srssr "r 20 FLIES OE SUN, Mighty Plashes That Beach Upward Forty Times the Earth's Diameter. AX OCEAff OF LIYID FIEE On Whose Breast Roll Waves Larger Than Our Whole Planet NATURE'S ONLY SOURCE OPPOWER The Light and Beat Mostly Duo to the Gradn&l Contraction. ONE OF FLAMMARIOX'S POETIC PAPERS tVTBITTEX FOB IHT DISPATCH. The simple ideas that were inspired in primitive times by the contemplation of the spectacles of Nature have been generally transformed, and sometimes completely overthrown, by the scientific analysis of phenomena. And very often also the pro gressive movement of discovery, in its turn modifying the classic theories, has led men's minds back to the ancient opinions, and has resuscitated the old ideas, giving them a new life. This is true in the case of the sun. In onr age re have scarcely heard the flames of the sun spoken of, save in poetry. The expression had been pervaded by myth ological perfume, now long evaporated by the ages. Especially since the labors of "William Herschel, that is, since the end of WsS??M'' '&skrm, ' V--.T Three Sdar Explosions. the lat century, the orb of day seemed to have lost his fires. It is kno rn that, for theological reasons, Herschel believed the sun to be habitable and inhabited. His globe was considered by him, by "Wilson and their cotemporaries as solid as the earth, and, as it were, environed by a vast atmosphere, crowned with an eternal dome of resplendent clouds. Astronomers in the first half ot our century admitted this theory. Other Curious Old Theories. It is true that they had noticed during to tal eclipses of the sun certain red projec tions surrounding the moon and luminous clouds of the same color apparently sus pended around the central orb, but they were not disposed to attribute these things to the sun. A few theorizers, more royal ist than the king, went so far as to sustain that not only is the sun not blazing.butthat he is a veritable block of ice, and that the luminous heat which we receive from him is a subjective phenomenon. But now we behold the flames of the sun rekindled and never again to be extin guished. The qualification, flames, is even more exactly appropriate to the nature of tne phenomenon than are the words actually employed, prominences, protuberances, ex plosions or clouds, for it corresponds better with the lightness and inconstancy of the aspects observed, with the aerial, vapory, chancing forms of light, with the calorific condition oi the solar atmosphere in whose bosom breathes forth and darts upward the incandescent hydrogen. There are, even on earth, flames and flames. "Without abusing metaphor, do re not even sometimes see cold flames? Has the ignis fatuus which flits over graves at night ever bnrned any thing but the wits of the bewildered spec tator who meets it? Are not the rose-colored lights ot the aurora borcalis as cold as the atmosphere of the poles? There Are Tlames and Fl times. "What a contrast between these inoffensive flames and those of the furnace pouring the glowing metal io. streams of fire into the sand with its dazzling ebullitions and filling the forge with stifling heat! "What an abyss between the gentle, silent flame which de taches itself and flies away from the candle as it is extinguished, and the blinding flash of powder which explodes, scattering ruin and death in its path! The variety, the diversity of chemical and physical phenomena expressed by this one word amply justifies its general application to the solar protuberances. "We can see these flames of the sun (in the spectroscope) standing out on the back ground ot the sky only around the solar cir cumference; we can distinguish them only when they are presented thus in profile. "We must in our mind regard the immense globe of the sun as encompassed, bristling at every point with flames shooting up into his atmosphere and sometimes reaching in sheets of fire out into the illuminated heights. The solar surface which we see. and which outlines ior us the globe of that star, is covered with a sheet of scarlet fire, from which rise constantly a multitude of flames, a veritable and peipetual conflagration. The dazzling light of the orb of day ren ders these flames invisible to us they are, moreover, transparent as the stars are made invisible to us. JS'ot ainch Time for Observation. , Before the invention of the spectroscpe they were seen only at the rare instanys of total eclipse, when the lunar disk, iiter posed between the sun and us, masked the dazzle ot the sun and allowed us to distin guish his surroundings. It isevidenthat such observations, limited to a fef mo ments in time, and diminishes in clearness by the surprise and the sttrange beauty of the phenomenon, Mere neces sarily fugitive and imperfect! At present they are made every dayj The gaseous laver which envelops the sun, the ocean of fire, measures in depth froii 4,000 to 5,000 miles. From this ocean dart gigantic flames to a height of from about 6Q,OO0 to 250,000, and even 300,000 miles. On the 7th of October, 18S0, Prof. Young observed a flame which, at 1 o'clock, leapedto the height of 350.000 miles, broke into filaments and vanished. I "When protuberances do not exceed in height 7,5110 miles, or the thickness' of the earth, astronomers make no noto pf them. The earth ia Homes set on the edge of the sun and seen from here would not be, or would scarcely be, noticed. A quarter of tfce protuberances observed surpass in height 25,000 miles. Those of 62,500 miles are not rare. They present the most varied forms. Some, more especially designated by the term eruptions, dart up like explosions to the tantastio elevations which we have Just described. Tne Clouds on the Son. Others, designated by the name of clouds, bear a perfect resemblance to the clouds suspended in our atmosphere; at times they appear heaped up on the dice of the sun like a bank of clouds on the uorizon, but commonly, when .they are seen in their entire outline tp the bottom, it is marked that they are connected with the chromo sphere by slender columns. Sometimes also, the lower surface of a cloud is hung As Seen July tS. 1$7J. with filaments directed toward the bottom, reminding us of a shower of rain falling from a heavy cloud. The eruptive flames are not of long dura tion. Thev" shoot up into the celestial heights with incomprehensible rapidity, falling back frequently upon themselves like a shower of fireworks, and dropping in a rain ot lire on tne blazing surtace, wnere they vanish, spreading out like a rosy smoke; it is at times as if we saw the flames of a violent conflagration driven by the wind. These cloudy protuberances last for a long time, sometimes for several days and sometimes for weeks. These formidable explosions are often thrown up ward with a velocity the more surprising in that the surface of the sun, being neither solid nor liquid, does not offer the resist ance which would be met by volcanic erup tions or by any projections whatsoever on our planet. This leads us to believe, that the surface of the sun is composed of a gas extraordinarily condensed, even to a liquid condition, or to the viscous consistency of pitch. Velocities have been measured in these eruptions of 300,000 and 400,000 yards per second. The Intense Heat of the San. But what are all these flames in compari son with the magnificence of the solar cor ona, which constantly envelops the dazzling orb in an aureola of glory and light, and which darts its rays to distances exceeding the entire diameter ot the sunt "What rays! "What grandeur! "We are only beginning to-day to possess the elements of the solu tion and understanding of this important problem. Important it is, indeed, as is everything which touches upon life. "The present order of things," writes Young, "seems to be limited, in the future as in the past, by terminal catastrophies, which are veiled by clouds which have so tar been impene trable." It is, above all, the question of tne soiar neat ana ot tne feeding ot these flames which interests the most It is cer tain that this temperature is so high that no one of our chemical combinations is possible there, and that the elements there remain dissociated. It is a fire so hot that it no longer burns. Its most probable thermo metrical valuation is 10,000. A being who should come forth from that temperature and should lie down upon a sheet of iron heated to whiteness, or on a stream of fused metal, would think himself lying upon snow. The rays of the sun concentrated In the focus of a lens instantly melt platinum, clay and the diamond; now, the tempera ture thus obtained evidently cannot surpass that ot its origin, the effect of the lens being simply to virtually place the object nearer the sun, at snch a distance that the solar disk may appear on it equal to the lens itself seen from its own focus. The most power ful lens which has yet been constructed thus virtually transposes an object which is at its focus to within 250,000 miles, or 100,000 leagues of the solar surface. IT the Sun Were the Moon. "We conlnde thence with certainty that if the sun should approach us to a distance equal to that of the moon, the whole earth would melt like a ball of wax and would in great part become vaporized. It is most happy tor us that the orb of day is so far re moved. Far removed, indeed! Impressions are transmitted by our nerves with the rapidity of 30 yards per second. If we rould imagine a child with en arm long enough to touch the sun and be burned by it, this child would never feel the burn. To travel from his hand to his brain the nervous impres sion would require not less than 150 Years. The child would have become an old man and died long before the pain could have traveled lrom the end of his arm to his brain. At a constant speed of a kilometer of a mile) a minute, an express train would take 148,000,000 of minutes to travel lrom here to the sun or 266 years a period of seven human generations! "Who could imagine, who could depict the ardor of that celestial fire, intense enough to bring to the boiling point in an hour, 1,362,500,000,000 cubic miles of water at the temperature of ice, rich enough yet to burn without a pause through 10,000,000 of years! If we could approach it without An Explosion of Curious Form. being vaporized like a drop of water falling upon a hot iron, without being blinded in the furious glare, we would see A Luminous Ocean, lFllhoat Shores, an ocean of flames, whose agitated waves are almost as high as the diameter of the earth, in the midst of and above ivhich, through blinding flashes of lightning, tempests break upon each other in fury, tear each other into pieces and spring up anew, while mountains of flame as large as our planet and far more voluminous dart forth into the sky as if by the monstrous hands of invisible Titans, spreading up into the cooling atmosphere, expanding into clouds ot light, or falling back again in a rain of fire upon the ever burning ocean! Immense rays of light travel to the distance of millions of miles, in all directions, sending out like beacon lights their dazzling brightness into space filled with whirling meteors. Superb phenomena, in which heat, light, electricity, magnetism, act in unison, with an energy so fearful that our most violent hurricanes, our volcanoes and our thunder storms are, in comparison with them, but fleeting smiles in the dream of a sleeping infant. And how shall we measure, in addition to all these giant forces, the magnetic reaction which we feel from them at this distance, over 37,000,000 of leagues away? And yet this mvsterious connection is no longer to he denied. How shall we refuse our interest to the subject of this divine Sun? He it is who makes us live, and all the destinies of the earth are hung upon his rays. He is at once the hand which sustains us in space, the lamp which lights us, the fire which warms us, the puissant source from which all energies are derived. It was expressed 18 centuries ago by a happy metaphor of Theon of Smyrna, ''He is veritably the heat of the universal organism, since his THE palpitations spread all about him in space the waves of planetary vitality." The Source of Ufa and Power. If he stopped for an instant, if he varied in his brightness, if his calorifio energy be came more violent, or if its emission were suddenly paralyzed, all humanity wonld be struck to the Heart, and all personal activ ity ceasing, we would hopelessly await the universal death agony. As certainly as that power which moves the watch is de rived from the hand whioh wound it, so cer tain is it that every terrestrial force de scends from the sun. It is he who main tains the liquid condition of the profound ocean, of the river which flows across the plains, of the babbling brook and the mur muring spring, for without him water would be rock. To him we owe the wind which blows, the cloud which passes, the green grass, the forest, the flower with its perfume and color. It is he who makesthe world go round, who brings back the spring, who raves in the tempest, who sings in the unwearying throat of the nightingale. The galloping horse moves only by means of combustible material which he has re ceived from the sun; the turning mill is moved by the same beneficent orb. The wood which warms us in winter is sunshine in fragments. Every cubio inch, every pound of wood, was built up by the heat of the sun. And in thev darkness of night, through rain or Enow, the noisy and blind train which flies like a serpent, plunges be neath mountains, goes whistling and flash ing through the fog in the frozen nights of winter, this artificial animal is'but another child of the sun god, for the coal which feeds it is again sunshine stored up through millions of years in the geological forests of the coal period. The sun comes to ns in the form of heat, he leaves us in the form of heat; but between his coming and his going he has brought into existence all the vital forces of our globe. Everything on a Grand Scale. "What wonderl "What power! What en ergy! What splendor! The heat given forth by the sun every seoond is equal to that which would result from the combus tion of eleven quadrillions, six hundred thousand billions tons of coal burned to gether! To estimate its temperature in de grees is beyond imagination. We call a flame of fire that which burns; but the gases of the solar atmosphere are raised to such a degree of heat that it is im possible for them to burn. They are disso ciated and cannot enter into combination. We can distinguish the vapors of magne sium, of iron and of the greater number of the metals, impregnating the incandescent hydrogen. If we call the superficial layer ot the solar globe on ocean of fire, we must reflect that it is an ocean hotter than the hottest glowing furnace, and at the same time deeper than the Atlantic is wide. If we call hurricanes the movements observed on the sun, we must remember that our own hurricanes blow with a violence of 100 miles an hour, while there they may blow with a violence ot 100 miles a second; our most impetuous tempests are but the light est breezes. Shall we compare the solar ex plosions to our volcanio eruptions? Vesu vius has swallowed up Herculaneum and Prmpeii under her lavas. A solar eruption rising instantaneously to a height of 62,500 miles would swallow up the entire earth under its rain of flame, and in a few sec onds would reduce all terrestrial life to ashes! The fiery layer, these dazzling particles, are descending on an ocean ot gas. This granulated surfaoe is, properly speak ing, neither solid nor liquid nor gaseous; it is clondy, and rests upon the solar globe which appears formed of gas incomparably condensed. This immense solar globe is 1,280,000 times more voluminous than the Flames 150,000 Mites in Height. earth, and measures no less than 863,750 miles in diameter. It weighs alone as much as 324,000 earths put together. The Sources ot the Great Heat, And now, how are this light and this heat maintained? Three principal causes appear to be in play: The contraction of the solar globe, the falling of meteors upon its surface and throwing ott of brat pro duced by chemical combinations. The first cause must be the most important Every body which falls and which is arrested in its fall produces a certain quantity of heat, and the quantity ot heat produced is the same, whether the body be suddenly ar rested or its course gradually slackened by resistance. If, as is probable, the solar globe is the result of the condensation of an immense nebula which originally extended beyond the orbit of Neptune, the falling of the molecules involved in the present condi tion ot condensation has formed about 18,000,000 times as much heat as the sun now gives yearlv. From this it would result that the sun has only had 18,000,000 years existence. On the other hand, suppose this to be the only source of solar heat; this orb continuing to be con densed will be reduced to one-half its pres ent diameter in 5,000.000 of years at the latest, and since, with this size, it would have eight times its present density, it would become liquid and its temperature would begin to decrease, so that after 10, 000,000 of years its heat would no longer be sufficient to supply a condition ot life analogous to the present one. The entire lite ot the solar system would not surpass, according to this hypothesis, 30,000,000 of years. The falling of meteorio matters might increase it by so much as would bring it up to 60,000,000 of years. It is prudent to add that we are not acquainted with all the resources of nature, and that probably this prodigious giving forth of light and heat is kept up by other additional causes. However this may be, the physical con struction of the sun is one of the most curi ous and one of the most important subjects of study which are offered to our attention, and any mind which is interested in the af fairs of nature cannot refrain from being impressed by this greatness and attracted by these problems, whose study doubles to us the pleasure of life. Camiixe Flasimabion. A Pointer. "I am very much pleased with Chamber lain's Cough Remedy," says H. M. Bongs, the druggist at Chatswortb, I1L "During the epidemic of la grippe here it took the lead and was very much better liked than other cough medicines." The grip requires precisely the same treatment as a very severe cold, for which this remedy is so efficient It will promptly looseu a cold and relieve the lungs, soon effecting a per manent cure, while most other medicines in common use for colds only give temporary relief. Fifty cent bottles for sale by drug gists, ttsu Excursion to California. A special excursion will leave Pittsburg May 3 for Caliloiiiia. A veiy low rate has been secured. Excursionists nave choclo of two routes on letum trip. For mil informa tion address Sloan &. Co., No. 127 Fourth ave nue, PIttsburs, Ta., or Georso W. Crow, Uniontonn, Fa. ttsu FcnarrnnE packed hauled and stored. IIausk & Kxesxs, 33 Water street wsu Suarra will banish roaches, bedbugs, etc, from youfuouse forever. 25 cents. jgpjg;-i'jia1jin ;rqL.yviS"1"" frill ifrLitglBsssHw'ltffij FnjTSBUEP- DISPATCH, TWO SIDES OF MEN, One Is His Conduct Toward Society) the Other Toward Himself. A SERMON UPON THE UTTER SIDE, Xeslization of the Creator, Hatred of Sin and Lore of the Savior, APPME IS CHRISTIAN CHARACTER IWKITTEN FOB THK DISrATCH. Sermon Mo. 1. Men and women may be thought of either individually or socially. Tne Christian may be considered either in himself or in society. If we desire, however, to see peo ple as they really are, we must look at them out of both eyes. It is not for nothing that Godhos given us two eyes. It means that the right way to look at the world is from two points of view. And we ought to have two eyes in our minds. We ought to study truth .from more than one side. If we wish to understand people we must look at them from at least two points of view. We must consider them not only individually, iq themselves, but in their relations with other people in society. Ever since that great social and religious crisis which we call the Reformation,' great emphasis has been laid on individualism. Before that, the individual was but little accounted o In the pages even of the New Testament, we read that not only might a man be sold into slavery fo a debt, but that his wife and his children might be sold with him. The man's family was thought of simply as a part of the man. Be fore the Reformation, the individual was subordinate in politics to the State, and in religion to the Church. Every man, with the fewest possible exceptions, had a mas ter. The supreme human duty was obed ience. The people had princes over them to tell them what to do, and priests to tell them what to think. Tiro-Sldei to Every Man. But about the time when Columbus dis covered that there are two sides to the At lantic Ocean, there was made a still more important discovery that there are two sides to the nature of every man. It was asserted that every human being stands not only in a social relation to the State and the Church, but that he stands also in an individual relation to the Host High God. It was declared that the meanest human being that breathes possesses an immortal soul, and that for the well-being of his soul he is directly and personally responsible to God. The laws of God must be obeyed, and then the laws of man, afterward. And every msn must test man's laws by God's laws. No dogma nor decree, no act of Par liament nor Article of Faith, no word of prince or priest, is to be accepted save so far as it commends itself to the instructed conscience. The effect of this new emphasis was won derful. Old things began to pass away, all things began to become new. The Reforma tion was the dawn of liberty, equality and fraternity. It meant free speech and free thought It meant political liberty and private judgment It nieant the spiritual izing of religion. The PHirrlm's ProsrMS Idea. But these were not its only consequences. The new emphasis had the defects of its qualities. In general, men began to think more about the rights ot men than about the duties of man. In the religious world, one result was the division of Christendom into sects and parties. Every man insisted upon doing his on n thinking; scant reverence was paid to precedent, or position, or authority. Another result was the turning of the at tention.of the religious teachers in, rather than out Supreme emphasis was set upon the individual soul- To get that saved was the pre-eminent purpose of human life. The Church was regarded, as some one says, as a great spiritual colonization society, meant to muster emigrants who should abandon earth and turn their faces toward heaven. The hero of Pilgrim's Progress is a good idea of the Reformation ideal of a Christian. He finds himself in the City of Destruction, and he never thinks of staying there and trying his best to make a City of God out of it He runs away. His whole endeavor is to save his soul. Thus a separation was set in man's mind between the sacred and the secular. The prayer that the will of God might be done on earth as it is in heaven was prayed with unheeding hearts. Religion was parted from politics, from business, from soeiety. The great doctrine of Christianity was taken to be the doctrine of the atonement, that Christ died for our sins. The other great doctrine, of the incarnation, that Christ lived to sanctify all our common life and show us how to live it, was neglected. The Religion of To-Day. Now, to-day, there is again a turn in the tide. More and more emphasis is laid on the relations of men and women to the world we live in. It is being taught, as Ruskin said, that if religion is good for anything it is good for everything. Chris tianity is-being brought into a new contact with all the institutions of our modern life. The ministers to-day are shutting up the old theologies and opening the new sociol ogies. Religion is taken to mean the saving of men, soul and body. Shoulder to shoul der with the medern Church stands the parish house, the center of all manner of uplifting influences. The prophets who to day are dreaming dreams and seeing visions of the coming centurv predict a reign not of individualism, but ot universal socialism. Nevertheless, it is true, as I said at the beginning, that the only right way to look at people is out of two wide-open eyes. Not much, after all, is gained when one who has been looking only out of the left eye, shuts that and looks only out of the right The way to understand men and women is to think of them both individually and socially. We must look at them out of both eyes, if we wish to sen them as they are. Accordingly, I began this series of studies, which will be concerned for the most nart with the Christian in his relations to others, with a consideration of the Christian in himself. What do I mean by the Christian in him self? I mean the Christian spirit, the Christian disposition. Jesus laid more emphasis on disposition than he did on conduct He was more de sirous to get people to feel in a certain way than to act in a certain way. Principles in Place o't Rnles. It is evident in the records of His life, by instance after instance, how He absolutely refused to lay down rules, but taught prin ciples in place of them. That is, He would not say, thus and thus must you behave, but thus and thus must you feel in your heart Take, fcr example, that time when Peter asked Him for a rule about forgive ness. "How oft shall my brother sin against me and I forgive him?" Jesus, in auswer, gave a parable, the point of which is that tne essential thing is the spirit of brotherly love. Take again that case of the two brothers who were disputing over the division of an inheritance. They desired Jesus to act as arbitrator. They wanted Him to look into the will and thf deed and the title and the accounts, and settle up the estate fairly. But He refused. He laid down a great eternal principle which, if they followed, would enable them to decide their own dis cussion. He knew well that without the recognition and the acceptance of that prin ciple, no deoision could really decide be tween them. -Take heed," He said, "and beware of covetousness." We know what He did even with those laws which came with the highest ot all sanctions, from the judgment seat of Sinai. He emphasized not the letter but the spirit Whoever has an angry thought in his heart is a murderer. Wnoever has an impure thought in his heart is an adulterer. Indeed, so exceedingly desirous was He to have it understood that disposition is of SUNDAY, APRIL U. more account in religion even than conduct, that He put his words of counsel into such extreme forms that it might be plain that what he asked was not literal but spiritual obedience. Turn the other cheek, resist not evil, give to him that asketh; these are not regulations of outward conduct; they teach the spirit of fraternity. Christ is em phasizing not the act but the feeling. xms auaonwg oi supreme importune a disposition "was partly due, no doubt, tothe fact that conduct, divorced from disposition, has no moral value. God look at the heart to see bow muoh is held out in the hand. Wsthout charity that is, without a Chris tian disposition nothing that we do is of account Partly, also, Jesus had in mind that a right disposition is sure to show itself in a right conduct Like a wise physician He prescribed not for the symptoms but for the disease. Men and women cannot be set right from the outside. Betterment must begin at the heart Yon cannot regulate a watch by moving the hands; you must set the mainspring right You see the importance, then, of a man'i being a Christian in himself; that is, of the possession of the Christian spirit What sort of a Christian he will be in the family, in business, in soeiety, in the parish, in the 'city, will depend upon what sort of a Christian he is in himself. Conscious of th Blessed Presence. We come, accordingly, to the considera tion of the characteristics of the Christian in himself. One characteristic of the Christian in himself, is that the Christian realizes God. How different that is from a mere intellectual conviotion of the exist ence of a Great First Cause, of an Infinite and Eternal Energy from which all things proceed! How different from a mere rote recitation of a church creed, in which the lips speak while the heart iB silent! The Christian realizes God. The Christian is conscious ot the blessed presence of God. For Christianity is human life made the most of, lived in the largest and highest way. Life, the men ot science tell us, is harmony wieh environment It is propor tioned to the relation between that which is without and that which is within. An animal lives a larger and higher life than the plant, because it is responsive to a larger circle ot environment It is capable ot companionship. It has some idea of freedom, ot fidelity, of love, of duty, And a man lives a larger and higher life than the animal, because he is responsive to a still wider circle of environment He is capable of intellectual pleasures of whioh the animal is ignorant And among men he lives the largest and highest life who is responsive to the widest circle of environ ment Getting the Most Oat of Life. One man delights in little beyond the pleasures of the grosser appetites. He eats, and drinks, and sleeps. Another is culti vated to enjoy books and music and art and science. It is evident that there is a vast difference between these two in the matter of making the most of life. But here is an other who can appreciate thoughts that are higher still. He is responsive to his spir itual environment. He hears the whispers ot conscience. He sees visions of benefi cent duty. He knows the joy of prayer and adoratiou. He realizes God. This man is perfectly alive. He alone, of all the chil dren of God, makes the most of life. The Christian realizes God; realizes, that is, the abiding presence of God. God is here. Every thought of my heart and your heart is audible to Him. Wherever we go, what ever we say or do, God is with us, knowing all. And the Christian knows who God is. To the Christian, God is the Father. This constant presence is not the hateful presence of a Dmae despot; it is not the intrusivo Ereseuce of a Divine taskmaster; the Father i with us, who made us, who is interested in us, who cares for us, who loves us. The Christian realizes this protecting, helpful, blessed presence. The Christian lives in the presence of God as a young boy lives in the sight of his father whom he reveres, or as a young girl lives in the sight of her mother whom she loves. The presence is a perpetual uplifting influence, inspiration, Denediction. Every Man Desires to Be B-ttor. Another characteristic of the Christian in Himself is that the Christian hates sin. He longs to be free from all sin. Here again, Christianity takes in all that is best in the aspirations of men. I have a friend who is an ethical lecturer in St. Louis. He made an address the other day, in which he summed up the results of live years of ob servation and experience in the endeavor to uplift men. He said that he was now con firmed in the conclusion that every man de sires to be better, and that the best way to help people is to begin by taking that for granted. We have tried too long, he said, to get men to do right by teaching them to believe right Let us now try to get them to believa right by helping them to do right But this is not a new discovery. Jesus Christ always ministered to men upon this principle. 'He always took it for granted that even the meanest man wishes to be better. And as for the precedence of con duct before creed, that is what he taught beyond a doubt If any man will know the truth of God, let him begin by doing the will of God. All this that my friend has arrived at after five years of study is right here in the Christian Scriptures. Herbert Speucer, in his "Data of Ethics," sums up the conclusions of a whole lifetime of hard study, and the end of the whole matter is this: That the only right conduct is that which is based upon the principle of altruism. And altruism, when we come to look into it, is nothing in the world but Christ's own commandment, "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." This which Mr. Spencer has worke'd out, using all the resources of his splendid genius, is only what every humblest Christian knew al ready. Plenty of Satisfying Religion. These people are like the crew of that old ship which was sailing along the coast of South America and ran out of water. And the scorching sun shone down upon them, and the great ocean seemed to mock them with its delusive waves, and, one after an other, the men began to die in the agonies of thirst And one day they sighted a ship, and they set the signals of distress. They said, we" are dying here for lack of water. And the other ship vesiel answered, why don't you dip your buckets down? This is the mouth of the great Amazon. There is good water all about you. The religion of Jesus Christ, if men would but take that, has satisfaction in it for all the hunger and thirst of all humanity. The Christian bates sin. And this, not with a passive and indefinite hatred, but with the spirit of one who fights against an enemy. The Christian has a passionate longing to be free from every taint of sin. He watches his words and his actions. He keeps guard over his lips and eyes, and hands. He knows that Christianity means character and that the only way to be a good Christian is to be a good Christian. Tlio Third Great Principle. Another characteristic of the Christian in himself is that the Christian loves Christ The Christian has a great love for Jesus Christ See how this takes these other characteristics of Christianity and empha sizes them. How it deepens the realization of God! Because it reveals the nature of God. Christ is the manifestation of God. We think the truest thoughts of God when we think of God as being like Christ And how it deepens the hatred of sin! Because it shows the fearful sin fulness of sin. The Christian looks at sin from the side of the cross. The Chris tian is really the only person in the world who knows what sin is. Because he i ens ures right and wrong by the one accurate and ideal standard of the character of Christ He tests life by the approbation of Jesus Christy Never to do anything that e would not like to have Jesus Christ see us do; never to say anything that we would not like to have Jesus Christ hear us say, Is the purpose of the Christian. Do not think that Christianity is a church or a ritual. Do not think that it is a creed or a theology. The Christian spirit is the spirit of Cnrist Christ is Christianity. To realize God, to hate sin, and to love Christ is what it means to be a Christian. George Hodoes. Till May 1 special low prices on silver ware, Kogers' spoons, knives, etc Ten per cent discount for cash ac II. G. Cohen's, 36 Filth avenue. 1892; TOPICS OF THE TIME, The Difficult Hole Amelia 6. Edwards Essayed With Success, A COUNTESS AS A SKIRT DANCER, Queen "Victoria Had a Court Jester Who Died Only the Other Day. THE W01IB5 TEACHERS OP NEWHHAM rwjtiTTW ron tub risrjiicH.J Egyptology and novel writing at first sight are not a team that awoman would be likely to find easy to drive, but Miss Amelia B. Edwards, the En. glish writer who died A few days ago, showed how well it could be done. Lat terly American read ers have known her best as the historian of the discoveries made in Egypt under the auspices of the Egyptian Explora Amelia B. Edwards. tion Fund, of which she was the founder. She has done more to popularize the study of Egyptian hieroglyphics and antiquities generally than any other writer of her time. In a recent American magazine article she paid a very pretty tribute to the Americans who had furnished the Egyptian Explora tion Fund with the sinews of war. But a generation ago almost Miss Ed wards won a large audience in this country by the graphic pictures she gave of running the blockade into Charleston harbor during the war. For truthful details of that ex citing business recourse can ba had to no better anthority than Miss Edwards' novel "Debenham's Vow' Her preliminary study for this book, of charts and original records she interviewed blockade runners by the dozen and took a special course in seamanship was characteristic of her thor oughness in all things. Her fiction is a mosaic of facts. The Saturday Jievkv of London once had the temerity to poke fun at what it called her "woman's seamanship" in "Debenham's Vow," and an Admiral of the royal navy came to her rescue with an indorsement of all her nautical statements. She was one of your systematlo workers; dividing the day into set periods for different work, walking a measured half mile in the garden of her home near Bristol before breakfast and an other half mile after, and so on. Her plan in novel writing was amusingly precise. First she sketched the plot chapter by chapter, going deeply into details. This finished she would start afresh, and evolve as she wrote an entirely new plot The Democratic Spirit in England, The revival of the interest in the affairs of the Guelph family by the adjustment of the difficulty between the Duke ot Cumberland and the German Government, as to the dis position of the so-called Guelph fund, has taken the fo'rm of a controversy iu the En glish newspapers as to what the surname of the reigning family in England really is. The general acceptance of Guelph as the family name is disputed by some. It is pointed out that accepting the family tree as printed in Burke's Peerage and other standard authorities, it is clear that mora than 800 years ago Cnnegunda, a daughter of Guelph, Dukeot Nether Bavaria, married Azo the Second, Marquis of Este, and her son succeeded to his uncle's estates upon the latter s death, Theretore it is claimed tne family name should then have been changed to D'Este. But it does not seem to have been, although the name D'Este has ap parently continued to be regarded as a sort of second name by the family. When Frederick-Augustus, sixth son of George IIL. aud commonly known by his title of Duke of Sussex, married Lady Au gusta D.e Ameland, daughter of the Earl of Dunmore, it was considered a breach oi the royal marriage act, and the courts, although the marriage had been regular, declared it null and void. But a son and daughter were born and both took the name of D'Este, showing that their father recog nized that as a family name. One writer suggests that the English royal family mignt just as well take the name of Plan tagenetor Stuart, for they have just as much of the blood of those royal lines in their veins as of the Guelphs. it is signifi cant of the progress of democratio ideas in England that the contributors to this con troversy handle the subject without gloves, and talk of the Guelphs and other royal personages fully as flippantly as if they were plain Smith, Jones or Brown. A Conntess in a Ballerinas Skirts. The debut of Countess Russell as a skirt dancer on the London stage lost week is quite in keeping with the exploits of the family from which she comes. Though she is the first ot her blood, in recent times at all events, to lit erally kick propriety out of sight, with her clinging black lace skirts and daring dance, her mother has the reputation of having made London howl in her time. Thv latter is Lady Lady RuiaelL Scott, whose husband, Sir Claud Scott, ran away with herwhen she waj a pretty school girl. She has long been a leader in one of the fastest sets m the West End of London, and has been the heroine of more than one social sensation. Lady Russell's sister, the wife of Major Russell, who appeared at the Royalty Theater the other night as a skirt dancer, is known to fashionables of the rapid sort bv the nickname of "Gid." Lady Scott and her two daughters, Mabel and Lena, have not a little beauty and brains between them, and their photo graphs, singly or grouped, are to be seen often in the Lon don shop windows. The most beautiful daughter, and the eld est ot the three, Flor ence, died some years ago. It is hardly likely :,.,z"") ji-a fJJS 'I 4 ydr Mrs. Dieh'RusstH that Lady Russell will stick to the stage steadily. She is an impulsive, hysterical woman her wedding almost killed her, and for weeks after it she was confined to her bed and her friends think that her exploit in a ballerine's skirts is merely a freak of the moment and chiefly aimed to annoy Earl Russell, from whom'she recently tailed to obtain a divorce Cholera Oatbrrab at Bnrdwnr. The outbreak ot cholera at Hurdwar has called attention once more to the danger of these great pilgrimages, which still form a part of the national religion in the East Every twelfth year the pilgrimage, which at any time means a crowded city, fairly swamps the local accommodations, and thousands are compelled to camp in the open air on the unhealthy flats around Hurdwar. This year, for instance, between one and two millions of pious natives are expected to visit Hurdwar, and that ancient j '.WW IWEfEB f'v city of 6,000 inhabitants Is no better pre pared to receive them than usual. Hurdwar is a place of prodigious poneity. There is a foot-print of the great Vishnu to be seen in the stone at the elmt or public bath, and thither pious Buddhists throng from all over the East Cleanliness being anything but next to the godliness of these devotees, epidemics are often the result of their congregation. Now the cholera has broken out and the pilgrims are scattering to the four winds, carrying the contagion of cholera with them. The Indian Govern ment fears a plague of tremendous propor tions is at haqd and it powerless ta stop It Talking of the cholera on officer of the English army in India once told the writer that a natural warning of the plague's pres ence may always be noticed in th,p atmos phere. In the early morning and again at sunset a peculiar bluish haze is be seen hanzing over the place where the cholera is raging. So invariable was this phenomenon that the soldiers on the march looked out for it, and chose their camping ground accordingly. "Work for the Britlsn Army. The wild tribes of the northeastern frontier of India continue to furnish work for the British army. Last week the cables announced that the Lushais had attacked the British camps no less than three times within four days, repeated repulses seeming to have no effect on their fighting ardor, Tne Lushais, or Kukis, as they are some times called, belong to a numerous family of nomadic tribes Inhabiting the Lushai hills, a range that extends into the heart of the unexplored mountains of Upper Bur mah. It will be observed that in the bat tles mentioned the natives were in each case the attacking party. It would be sup- fiosed that they would hesitate to take the initiative against a force much superior to their own, both, in numbers and equip ment, hut, if the opinions of travelers go for anything, the Lushais have really no alternative as they are being pressed for ward by a still stronger people, the Soktis, from the interior of Burmah. There is good reason to believe this is true, as the Lushais have been raiding the British lines since the earliest occupation of the territory. These forays are also thought to be instigated by a desire to obtain human heads, wnich they use in their peculiar re ligious ceremonies as propitiatory sacrifices to the gods of the mountain. In the war fare that has continued for more than a cen tury the native tribes have had, a a rule, the best of it, although the British forces have been victorious in the recent engage ments,' Principal dough's Successor. The girl undergraduates of Newnham College, Cambridge, are greatly pleased, we are told, at the ap pointment of Mrs. Henry Sldgwick as Principal in succes sion to the lamented Miss Clough. Mrs. Sidgwick has been associated with Newnham for many years as a Professor of Mathematics and as Treasurer, so that she is in thorough sympathy with the Mrs. Sidgwick. policy which has made this college for girls an institution en tirely worthy of a place beside the older houses of classio Cambridge. It is a little unusual to find that so successful an educa tor and woman of affairs as Mrs. Sidgwick has not contemned man altogether. Her husband is Henry Sidgwick, Professor of Moral Philosophy at Cambridge. The families of the Premier of England and of his arch opponent are, singularly enough, both- represented in the faculty of Newnham, for Mrs. Sidgwick is a niece of Lord Salisbury, and one of the professors is Miss Helen Gladstone, a daughter of the Grand Od Man, and one of the brightest women in England. Qaeen Victoria's Court Jester. Who knew that Queen Victoria hod a court jester? Jocularity, official or other wise, has been out of fashion at the Court of St James for many years, and the an nouncement of the death of William Wal lett, Conrt Jester, has a very strange sound. The office must have been a sinecure,- and is hardly likely to be filled again under the scrutiny of the watchful Radicals in Parlia ment What a change came over the office in the lapse of only three centuries, for down to the time of Queen Elizabeth in England the court jester continued to be a personage of some importance. In fact, fools were a port of the kindlv retinue until George L came over to England. In France the official mlrthmaker to royalty lasted longer, and we find as late as Lo'uis XVIIL's time a certain Coulon filling the double office of court jester and physician, and his jokes must have been better than his medicines,' for the fame of them has survived him. The court fool in earlier times was mu nificently rewarded, witness the endowment of Berdic, William the Conqueror's fool, with three towns and much land in Glou cestershire. One famous fool stands immor talized in a monstrous statue of wood in front of the celebrated tun in Heidelberg, and in Rome the effigy of Pasquino still ex ists to remind us of the origin of the pas quinade. W. G. Kaotsiahn; Electric Cars Without Conductors. The electric cars in Halle, Germany, carry no conductors, and this facts Tenders the wages account remarkably low, the entire working expenses coming to only about 5 cents per car per mile, or 55.5 per cent of the gross revenue. In this, however, no al lowance' has been made for depreciation, whieh would add nearly 2 cents more to the expenses account An incident of special Interest in connection with this line is that the German Government stopped the run ning of the electric cars immediately after the opening ceremony, because they inter fered with the proper working of the tele grams and telephones. The cose came be fore the law courts, and the judges decided in favor of the railroad company, stating at the same time that the streets of a city were intended tor general traffic, and that their course could not be altered, but that the postal authorities could easily make any necessary deviation in the line of the tele graph and telephone wires so as to place them bevond the influence of the electric lines, which use the rails and earth for the return circuit. Slaslo Pram Electricity. The public is becoming accustomed to the sound of organs whose mechanism is actu ated by electricity; but the idea of a musical instrument, in which the electric current produces the musical tones by no other means than the conductor itself, is startling as well as puzzling. In the ex periments of Von Lepel, in Germany, a disk of glass or paper rubbed with paraffine, placed between the terminals of the con ductors (small copper wires) from a strong induction machine, have thrown out with great rapidity tiny balls of fire, whioh dis appeared with a faint whistling sound. A more definite and practical instrument has been constructed, consisting chiefly of coils ot wire ot various sizes and lengths. On passing through the electric current a dis tinct musical sound of peculiar quality is given out Mr stock is too large and must bo reduced betoi e Ma v 1. To that cno we have marked all goods down and In addition will allow 10 per cent cash dUoount- You wiUsavo money by making your purchases of dla niond. watches, jen elry, silverware, clocks, bronzes, etc., o M. G. Cohen, Diamond Ex pert and Jeweler, 3U Fifth u enue. Tr.r a bottle of Bugine and yon will be con vinced that it is the best and Quickest Inject exterminator known. 25 cents. FuBsrrtrR3, china, ornaments and pictures packed, hauled, stored and shipped. Hauoh & Kmra-sjr, 33 Water street wsu CLEARING UP FOGS. Results of Electrical Experiments at Sandy Hook and Boston. A NEW STILE OP CASH EEGISTEK. The Telephone In Hawaii Hai Made tht ladies Fatter Thaa Ever. NEW APPLICATIONS OP THE CURBE5T IWBITTEt POB THE DISFATCH.1 Various reports, none of them nnfortu. nately authoritative, have been published of the recent trials at Sandy Hook and in Boston harbor with the view of dissipating fog electrically. So far as can be gathered from the meager details made public, it would appear that the effect of the current is directly proportional to the intensity of the fog; L e., the denser the fog the more easily it is affected by the discharge, and consequently the larger the area that can ba cleared with the same amount of energy. No detonation or explosion accompanies the discharge. The largest area cleared by one discharge is said to have been nearly two acres, or, approximately, a radius of 150 feet from the point of application. It is claimed that with more powerful machinery much greater areas could be cleared. The fog is described as falling in the form of rain, and the atmosphere after the process as being clear as after a summer rain storm. The surrounding fog, however, closes in over the cleared space in a few minutes, and it would require discharges mode at inter vals of two minutes to keep the air practi cally clear. The subject of fog clearing bjr electricity is not by any means new, and it is so certain to engage serious attention before long in consequence of the important issues which it would inevitably affect that it is to bs hoped the results of the recent tests will be given to the public officially. A Useful Cash Register. The nnmber of storekeeper and others who have had sad experience of the fallibil ity of patent cash registers is legion, and such will welcome the advent of a new cash register that promises to pay for itself very quickly. One of its advantages is its sim plicity, which materially lessees the liabil ity to get out of order with which so many devices of the kind seem to ba afHicted. The new register will keep anv number of accounts, either at the point of sale or at a distance. For instance the sales made in the store can be recorded in the proprietor's house, whether it be above the store or at a distance. The proprietor can thus know what the day's receipts are up to any given moment without coming near the store. The cash drawer is opened automatically by the action of the leve- which registerii the sale. The drawer can be opened and change made without registering, but every time it is opened a record is mode of the fact In other words, if the drawer is opened simply to moke change, no record is made of a sale, but a record is made of the fact that the drawer has been opened for the purpose of making cfianee. A strong point of the invention is that there is no known way of "beating" It If any attempt is made to tamper with it the bell rings. Fur thermore, the bell rings whenever anything gets out of order, and continues to do so until the fault has been attended to. No money can be taken from the drawer with out detection. The device is worked elec trically, and the battery which supplies tha current will last 16 months without re charging, which can be done at slight ex pense. The Telephone in Genial Hawaii. A celebrated engineer who some time ago spoke at an Important meeting of electri cians in New York told his audience that the inhabitants of Hawaii, from which ha had just returned, were the best natured people on the face of the earth. He stated, moreover, that the climate was sultry and that the principle on which business was conducted was never to walk if you could ride, and never to ride it you could sit still. Under such conditions it was only natural that the Hawaiian should look upon the telephone as the greatest invention of tha age, and it came instantly into universal use. The ladies especially were in high glee at being able to do their minor shop ping while sitting at home, and to such an extent did they forego their wanted exer cise that an increase in the average weight of the female section of the community was distinctly apparent This was told not as a joke, but in sober earnest, and a letter which goes far to confirm the account has been received from the superintendent of the Honolulu Exchange, who says: "Hon olulu has the most wonderful telephone system in the world. You can get any num ber you want as soon as you ask for it, and can hear perfectly a great distance. Tha people ot Hawaii use the telephone much more than do the people in any part of the United States that I was ever in." If a man wants to know what time it is, instead of getting out of his seat to look at the clock he rings up the operator and finds out" Electric launches In England. An English company has 18 pleasure launches plying on the Thames, all worked by electricity, and charging stations have been built at various points on the banks of the river, so that if a pleasure party is de layed or chooses to extend its excursion, all it has to do is to put into the bank and re charge its batteries. The large fleet of elec tric launches now on the Thames includes manv private boats. A line electric launch has "just been built for the Earl of Dysart, which measures 55 feet in lensth and 8 feet 6 inches in beam. With her full equipment on board she will draw 2 feet 6 inches of water, and her speed will be 8J to 9 miles an hour for seven hours. She is built of mahogany and teak, with omnibus seating on the roof of her capacious saloon. Xablne rnosphorn'i by Electricity. The application of electricity to the man ufacture of phosphorus is expected to revo lutionize the industry. The phosphorus is extracted from the usual niaterials by being intensely heated with carbon in an electrio furnace. It is thus vaporized and is after ward collected in copper condensers. Tha latest pattern of furnace produces daily about 150 pounds of very poor phosphorus, with a loss of about 14 per cent of the total quantity of the raw material. The effect of this new development will be that a single building which has been erected for the purpose in England will soon ba turning out about half as much as tha world's present consumption. . ................. .Af.A..A.A.J RHEUMATIC FAINS Step anointing, and apply to the spot that aches WOOD'S PENETRATING Vctl continuously. Its r LHO 1 -r dilate the pores, penetrate deeply and step pain, rendtrs it far superior to ordinary porous plasters. Or PRUCGIST3 i N.Y.Depot,92WaiamSt vivvynryyv'y'T'T'V'T' " ii ro ES