(— SSE THE NATIONAL GAME, Garvin is Pittsburg's winning pitcher. pi Tae attendance everywhere is excsilent, Tae old time flat bat is onos more being used in sacrificing. | GLASSOOCK captains the New York team in Ewing's absence, " Tue New York Club offered Rochester $2500 for Catcher Bowman, Umpires declare that Pittsburg and Cin- <inpati are the hardest cities to empire in. Maxy consider Sharrott, of the Now Yorks, the coming great pitcher of the Gronroe VAN Havrrex is considered the most valuable all-round player the Balti- mores ever had, Jorx Warp, of the Brooklyns, 2 late Fogarty was the greatest ou that ever lived. ¥ BEAKING up the batting order is a favor. ite pastime of managers when things go wrong and their teams lose. ¥ Five of the Pittsburg players are accom- panied to the game by their wives every day and go home with them after changing their uniforms. the elder Tux wonder of the baseball world is Ames | Rusie, the twenty-one year old pitcher of the | New York 1 o Club. He is regarded as the speediest pitcher that ever lived. longest in the country. The right foul flag is 350 feet distant from the home plate. + Presipent O/Newme, of Pittsburg, now thinks that every League team ought to start the season with a lot of young pitchers to do the early work and give the veteran twirlers time to thaw out, 4 BECOND-BASEMAN McPues, of the Cin- cionati League, is probably the only ine fielder in either the League or Amosrican Association who does not wear a glove. McPhee plays bare handed, and always did. James Wirrney, the famous pitch the old Boston Red Stocking Baseball C0, whose sobriquet was “Grasshopper Jim." died at Binghamton, N. Y., a fow days ago. Whitney had for some time been in failing health, and went thereto engage in farming. He was thirty-five years old. JUDGE MAXWELL has refused to grant the injunction asked for by the Columbus Base ball Club to prevent Charles Reilly from playing with the Pittsburgh Club, on the ground that an injunction should not be is- sued where adequate remedy in damages may be bad, Judge Maxwell's decision makes the legality of any baseball player's contract questionable, NATIONAL LEAGUE RECOAD, Fer Won, Lost, of, Chi 10 10 655 Cleveland .18 14 583 Pittsburg. .15 18 536 Ciocin'ati. 12 19 Philadel. ..16 15 516 Brookiyn..11 19 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION RECORD Won, Lost. Boston ....15 15 New York. 15 14 Won. Lost Cincinoati. 20 22 7 Louisville. 17 25 ‘ Columbus , 16 514 Wash'gt'e, # PROMINENT PEOPLE. Tue Prince of Wales's bad health is caus ing anxiety. Ex-Presipext CLEVELAND has a remark. able memory for faces Taz King of Greece is the most economi- cal of European monarchs. LORD SALISRURY'S ancestors were mem bers of the English Cabinet 300 years ago Wirrtiax Warporr Astor, the head of his family, is the greatest real estate owner in the world, Boston... .2 Baltimore. 4 12 St. Louis. . 25 17 Athletic. 10 18 Ex-Sgxarorn Wap Hawmrrox is sag Rad as the next President of the South Jarolina University Baer Harry's income in England from bis work last year was $15,000, while his American revenue was a little less than $1000 Tae widow of James K. Polk is eighty cight years old, but appeared as ghtly as a young woman at the wedding « Nashville, Tenn, the other evening Gexzral Tnosas T. Eckert is paid 85. 000 a year as manager of the Western Union Telegraph Company. and Dr. Norvin Green | gots $30,000 as the company’s President Taz present Czarina of Rusia is said to be the most popular Empress the mation ever had, She is loved for ber charities and is as bright and clever as she is slegant Davip Mezxenr died a fow days ago at San po. Mr. Meeker came to California in 1850, was a partner of Senator Stanford and was a prominent man in State politics M. M. Poxznoy, familiarly known as “Brick.” is about sixty years old, and wears a chin beard, He resembles a county Meth odist Humorous writing consumes only a portion of his time, as he bv engaged in mi operations near Denver Tue Rev, Thomas F. Gaylor, the new Episcopal Bishop of Georgia, is only thirty. five years old © has refused flattering of- fers from wealthy parishesis New York and Iilnois, and is at present Chancellor of the University of the South, at Sewanee, Tean. Prairies Brooks, of Boston, is descended from the Rev. John Cotton, whose namesake was Cotton Mather, the famous preacher of the New Eogiand colonial days. Several others of Ur. Brooks's ancmtors ware di Yanan in both his mother's and his father's Mus. MocKinruy, wifeof the ex-Congros man, is an invalid, but a most t and sweet tempered woman, Nhe cannot walk without amistance, beca se of lojuries her spine, and she never goes out without her husband, Whenever her husband is away from her she constantly keeps his photograph within sasy reas. Ong of the succesful lawyers of the Pa cific slope, a son of the famous John C, Breckinridge, and a brother of the Kentucky E bears the curious name of “Owen County” Breckinridge. He was born on the day, 1853, that his father was nomi nated for Congres over ex-Uovernor Letcher, and as that result was brought about by the votes of Owen County, the grateful candidate bestowed the name on his new born hair aos ——— ARSENIC BY MISTAKE. Sadden Death of Congressman LL. C, Houk, of Tennessee a nieow in | RIOTING IN PARIS. Police Overpowered by the Striking Ntagedrivers, The strike of stage-drivers throughout Paris, France, continusd for two days, and caused great excitement in that city, The company, assisted by the police, made an en- deavor to run several stages. No sooner were the stages well out of the depots than they were greeted with volley upon volley of stones, accompanied with a storm of hooting and jeering. Though the sta were escorted by policemen, the strikers watched their opportunity, and, at a signal agreed upon, charged furiously upon the stages, swept away the police lines, dragged the new drivers from their boxes, pounded them vigorously, cut the traces of the horses, and in several cases overturned and seriously damaged the stages them selves, Two strikers were crushed and fatally injured while attempting to stop an omni. bus. Squads of police attempted by repeated charges upon the strikers and their support | ers to protect the stages issuing from the depot on the Boulevard Bourdon, but the crowds responded by attacking and over powering the police. The strikers then pulled the new drivers from the stages, se. verely maltreated thom, and compelled the | stages to return to the depot, * Maxagen Banxig, of Baltimore, claims , that the right fleld of his new grounds is the | Minister Constans gave audience to dele gates of the strikers and the company’s di. rectors. As a result of the audience and the | mediation of the municipal authorities, the | directors of company met the union leaders and drafted an agreement virtually ending the strike, on the men's terms, The com- pany recognizes the union, reinstates dis- missed union men, and adopts the twelve. hour system, OALL RE-ELECTED. | A Senator Chosen in Florida After a Long Contest, Wilkinson Call was choser cessor as United Stats fda. Kir Zz after Caucus diel by a vole « Ninety alten two ballots, ballots had been to deteat his adjourn sine die taken in a vain Cit rs 1 elo yo mem! o es Senate sd remain all the called a1 that qu bra: An ao al from of the N members ee Legislature present this decision resulted in § Chair The vous for Senator was then a announced as follows: For al fifty. for Mays, one he President of the joint session then declared that Wilkinson Call was duly elected United Ntates Neunton The announcement was greetad with cheers. A committee Was appl upon Senator Call, who appearsd ball and made an eloquent speech and WW, loud nied to wait in the NEWSY GLEANINGS. FixLAND is being Russianised, Gruercs has seven cotton mille, Crexariox flourishes in Japan Uscrz Sax has 30,000 locomotives. Tux inflosnza still lingers in Eagland, Tux Hessian fly is in the wheat of Kanme, ArLoenia is again devastated by locusts, Inxraxn will exhibit at the World's Fair, Tuzns are 390 Arabian families in Chi cago, ’ Tae coinage of silver dollars will July 1 New Yong Stare bas 50 floral establish. ments A SoorLAND farmers complain of a mics | plague Tux 1* has 1.520, 000 members Tur yearly Prov.nces to Central Rally > Kx pet Vanes aout ex ius from the vow Kagland has wd officials day sons will go from ward Bost Canadian Maine about md and bry bro this onl, SOIL» y bu h il go back FOOLED 10,000 PEOPLE. Locked in the Omaha Fair Grounds W hile the Swindlers Fled, Ten thousand people paid fifty cents each | to witness the flight of the Chicago airship at the Falr Grounds at Omana, Neb, After the crowd had got inside “‘Profess ory” Bush and Dodd of Chicago, =» curely locked the gates =o that their victims could not get out, raked the pile of money intoa bag, and jumping on horws already arranged for their escape were out of the city before their flight was discov. ered. When the crowd discoversd the de eoit the case suppossd to coutain the air stip was torn to pieces and only old papers were discovered, THE MARKETS, NEW YORK werd ase Mileh Cows, com, to good, . 2 @w wn Calves, common 10 prime Hoge~l1dve, ....cciivvvinees Dressed... ....0o0000 Flour City Mill Extra. ... Patents Wheat—-No, 2 Red. ..0.c0vs Ryo~8tate .......coo00c0ns Barley —Tworowed State. Corn’ 4 Mixed. .... Onta=No, | White, ,....... Mized Western, ..... Hay—VFair to Good, ,,...... Straw} Rye .ovinnnes Lard City Steam... ....... ! Butter —State Creamery... . Dairy, fair to good, Went, lm, Creamery Faotory ...covevenes Chose —<Htate Factory ...... Bkime Light, ..... Western, ... sean J 4 sassunsssense § 4 13 * Cora No, 1 8 Yellow, ..ooees Onta- No, LWhite,,coveeeis Barley No. i Canadn, ...... BOSTON, Kag-Near-bf gH Clover, toss 0 Hay—Falr ,....o00iieenisn ld wliood to Prime. .....07 A i" WATERTOWN (MASK) CATTLE MARKRT, Bod Dressed Sennen FRR REs EE dt tl dh hhh id HEE ERs rR ES BERR {1 SEStYEy the | wzanizer of the Colored Alliance ses | REV. DR. TALMAGE, THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN. DAY SERMON, I ———— Subject: “Two Garlands” Text: “I will say to the north, Giveup, and to the south, Keep not back." Isaiah xiii, 6. Just what my text meant by the north and south I cannot say, but in the United States the two words are so point blank in their meaning that no one can doubt, The mean more than east and west, for hor between those last two there nave been rive alries and disturbing ambitions and infelici- ties and silver bills and World's fair contro- versies, there have been between them no batteries unlimbered, no intrenchments dug, no long lines of sepulchral mounds thrown up. It has never been Massachusetts Four. teenth Hegiment against Wisconsin Zounaves: it has never been Virginia arti! lory against Mississippi rifles Fast and west are distinet words, and sometimes may mean diversity of interest, but there sno blood on then, They can be pronounced without any intonation of wail. ing and death groan, But the north and the scuth are words that have been surcharged with tragedies, They are words which sug- gest that for forty years the clouds had been gathering for a four years' tempest which thirty years ago burst in a fury that shook this planet as it has never been shaken since thank Cod that the words the iotensity which they possessed three de- cades ago; that a vast multitude of northern tude of southern people have moved north, ten thousand, and northern colonels married the daughters of southern captains and Texas rangers have united for life with their children ball northern southern and altogether patriotic But north and south are words that nead to be brought into still closer harmonization, 1 thought that now, when we half way bet= presidential tions, and sectional animositios the lowest ebb; and now, just a presidential journey, when our chief mag wtrates, who was chiefly elected by the north, bas been cordially received at the south; and now, just after two Memorial Days, one of are and half on Le are at I Bowers « { in a chain of 8 them a month ago strewing flowers on south- ern graves, and the other yesterday strewing n northern graves, it might be ap : propriate and useful tor me t preach a ser mon which would two gariands—one | for the northern and the other for the southern dead and bave the two interlocked wers that shall bind forever two sections into one; and who knows that this may be the day when the of the text made in regard to the i 1 in regard to this den the but | pr ancients may be | oOuUniry, an hey filled i i the north give up its pre judi we and the south k y pot back its confiden “1 will my to the north, Give up, and to the south, Keep not baci But before | put these garlands on the raves | mean to put them this morning a little while on the brows of the living men and women of the north and south who lost busbands and sons and brothers during the civil strife. There is nothing more soothing to a wound than a cool bandage, and these two garlands are cool from the night dew What a morning that was on the banks of the Hudson and the Savannah when the son was to start for the war! What fatherly snd motherly counse What tears’ What | benrtbroaks! What charges to write home | often’ What little keepsakes put away in the knapsack, or the bundle that was to be exchanged for the knapsack The crowd around the depot or the steamboat landing shouted, but father and mother and sister rien And how lonely the bouse seemed after cant chair there was at Thanksgiving fable And alter the battle, what waiting for news! What suspense till the long lists of the killed and wounded were made out! All slong the Penobsoot, and the Connecticut, and the 8t, Lawrence, and the Ohio, and the Uregon, and the James, and the Albemarle, and the Alabama, and the | Mississippl, and the Sacramento there were lamentation and mourning and great woe, | Rachel weeping for her children, and refus ing tv be comforted because they were not | The world has forgotten it, but father and i mother have not forgotten it now in the eighties or nineties fresh wound wound Have war pitched but It = a realized the fact that our civil mt upon the farmields of north and the plantations of multitude that no man oan number, chil dren without fatherly help and protect on’ Under all the advantages which we had of fatherly guidance, what a struggle life has been to the most of us! But woat of the salidren, two and five and ten years of age who stood at their mother's lap with great round, wondering eyes, hoaring her read of those who perished in the Battie of the Wilderness, their fathers gone down among the dead howt® Come, young men and women, who by such disaster have had to make your own way in life, and I will put the garland on your young and unwrinkied brow. Yes: you have had your own Malvern Hill, and your own South Mountain, and your own Gettysburg all slong these twenty years, Come! And if | cannot spare a whole garland for your brow, I will terist In your locks at least two flowers, one orm son and one white, the crimson for the strug gio of your life, which bas almost amounte| to carnage, and the white for the victory you have gained, Before 1 put the two garlands I am twist. ing upon the northern and southern tombs I detain the garlands a little while that | maf put them upon the brow of the living soldiers and sailors of the north and south, who, though at variance for a long while, are pow at ce and in hearty lovalty to the United States government, and ready, if need be, to march shoulder to shoulder against any foreign for. The twmmtysix winters that have passed since the war, | think, have sufficiently cooled the hatreds that once burned northward and south. ward to allow the remark that they whe fought in that conflict were honest on both sides. The chaplains on both armies ware honest in their prayers The faces that went into battle, whether they marched tow. ard the Gulf of Mexico or marchel toward the north star, ware honest faces It Is too much to ask either side to believe that thom who eame out from their homes, formmking father and mother and wile and child, many of them never to return, were Bot in earnest when they put their life into awful exigency. Witness the ast scene at family prayers up a the (irsen mount. alos or down by rou it swung out at the first world building, 1 | have lost some of | people have moved south, and a vast multi. | and there have been intermarriages by the i have | the daughters of New York abolitionists, and | are | after | | the grave of the southern dead | of the American Union, | Christmas night | that | today twist | my | about this time, If | am {| on aver | and north and south | forget what the good i few they went home, and what an awfully va | the Christmas and | - | out to Greenwood and scoop up my dust and { both of {| tonrs They may be | and will always remains fresh | the | the south a | OY Seo os op Boonesville his last messaze to his wife sud mother and child, it sounded just ke & mes that a northern man dying far from home would send to his wife and mother and | child, And when 1 plcked up from flold of Antietam the fragment of a letter which I have somewhere yet, for the name and the address wore torn off, | saw it was the words of a wife to her husband telling him how the little child prayed for their father every night that he might not get burt in the battle and might come homs sound and come home well, but that if any- thing happened to them they might all mest again in the world where thers are no part. ings, it rend just as a northern wife would write to a husband away from home and in wril conveying the mowsages of little ehii- dren, Oh, yes; they were honest on both sides. And those who lived to get home are nving yet were just as honest, and ought they not for the suflering they endured have a coronal of some kind? But we must not detain the two garlands any longer from the pillows of those who for a quarter of a century have been prostrate in dreamless slumber, never oppressed b summer heats or chilled by winter's cold, Both gariands are fragapant. Both have in them thesunshine and the shower of this springtime. The colors of both were mixed by Him who mixed the blue of the sky, and | the gold of the sunset, snd tha green of the | grass, and the whiteness of the snow crystal, And 1 do not care which you put over the northern grave and which over the southern grave These august throngs gathered this morn- ing in these pews and aisles ana corridors and galleries are insignificant compared with the mightier throngs of heaven who mingle in this service which we render to God and our country while we twist the two garlands, Hail spirits multitudinous! Hall spirits blest! Hall martyred ones come down from from the King's palaces! How glad are we that you have come back again! Take this kiss of welcome and thess gariands of remin- scence, yo who languished in hospitals or went down under the thunders and the lightning of Fredescksburg and Cold Har. bor and Murfreesboro and Corinth and Yorktown and above the clouds on Lookout Mountais Among the thousands of gatherings at the north and at the south for Decoration Days | am conscious that this service is unique, and that it is only one in which there has been twisted two garlands, one for the grave of the northern dead snl the other for 0 Lord God i= It time that bury forever our old grudges! My' My we not be at peace on earth when this ment in dwell in perfect love, Ulysses 8, Grant and Robert E. lee Will lam T. Sherman and Stonewall Jackson and 3 : t t of northern and out hers igh they onoe looked askance ther from the banks of 1h tome and the Chickab and the Tennessee, now are on the same side of the river, keeping fubs with some of centuries we Can my» heaven opposite nmuny the James and Jor those old angels wh AED ORM i chant Bethlehem, the highest: on enrth near nineteen wn 16 over “Glory to God In | peace good will to men * I have been waiting for some pone one else to twist the two garlands but, po one doing it, In the love of God and my country | put pow band to the work, and next spring and well 5 living will twist two more gariands for northern years for | and southern graves, and every springtime until some man or woman whom | bave cheered a little in the struggle of life shall come out and put a pansy or my own grave. Bat if time should ome when this land shall over to sectional rancor and demagogisns or cast and west shall God built this nation and it shall halt on its high oareer of righteouoness and liberty and peace, and be come the agent of tyranny and wrong and oppression, then let some young man whom I nave baptized in infancy at these altars g may this 8 be given scatter it to the four winds of heaven, for | do not want to sleep, and I will not sleep in | a land accursed with sectionalism or oppros wo And now | hand over the two gariands widehh are wet with many tears of widowhood and orphanage and childiesaness. tears of suffering and tears of gratitude. and as the ceremony must be | performed in symbol, there not being enough take Lhe porthern flowers to cover all the graves gariand to the tomb soldier who may yesterday have ben omitted in the distribution of the sacra ment of Sowers and the other garland the tomb of some southern solller who may a month ago have been omitted in the distr bution of the sacrament of the flowers, and wat both the wreaths gently down over the Roarte that have omsed to best God bless the two garlands God save the United States of America ———— Me of some Wars a young man, the late Charles Bradlangh was a strong believer in Christianity, and a member of a Bible class in the parish Sunday school While thar studying the Bible, he came across one or two apparent con- tradiotions, and went to the rector for light. But the rector was a stern man of the old school, and, instead of help- ing the young man out of his difficulty, rebuked him severely for daring to find any diffenlty in Cod’s book, and ad-| vised him to believe everything he read in it without asking any questions. The advice was well meant, but it was the worst that conld have been given in this particular ease. The young) man at once quit studying the Bible or believing in it, and the rest of lis cs reer is known to the world, —— —— “I've often thought of yon newspn. per editors,” said a well-known Detroit clergyman, “when some day not feel. ing especially in the mood, I found it exceedingly dificult to evolve my ser ia by experienc, that it ! not limited by write acceptably when the battle SABBATH SCHOOL. ———— INTERNATIONA: LESSON FON JUNE 7. Lesson Text: Hewxekiah, The Good King, II Chronicles, xxix, 1-11. Golden Text: | Sar | il, 80- Commentary, 1. “Hezokish began to relgn when he was | five and tweuty yours old, and be reigned nine and tweniy sears in Jerusslem.” Havieg in the lust lesion stepped wo no return 10 about the time of the le son of 1wo weeks 8.0, for it was in the beginning of the reign of Hezekiah Judah. His father, Ahaz, waa wicked king, and hos son, Manes h, was the (xxvill, 1%, 22; xxxiii, 9, 10). But Jothum, his grandfather, did right io the sight of ihe Lord, sod prepared bis ways before the Lord | his God (xxvii, 2 6 2 “And be did that which was right in the wight of the Lord, ace rdug to ail thet David, | his father, had done.’ Of ae un father to laracl (Lesish Ji, 2), Mast, i, 1, Jesus is called Son of David, Son of Abraham, ‘The word som in Scripture often indicates likeness 07 sameness of nature, sig- nifying the closest possible resemb ance I These. v, 5; Actaiv, 36; John viii, 44) Abraham also is #poken lo do right in the s ght of the Lord was one of | fersel (Deat vi, | the commands laid npon all 18), but it is only wr.tten of aight of the kings a'ter the desth of Solomon. Hezekiah trosted inthe Lord God of Ivrael, so that after him was none like him amos sll the kings of Judah, nor any that were Defors him; for be clave to the Lori and departed not from fol lowing Him | 3 ‘He, in the first year of his reign, in the | first month, opened the doors of the house of she Lord, and repaired them.” What agrand boginniug he makes, and how promptly! He does pot allow a mouth 10 pass after he be- cumes king without attending to the house of ihe Lord, Ahsz his father, had destroyed the vessels, shut up the doors, and made sliars in every corner of Jerumlem (xxviil, 24). Heze- kish now seeks to undo his father's sin, sod he loses no time about it. Right relations with God lie at tae foundation of all else; if we are right with Him ali will be well, but if not right with Him nothing else can be right “Seek firs: the kingdom of God sod Hisright. sotspows” is & binding command upon all, and at all times 4. “And be broaght in the priests and Le. vites, and gathered together into the eat siroel” Toere was a time when the head of ench fami'y scied as the priest of the house. hold, offering sacrifi ¢ noto the Lord (Job |, B; Gen, will, 20; xii, 7, § But since the bulliding of the tabernacle at Sinai the house of Asron aod the tribe of Levi were sel apart to stand between the people and God ana to offer maorifios, There had been much in Israel, and the first thing necessary 0 right relations with God was the pulting sway of win by atonement in God's appointed way, and then provision for continued cleandng. We have now a great High Priest who, once for all, made stonement for sin by the sacrifice of Himself, and who, risen from the dead, and alive for evermore, even liveth to maka inter. omssion for His redeemed, now appearing in the presence of God for us (Heb. ix, 24.35), 5. “And said unto them, besr me, ve la rites; munotify now yourselves and sanctify the house of the Lord God of your fathers, and evry forth the fithiness out the holy Vacs,” Bapctification Inc 'ndes separation and liness,. We mu-t be separate from all that defilen, and the temples of our bodies should be flied with the Sparit 1 5e actual temple of Solomon was a type of the body of Lord Josus Christ (John ii, 19, 21). The church eoliectively is now the temple, and the bodies of individual believers sie also temples (11 Cor. vi, 16; 1 Cor. wi, 19). It rock them six toons dars 10 cleanse the temple on this oc onion (vs. 15.17): but 1 take: much longer than thet to cleanse some believers from the filthiness of Sesh and spirit which clings »0 chomely 6. “Por our fathers have trespassed and done evil in the eves of the Lord our God, snd have forsaken him, and have tormed away their faces from the habitation of the Lord, and turned their backs.” So alsa, sald Jeremiah » little laterin history (Jer. 0 18 15 and ~ 1 Moses ere the nation was yet forty years heir history might said old (Dent, iz, 8, M4 : ralled a comtinned for-akng of the Lord who rod emed them, A record of all Hi» Kindness and of their Kindness of heart is summarized in Ps. Ixavill, where we read that notwilth standing »'] His wor derfu! works they tempted God, spake ag iinet God, believed not in God and trusted » His salvation, provoked Him, grieved Him. and limited the Holy One of larael. remembering not His hand nor His deliveranors +2 IS J08 70 40 41, 1 7. “Also thet have shut up the doos of the porch, and put out the lamps, and have bot burned incense, nor offered burnt offerings in the holy plsce. unto the Cod of Jarsel.” They Hterally did all these things, Let us consider the application to onrseives in A spirtaal sense. When seats In a church have 0 be bought in order to be cooupied, and the pour must take saats that no others want, or when we do not pul forth efforts to win people 0 the house of God, may we uot be said to shut up the doors’ 5. “Wherefore the wrath of the Lord was upon Judah asd Jerusalem, and he hath de- livered them to trouble to astonishment, and 10 hssing, se ve see with your eyes.” In Lev, xavi and Dent xavili it was clearly foretold that the wrath of the Lord would thus come upon them, if they were disobedient, and oven added, “1 call HeavenELand earth this day against you, that [ have set before you lite and death. blessing and cursing; therefore them Kin . ol be choose Life that both thou and thy seed may lve (Deut, x25, 19 Ax God by His servant foretold so itosme 10 raw, Tiniways was and sways will be just as God says 9. “For, lo, our fathurs have fallen by the sword; and our sons and on’ dwaghters and our wives are in captivity for this.” One han. dred and twenty thousand fell in one day, snd | 200 000 women, sons and daughters were oar i oaptive because they hed forsaken the | Lord God of thelr fathers (chap, xxvii 6 8), This also had been plainly foretold (Deut, Pxavidl, 25 32), and so It came to " ink | for a moment st t oe more than 100,000 who in | boathendom are dying every day, without a | knowledge of God, remdes all in Christendom | who have heard of Him, bot do not believe in Him. There is no remedy but the return of | Christ, and yet how few, even of those who bear His nates, ever ask Him to return, or do tL 10 hasten It. 0. “Now it i» 8 mine heart to make A cove. nant with the Lord Goa of Isrsel, that his foroe wrath may turn away from oe” So did Asa, and at 8 later pertod Nehomanh (chap, ww, th Kaba, 0), and Seth wianinest blens ne Hee 10 aot thus in 11 Chron, vil, 14 David found somfort in the unchangeatlonies and frilne-s of God's covenant with him. and God's faith: back abont 100 years | to consider the revival in the days of Joab, ' that the ton tribes | { were carried (nto captivivy (11 Kings, xviif, 10), | Ho was the Just but one of the good kings of | worst of aly, | and in | pee | ed NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN, —— Velvet is much used. Loose fitting gloves are the latest, Turquoise jewelry continues fashion. abl: Brooklyn has a new colored woman doctor. England has 8 Woman's Agricultural Behool. The honeysuckle is a popular design in silver. Victoria's evown jewels are worth §15,000,000, Electric pins have become a fad of English women. Chicago colored women have formed a World's Fair Committee, The daintiest brooches for summer dresses are those which take the form of flowers. Bracelets to the number of three or four are worn, not ss bangles, but close to the wrist, Green leather card cases and purses are fashionable, also dull red; any color, indeed, but black Finger rings showing three rows of gems, five in each row, give, when con the finger, the impression of three five. slone rings. A favorite bracelet with horsewomen of a curb-chain, ornamented with a pair of snafles and a diamond horse shoe consists A taste for the exquisite chiss and wide, shallow cups affected by the Em- press Eugenie has come in with the Em. pire gOWHDSs An attempt is being made by Mme. Belloe in London to establish a home for the dying proc r, ter save Lhe who have now no shel. Work house A collection of 7000 butterflies, all bred from eges, bas been given to the New York Museum of Natural History by Mrs. M. Schuyler Elliott, wehid, faith and mount. t} worn in ae hair or used to fasten the corsage. There are in the United States, Canada, thirty-four } they Eogland and Scotland woMme n's societies, and the field. The pew gauze parasols destined for anything except to shade the face have gilt frames. One of green gauze has a heavy cluster of roses drooping at one side. missionary have 1397 missionanes in be Queen of Denmark is an expert dressmaker and a good pastry cook. Her daughters also are all clever needle. women, and so is her sister, the Czarina of Russias. Copper bronze is to be the fashionable shade of hair this season. What it will next season cannot be salely an. pounced until the new colors are de- cided upon The colony founded by the followers of Tolstol in Russia have been reinforced by a number of Iadies of high rank, who faithfully follow the prescribed rules and like the peasants around them. be live The popular red parasol, effective, dressy and bright as it is, has a decrded drawback. While it gives sa most becom ing tint to the checks, it adds same ng i the not at rosy Lint 10 Lhe nose, which all desirable It is reported to be a fancy of fashionable girl that after wearing her long suede gloves three or four times she takes them to a shoemaker and has made from them a pair of slippers for her the chosen admirer Hesrt-shaped brooches, the Stuart heart prerced through with an arrow and the Douglas heart, are the dearest love tokens in the world, and, if they are set in a frame of diamonds or snowy pearls, perhaps the costliest, Virginia is to have a woman's college. A real estate syndicate of Lynchburg has offered the Randolph-Macon College twenty acres of land, with $40,000 cash and $60,000 in bonds, provided an en- dowment fund of £100, 000 is raised Mrs. Bailey, wife of the editor of the Utica Observer, has recently devised and patented an arrangement to be attached to hospisal beds, by means of which a patisnt is enabled to raise and lower him. self without the assistynce of a nurse Crepon is without exception the fav. | orite material for voung ladies’ summer | dresses, mohair in pin strikes for travel. | ing gowns, and chuffon for evening wear. Bengaline is the favorite heavy silk, and China silk still holds its place of favorite | for warm days. The favorite blooms for bonnets are single hyacinths in pear! gray or lavender, pale yellow primroses, and lilies of the valley arranged in light sigrettes. Cow. slips and mimosa, too, are seen, Mercury's wings point backward from embroidered toques. The latest cut in skirts has six pleces
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers