REV. DR. TALMAGE. mi I5ROOKLYN OIVLXE'3 SUN r.V SERMON. Subject: "The Mission of the Frost." Text : "En tl.e breath of God frost it given." Job xxxvil., 10. Nothing is mora embarrassing loan organs it or pianist than ta pat his finger ctfi Ice) of the intni;nrnt itcd have It nnk& no r apwni-e. Though nil tbs olhor keys are to fall play, that oae siienijs destroys tlienmsla. So iu tile preut rat1ie.1nl of Nature, If ons part faiis to praise the Lord tha harmony M halt 1 ami lot. While flr and hall, snow and vapor. rrpond to tha touou of lnspira tion. if tlie trost made no titteranea the or'.'kcs'.rii r.-n lnrius TrouW be hopelessly da'iiHed mid tiie harmony forever inaaab jiletp. I am morn glii't than I can tell that the white toy of th frost sounds fortTi titpiitiiy as any of the other keys, and wke", avid touches it in the I'salins it s&andl forth the words, "lie scattexeth the hoar frost lilf :is'i." and when Job touches It la my text it resounds with the words, "By the Lrnath ot Go l frost is given." As no one s?mi disposed to discuss the mission of frost. dpptridinpr on divtiie help I undertake it. This is the first Sabbat ol winter. The leaves are down. The warmt-5 has Kone out of tlie air. The birds Bv made thoir winded marsh southward. The landscape has been smarted by the autumnal equir.ox. Tlie busters have rifled the corn shocks. Tiie night sky has shown the usual mcteori? restlessness of ITovomber. Three seasons of the year are past, and the fourth and List has entered. Aaotkar element now comes in to bless and adoxa and instruct the world. It is t he frost. Ike palaees of this king are far up in the aretiu. Tholr walls are glittering congelation. Windsor castles and Yullories and winter palaces and Konilworths and Alhamhras of lc-, temples with p'ndant chandeliers; ol fee, thrones of ioeberg on which eternal silence rfllrrns, theaters on wbose stage eternal oold dramatizes eternal winter, pillars of ice, arches of ice, arowns of loe, chariots of ioe, sepulchers of ice, mountains of ice, dominions of loe eternal fripidfty I From those hard, white, burnished portals Kinu Frost deseeads and waves Ms silvery scepter over our temperate aone. Too will soon hear his heel on the skating pond. Yon already feel his breath tn tire night wind. J'.y most considered nn enemy coming here to lxjnmnb and hinder and slay, I shall show you that the frost is a friend, with Lon.. H ' ):i divinely pro nounced, and char .ill surcharged with lessons poteut, bene.t.:.-ut and tremendous, 'tlie Iiibla seven times a'.lu les to the frost, and wft must not isnfirs It. "I:y the breatn of God fret Is jrivtfn." First I think of frost as a painter. Ho be (rlns his work on the lenvaa and eoutlnues i on the window panes. With palette covered with all manner of colors in his left haad and pineji ,..f cr.st.il In his ritrht hand, he sits dovn l'cti't-e tli ImuiV.Iest hush in tie latter part of S i te:nli&r and begins t' sketching of the I.mv. No;v he puts upo rbe foliaxo a faint pr-.llor. a-i i th":i a tou -h ol brown, and then a huo of or.inur' an 1 Ui-t a flame of Are. The beech and ash an 1 oak ;ir turned first into sunrises aui tljea into fiirt setsof vividuss and sp'.ndor. Allihe l:ivs are pen.-lie-l one by one. but sometimes n whole forest in the course of a few dri-a shows srreat velocity of work. ( Wer-mi, the Dutch painter, enu.d mako ia. a summer day three portraits of life size, but the frost iu ten days can paint t"ii moaik taiD3 in life si.e. Itrfiakesthela.it days of nn autumnal wood Ihe d.:ys of its eiiie.'esj jlory Luxemhourgs in tho Adiron lacks, Louvres In the Sierra Nevada, Vatl -ens in the White Mountain;. The work of other painters you must see In the riic'ut liht to tally appreciate, ,ut tho puiminj of tha frost in all lights are enchanting from tbs time when the curtain of the mornin? liftst'i .i. ,i i. ... i 1. 1. . i luw lime unuu i no cu nam ol lueuiuc urons. Mfchael Auelo put Bpon ouo ceilim; n: representation of the Ist ju laient. but til l frcst represeuts universal conflaratioii upon 8000 miles of stretched out grandeur? Leonardo do Vinci put upon a fe.v fe-tuf canvas our Lor J's last suppar for all ae to admire, but the fr. st puts the c'.eaimn',' chal. ices of the imperial glories of the Inst sup. per of the dylnij year in the heights aud lengths and treadt!; of the Allernanies. When Titian first tail upon a sketch o! Corregijlo, he was wrought up into sued ecatacy that bo crie 1 out, "fi I wero no; Titian, I would bo 'orr-s! :o." an 1 s sr"at and overpoivsrin t are the autumnal seues of our An.erican lore-'s that one forco of nature micht well ex-iaim to another, "It J werenot the sunlight. I wou! 1 re the tro-;.'" Eujfendas, the G-nn-iu painter, tuueriu from weakness in his rn;ht hand, lal orlousiy learned to palut with his left hau l. Put the frosts paints with both hanis. nn 1 has in them n;ore skill than all the Ketnhrau lts::n I llubens and Wests and l"uus-ius aui Alt.ert Durrs nnd Taul V-r uiese.s un 1 CIhu I-s Kathered in one ion' art calh-ry. liut tiie doorof that tr-at nir-.-u n .jf aiuu-nnal co' orine la now close 1 f jra tw?lve:uonth, an I another spectacle jii'.t as wmd.-T.'ul is u i v opeu. I put vou on the alert uti 1 asi yo.i to put your chil ir- n on the ae-rt. Tired of worinc; ou the leaves, the .'ro-t will soon turn to the win lov p-ines. ,ei will soon waken on a cold moruia and lin i tnat the windows of your home have during tho night been adorned with curves, w.tu e-oronets, witn c; juisiteu -aj, witii pomp, with utmost t'.irerr.a! ;ir il sp ctaclo. Then you will appr - 'i ite what m' test s ivs as It declares. !: t !:; breath of Go 1 "frost u fcdven.'' l"ou will s-e on the window pane, traoed there l y th- fr i,t, whole gardens o. beauty ferns, orchids, daffodils, heliotropes, china aster, fountains, statues, bounds on the chase, roebucK pluumi; Into the stream, battle scenes with dyin an 1 dea l, cata falques of kin:r, triumpnal processions and as the morning sua breaks through you will see cities on fire, and bombardment with bursting shell, nn 1 illuminations as for some great victory, coronations and angels ou th wine. All night lonr while you were sleeping the frost whs working, an 1 you ought not le the warmth obliterate the s 'ene until vou have admired it, at u lied it, absorbed it," set it up in your memory fer perp-tua! p-fre-h-ment and realiz-d tlie tore.) uu 1 nia.irmt u le and intensity of my text. "By the breath of Gol frost i.s given. ' Oh, what a Go 1 w have ! What res jure s are :upijn, ,v the fact that he ts ablo to do tint by the linger of the frost fifty times in on- wnter and ou a hun dred thousand win !o v p mes for thous tnds ef winters 1 The great art galleries of Teniae and Na ples and l'resien are carefully gaarlei and gov-rnmcn's protct them, for once lost, they can never bt reprodaeed, but God se1 up in the royal galleries of the frost pietuivs such as no human art could ever produ'-e, hundreds of thousands of them, only for four or live hours, and then rubs tbem ont, making tha place cl-ar for a display Jusv as magnificent tho next morning. Xo one bat a Gol coui l aford to do that. It would Isinkrupt overythlrg brt: ir.luity an 1 ooiul potenee. Standing hen; br clo" 1 doors of the pl.;ture l wools rnd the rnnin:r doors o the tr.m.'lg'ired win'o.-. -.-ii-, 1 w mt to euro my b !;y an 1 vo ir Jolly of longing for glorlo.is timers iu !hi .I'-tauco, wane we nogleet appr tati -i of gto-iads tilings neni t'V. '-Oh, if I could only go and e(j th factories of laee at lira -Is 1 'aays someone. Why, within thirty fe -t ef wher-you awaken some l;eceraber morn '.t yoa will see richer lace interwo .-en lor yo.r woidow pan-s by dlvine linger?. "Oh. k I -o ild See the fac tories of s:lk ;it Lyons:" says some cni. Why. without ieav.iu; your borne on the lior: b s:.!e of :;c e .vii i oii-o on Christ. uas morning vo i iv s e where the Lord haa spun s:!k a threads a; jt your wlndowsthis way and tiiat embroidi ri"S such as no on but flo 1 (via work. A !n. for this fi -rile iH- n of the distant and this belittling as t:ie close, by I Thus fruini" "f " .--.- lt la adj - j k at f :il .va:en i-a n-. hi..' as w. I ,....ie - m-t'ii'i ; w caa ee by cro-ire o ir own re,, n, and free o rharge! Th:s pr i;.-ir, ; of K i-.liacls h.un Ire 1? r.. veurs gots, w e-n t he gr at--r K-ir.hae', the f.-o-t. w.ll ; ja bo buy at the entr :n to your owa ho ne ! N"xt 1 speak of the fro-t as a rhv..:-n. ''tin ting at the gat .-.f N'.-w York ' h ir: o suiuipa before li-t, trie frost l-ovo l.i.'i the cholera, saying. "Thus fir shnlt thou come and no far'toT." I-ro.n M "nidus am' fev t piague tin elc i Kir'i aria .... I'ho fru-st is a physi-iun that ilo-.-tors citi.s, LS'atioaa and continents. lie medicines the world. Quinine for malaria, anti-febrile for typhoids, sulphonal for sleeplessness, anti spasmodic for disturbed n-rves, but in al' therapeutics there is no remedy like thb small pellets prepared by the cold, aud no physician so skill.il or ho mighty as the frost. Scotland has had great physicians, but her greatest doctors have been "tho Abernethies and Abererombios that have co:ne down over the highlands horsed on the north wind. Kngland has had her gn-nt physicians, but rer irreatest doctors have been the Andrew t .arkesand tho Jlaekenzies who npp-are 1 the llrst night the Hel ls of England werj rimraed with white. America has had its great physicians, but her greatest doctors have been the Witlard Parkers and Valentine Motts who landed from bleak skies while our finirers were benutnbel and our ears tingled with the cold. Oh, it is hb'h time that you add another line to your liturgy! It Is high time that vou make an addenda n to your prayers. It is high time that you enlarge the catalogue of Tour blessings. i Tbanlt 8od for Irosf. If Is the best of all germicides. It Is the only hope In bacteriol PKZtiysih8meJi?aJ5utjiients1It . ' n&malnint Ot OPT temnaratT)ne. It Si (he beet tonda toat God evelr pave tlie human ,aee. It ts the oaf? strong a ri mutant which has ne reaetlan. The best eouiareuSarv as it I bad wssfs walking nam here one oodI motBtogj with my brotaaN3t, 'Who "gaat the most el Mi Ufa al a jrtl.fl reus ry i Cain a, SJid in that part ot It where there are ne Vosts. He said tkaro was tinsHns glao tssaia his nerves Initsserihable.and aoahnosl intoxication of delight fxotrrbe fact that it j.-as the first time lor years he had felt the sensation of frost. Wo complain of It, we soold It, we frown upon It, when we otighl to be stirred by it to gratitude and hoit it on itATnlncv. lint I must fro farther anl speaic o! the Jrost as a jewaloa As the snow is frozen tain, so the frost is frozen de jr. God trans, lirifaaitit?" ssjraoia fEto.a crystal, Ills' to de plorlCed. la the ftlrtvShlh-clmp-rsr of that inspired drama, tho boolf ol Job, Ood says to the insplted dramatist with eestntta'tnterrogatleii. "The hoary frost of na&Ten, who hath gendered ItV od there asks Jab if be knows the parentage ol 'the frost. Jle inquires about its pedigree, lie suggests that Job srody tip the frost's genealogical line. A minute before God had asked about the parentage of a raindrop U Vords that years ago gave me a suggestive kext for a sermon, "lint the rain a fufhenV" But now the Lord AlratRhty oateohiainif lob about the frost. lie praotlcaHy says i "Do you know Its father? Do you know its tnottrer? In What oradle of the leaves did the wind Tact it? 'Thehoary Tro3t af heaven, who hath gendered itr" " Ho Is a stupid Christian who thinks so much of the printed and bound Bible that he neglects tha Old Testament of the fields, nor reads the wisdoai and kin tao&s and beauty of God written fn blossom on the orchard, in sparkles on the lake, tn stars on the sky. la frost on the meadows. The f rent-tit jeweler ot all the earth is the froet. hare is nothing more wonderful in all erystallograpny. Some morning In Deee-n-ber a whole continent is fouud besprent with diamonds, the result of one night's work by f bis jevelor. - Do you make the doprouiV.ory renark tht the frost is impermanent an 1 will last on y I wo or three hooper What ef that? Wa go into Lon don tower anl look at the crows jewels of England, but we are In a prooes'on that the guards keep moving on, and fl' minutes or loss are your only opporl unity of looking at those crown jewels, but at the erown ieweis bestarred of tho frost in parln and Holds yon may stand to look doliberutely and for hoors, and no oueto tell yu to itovn on. I Oh, th.-se regalias an 1 dil Jems of besuly flung out of heaven ! Kings and queens ou celebrativa days have come ridin throug i tho streets throwintr hanlfuls of silver anl goLl among the people, but the o,uecn of tae w.nter morning is tbe only queen rich enough to t;:row peerIK, and the kUi of frost the only king rich enough to throw opais an 1 sappirtkes and diamonds. IIoT.er d-se'irbhee a necUace of tlt g.von to Pcue'opc, bat the frost neeklaees a eoa'.ta'Uit. Tiie o.r-an of precious stoa -s given t- H.ir.iioa.a bud piu:tms of orange jasper and white moon stone an I fa than ag.to, oat it w is a ml .r t un- to any ona w : o o.v: d or in'ier'.Mt it. nl it.i history, g nr.:t'on a't T gen -r .? on, was a history oi disaster, hut the raba o. fro-t is lae good fortun of every T.-.ornin r oi-.-ns it. J h i:r.;-erial bo'.i'it'io! 1 ot I.ou's XVi eeu' I not a'Tor! tho M:i v. .ad u.ey::a -o v ' h i 1 o -ea order- 1 for Q n n M ir.-i A l'.o a I.e. an 1 it was stolen anl t.ii ei apart aa 1 nn:, but too neeSlacs that the :ro-t pu's o.i ft Wintry morn n, tliojgh ma .e or as ma- -i r.lham.s as the w. titers I glass blales, e.;ily alTorded by riiviri'j opatence nn 1 Is never lost, but arter its u.-e ui the coronation of 1 1 its lieids is token bacit to heaven. O men an 1 vr .men, accustomed to go into ecstasv wiien tn foreign travel you co ne upon ta hljtorioel gems ef Katieue, whotiier tne Jswel be allnd the Mountain ot Glory, or the H-a ?r Light, or the Crown of the Moon, or tn Kye of Allah, or the ar of Sarawst, r the Koh-i-noor. I iinphia-1 you study the jewels ftr wn all round your wintry home and rsa llzetnat "t'V the breath of God frost if given." Hat I go a step further and speak of the frost as an evangelist, and a toxt of S-v.ptnre Is not of much use to me unless I can find the gospel ia It. The Israelites in the wil-deru-ss breakfasted on sorn-tning tr.at looked like frozen dew, aid the dew evapor ated anl left a pulverised material, wliheaud looking like frost, but it wss manna, an I oi that they ate. Ho now this morning, mix- 1 whh tho fr''an d'-w of mv text, thers Ls tn.tnna on which we can breakfast oar serfs. Ve i s-:y the frfi.-t kil's. Yes, it kills sotae th:n t .it we have already se-.u t hat it .v.-w h -a t i and li:e to otaers. Tins gosjjel is th- Kr.r.r of ii.e unto life orof death unto death. A- th- 'rest is mighty, the gospel is:ni.hty. A- t :. t.-o-t iKse-'n Is ireai heaven, the r:opei ei s e.i Is ir .ti h avea. By the iir-nttt ol God iro.-t i- given. Hy t;ie l-.reath o'- Go lthe e .ai.! i) etv n. A- tne trost purifies, so th j-r-iec ot God partdes. Asthelri? ltar- th- ear:o, so gra-c b"jew.ls th- sorr. As t'ls iro'-t prertr"3 for food many tii.nrs tha: o: iie.-.vis j would be in-iiole, so tho trost o. iria'r.poas r. 5 prep ir.-s 'o id for t ne so't'. li toe ti t it i-rio of tho fr .sc ta-' har 1 s it- s .. v i. cut an I c . - .-i: til hi -'-i-.- e ei, an i tee luxuries of the w o ; ne .;eo o-ir Uo or upon o.irlab:.-s ; .o the ro--t o tr ai t f." 'Miany a iiar I an i pri-kly s'l-ll no i er.is'i t cut it that w :i ee .8 it. There ar pa-s ig- i-lrs euig nas, pu57.1 0. .- .-r p: 1, . i i---s that r 1 i r.o bili-.ies for vol t u a i -r'e'i 1, ofiroublo a ter aw in r to your so il Wev 1 1 ivid keep-i r ' e ('j-'ue ! Ye t:n . l-.-i .o n ; h:s ; tlie -t. cut- r. l-o.v he w is p'i:-s-i : 1 :i d-'S T.-beS hi r.b -if U'. : r.-oai .-s I i. Vol i..- hi t :.- y li I. ; i 1 1 b r V'-n i n of : in o; th 1 d h :i iv I e, 1 U 1 : 0 Lor 1 1 An 1 t e:re h SO run .: eivation in his writinu ioe, tmt after awhi vou in the shape of r ' i o" t i it -:-! la n- s yo t thiu.: t" o e toet'rov. co n-s u v.itio !, and v 1 stu-k with this censure an 1 st a-k w.t'i t :jt defamation, and Etu -k v.- th som i i il-!; .o 1. an I iies iu s-ve.r.r.s an bu.in r. I n:-.. aboat your v..rs, an , a' las: you u:i 1-T-. ia w lat iJavid n.oant w :ru ho s li I, ' i ;r--co.r.i.as 1 me about iiko b:-s ; yea, fij ;oiur-usa 1 iu ahout iie ;,..' (,' uaijroue0 town under r.Tvcr.s prostration and fcal bat vou are as far dowa as David when he r el", "O it ot th . depths of hell !" V.'hat op-ne I all those chapters that Mt';er. ha 1 no n;j;r oprlatea-'s.' Frosts! For a long wa.de the Bible a ro tie I lopsided in I a disproportionate n cour.t of It given ap to th" ct us o'ai iry. Wdiy page.aftr page u 1 chrip. .r a": r chapt-r and book after ie .k iu the l;v,e t-ikeii no ,vhh nll"v;a :'o we:i pa ':! .1 v:i, with eoudob-nv? I'h- iob; s. i.s tiks n apothe-a.j- store w:h cm i-':a':' u'f'e rl-.lves oceuole 1 wit a t.-i'si-i.-. Whv s-i -h a M'ir. v:ia;iy of bal ia:r.? Hit n:'"T axhi'e t'r- rieiibr sneous trojp cirr.es oT jour chil l, or your he i'ta j'ves way under the gr p. or your pr-vv-rty ! swe;- oT by a ba 1 in- '-tm ut, or perhaos all three tri'ihhis '0'rv- at oae baril ruptcy, slckn'S an 1 b T.t-cii -nt. Now .h' con-.olatory pruts of I'n i.oI- not ie.u to be .1 . ipo.r:;.:ito. Y-.il w .ut som-e.ti. a r o.y a n 1st nd th- h-Tv -s or th-it a -re t d s;e;s-;ry. ':,-tt Ibis nujuvere! in 1 expose! to ou 11m u-;:rulness of so rnue'- -f iho 11..- ' was b fore Id 1 Ion? Tut do.vn all th- p-o-?. s- tif.le 'nr s-' u iy. sa 1 p 1: t-ie on. 111 on on table p rrvn w .e has ne,- -r or v ry little of it. but pi I) '-.hie ii:n all '-f:ey -'op sri , anl ail ar-'ne .:o r; ineutari-i, and 01 tlie ot:.-p-it a ni'in w 10 h -s ha I Irr osier upon .lis i-t -r, an I 1 Itu ly of tbe promises w.tai o-it .'ommntary. w'thn-;t p! iin or help, an 1 this Hi:- lo U00.1 i:ei ta .ie i an t al! dietiou--s an I ail com r s. !o of the talbe ! -i-.o-i tri-il. .Its t b: a begiu the eat lix!cfei1 w':t:i- any ioo1; to ex r rian -vbl r.ud"r- ft and far more of the 'i-'ght .in I .1 Jen-th and breadth of tlu.-ie j ro th 1 leirnel rx-get opp'-it-, Hi' m 'ri" 1 In sacred literature. Th Ibe a Ivautage over tho oth-r i.e-.n 1. an 1 ' t '!-..! s-l 1- i- has e has felt tiie mission of the frosts, oh, t u" the consolation '' tills theme, ye to whom life is a fctrugla and a disnopoii.tmrn'. anl a gantlet and a panfr. That is a o -antiful proverb among the H-brows wbi'.li siys, ' A lien the talo of bricks ia double!, then M os-s comes." Mild doses of medicine will do for mild sickness, but violent pains n"ed strong doses, aud so I stand over you and count out some I'rops that will alleviate your worst troubles it you wjl only take tho m lieln", and hero It is: "In the world ye shall bavi tribula tion, but be of good cheer ; I have overcome the world." '"Weeping may endure for a night, hut joy eo nctn in the morning." Thank God for frosts! What hlp-l mait! Milton the great -t of poets Tue iro-d of blindn-ss. What helped make Washington the irreatest of generals? The frosts of Val ley Forge. What ma le it appropriate for one passing John liunyan's grave to e'v-tlai-e, "Sleep on, thou prince of dreamers ' The frosts of imprisonment. The greatest college from which we pan graduate is the college of frosts. Especial trial tits for especial work. Just now wateli and you wilt see that trouble is preparative nnd educational. That is the grindstone on. which battle axes aro sharpened. I have elvays noticed in my own cue that wrt nUie Lord had some special work for tue to do it wnfl preeo led by especial attack upon me. This Is so proverbial In my own house that if for something I say or do I get poured upon me a volley of censure and anathema, rr wife always asks : "1 wonder what new o;U portunity of usefulness is n'lout to openV Something gooland grr.ud is snrely cure Inir !" What U Iras In my cr----1 line on a larger r smaller scale In the history of every tiiaf mi woman who wants to servo tho Lord Without complaint take the hard knocks tan will see after awhile, though you tnii ot appreciate ft now. that by the breath a a goad anJ loving God frost is given. L4 tlm corners of yonr mouth, so long drawi down in complaint, be drawn up in smiles a Content. Eor many years poals and essayists havj celebrated the grace and swiftness of the Arab lan horses. The most wonderful exhi bition of horsemanship that I ever witnessed was just outside the city of Jerusalem an know where these Arabian horses got their fleetceas and poetry of motion? Long cen turies ago Mohammed, with 30,000 cavalry on the marsh, could Dud forthein not a drop of water for threo days. Coming to the top ota hill, a river was in sight. With a wild dash the 33.0110 horses started for tbe stream, A minute after an armed host vr.ls seen ad vancing, and at Mohammed's command 109 bugles blew for the horses to fall in line, but all the 30,000 continued tho wild gallop to the river except Bye, and they, almost dead with thirst, wheeled into line of battle. Nothing in human bravery an 1 self sacri fice excels that bravery and self sacrifice ot loose five Arabian war horses. Those flvt splendid steeds Mohammed chose for his own use, and from those Ave came that race of Arabian horses for ages tho glory of the equestrian world. And let me say that in tins great war of truth against esror, ot holi ness against sin aad heaven against hell, the Kt wnrh- e e descended frost those ftTco. nfbler pans and self denial andtTBTlblB. liaswercd the gosp.sl trumpet and wheeled into line. Oat of great tribulation, out ot kr"it fires, out of great frosts, they came. And let me say it will not take long for God to make np to you in the noxt world foi ail you have suffered In this. As you entet heaven He may say. ''Give this man one 01 those towered aud colonnade ! palaces on that ridge of gold overlooking the sea ol glass. Give this woman a home among those amaranthine blooms and between those fountains tossing in the ever! istingsnnlight. Give her a ooueb o.inoolod with raiuhows to pay her for all the fatigues of wifehood an ! motherhood anl housekeeping, from will., she had no rest for forty years. "Cupbearers ol heaven, give these newiy arrived souls from earth the costliest bever ages, and roll to their door tao grandest ohaxiots, and bans on thoir walls the sweet em harps that ever thrummed to linger 1 seraphic Give to them rapture on raptuts, celebration on celebration, jubilee cn jubi lee, heaven on heaven. They had a liar I time on earth earning a livolinood, or uurs bi" s'x children, or waiting on Tuerulous old ge, or bett ing f- '-' 1 o .': it were 'old about tnean, or were cojipeliej to wort alter they got shortbreathed and raeummio and (Jimaiehtsd. ' C'hjunberlalns of heaven ! K lepers of the kir;'s robes ! Banqueters of eternal royalty ! Make np to them a nundredrold, a thousand fold, a millionfold for all they suffered from ;r,v 11 ling clothes to shroud, and let all fhosa who, whether on the hills, or in the temples, or on the thrones, or on jasper wsli, were helpi an l sanctified an 1 prep irel for this heavenly realm by the mi&siou ot tne frosts stand up aaJ wv their scepters'.'' And I looked and, behold ! nine-tenths of the r-.iieomed rose to their feet, and nine-tenths of the scepters swayed to anl fro in the light of the sou that never sets, un 1 then I under- atoa I far better than I evur did before taat trouble comes for brneflcent purposes, nn 1 that on the coldest nights the aurora is brighioet in the northern heiv-ns, an 1 that 'by the br.-ath of God frost is given." Origin of tlie Arab Steed. The origin of tho best strain ol Amliiad blood has been related by some roiiiabccr. "iVhiie Mohammel was ilgtinej his way to jfreatness ho was ouie compelled to lead his corpa of 20, (NO cavalry for throe days w.th uut a drop of water. A l last, from a hill top, they de-K'tite-rt the silver t-t:c;.k of a distant river. Mohammed ot'ered his trumpeter to blow the call to dis mount and loose the horses. The poor t rutcs. t-turvini? for water, at uikc sprang into a m id gallop toward t:ie lon-e 1-for fc'o.il. No sooner loosened than came the alarm fal-e, as it happened of a sudden ambush. ' To Poise!" was blown, ami repeated by a hundred bugles, luit the demand was t-o ureat: the I p. eh-; 1 throats wero not to be re fine 1: the stampede urew wilder a d wilder as -0.000 steeds pushed tics peiaieiy for tho river banks. Of all the f 1 antic crowd but live itrires rcspou led to the caH. To th 'sc duly was highcrthan suilering. 'i'h y turned their tra Us, caim! bravely biicU". i lehding in t heir eyes and anguisii iu tl.e.r sunken lianks, and stood before tin; I'rophet. Love for their master and a sense of obe ii ence had con'juercd their distress, but their b't olshot eyes told of a fear ul torment the more pathetic for thoir diimbne 8 Tho daner was over; the faithful m ires were at onro released but Mo hammed sc'.ccfd the-e live for his own use; an J they were the dams of one of the greatest races of the des tit From them ha.e f-prung the be t of Arabian steeds. It ean how ever, Ecat' cly I e cla mcd that tha avo.age lior c of the ('ri nt comes u;i to this ideal, lie must have beon bred from the l'.i.li'J'). Col. T. A. Do ne. I'nite I States Army, iu Har per's Maoazine. Keep Vonr Owu Soercts. if you are unfortunate enough to have secrets, Ke p them to yourself. A secret in joint tenancy is no secret, l'.ut it has been said that all things should be common among friends, that uothine; should lie reserveJ or hidden. This remark belongs to the region of the true and the beautiful, but by co mean to that of the politio or the useful It is a remark 111 the wort's of Mr. H eller. ! r , '-wei-gina on tiie poetical " It Is absurd tosup. pose that another, to whom your secret may be of little or no consu. quence will keep the matter which you, to whom it may be of the great est consequence, cannot keen "A faithrul m::n who can find." .'o treachery may be involved ia the breach of tnn'ldence. It isnot gener ally a couai Jeruion of his own ad vantage which induces a man to be tray the secret of his friend; rather it is an inordinate love of talking. As taciturnity li said to be a chief characteristic of tbe mad portion of mankind, so loquacity may be eaid to Le that of the sane. It :s thi3 garru lous habit which leads to an inter change of tae teoros'ical remarks be tween two who meet by chance, who have no interest in common, imd, having little to say on this, fcae nothing to suy to one another on any other eu' jcct tinder the nun: and it Is this same hn'iil which divuici secrets, and s-.pi'rates friends. Those who are troubbl with tho disease can no n.orc resi.-t its insidious at tacks than th linn aua ad the royal family and the lurds of his council and all the nobility ccu'd tcfiuln from ilanciag in the story hen tho manic pipe was played It is the tfiory of nature to conceal a matter, but it is the happiness of mankind to declare a seciet. Why nntuie 1 nilt a v-.,iiig womnn so .hat tne prefer" wul .).; to wasluLp disLcs ts one of th :uj -ti r"i-B. A not'lo i.ati'te ct- id ne Httruct tht noble, and slon kn.jv, s Low to retuii. t-lierr. Tho ihilonopber th.i wt.'te tht Bood n.mc I better than riches ctve iiad a co-'O ia nu American rjurt of law Tis better far to love and be poor, than be rich with an empty heart. A lazy man is necessarily a bad man: an idle is necessarily a demoralized population. : Soman can be provident of his time ho is rot provident in the choice of : is company. ; It is very hard to believe that a thing s rightly done when it is not done onr ray. J FIVE CIVILIZED TKIBE? nrDiA-srs who haw jeabnei THE WHITE MAN'S I.E330NS. White Men Getting "Head Rights" bj Marry Ins Indian Girls The In dlan Form or Government. UNCLE SAM has protected tht civilized tribes ot the Indian Territory longer than he evet did any other Indian landhold ers very much longer than any ona thirty years ago ever thought he would. Their area has been pared down on ever.i side, wherever an excuse could be rosd 1 by loose or broad, stridor lstitudinanan construction of laws and treaties, aad still the five Nations owns some 20. 000,000 acres of land, or about S0,00.i square miles. And there are certainly not more thaa 65,000 to hold it, including people ol all colors. Just how many of the 03, 000 are full-blooded Indians it would bt hard to say. The traveler bIodi? tut main roads get tbe impression thnt they are not as one in ten, even in a district where they have a majority. Big coal-mining companies, big cattle 'companies and big "citizens'' of the Nations who have been able to fence in large tracts practically own more than half of it. And most of these "citi zens" are white, or nearly so, for all the Nations, the Cherokees especially, have been absorbing white blood ever sice: they were discovered. Of late year: hundreds or thousands of enterprising young men from the adjacent ritate; have married Indian girls to get "head rights" in some Nation and a chance at the land. In the Chicktaw Nation these people are known by -the flat title ol "squaw men," but the other Nations, more civilized, call tbem "adopted citi zens." These and the detcendents ol men like these make up the majority of the citizens of the five Nations. But among the Cherokees there is 1 far more honorable white ancestry. While missionaries settled in the trlba early in tbe Eighteenth Century, and! k hite children taken In war were adop ted. When the Revolutionary War closed tho best class of the Tories in tbe Caro linas gathered up their movables, crossed tbe mountains and located among tha, Cherokees In upper Georgia. Hence tbs; prevalence 01 ccoicn names 111 toat trine. Ooo reads of Indian Legislatures, and when he reaches TaUicqusa or Atoka it gives him "quite a turn" to see a map as white as Tom Reed wielding th i Speaker's gavel. John Ross was by fi tiie most noted Cherokee ot his time, lie was as white as Abraham Lincoln. Tho present Speaker of the Cheroke 1 House is W. D. Clark, a white man with no trace of Indian blood, dark-eyed, chin-whiskered, nervous and business, like, with a look ia his face that says hi would just as lief fight as not. IIu pushes the council along in great style. All the five Governments are republi can in form, but native titles are re. tained. Thus, the head of the nation it called Principal Chief, his vice is Second Chief and the Legislature consists of t House of Kings aud a House of War. riors. In the legislative records of taa Cherokees one often sees the names ol Black Fox, Pathkiller, Turtle at-Home, Young Wolf, Bark Flute, Big Rttlin$ Gourd and Soft9hell Turtle. Among the other Nations it is much the same, thsugh English names are rapidly in creasing. Next to the Cherokees in tribal im portance are tbe Choctawi, and t'u.. present chief ls Wilson N. Jones, of the Ok-!a-fa-lay-a clan. He was born u Mississippi, where thcra were man Cuoctaws of that clan, but his fathci came to the Territory when the preseni chief was but two years old. Ciiiof Jonet lives eighteen miles from Caddo. Ib receives a salary of $20U0 a year, bui doesn't need it, for he is a very rich man. Although quite light-colored In is very much of a Choctaw, for he apeikf scarcely any English. lie made his for tune in trade and cattlo taisin. The two political parties in the Choc taw Nation are known to each other a "Eagles" aad "Buzzards," and tb former, the progressive, are now in power. Although the land in the Choc taw country is good enough to make whites eager for it, the great object, especially with the railroads and specula tors, is coal. There seems to be fine coal everywhere in the Choctaw country. It has been mined there in greater or less quantities for twenty-five years. Tht present output is something over 1,000, 000 tons annually. Tbe Choctaw mining laws allow a citizen who discovers a coal deposit to lay claim to it and to the land for one mile about it. This claim must be recorded with the County Clerk. The Nation demands a royalty of hall a cent per bushel on all coal mined, and the owner of the land gets another roy alty, so there is much strife about titles, and an awful amount of perjury. The word "owner" is used for con venience, as it is no easy thing to get any kind of title. By the laws ot all the Nations any man can use whatever land he fences in, provided ho leaves a certain amount of vacant land between him and the next occupant. But thii last proviso is so generally disregarded that theie is great confusion. Tbe Choctaw pasture laws allow tin fencing by each citizsn ot one square mile of land, requiring that roadway be left between all pastures. Tbe citizen! frequently interpret the law to mean one square mile of land for each member of a family, and the result is found in some almost endless pastures. In fact, these land laws receive about as much atten tion as. Indian laws generally. A Choc taw when he wants pasture land takes what he pleases. Many of tbe chizen landholders lease their claims to non resident farmers at fifteen cents an acre, and these non-citizens raise fine crops of cotton and corn. As there are but 14, 337 Choctaws, and they have 16,4jJ square miles, they could run along in this careless fashion for quite a while if whito men would let them. White men are not in the habit of let ting a good thing alone. There are ai res J y some thousands of coal miners in the Nation, and tha Choctaw Govern ment receives in royalties on coal about fllO.000 per year. The Nation baa many other sources of official income and is rich without taxation. There is a fee of $ 100 charged for any white man who marries a Choctaw girl, but the practice now is for the couple to elope to Texas, marry there, return and claim "head rights." New York Advertiser. 1 A Queer Proposal. A grand-daughter of Delacroix re ceived the following curious pro posal of marriage front tbe famous Champlleury: "Mademoiselle If you believe, as I bave heard, that an unmarried person is like the half of a pair of scissors, which is use less without the other half, I offer you my sympathies, my love and my best efforts to cut together the material of life." The youn girl'8 answer was the gift ot apair of scis sors, followed by a marriage thref weeks later. Teaix-robbing Is becoming so dan Itous that the industry ls suffering !roru great depression. And the on y safe burglars now are those who tave Quit the business - - Dyspepsia, tlie Blues. Headache. 'T wMrnLvnihl nnd dull 11 the time: In short, d the WuHfc; iVU slt'tcall over and often thought I Anul1 rtooti (lif. ( ould not s!p, eat or work witfe mttfwtion. Mr ntorn-ich whs out f onler. I spent mtany d.jJiftr for tutVine. all forlittie. or I mitfht Mr, no tieiiftit. I anwand reud so nituU about MootTa 'rnapttrtna toat I thotiKht I would try it- Th flrt-t aottle inmit a iltrTfr-nt feli:iic. no I kpt on till I ImJ taken thrvt. The mvrv pain tn my back, headache am! dlstrv In my sinnwti, all trarea ivt ! t p"ii have entirely diwppeared and I can ftt, Bleep and work, and liV so nitich hetter than 1 u l to, that I cannot thank Hood's rsa parti la et-jlj;;h.- John HoodsS3pr Cures SriKLV, "IS tocuat Stmt. -xll;t fa. Hood's Pills cure sict hesdaohe. Tides. A short time before Dr. Charcot died he said in a lecture that seral scieutisls had for more than flftv years ridicukd thj Idea that the full of the moon waa a dangerous time for mad people. Letter-informed mtn are coming back to that old-time notion, said Lr. Charcot, as tte result of increased learning on the subject of e;iith tides, similar to the o.-cillation of sea tides. A CHILD LXJOYS The pleasant flavor, gentle action and soothing effect of Svrup of Fies. when in need of a laxative, and if the father or mother be costive or bilious, the most gratifying results follow its use ; so that it is the best family remedy known and every family should have "a bottle. Western Pennsylvania chemists are striving for a common method in ex imining iron and steel. Fifty Cents Well Invested. Koonomy is wealth; simple incidents have established the destinies of mon archies and of republics, monopolies mid individuals. Timely appliances will often avert grent evils; prompt action is frequently required and only a little of that to prevent serious con-equencca. lake "a cold, for example. If not checked in time, like a spark of tire, it may cause great trouble, suffering and lirtr-!. lo stop a fire in the begin ning is comparative.- an easy process to that of subduing an extensive con flagration. So Radway's Ready Relief taken in time will prevent all of the serious consequences arising from ne glecting a cold. For a chill, take from a half to a teaspoonful of Ready Relief in a half tumbler of water, drink it down and repeat if necessary, to warm up. For pains in the chest, side or Dack rub freely with Ready Relief, applied ly tlie hand, till the skin comes to a glow; cover well up and keep warm; one or both of the above pplianees will cure ninety-nine casos out of every one hundred. Investigations of rain drops lead to the conclusion that some of the large drops must be more or less hollow, as they fail when striking to wet the whole surface inclosed within the drop IIoot'h ThU ! Vo offi-r One II-.in.lr"l I) .llirs Tlewiinl fur nnr raei.f 4'Marrh thai i-.t.m -t be cured by lliiU'a t atarrli Cur. K. J.Chkhlt Co., Vrnr-i., Tolodn, O. "VW, the umlrrMlfrned, ltae known F. J. Clin. npy fur I lii.t 15 year-, ami Iwlieve bim inr-fet-tly hQnnmltle In all business transactions anl financ ally a.hl la carry out any o:Iit:;i I ton mmle by t ue.r firm. Wubt Ac Thcax, Wholesale Druei;"5'! Toledo, Ohio. VTalmvo. KiftvAit & Marvi.s, "iVliolexa'.e lirugeistM, Toledo, Ohio. ITa Ta t atarrli 'un Is taken internally, act ing dirctiy up n the l.ioo-t an l mucous mi:--l.ice of tbe system. ITi.-e, 7V. Mr botlle. Sole, by all Druggist. Testimonial: fret;. Experiments made by M. d'Arson val with an instrument which he calls myoplione proves, contrary to the older opinion, that nervous excitability may exist for many hours after death. POSTAL GUIDE FOlt 1S: I CnntalnlntnK all the pout offices nrrjni;.' I al babel leal ly. In St.ttes and l ountle. witli all nibrr matters relating to post office affilrj cm be ordered from B. Sali.noer. P. O. Box. lisj. Philadelphia. 1'a. No business man should bs without It. Price i2.io pai.er cover with monthly; tiLCl. cloth cover with o.ontltly. If In every land between Spitsbergen anil Fatagonia there is some species of the common blood- sucking mosquito. In British America and Alaska they are very large and troublesome. Jf afflicted w Itb soreeyes use Pr. Isaac Tlmmp son' Kye waler.Druiutsts sell ati,c. pet bottla. The moon is not so small after all. Its surface area is fully as great as that ef Africa and Australia combined, which would make it only about 13 times smaller than our earth. The Importance of keeping tbe liver and kidneys In good condition cannot be overesti mated, llood's fsarsaparilta is a great remedy ror regulating and invigorating these organs. Hood's Pills act easily, yet promptly and Hectlvely, on the liver and bowels. -J6c. The actual occupancy of Mars by a race superior to our own is said to be very probable. Coughs anil Cold. Those who are suffering from Coughs, Colds. Sore Throat, etc., should try Bbotvn's Bronchia i. TBocnra. ff only in boxet Tiie coins of Constantine struck A. I). 312 were the first to bear the Christ ian emblems. These showed the cross, 'the monogram of Christ, and sume- umes me worus aiptia ana omega. A wonderful stomach corrector Heecham'a Tills, fteecham's no other. 2 cents a box. The astronomers discovered twenty nine new planets during the laet year "German Syrup 99 My niece, Emeline Hawley, vratf, taken with spitting: blood, and she ) became very much alarmed, fearing I that dreaded disease, Consumption I She tried nearly all kinds of mcxli- cine but nothing did her any good. Finally she took German Syrup rxd she told me it did her more good than anything she ever tried. If stopped the blood, gave her strength and ease, and a good appetite. J had it from her own lips. Mrs. Mary A. Stacey, Trumbull, Conn. Honor to German Syrup. T . fill n bunts nntNt au. tLbt UH-S. Best Couata turn p. TatsJooa. SELECT SIFI1NS5. There are only two lawyers ia Iceland. Asphalt pavements were first laid in ?ris in 1851. The notation system of writing muiic was invented in 1070. A Sedalia (Mo.) preacher advertises good muiic and abort sermons. Durinsr tiis Tears tnat Henry VIII. .-signed 72,000 thieves were hanged. The swords of Damascus were world amous tire hundred years before the Christian Era. A dozen bee trees in Kcw M"-' vera lAtely tapped, aad yielded 600 pounds of wild honey. Tweaty-Sve large nails wero found in the stomach of a bulloc recoat'y slaughtered in Wilkesboro, N. C. An antideluvian frog has b - .'uan.l. .... i, ;l AAal in anthracite COal still aiivc, iiuuuu5 - J00 feet below tbe surface of the ground. Performances at theatres or. ancieni. Greece sometimes lasted twelve hours, aeven o'clock: in the morning was the time for the raising of tho curtain, so to apeak. Frasseville, one of the New HebtiJei Islauds, is said to be the smallest lis-publ-c in the world. Its population comprises forty whites ana about 5Jtf Africans. The citv of B-injaD, in Creat U-.-'.aria, ia cut in the side of a mountain. Tatre are 12,000 artificial caves and tsro statiiES, one ninety, the other twenty feet high, each hewu from a sing.o stoue. A pistol ball was recently removed front tha right thigh of a man which had bean thera since 1801. Tne ball, It is said, had gravitated about a foot aad a halt through the flesh in the last twenty-cine years. A couple of pheasant", joined after the , Ar RimiiMs twin, were shot hv a hunter in Bellefonte, Oregon. The connecting ligament was half an laca lon 5 and a quarter of an inch thicV, aud' uuiteU taeui just ia front of thu wings. A level head is possessed by a certaia voung m tn iu "W'inaraac, Iud. IIj love 1 two girls equally well, and bjta of the a adored him. He set them to cooking a dinuer, etcit ia turn, in his presenc-3. Ha mirricd the one who;e dinner he pre ferred. Theiabasheea plowsl upinAnJrew County, Missouri, a a ancieut Roman sword", it is reported, whic'a is believed tci h;tva buloue i t soms me:nhsr of Uj S to"s erps-lition, who were eiplor iag in thit pare of t:i3 ciuntry i tha mi Idle ot the Sixteait'u Century. ralindromes, that is to say, sentences ,tho letters of which reJ the same from left to right or right to left, are just now very popular in London at home gather ings. Here are several good examples: Eros stw Ere tub, but Kri was sore Itepel a leper .".. i- a cat I saw Evil did I ere I did live Big was I ere I si. v Gib. The "oyster" is thought by epicure to be the sweetest til-bit of a turkoy. It is a portion of exceedingly tender dark meat which lies in a hollow on each side of the backbone, near and just above the second joint. F.y examining the jbare frame of a carve J turkey, the to hollows where the "oysters" lie will be cosily perceive J, and one will note that their shape is a long oval. Do your clothes last as they used to If not, vou nival t.e n-ing a atxtp or washing jwvdn' Ibnt rota tbem. Try Ui cofnl otU-tnthtoHeU lKl.hins' Electric Soup, perectly pure to-fluv u Iu l!S. A MOORISH PRISON. Horrible Dungeon Wl:er Human He ins Are Co'inned. Of all the places where human be ings are confined for punishment, there are said to be none so horrible as the prisons of Morocco. The one presented in our illustration is situ ated at Fez, and was, a short time ago, visited by a traveler who gives the following description, of it: Vou nscend by a narrow t.t;ii reuse, lie writes, and come ut. t.n a fiat foof bathed in the glor ous sp ring sun. At jour feet is a square opening with a heavy wooden grating. It is hell's hatchway. Yon look down and instaDtly iurn i-Icic with the horrible steuch which aris"". You look again and you see down there upturned faces, white, passionless, XXTERIOR or A MOORISH FR180B. despairing, and up from the derithi comes the clank of chains. Dark- fou!, damp; a den or filth and fever, where mind ls destroyed and body racked with ague; a pit of destruc tion whence the most fervent prayer that comes up must be the prayer for swift death. "What are thete Drlsoner-,?" I asked the guard who accomrjanied rue. "They aro all bad people," lie said. "Murderers?" "Thev are roo ters many of them, and there are many of tho tribesmen who made the trouble recently at "Wazzan and attacked the town; others arc debtors, mci who owe money to Jews and others." "And they are all kept together down there murderers and roblx-rs and reb els and debtors?" "Yes." "And when will they be tried?" I might as well have asked the man the exact day and hour of the next total eclipse of the sun. lie knew nothing about trials, and his ldeaa as to the meting out of Justice to the wretches below began and ended right there In the pit that was Justice. They wer bad people, and there they were. There is no fixed term of imprison ment; the murderer and the robber and the rebel stay In the hole till they die; the debtor stays there till he pays, and if he doesn't pay he dies, too. No writ of habeas corpus runs In Morocco. Anl these thlng3 are done within six days' steam from Charing Cross; within twelve hours' ride from the residence of all the mi potentlary and envoys extraordinary uu ...jusua ui me great pewers! And is nothing ever done? Has the opln lon of Europe found no expression' Have the reports of Executive Com mittees of philanthropic societies availed, naught? Oh, yes: Once in a while the Moorish authorities give tbo prtjonj a Cm of whitewash. IF YOU WANT TO FEEL A PERFECT CURE PROMPTLY, CF LUMBAGO, SL JACOBS OIL WILL DO IT AS NOTHING ELSE CAN DO, FARM ffOTiig. 1 LaSD PLASTER FOB BTjttZSr Professor Dean, of the Ontario Agri- blaster instable!: "tte use con luiy n our floors a liberal quantity of J.'ad plaster or gypsum, which has three effects: (I) It Cs the ammonia and makes the manure more valuable. (-J sweeter,, the stable, absorbing bid It sweetens beUcr ..ndsneatandy. I- iKcf.sa hour after our cow, mr , cut vou would scarcely know . -Ud been in. This is accomplished I by liberal use of plaster and whitewash. Both are cheap." SOOT TKA TOR FLAST3. One of the best fertilizers for pot plants is soot. It not only nourishes the plant, tut keep, the sod sweet, Kill destroy all worms and insects, aad e. en rent the green fly. It best use i m a liquid form. One tablespoon ful of so"t to two quarts of warm water is a li.np.e WBy of making the tea. If one dot res to make it in larser quantities, put into a vessel holding filtcen gallons of wa'cr a half peck of soot, and stir twice a for a week. Probably the better way ,s to tie the soot securely in a coarse T.hichU Urge enough to let the soot swell and move about inside it. lurow tte ba" into the water and allow it to oak, moving it about occasionally, -r prcssin" it with a stick to extract tue strength. As the water is used out fres i can be added as long as any soot remains. Give the plants light aoses oi mo oaceortwicea week. Dilute if to. ttron", because if used in toa thick a state it will make the surface soil toj hard and dry. Soot mixed with twice its bulk or dry earth may be used for a top dressijg in sue earden witn goo-i reauiio. -i; fork World. BLVST150 STC.MPS. Til rrnmnhio Drciudice a2aiat the - . . r i ;omn;on use of dynamite for any :nd o. : tvork on a faroi, or by iaexperieneel per ions, makes it desirable to me t'.ie cu.n- t nou bhck powder for su--h purposes. ! This is not renlly 'i tare as the dynamite when in the hands of experts, but safer j otherwise, and persans generally under hand it better. To bresk un stumps with blasting powder proceed a. lollows: j Bore a hole 1J inches wide into the I rentre of the siutp in such a direction j is to reach tae middle of it near the root; c'iare it in the usuil manner, lining plenty of powder, one foot in depth at least for a large stump; pro cure a screw with a hole through it for the fuse, and a square head by wh:ci it mny be screwed down on to the powder. Fire the fuse, and the stump will be jhattcrcd so that it can easily be taken nut iu pieces. A lookout for the icrew ihould be made when the explosion takes place, and it may be picked up and used again. It may be well to put some dry iao.l on the po.vder under tba screw. It is most often the case that the scre.v le mains in the wood aad caa be split out of it. Xew York Timc3. no-v to cnEAras feeds. The prices of feed bid fair to be high the coming winter, and such will con tin ie to be tbe case every winter, as long as there is such a tremendous demand for all sorts of millstuffs, on the part of dairy farmers, all over this broad land. The dairymen are all right in their ideas of feeding well, but they are all wrong ill not growing more of their own feed. Wheat is way dovva l.i the lowest notch t?e have seen in thirty years, and bran t'.imbirjg up in price every day. We are not certain but those fanners who are (cell situated to do it had better buy the wheat by the car load and get it ground at tae u-tom mill, and feed the bran and middlings, selling the flour for what they can real z ". If we were in Northern Dakota or M nnesota we would not sell wheat at j.iy coats a bushel, if we had good cows to feed it to, and butter thirty-one cents a pound in Chicago. We believe there are four pounds of butter in a bushel of wheat fed to a good cow, with good roughage in addition. Bat whether in j the Uakotss or New York, everywhere the dairy farmer is at the mercy of the feed van Jer. This would not be so if the majority set seriously to work to produce their own feed, in some form or ether. The mischief is, the most of far mers stop feed when prices of feed go high, no matter what the price of butter i. Fi'bat a lot of education we all do need on this feed oiestion. There is so little real figuring so little really studied out by the dairy farmers by which they can figure. The way to bring down the price of feed stuff is for more farmers to go at growing peas and silage corn. Not one man in a thousand knows what he could do if he should try. Uoard' Pairvman. TO KBEP BUTTER. To keep batter several months it la necessary that the butter be perfectly well made and be completely freed from all traces of tlie buttermilk, or this wilt quickly spoil it. It must then be packjd without delay in air-proof packages ; i glazed crock or jar is a good package, or a new, clean whito oak or spruce tub, with a tight-fitting cover. This is first soaked with water and a little soda tc remove any acid of the wood. It is then well scalded and soaked with salt brine. Then it is rinsed with pure cold watei and f pvinkled with fine salt on the in side. Tbe butter is then packed in sol idly, eac:i layer of four inches being wel packe'i, to leave no air spaces, anc .rin'-uc I with line salt. Then anothei layer ls psckea m tne same way, ana so on until the tub is full. A clean cover of cotton cloth is laid over the top ' of the buiter; this is covered with fine dry salt, and the cover is fastened down. Care is to be taken to exclude air by covering and packing under the cover. The tub is then kept in a clean, dry, airy place where no disagreeable smells may affect it. Good butter thus packed may be kept foi sir or eight months without the least deterioration. The Jtrsey cows make good butter, which bat a high color, and some of them make a good deal of it, but tbe best are too costly for common uje. A good, well lea Ayrshire cow is as good for butter as a Jersey for a working dairy. Some Durham or short-horu cows are good butter makers, and a goU jud e of ectoTv?i!ght ge,,dairy of th8 co stock that would be very good if well selected The best cLLadU . half-bred Jersey having a good common dam and a pure sire. Some ot these vre as good as the pure bred. Wbt Brings Release From DirHiirGrnvirv, Don't You Knmv? SAPLIO Sjme Curlois Eematm. Somo very curious aad imporUat ir chaeological regains were urseirthe' M Cre3oa, loa, the other diy by k,, workman engaged in digging a cellr. They struclt what at tint appeared to bi a solid ledge of roci or co i!, aaJ, aittia? down to rest, one of them becpn idly t peck at an apparent fissure, when a w'ld block nearly two feet square disippta with a dull thump. The men set eigW!y to work, and removing the bottom of the pit discovered a chamber wifa , tifteen-foot ceiling twelve by twenty frel in extent, the walls biun or neuir seamed stone work. Iiangel in rowj n'a rudely constructed platforms wero ke'e. tons, each with a toinnhank anl 1 arrow at its side, earrings an b:ac;:e-, of lead lying where they were dropped, and piles of what appeared to hT9 bea furs in the centre of the platform, e;i pile crumbling to du-t as sooa u ex posed to light. A number of tools made of copper were unearths 1 ami freh dis coveries are constantly beia nu-ic. Picajuno. Nature never puts the wrong oiors h juxtaposition, and a good p.aa waea choosing an evening go.vn is t s-'.ejt the colors of a flower au J leaf. Mrs. M. A. Ilauleabeck, of ';; York, who has been s commercial traveler for ten years, earns $ 50U0 a year in commis tions upon the sales she makes. Mrs. Monarchesi, wife of the publis'j. er, has invented and receive.! tae patent papers lor a new gridiron which is on. sidercd a great improvement on taa oW one. Mis3 Virginia Penny, the a lt'anr, who gave not only her time but her entire fortune for the advancement of wj r. i, ia now living iu dira poverty ia X. Eork. There has been considt rable ili- sion as to who invented ?;.e. tu. 1. hu who had the phiasure f v. an; ,' tl.e firt pair. The liomr is p.!,cra',; awarded to an ItaliAnn-im-' 1 S-ilvin. Armati, who died in 1-"17. A vine at TTn niton '-t-vt. I "i which w.-is 1.ii;'.ih1 in 17'. is I -lit -.-.. to be the lurg.js-t in th- world. I;, branches extend over :i s;.;ne of i' :. i feet. It usually l.":t.s ii .w.ir.l- ... 2,000 bu;iches of gr.ip.'s i i t'.'.v. Vestniintcr nniv-rity is the !:::: nf the new l'resbytM-ian S. hool ut 1 .-:: ver. It will be open f. v i'l kr't" t full. ij I , V t-, l v.si, ,ntlr -..-t ! R . "A. cnil- ' ;" ' '.'' ' 1 110 -tf l.- ru:i-i:. S-ei.:t-? ' 1 li 1 . :i re.e.i : BRAOFiCLD r.i.GULftTOft CO.. AT!.T. C. "!."" ." -i T" p-; kv..il 4 . II Boot, E vorit it.au I luKIlitJl, '. . . .. . ' Inferior -j... Colchester Rubber Cc. The Best Cliristmas Gilts or the Lest addition ta one's own hhrarv S INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY WEBSTER The .Vew "Unabridged." Ten years pj-ent reviMln.lim editors emilovt?l, and over $3A7V0 exii-iided. A Grand Educator Abreast cf the Times A Library In Itself Invaluable In thf household, and t.i the teacher. it.f.---aional niuu, or 6if cduciuor. Sold by Ail JlookselUn. C. A C. Merrlam. Co. j'utuifhera. Springfield, Mass. tVEBSTTR'S lLVTERS.rXN'.! CJPo not tuy riieap phttn. ,DiCTiox.jrr ty6end tor free pronpectu. jAN"r5 EA "Va Ml LY "m ED I C IN t I For IniM.Hiln. li. 1 for InillvM.in. Km itmnrlcxlua, 4tfvnU Hratli. f mtul ail disorders ox Uie buu&ach. LlTerr.d BowtI, !.R,NS TABOLE8 !b ll fUo tli-ir u-. Boi.l I For trvr ni pl-s .T lr. ..i.J." New To-V FOR FIFTY YEARS! I MRS. WINSLOWS i SOOTHING SYRUP f ? IT? nf1,.b'' Mttlions nf "VTo-her- I i 1.?" ihlWren wlille for o. r S iirty Y-ar. It Booths, tbe child. ...fi.ns tl.e 5 E.'liJL11'"' Jin. cuiwa wlud colic, auU u the befit remfwfv f..-H..-.. & Twenty-five Cents a Bon'o. If nr one d'ni: 3 w an cure thu tu . Untue c-e ia a day, let him wr patUcnlar n-i in (rat our relUb ity tininrlaj . bv k :p 00,000. Wfcen Bi" ELC03 POISOH A SPECIALTY. iT, w "aPe or Slavic Cyphlienr-1 th that willcRro pennimentl-r. P iW.v Tui --cts, trosa. iwn xvXKiT CO.. OlCagO, lil. Jjrrslnlast war, liadjudicaluisciaiiu., ait s..a. FHIL. 'pTT'" M A c R , lU r,k.-.. "" oir. 6mlu.urfca M.U.3t'.lt. SO'iArtestown. !. f . ' ' I it lU'.l. -l-. v-. . V OUti, .'.ant ' f X'f CI--:-! -!-r-Ji.T- .-. X "'- 1 ' .! .a: .1. ; rf- .i-Y , be-t iv nr. ti'? BtbT IN' V KAKIMJ sSy VLAIJ1V. Kr f -'f -a" The outer rr tap p.: 'JLZ rr-s: ext.n.lh ibe w l.ol.-1.-...- t-1-? . sf' -C-r UOWDtotl.tr lit-l.l.iOU-. c-. -r .,. 5 t "ijii '"s ti i.t iu .i . 'Ji "-"' . v in o: her bar 1 sis p ;ssar 1 ; If s 5 I