i REV. DR. TALMAGE. DROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN DAY SERMON, THE Subjoot: ‘“‘Gleaners in Life's Field} iPreached at Glenwood, Col) Text: “And she went and came and gleaned in the field after the reapers; ana her hap was fo Light on a part of the fleld belonging wanto Boas, who was of the kin. dred of Elimelech.”—Ruth ii,, 8 Within a few weeks | have been in North Carolina, Virginia, Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, Michigan, Canada, Indiana, Ninos, Kentucky, Missouri, and they are one great harvest field, and no season can be more enchanting in any country than the season of harvest The time that Ruth and Naomi arrive at Bethlehem is harvest time. It wes the old custom when a sheaf fell from a load in the harvest fleld for the reavers to refuse to gather it up; that was to be left for the poor who might happen to come that way. If there were handfuls of grain scattered across the flold after main harvest had been reaped, instead of raking it, as farmers do now, it was by the custom of the land, left in its place, so that the poor coming along that way might glean it and get their bread, But, you say, “What is the use of all these harvest flelds to Ruth and Naomi? Naomi is too old and feeble to go out and toil in the sun; and can | pou expect that Ruth, the young and the Beautiful, should tan her cheeks and blister her bands in the harvest field Boaz owns a large farm, and he goes out to see the reapers gather in the grain. Com- ing there, right behind the swarthy, sun- browned reapers, he beholds a beautiful wo- man gleaning-—a woman mors fit to bend to a harp or sit upon a throne than to stoop among the sheaves, Ab that was an event ful day! It was love at first sight, Boaz forms an attachment for the womanly gleaner—-an attachment full of undying interest to the Church of God in all ages: while Ruth, with an epbab, or nearly a bushel of bar- ley, goes home to Naomi to tell her the successes and adventares of the day. That Ruth, who left her native land of Moab in darkness, and journeyed through an un- dying affection for her mother-in-law, is in the harvest fleld of Boaz, is afflanced to one of the best families in Judah, and becomes in after time the ancestress of Jesus Christ, the Lord of Glory! Out of so dark a night did there ever dawn so bright a morning? I learn in the first place from this subject how trouble develops character. It was be reavement, poverty and exile that developed fllustrated and announced to all ages the sub Hmity of Ruth's character That is a very unfortunate man who bas no trouble, : was sorrow that made John Bunyan the better drear , and Dr, Young the better wet, and O'Connell the better orator, and Jishop Hall the better preacher, and Have. lock the better soldier, and Kitto the better encyclopedist, and Rath the better daughter in-law 1 once asked an aged man in regard to his astor, who was a very brilliant man: “Why is it that your pastor, so very brilliant seerns to have so little tendervess in his ser mons™ “Well,” he replied, “‘the reason is our pastor bas never had any trouble. When misfortune comes upon him his style will be different After awhile the Lord took a chiid out of that pastor's house, and though the preacher was just as brilliant as be was the warmth, the tender. discourses The fact Is great elo wmetites a musician sit rament, and his execution unfeeling. The rea. * has been prospered. r bereavement come to » sits down at the instru the pathos in the first rtune and trials are Is n nd yeu d of the keys. soUver Mis Rens. iWon great educators A young anes into a sick room where there is a dying child. Perhaps he ugh in his prescription, and very rough in bis manner, and rough in the feel the pulse, and rough in his answer the mother's anxi question, tut the years roll on and there has been one jend in bis own house, and now he comes the s «d with trarful eye he iid and he save, “Oh, nds of my Charlie™ » great educator Sorrow] in the grandest painting: 1 tremor in the sweetest I feel Fhtiest argument y sald that the founda- struck out by the horse, Pegasus. | have that the brightest and fountains of Christian com. 1 life have been struck out Us hoof of disaster and oa- inmity. 1 see Daniel's courage best by the flash of Nebuchadnezzar's furnace no Paul's prowess best when | find him on the {oundering ship under the glare of the light- f in the breakers of Melita. God erowns His entlaren amid the howling of wiki beasts and the chopping of biood splasbed guillotine ant the crackling fires of martyrdom t took all our past national distresses and it takes all our present national sor rows, to Hit up our nation on that high march along after the is ry It wis Kroon oe son owed in life t beantitul {ort and spiritu the iron shod arser where it will forvign despotisms that have mocked and the tyrannies that have jeered shall be swept down under the omnipotent wrath of (rod, who aates oppression, and who, by the strength of His own red right arm, wiil make all men free. And so it is individually, and in the family, and in the church, and 5 the world that through darkness and storm and trouble men, women, churches. nations are develoned Again, | see in my text the beauty of un faltering friendship. 1 suppose there were lenty of friends for Naomi while she was n prosperity. But of all her acquaint ances, how many were willing to off with her toward Judea, we to make that One—the wd very / at sang in the bower while the sun shone have gone to their neste, now the night has fallen In this world, »o full of heartiessness and hypocrisy. how thrilling it Is to find some friend as faithful in days of adversity as in days of prosperity! David had such a friend in Hushal; friend in Mocdecal, who never forgot their cause; Paul bad such a friend in Oneaph. orus, who vidted bim In jail; Christ had such in the Marys, who adoered to Him on the cross: Naomi had such a one in Rath, who cried out, “Eatreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after thee; for whither thou goest, | will go; and where thou I will lodge; thy people shall be my people sud hy God Ty od: where thog | ai din, and fiers will Lb, vind; Lord dowo to me and more a aught but death thes and me." uh the | | alight — as | straws.” i enough to make a sheaf, Putting that d | she went and gathered | other and another | them altogether and she threshed them out | awl she had an ephah of {| bushel | be was waiting for the door of trudge | she had | the Jews had such a | AH ar mA. AA A AOA A AA AAA morning quizged about his old boat that would never be of any practical use, and looked out on the wreck of a ruined earth. Christ, hounded of persecutors, denied a | pillow, worse maltreatel than the thieves on either side of the cross, human hate smacking its lips in satisfaction efter it had been draining His last drop of blood, the sheeted dead bursting from the sepulchers at His orucifixion. Tell me, O Gethsemane and Golgotha! were there ever darker times than those? Like the booming of the mid. night sea against the rock, the surges of Christ's anguish boat against the gates of eternity, to be echood back by all the thrones of heaven and all the dungeons of hell. But the day of reward comes from Christ; all the pomp and dominion of this world are to be hung on His throne, uncrowned heads are to bow before Hiv: on whose head there are many crowns, and all the celestial wor ship is to come up at His feet like the hum. ming of the forest, like the rushing of tho waters, like the thundering of the seas while all heaven, rising on their thrones, beat time with their scepters: “Hallelujah, for the Lord God omnipotent reigneth Again, I learn from my subject that events which seem to be most insignificant may be momentous. Can you imagine anything mors unimportant than the coming of a poor woman from Moab to Judea’! Can you imagine anything mors trivial than the fact that this Ruth just bappened to they say -- just happened to alight on that flald of Boaz? Yet all ages, all generations, have an interest in the fact that she was to become an ancestress | of the Lord Jesus Christ, and all nations and kingdoms must look at that one little ineci- dent with a thrill of unspeakable and eternal satisfaction, So it is iu your history and in m ne: events that you thought of no impor tance at all have been of very great mo ment. That casual conversation, that ac cidental meeting—you did not think of it again for a long while; but how it changed all the current of your life! It seemed to be of no importance that Jubal invented rude instruments of musio, calling them harp and organ, buat they were the introduction of all the world's min. strelsy. And as you hear the vibration of a stringed instrument, even after the flugers have been taken away from it, so all muslo now of lute and drum and cornet is oniy the long continued strains of Jubal's harp and Jubal's organ. It seemed to be a matter of very little importance that Tubal Cain learned the uss of copper and iron, but that rude foundry of ancient davs bas its echo in the rattle of Birminghan chinery and the roar and bang on the Merrimac Again, | see in my subject of the beauty of female tuth toiling in hot sun, or at noor the reapers, or eatin which Boaz handed to h society of course have ¢ the hardships and exposure to wh was subjected, every intelligent will find something to do I there is a sickly sentimentality subject, In » families there petions of no practical ssrvice to the house wold nmunity, and though thers are RS sesRary URS SU BPOUUIEE ROOUL SOM IN TOs world they spend their time languishing Over a new pattern or bursting into tears at midnight over the story some lover who shot himself! They would not deign to look at Rath careving back the barley her way bome to motherdn-law, Naomi Madame do Stasl did a world of work is her time: and one day seated amid instruments of which she had seript 5 an Hlustrati ndustry Het the ha : taki HE or on of on while she muse, mastered, and amid woks w. : hal one said to her, * do you find time 4 attend to all of these things? Oh,” she replied, “‘thess are not the things | am woud of. My chief boast is in the fact that i have seventeen trades, by any one of which I could make a livelibood if sary.” And if in secular spheres there is = much to be done, in spiritual work how vast the fleld! How many dying all aroun about us without one word of comfort We want more Abigails, more Hannab more Rebecoas, more Marys, more Dotown cotsecrated--hody, mind, soul i who bought them Unce more | learn value of gleaning harvest fleld might have said straw amd there fs a straw, but what is a straw? | can't get any barley for myself er my mother-in-law out of these separats Not oo sald beautiful Rath Mie gathered two straws and she put thems gether, and more straws until written som nee LTA t into that ‘There I= a from my tath 2 ng she got wo more straws until she had another sheaf, and another and an and then she brought bariey, nigh a Oh, that we all might be gleaners Eidbu Barritt learned many things while { toiling in a biscksmith's shop, Abercrombi ! the world renowned philosopher, was a phy | sician in Scotland, an be got his philosophy, or the oliief part of it, while as a physician the sick thare are room to open Yet how many | in this day who zay they are 0 busy they have no time for mental or spiritual im provement: the great duties of life cross the field ike strong reapers and carry off ali the hours, and there is only here and there a fragment left that is not worth gleaning. Ab, my friends, you could go into the busiest day and busiest week of your life and find golden opportunities which gathered might at last make a whole sheaf for the Lord's garner, It is the stray opportunities and the stray privileges which taken up and bound together and beaten out will at last fill you with much joy. There are a few moments left worth the gleaning. Now, Ruth, to the fleld' May each one have a measure full and runain over! Oh, you gleaners tothe fleld! Ane if there be in your household an aged or a sick relative that is not strong enough to come forth and toll in the fled, t jen lot Ruth take bome to feeble Naomi this sheaf of gleaning. “He that goeth forth and waepeth, bearing precious sead, shall doubt. less come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him.” May the Lord Gol of Ruth ani Naomi be our portion forever! Musical Fish of Ceylon. Every bay and inlet on the const of Ceylon abounds with musical fish, Their song, if it can J called a song, is not | one sustained note like a bird's, but a multitude of tiny, soft, sweet sounds, each clear and distinct in itself, some- | thing like the vibrations of a wineglass | when its rim is rubbed with the moist. In the harbor at Bombay, But when the deluge eames, and the tops of the | mountains disappeared like the backs of sea | monsters, and the elements, lashel up in | fury, clapped their hands over a drowned | world, then Noah in the ark rejoiced fn his | own safety and in the safety of his family, | yw) fatten geese of a mongrel | The best and the quickest birds to-day THE FARM AND GARDEN. THE BEST GEESE, A Connecticut poultry man, who speaks from his own experience, distinet- ly states that: **No amount of good food type.” of good flesh in his opinion are those produced by Embden geese crossed by the Toulouse. He feeds his geese with wheat and barley grain and barley meal with brewer's grains, all of which are nip and marigold tops, which are greatly relished, — New York World, A LONG TAIL OX COW, W. H. Seeley, of Kalamazoo, Mich., a dairyman of long experience, says: “I kuoow of no physiological reason why a long tail is a good sign in a dairy cow, but I do know that all in theDairyman not long ago. landers for hundreds of years have ob- | served that their most promising and long-milking cows had long tails. Hence it becomes a settled thing with them that | the tail should extend at least below the hock. The Dairyman says: *“The long tail is an indication of nerve power, and that is a thing that is always to be de- sired in a cow. It is equivalent to what we call the ‘staying power' in a race horse.” BADLY EDUCATED CALVES. Much of the trouble in dairies due to vices in cows education of the calves. of the calf should begin got upon its feet, The training before it in a sack and carried away to a comfor- table pen at a distance from the cow, To prevent its recognition of the dam is the first step to make a docile calf. It relieves the cow from a source of much nervous excitement, to which quite often an attack of milk fever is due. The cow is left in quiet, in a dark, lone pen if possible, for a few hours, when the scceptable meal of warm bran or oatmeal gruel is given having a pint This is laxative and nutritioas and settles the cow of moiasses in it. 0 & com- , after which ilked and the milk is at little y calf the Y ix, fortable rest for a few hours she }H i once paticoce will rst lesson, 1 18 to drink and then a second one is gf strap around its ne the pen. ven. This is to havea k and in It will lie down and sleep quietly until the next milking time, which will be in twelve hours, when it will need a little more patient teaching to drink its next meal, such treatment the young thing will soon learn to drink, and the wpinth meal should be of warm, sweet skimmed milk, To make a good calf its milk should be given warm as long as given to months, y be tied Mix 1s it, which may be three or four New York Times. ROADS AND ROADMAKING, The Alabama ment Station af Auburn has issued an interesting bulletin on this subject from which the following extracts are taken As an unnecessarily long road would increase the cost of construction, the cost Agricultural of repairs, and the cost of time and labor in traveling over it, it should, other » things being equal, be perfectly straight but straightness should always be sac rificed to obtain a level or make the road | less steep. This is one of portant principles to be observed, and yet is most often violated. Roads should be made to curve sometimes for economy in construction, such as to avoid swampy or bad ground, or to avoid large exca- vations, or to reach on streams better suited Tor the approach of bridges. Besides its substantial advantages, the the most im points gently curving road is much more pleas- | aut to the traveler, for he is not fa. tigued by the tedious prospect of a long straight stretch to be traversed, but is met at each curve by a constantly varied | view, Tbe proper width for a road depends of course upon the importance aod the amount of travel upon it. The least width to enable vehicles to pass is as sumed at sixteen and a half feet. In Eog- i land the width of turnpikes approaching large towns is sixty feet, Ordinay turn. pikes are thirty-five feet wide, and or. dinary carriage roads across the country are given a width of twenty-five feet. In France the roads vary in width from | sixty-six feet to twenty-six feet, and all have the middle portion ballasted with stone. In New York all public roads are laid out by the Commissioners of High- ways and are not less than three rods wide between fences, and no more of them need be worked or formed into a surface for traveling than is deemed necessary. The drainage of a road by suitable ditches is one of the most important ele. ments, All attempts at improvement are useless till the water is thoroughly got rid of. These ditches are sunk to a depth of about three feet below the roadway, 80 as to thoroughly drain off the water which may pass through the surface of the roadway, In repairing roads the earth used should be as gravelly as possible aod free from vegetable earth. Bod or turf, though at first tough, soon decays and forms the softest mud in wet weather, Stones of considerable size should not be used, as they will not wear uniformly J sist of the rod, anh will pro. good fattening foods. He also feeds tur- | ® 800d servant, but a bad master. our best cows | have them.” Mr. J. B. Knapp, of Port- | land, Ore., gave a corresponding opinion | : E ponding of | film of gum, The Hol- | is attributable to the bad | has | It should be wrapped | By continuing | Experi- | moisture, while the winds of Ireland, England and Western Europe pass over the Atlantic Ocean, warmed by the Gulf Stream, and are loaded with moist- ure, Here our roads are muddy to-day and dusty to-morrow, and some people grumble and call it a disagreeable cli- mate to live in. Nothing of the sort. It is the best climate in the world for road making. Dut we must not let the roads get muddy. We must drain them. And in making hay our climate is the best, or worst in the world. Like fire, it is een cut three weeks, and repeatedly grass that had been cut here for three hours. And it did not seem to be in- jured very seriously, In this differencet When grass and clover are growing the leaves and flowers are covered with a Pull off a clover blossom { and you find it sweet, If it were not for this film of gum or wax the rains and dews would wash out the sugar, When we cut the clover or grass and it dries rapidly, the film of wax cracks and | then the rain can get at the sugar and | wash it out, This is the one most im- | portant fact to be clearly understood | and observed in curing grass. The | resson why the grass that had been cut so long in England was injured so much less than we should have supposed was due | to the fact that the weather was so wet | and the so charged with moisture that the grass remained nearly as green and full of sap as if it had not been cut. The film of wax was still unbroken and the rain could not get at the sugar. If we cut a field of clover, and rain imme- mir | diately follows, before the clover wilts, no harm is done, But if the clover is partially cured and is then allowed to lie out exposed to the rain or to a heavy dew, much loss of sugar and other even { soluble matter will be sustained, Our own plan of curing clover or a mixture of clover and grass is to start a s+} of mowing machines in the after. § couple : an | not touch it again until next While it night will n would moruit the sk is green the dew in jure it, and if it min in the night or t done, It is better not to touch the hay until there y enough to put into cock. Fortunately, A8 BOON As LHe MIND Is Over and is a chance of getting we have a clear sky and a brisk wind the hay will dry with wonderful rapidity. We want no eight-hour men on such a day, unless they do not commence work before noon, The hay must be got into cock before one leaves the fleld, * It is then, if the cocks are well made, comparatively sate, We like to get hay in without rein. If it is not cut too early and has not been injured by rains or dews, it is astonish- ing how green it can be put in the mow without injury. The richer the sap the better it will keep. A few days of sharp | fermentation will do no ham. The | heat generated will kill the microbes, : and decomposition will stop. It shbuld be remembered that there is quite a difference between internal and external moisture. Ordinary green clover grass, when cut, contains seventy-five per cent. of water. In other words, of grass contain 1500 pounds of water and 500 pounds of dry hay. A ton of dry hay, when | growing, contains 6000 pounds of water, it is not necessary to get rid of all thi water. If 5000 pounds are evaporated, the hay as put in the barn would contain thirty-three and one-third per cent. of water. If the heat generated in the mow evaporated 500 pounds more water the bay would then contain twenty per of water, This is a little wore than bay as sold or fed out usualiy con- tains, ~ American Agriouliurist, or a ton cent, FARM AND CARDEN XOTES. Pick the geese regularly during the summer to make them pay well, Under ordinary management it costs | about five cents a pound to grow chick. | ens, { The Houdans are good layers and non. | setters, and their flesh is considered very | delicate. a sufficient growth they should be given a free mange. i | If the fowls begin to lose their feathers too soon change their food and do not give too stimulating diet, The refuse of the crop from an acre of rial than similar remains of most other | crops, | should be supplied abundantly, and kept clean and fresh, better Zeturve in eggs than in any other | way Vi can be aid, V1. is not economical to use the hoe if | | horse-power can be bestowed, but it is | better to use the hoe than to allow weeds or grass to grow in the rows. If a man wants to invest a cow with an aroma of greatness, give her a log name ~fortieth Dutchess of Bungletown, Queen Semiramis, or Pride of . field's Baroyard. There is a deal in a name, whether you believe it or not. The more thought and care a farmer gives to live stock—cattie particularly the better his general farming is pretty sure to be. Horsesare mes petted sud given extra care by poor and shift less farmers, but such farmers rarely take much pains with cows. Common purslane cho up and mixed with scalded corn is excellent feed for fowls that are confined. the hay fit only for the dung heap. Why | | i i We | have seen grass in England that had | turned, that was not wilted more than | | the wisest care, our clunate a | few days of such exposure w i \ posure would make | opabia But the troubles that are to be | | ing tonic, and a quieting, soothing | | As she enters | | womanhood, every young girl nceds | Troubles beginning | then may make her whole life mis- feared have a positive remedy. Dr, Pierce's Favorite Preseription builds up and strengthens the system, and regulates and promotes every proper | function. It's a generous, support nervine — a legitimate medicine, not a beverage, free from aleohol and injurious drugs. It corrects and | cures, safely and surely, all those * Cures ( hronk Whenever young turkeys have made | | tomatoes contains more fertilizing mate- | As hens require a deal of water, drink. | ing only a small quantity ata time, it | Fowls are very fond of milk, and they | thrive well upon it. Sour milk will bring | delicate derangements, weaknesses, | and diseases peculiar to the sex, A remedy that does cure is one that can be guaranteed, That's what the proprietors of “ Favorite | Prescription ” think. If it doesn’t give satisfaction, in every case for which it’s recommended, they'll re- fund the money. No other medicine for women is sold on such terms. Decide for yourself whether some- thing else sold by the dealer, is likely to be “ just as good ” for you to buy. ELY'S CHEAM BALM Applied lato Nostrils is Quickly Abtsortod, Cleanses the H Head, Heals the Wres GATARRH. 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It must be prompt in action, giving immedi- ate relief, as childrens’ troubles come quick, grow fast, and end fatally or otherwise in a very short time. It must not only relieve quick but bring around quick, as children chafe and fret and spoil their constitutions under long con- finement, It must do its work in moderate doses. A large quantity of medicine in a child is not desira- + with the ble. It must not child's spirits, or general suit old as health. well as young folks, and make Bo- schee’s German Syrup the favorite family mad A Cough and Croup then ngs UNEXCELLED ! Rheumatism, Neural¢la, Pains in the Limbs, Back or Chest, Mumps, Sore Throat, Colds, Sprains, Bruises, Stings of Insects, Mosquito Bites, TAKEN INTERNALLY It sets like a charm for Cholera Morbas, Dinrrbhes, Dysentery, Colic, Cramps, Mane sen, Mick Headache, &c. Warranted perfectly harmless, “Ser onth setGmpanying ench bottle, anise directions for nee, ts SOOTHING and PENETRA- TING qualities are felt immediately. 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The | shoe ever offered at this price | same ae cus tor made shoes costing from 8600 to ga 50 Police Shor; Farmers, Railroad Men 3 Letter Carriersall wonr them: fine calf, inside, heavy three soles exten me paler will wear bn yeur we calf; no Letter shoe ever offered at e this price; ope trial will convinoe thoes y wanl a shoe for comfort and servios $2 25 nud SL00 Waorkingman's shoms ® are very strong and duraise. Those who | have given them a trial will wear no other makes, Bo 8’ S100 and 81.73 school shoes are worn hy the bogs everywhere; they sell om thelr merite, as the lncreasing sales show, Ladies 3.00 Handesewed shon, wongols, very stylish: equals | Imported shoes costing from $0 to B50, | Ladies’ 21.50, JOO and 81.93 shoe Tow | Misses are the best fine Dongola. Striiss and durable, | Cantion, See that W. LL Dougiss’ name and are stamped on the bottom of each shoe W. LL DOUGLAR. Brockton, Meas. ¥*s%-21. . ’ 0 EWIS’' 98 °¢ LYE Powdered and Perfumed, (PATENTED) Strongest and purest Lyemads, Makes the best perfumed Hard Soap in 20 minutes without boil ing. It is the best for water, cleansing waste pipes, disinfecting sinks, closets, wash ing bottles, paints, trees, oto PENNA. SALT MFG. CO., Gen. Agents, Phila. Pa, PATENTS }uniit not the 8aintullesy You can lessen URDEN ~SAPOLIO#~ | son od beet i Iris a solid cake of scouring soap used for cleaning purposes What would you give for a Friend who would take half your hard work off your shoulders and do it without a murmur? What would you give to find an assistant in your housework that would keep your floors and walls clean, and your kitchen bright, and yet never grow wgly over the matter is just such a friend and can be hard work ? Sapolio at all grocers, PISO'S CURE FO
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