this religion, this practical religh dandelion root and chicory and other in. will come and put its hand on what is « gredients go into it It will not allow him to | good society, « alu y that is pure sugar when there are in it | clety, so that P ople w.ll have their expendi sand and ground glass tures within their income, and they will ex When practical religion gets its full swing | change the hypocritical “not at home” for { it will go down the streets, and the honest explanation "too tired” or "to come to that shoe store and rip off | busy to see you," and will keep innocent re jous soles of many a fine looking | © pion from bec ning intoxicating convivi { shoes, and show that it is pasteboard | ality snd wicked between the sound leather. And this practical religion will go right into a grocery store, and it will pull out the plug of | the adulterated sirups, and it will dump the ash barrel in front of the store the cassia bark that is sold for cinnamon and the brick dust that is sold for cayenne wpper, and it will shake out the Prussian itn from the tea leaves, and i* will sift from the flour plaster of Paris and bone dust and soapstone, and it will by chemical analysis separate the one quart of Ridge wood water from the few honest drops of estate wrongfully, and hg build a line of hos piishs and universities from here to Alaska, o cannot atone for it, After a while this man who has been getting a “corner” in wheat dies, and then Satan gets a ** on him. He goes intoa great, long Black Friday. There {sa “break” in the market. According to Wall street pariauce, be wiped others out, and now he is himself wipad out No collaterals on which to make a spiritual | loan. Eternal defalcation! rocks, 1nd look ove yme | Hor provocation six birds 20 when wn in the ill be the the practical make the bimsedf The | needs 0 The broti There ¥@ must be | other a large o young to kill is my brother with no wely, and 1 will try to up, and I will take some th n my fleld in the night time and ron } farm and say nothing he other brother said, My family, and itis very dif- port them, i I will is and ni help “0 I not cain ria. tha tn the sins its 0% evaltel society. su inthe w it will the fiet is 0 a Yes, there is a great opportunity for mis gonary work in what are called the success ful classes of society, It is no rare thing now to see a fashionable woman intoxicatad in the street or the rall car, or the restan rant The number of fine ladies who drink too much is increasing. Perhaps you may find her at the reception In most exalted | company, but she has made too many visits to the wine room, and now her eye is glassy and after a while her cheek Is unnaturally flushed, and then she falls into fits of excruciating Inughter about nothing, and cow's milk, and it will throw out the live then she offers sickening flatteries, telling animalcules from the brown sugar, some homely man how well he looks, and There has been so much adulteration of | then she is helped into the carriage, and by articles of food that it is an amazement to | the time the carriage get to her home it me that there is a healthy man or woman in | takes the husband and coachman to get her American. Henven only knows what they | up the stairs. The report is, She was taken put into the spices, and into the sugars, and | suddenly ill at a german. Ab! no. She into the butter, and into the apothecary | took too much champagoe, and mixed drugs. But chemical analysis and the | lignors, and got drusk hat was all, microscope have made wonderful reels (en, this practioal religion will have to tions, The board of health in Massachusetts | come in and fix up the marriage relation in analyzed a great amount of what was called | America There are members of churches pure coffee and found in it not one particle | who have too many wives and too many bus of coffee. In England there is a law that | bands. Bociety needs to be expurgated and forbids the putting of alum in bread. The | washed and fumigated and Christianized. public authorities examined fifty-one pack. | Woe have missionary societies to reform Elm ages of bread and found them all guilty, | street, in Now York, Beiford street, Phila we honest physician, writing a preserip- | deipbia, and Sooreditol, London, and the tion, does not know but that it may bring | Brooklyn docks; but there is need of an or- death instead of health to his patient, bes | eause there may be one of the drugs weak. | ened by a cheaper article, and anothor drug wt | in Beacon street and Madison square and {| Rittenhouse square and West End a o Ab, my friends, if a man bath gotten his | corner” | | country / | preme Court of the United States and Presi. auization to reform much that is going on | , | sleap, with wear and tear correspondingly and may be in full force, and so the prescription tony have just the oppo ite effect Intended, Oil of wormwood, warranted pure, from | Boston, was found to have forty-one per | cent. of resin and aleshol and ebloroform, | Beammony is one of the most valuable medi. | cinal drugs. It is very rare, very precious It is the sap or the gum of a tree or bush in Hyria. The root of the tree is exposed, an incision is made into the root, and shells are at this incisdon to catch the sap gum as It exudes, tis very this soammony. Put | , and be mixes it with a | ; then It comes to the re | HE i5%x £ job! Brooklyn Heights and Brooklyn Hill, | want this practioal religion not only to take hold of what are called the lower classes, but to take hold of what are ealied the higher classes, have an idea they can do all their religion on Hunday with hymn book and yor book and liturgy, sad some of them mit in church rolling up their eyes as though were ready for translation, when their Sab is bounded on all sides by an Inconsistent life, and while you are expwoting to come out from undor their arms the wings of an angel, there coms out from their forehead the horns of a There has got to be a new departure in . I do not say a new religon, Oh, no; but the old brought wow appliances, In our time we have had the daguerreotype, and the ambrotyps, and the photograph, but it is the same old sun, and oo - these arts are only new appilanses of the old | sunlight. Bo this what we want tn God on one soul, ¢ orfous Gospel is just RET the image of telagrap hie invention, and the t on & ight Intuntion, | the food furnished during this period The trouble ix that people | I am fully satisfied that were the { weakly, the emaciated aud the sleepless | to nightly take a light lunch or meal of ern hemispheres, old Gospel doing a new work. Now you say, “That fea very beautiful theory, but {sit possible to take one’s relig- fon into all the avocations and business of life? Yes, and I will give you a few speci. mens. Medical doctors who took their re. ligion into everyday life: Dr. John Aber. erombie, of Aberdeen, the greatest Senttish physician of the day, his book on “Diseases of the Brain and Spinal Cord,” no more won derful than his book on “The Philosophy of the Moral Feelings,” and often kneeling at | the bedside of his patients to commend them | to God io prayer. Dr. John Brown, of Ed- inburgh, immortal as au author, dying under | the benediction of the sick of Edinburgh, myself remembering him as he sat in his study in Edinburgh talking to me about Christ and his hope of heaven. And a score of Christian family physicians in Brooklyn just as good as they were. Not a new Gospel, but the ! Lawyers who carrie | their religion into their profession: The late Lord Cairns the Queen's adviser for many years, the highest lezal authority in Great Britain—Lord Calrns, every summer in his vacation, preach- ing as an Evangelist among the poor of his John McLean, Judge of the Bu dent of the American Bunday School Union, fooling more satisfaction in the latter office | than in the former. And scores of Christian lawyers as eminent in the church of God as they are eminent at tho bar Merchants who took their religion into everyday life: Arthur gpa, derided in his day because he established that system by which we come fo find out the commer. | cial standing of business men, starting that { entire system, derided for it then, himself, as I knew him well, 10 moral character Al, Monday mornings inviting to a room in the top of his storehouse the clerks of his estab- | lishment, asking them about their worldly to Conductor of a city car | interests and their spiritual interests, then giving out a hymun, i in prayer, giv. ing them a few words of good advice, asking them what church they attended on the Sab. bath, what the text was whether they had any especial troubles of their own. Arthur Tappan, | hoard his eulogy pro. nounced. | pronounce it now, And other merchants just as good, William E. Dodge, Moses H. Grinnell, in business; Petor Cooper, in the Scores of men just as good never in the iron business shipping 10 business af they wore Farmers who take their religion into their occupation Why, this minute their horses and wagons stand around all the meeting houses in America. They began this day by a prayer to God, and when they get home at poon, after they have put their horses up, will offer prayer t God at the table, seeking 1 and thi there will be in one dishones ad of rye, { corn, not one di r (30d 8 {ilis.or away d Florida, or away out lorado, or al i gic and the Raritan I knew them botter because [ went to school with them Mechanics who their occupations mous miliwright famous ship § summer AY away wn of { MR wher took their religion into James Brindley, the fa- Nathaniel Bowditch, the 4 bu Burritt, the fa mous blacksmith, and hundreds and thou sands of strong arms which have made the hammer, and the saw, and the adee, and the drill. and the ax sound in the grand march of our pational industries Give your heart to God and then fill your life with good works Conseorate to Him your store, your shop, your banking house, your factory and your home. They say no one will hear it. God will hear it. That is enough. You hardly know of any one sise AIRY ailington as connected with the vie tory at Waterloo; but be did not do the hard fighting. The hard fighting was done by the Bomerset cavalry, and the Ryland regiments, and Kempt's infantry, and the Hoots Grays and the Life Guards Who cares if only the day was +o’ In the latter part of the last century a girl in Bogland became a kitchen maid io a farm bouse. She had many styles of work, and much bard work, Time rolled on, and she marriod the son of a weaver of Halifax, They were industrious; they saved money enough after a while to build them a home On the morning of the day when they were to enter that home the young wife rose at 4 o'cibok, entered the front door yard, kneit jown, consecrated the place to God, and there made this solemn vow: “0 Lord if Thou will bless me in this place, the poor shall have a share of Time rolled on and a fortune molled in Children grew up around them, and they all becsune affluent; ne, a member of parliament, in a public place declared that his success came from that prayer of his mother in the door yard All of them were affluent. Four thousand hands in their factories. They bullt dwell ing bh r laborers at cheap rents, and ey were invalid and could not pay they had the houses for nothing One of thes ame to this country ad mired our parks, went back, bought land, opensd a great public park, and made it a present to the city of Halifax, England Mey endowed an orphanage, they sadowed two almshouses, All England bas heard of the generosity and the good works of the Crossley s. Moral Consecrate to God your small means and your humble surroundings, and you will have larger means and grander surroundings, “Godliness is profitable unto all things, having promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come” Have faith in God by all means, but remeber that faith without works is dead, it sen | woen t SOS ( Food Many persons, though not actually sick, keep below par in strength and gen. eral tone, aad I am of opinion that fast ing during the long intervals between supper and breakfast, and especially the complete emptiness of the stomach during sleep, adds greatly to the amount of emaciationy sleeplessness and general weakness we so often meet, writes Dr, William C, Cathell, of Baltimore, Phy- siology teaches that in the body there is a perpetual disintegration of tissue, sleeping or waking: it is, therefore, logical to believe that the supply of nourishment should be somewhat con- ss During Sleep. | tinuous, especially in those who are below par, if we would counteract their emacia- tion and lewered degree of vitality, and as bodily exercise Is suspended during diminished, while digestion, assimilation and nutritive activity continue as usual, adds more than is destroyed, and in. creased weight and improved general vigor is the result. simple, nutritious food before going to bed for a prolonged period, nine in ten of them would be thereby lifted into a better standard of health, ———————— The Deepest Hole In the World. The deepest bore hole in the world, | claimed at differect times for a number { of places, 1, according to latest accounts, at Schiadebach, a small German vil near leipzig. It measures 1748.4 meters, or about 5735 feet. The time expended in boring to this amounted to six years, at a cost of §53,. BOO, A peculiar experience cncountered in connection with this and other deep that the observed while NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN Boft colors prevail, Metal belts are a novelty, Prune is one of the favorite colors, | Decorated china is having its innings | Orange spoons are made quite small, The turquoise is again becoming popu lar. ‘ The new woolens look very spring | like. | A Turkish fez in very dark red is worn. The bell-shaped sleeve is restricted to | conts, | Cravats have suddenly become popular | again, Plaid cheviots vie with plain or striped | patterns. Necklaces are growing in popularity and size, It's a French fad for a belle to have an assortment of fans. The success of a hostess is mainly de- | | pendent upon her tact. The principal dentists in Australia { have women assistants. This is the season for replenishing the | supplies of house linen. The pointed bang is disappearing from the forehead of fashion. Bracelets are appearing formed of gold beads of successive size. Beaded chatelaine bags and purses sti]) appeal to feminine favor. Velvet are still very fashionable. ] sleeves in silk or wool gown Colored lingerie is not so fashionable as it was a little while Very few dream of speaking in public. “Aunt Fanny" forty-fi ks for « All the *% white gaux azo Spanish women ever even Barrow has writter piaren. ve bo ying « fans are made of ch plumes mental letter scales is an A pair of appropriate rift for any woman who pos sesses Bn desk R . . a Fur is used as borders even upon even ing dresses around the low bodice and short sleeves, The sealskin Is now made so soft and pliable that it is ruffled and plated like a dress fabric, A woman may be attired most stylishly without wearing a single fashionably French bonnets —and they are all little more than medium sized pancakes—are crow nless Mrs. Hetty Green, who had $18,000,. 000 left her some time ago, has increased her inheritance to 830,000,000, The New York Pre sbytery, a majority of that body at least, 1s opposed to insti tuting the Order of the Deaconcases, Dress skirts for street wear are length ening in spite of all protests. But ex tremely tidy women do not adopt them » . Very youthful “‘rosebuds” jocks with velvet band their is tied on the top of the head in a saucy littl bow, ribbon, which Chronic Rheumatism And serious Qsorder of the Liver and somash have troubhed me for more than ta years, durtng which Use | Bave mand almost every medicine reoom- mended without finding any relied whatever unt] | tried Hood's Sarsapartila. This has done me more good than aaything «lee that | have ever taken, and 1 take plensure In recommending Rt In the highest terme. 11 hae bean worth Ms weight ia gold W be wl aronsack Mitian, Limerick Centre, Fa Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by oll drageisis. $1; six for $5. Prepared only by CL HOOD & 00, Apotheonrion, Lowell, Mam 100 Doses One Dollar ADWAY'S READY RELIEF. 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Jones, Edom, Tex. writes: I have used German Syrup for the past six years, for Sore Throat, Cough, Colds, Pains in the Chest and Lungs, and let me say to any- one wanting such a medicine German Syrup is the best. B.W. Baldwin, Carnesville, Tenn., writes: I have used your German Syrup in my family, and find it the best medicine I ever tried for coughs and colds, I recommend it to every- one for these troubles, R. Schmalhausen, Druggist, of harleston, Ill. writes: After trying scores of prescriptions and prepara- tions I had on my files and shelves, without relief for a very severe cold, which had settled on my lungs, I tried your German Syrup. It gave se immediate relief and a perma- nent cure, ® G. G. GREEX, Sole Manufacturer, Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. A CoucH KEMPS a XY XU-Y DR. SCHENCK'S EAWEED TONIC Is & Positive Oure for DYSPEPSIA And all Disorders of the Digests fve Organs. It ie Hkeowiee corroborative, or slrengthens ing Medicine, and may be taken with great benefit jo all cases of Debility., For Sale ivr ofl Druggivte. Price, $1.00 per bottle. Dr Schenck's Few Book on Lungs Liver and Stomach mailed frea Address, Dr. J. M. SCHENCK & SON, “HE DID IT." “Pry ping the KW IHEN Remodies BR | nave cured all the colds in my amily, and in the vicinity for miles and, incloding bLatdes threst. med with croup, “kK. G. Row “ Vergennes, Vi KE WREX Cough Balsa Trockes cure homrseness 1 & minutes. bad coughs and wilde over night. Palas, 50; Troohes, Wand Be. By mall or dragpisie, Bl MB KEEP & 00. 6K. 15h 50, X.¥ PROF. LOISETTE'S NEW MEMORY BOOKS. Critietsems of Two tees! Memory Rvetems Frawdy ahout Apel Ist Full Tables of COomtents forwarded anly to those who setd stamped directed envelope Also Prospectus POST FREE of the Lodsettian Art of Never Forgetting Address Prod SETTE. 25 Fifth Ave Does ve, JEAD-ACHE & BROMO-SELTZER comnsdivto core Te] OC, ora, | ERATE Jid than out of the LB) ~ Kew York Are You Nervous? forhouse-cleaning. Itis a solid cake of scouring soap Try ik Cleanliness is always fashionaole and the use of or the neglect to use SAPOL!O marks a wide difference in the social scale. The best classes are always the most scrupulous in matters of cleanliness—and the best classes use SAPOLIO. PISO'S CURE FOR a eatin. Btcommendid by Pf ui. take {t without objection. By druggists. ENNVROVAL * Pit ™e nie om MONEY IN CHICKENS, Ie smd 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers