i.- - . THE M1DDLEHUKGH POST. T. H. IIARTKR, Edit aud Tm'b. miiii.kbukoii. pa., ma it. o. i, There aro 313 farmer la the Missouri Penitentiary, the largest representation. i . Ami now Italy has a great National candal on its hands, larpe enough to distract Italian attention from Franco and its Pinama troubles. The Atlanta Constitution it authority for tho statement that General Long atrcet would have gone into Hayes's Cab inet ha 1 it not been ascertained that he was a vehement Hlaino man. YoUing'e Island, where Columbus first landed when ho discovered America, his twolvo whtto anil six hundred colored residents. Tho blacks arovcry poor and the whites are not much better off. Tho crops fuilcd last year nnj the people having little or no coinmuiication. with the outshlo world find it a hard matter to live. Tiicy aro in great need of a schooner to ctmblo them to commuuicato with ncigiiborin! islands. Tho case of Corporal Orrin K. Wolfe, United States Army, is lather peculiar. Ho failed to pass his examinations nt Watt 1'oint, and thereupon enlisted as a privato in tho army. He rose to be cor poral, passed the examination for second lieutenant and was about to bo enmruis siouoJ, when it was discovered that ho would obtain tho rank six months be foru his classmates, who weto still at tho Military Academy. Ilia commission has been held up. You cannot tell how a boy will turn out. Professor Beatty, who for many years has been at the head of tho D in villo (Ky.) College, says there were at one time two boys under him whoso school lifo he remembers well one, John C. Drecktt) ridge, a very ordinary scholar, who did not promise much; tho other a boy whom ho thought a marvel, nnd who, ho expected, woutd reach tho behest position in the laud. Speaking with Governor Crittenden, of Missouri, about tho-.o two boys recently, Professor Beatty said the marvel was now teach ing in a deaf and dumb asylum, whilo the other became Senator nnd Vice president and ouco was a candidate for tho Presidency. 0.'' ernor Critten den's clnss of twenty1 -s the pro--;, tot thin:T"rJ'- "Ifteca of . .n.:...,u'1'' "- "balder fi t jtistical Associate,, published recently in its quarterly bulle tin some interesting suicide s'tistic gathered in New England through a period of thirty years, states tho New York Time j. From these stitistics it is seen that tho suicidal tendency is steal ily increasing iu tho four States of Mass achusetts, Uliodc Island, Connecticut and Vermont, mid that tho incrcaso inco 18(10 hxs been nt lenst ten per cent. The data presented hIiow that in Massa chusetts, Vermout and It lode Island the.e is u very steady and consistent in. crcoso in tho rate per million, while in Connecticut tho increase has been stir. frisingly out of proportion, which, thu writer says, "is ditlioult to parallel iu English spcakiug countries" From IS'li) to 1805, for txiiuplc, tho average num ber of suicides per million iu C'.muerti cut was forty -six, while from ltS0 to lSSS tho average was I'M, which is far iu excels of that shown by tho statistics of tho other States mentioned. Tho fig. ures presented by tho association sho.v that t lie popular belief that the inaxi niu'ii tendency toward suicide is found in the earlier nges is erroneous, uud that, as a matter of fact, tho maximum ten dency for males, ut leait, f ills between seventy mid eighty. This result is found to be very consistent throughout each successive year. The sniue uniformity is not found iu the female lex, in which tho tendency toward suicide is more evenly distributed all through life than in tho mule sex. April appears from these statistic to be tho unit propitious month for the suicidal mania. There cai bo no doubt that tho maximum is reached in that month, as the statistics iu all the States produce the aaaiu re sults us to seasonable laws. The mini, mum number of suicides in tho New England States i.i found to have oc curred in tho month of February. Hang ing may be said to bo the most popular method of suicide for males and poison n. f.KU1. A ,.L... .1 lui ivumtiM. v iaui.g iuiuujll IUU alii tistics shows thai men prefer poison next to haugiug, with "cutting the throat" and "firearms and other weap ons" next in order. Women use poison principally next to hanirinir and drown - They also "leap fro.u heights," a mon soldoin 1 do. I "' nop' ike. OH Hi J.oltzwortli, wfii tHijg. It cost ' . J.i-'lAJ. A.iM.it . gflfl'l 1 giTHeSSl A SERMON TO MANKIND, REV. DR. TALMAOE TALKS To Persons of All Ants In Life's War frs. Ood Should be a Man's Daeker During all the Different and Var ied Stages of Bis Career. Tstt: uTh tlnytofonr ynrtar tare tenn and fen." Psalm sc., 101 The seventieth mile ton of life Is here planted as at the end of the journey. A f ew (to beyond It; multitudes never reach It. The oldest person of modern times explret at low years, a nrex or tne name -or Ntrava ride lived to HI year. An Englishman of the name or l nomas 1'arr lived lS'j venrs. Before the time of Moses peole llve'J 153 years, anu 11 you vo rnr enougn Back tbey lived .MO years. Well, that was necessary, because tne story of the world must come down l.y tradition, and It needed lonr life wifely to transmit the news of the past. If the generation had been short lived, tho story wmno; so often have changed llpe that it might have got all astrny. but affcT Moses lirgan to write It down nnn patenment to 1 1 it irom century to can tury it was not tirceswry that people live so lone in order to authenticate the events of thoat. K incur time people lived only twenty -five year?, that would not affect his tory.sinre it is imt in print ani la no longer lei enm nt upon tradition. Whatever your ngc, I will to-dny directly address you. and 1 shall fpak to I hone who are in the twen ties, thu thirties, the forties, the fifties, the statu r, and to those who are in the seven ths and beyond. Fust, then, I accot those of you who (11 a 111 the twenties. You are full of expec taliop. Yen are ambitious thst b, If you iiiiioiint to anything for some kind of sue csr, comniei c al or fm-hint-al or profux hionalor liiMi-nry or ngrieultuml or aouial or iimrnl. If I fiml fonie one in th twenties without nny mrt of ainhitlon, 1 feel like saying: "My friend, you have Rot on the wron planet. XIiIhis not the world for you. You aro poimt to he in the way. Hnvo you luncie your choire of rosrhousf You will nivrr lw nhl" to pay for your r-ndlr. Wno ik ((oin to settle tm ytur boini? Tiiere is a miatakt) about the fact tbut you were Lorn at all." lint supposing you havfl ambition, let me ay to mi the twenties Kxpeet ewi ytliim IIiiuukIi iliviim manipulation, an I then you will jjet all you want or so'iiettiint; better. Are you Inol.'inc for wealth? Well, remem Iht that (Jo.l c nilrols tho money uiark"ty, the liarve-tn, the Uroulit', the critTpillar, tho leeiMts, tha suitchine, the torni, the land, the see, 1111 1 you will Kt wealth, I'er lia. not that which is stored up iu bink', In t af deposits, in ITnitei Ktatea securities, in In mi his anil lands, but your clothing nnd bnni'd nnd slielt-r, and that is about ull Vou an npi roprintn Btiyhow. You cot the Lord u Kreut di-il. 'lo feol and clot In and slii'lter for a hfetimj rcipiires a bi stun of meiii.y. nnd if you nothing more than the nOsolute necersities you get tin enormous amount of supply. Kxpect as much ns you will of any kin I of iicc s; it vou exp.-ct it from the Iord, you ire safe. Iiieuil on nny other riource an 1 vou mny be bally clinenne-l, but depend on (iod and all will bo well. It is a goo I thin;; in the crisis of lifu to have a 111:111 of laro nun in back you up. It is a .'at tiling to have a moneyed institution stand behind you in your undi-rtiikiu. Mut it is a might ier thinx to have the Uod of heaven and eiirtb vour coadjutor, and you may have linn. 1 am so Bind tliHt 1 meet you while you are In th? twenties. You are biyint; our. your plnnr. and nil your life in this world ami tho nxt for .VKi.om.otK) years of your existence will be a (Tec ted by those plans, it is about H o'clock in thn morning of your lift, and you are just starting out. Which way ara you coiug to sturt? O.i, the twen ties! "Twenty'' is a (treat worj In the Wble. Joseuh was sold for 20 piece of silver. Ham sou judged Israel 'iJ years. . ,Kolomon (rave Hirnm cxtiv . The t', --roll that ' 1 II l.'l t.'lici" . . , ilVi:." .""V !:!' . -.V ' done 1.. me twenties 1 Ilomulus founded Home when ho was '.-'. Keats Ulilshed life at - l.sfuvetta whs a world renowned soldier at '..'!. Ob.Tliu ace implislie I his chief work by 27. lionnparte was victor ovi-r Italy at 'Jo. Pitt was prime miuUtei' of KiiKlnnd nt '.!!. L'nlviu hud complete i bis immortal "institute" by the time hu was 'Hi. Urotitis was attorney general nt 'it. Home of the mightiest things for (io I and eternity have b.-eu done in the twenties. As lonx us vou ran put the limin e "i" before thfl other llguro that helps iiercribe your age I have hlh hoix-s nloiit you. I.xjk out for that tlKtiru "'-!.'' Watch it continil'iucj with as mui'ii cnrnestiioss ns you ever wutched anything that iiromis slyourrilv.i tiou or threituiii' I you ileni l"ion. Wuit a critical time, the twenties'. Wnile they con tinuoyou decide your oi-eiiimtioii mil thn principles by which you will b euided. You make your inot iibidmz trieivlsliips. : OU iiiraiine your hunio life. You tlx your habits. Lord (ioi Almighty, for JestH Christ's Hike, have mercy ou ull thu liiuu and women iu tho twenties! Next I uecost those, in the thirties. You ire ut 1111 ao wiien you find what a touh t li in.; it is to get reeuuiz vl and establisael 111 j our occupation or profession. Ten years ao you thought all that was nicjsssry for success was to put on your shutter thu siu of pliysiciun or dentist, or uttorney or broker or aent.und you would have plenty of busi ness. How many hours you sat and wuitel for btisiuesi and waited III vain three per fona only know Jod, your wife and yourself. In commercial life you have not had the promotion and the increase in s ilnry you anticipated, or the plnco you expected to iKciipy in tlm tirni has not been vacated. The proiiut of the farm, with which you expected to support yourself and tnos? du-IM-udiiiR ou you, nnd 10 pay the interest on the morti;iie, has been far lest than you anticipated, or thepricjs were down, or spe cial ex onuses for sickness made drafts on your resources tbat you could not uavo ex pecteJ. In some respects the barilest decade of life is the thirties became the results are generally so far behind the anticipations. It is very rare indeed thut a youuj man dojs as did the young man lust tSun luy nlglit, when ho cuiuu to mu and said: "1 have bjeu so tiinrvelously prospare.1 siuce 1 came to this couutry that I feel, as a matter of gratitude, that I ought to dedicate myself to (Jivl.'' Nine-tenths of the poetry of life has been knocked out of you since you came Into thu thirties. Men in the different pro fessions nnd occupations saw that you wero rising and they inu-t put an estoppel on you or you might somehow stand in the way. They think you inu:it. be tupprevsJd. From 3D to 4 ) it is nn eapecially hard time for young doctors, youii lawyers, youii' merchants, youug liu ue-rs, young mechan ics, young ministers. The struggle of the thirties is for honust and helpful and re munerative recognition. lint few old peo ple know bow to treat young people without patronizing them 011 the onn bant or snub bing thorn on the other Ob, the thirties! Joseph stood botore 1'iiaraoh at:i). David was 30 years old when be bean to reigo. The height of Boloinon's temple was 'M cu bits. Christ entered uuon Hisactive'miuistry at 3i) years of age. Judas sold umisilt for 80 pieces of silver. Ob, the thirties t What a word suggostlve of triumph or disaster! Your decade is the one that will probably afford the greatest opportunity for victory, because toere is the greatest necessity for struggle. Head the world's history aud know wuat ars the thirties for good or bad, Alexander the Great closed his career at 3, Frederick the Ureat uiado Kurope tremble with bis armies at ft5.i.Cortes conquered Mexico at ;t). Uil bt Hhiloh ahd Donelson when 'J4. .1 . 'IT T iha. l...v ion at 33. bir Philip Sydney ' " Jlod and against (dirties, aud your ad between the 150, - "I y i o; your age by 1 isTf r is tarring ou uuuureu a. 1 pnttinc first a flfure "J" and the time why yon will cwiseexprmalof It by putting: flrsi a figure "a'' As it la the (treatest time 0 tha struggle, I adjure you, in Uocfi oarnl and by God's srace, make It the great achievement. My prayer is for all those It the tremendous crises of the thirties. Thi fact Is that by the way you decide the prerf ent decade of your history you decide all tV following deoa lea. I When I wss In Kasala I was disappoint! I In not seeing the battled BoroJII Wb7'. nX th?w ,0"h bsitt'lefal tba small village? It ra, 70 mile, from Mem. Hbttlutilepff.tHtnjrt in which 13V (XXJFreochmevfppi with 109,000 ju sians. and a),0 dead Frenchmen and -lion dear Kussians were left on the field? J. was because the fate of Moscow, the sacra city of Russia, was decided there deoldsi 7'J mile away. And let me tell jmi, peopt of the thirties, you are now nt the jro lino wnence win resound its sueeansesor Its mora disasters clear on into the seventies if yot live to the threescore and ten of the text Next I accost the forties. Yours is the ds cade of dlicovery. 1 do not mean the dis covery of the outside, but the discovery o yourself. Mo man knows himself until h is 4). He overestimates or underestimata hiinsolf. Dy that tints be has learned wh he can do or what he cannot do. He though he had commercial genius enontrh to beoom- a millionaire, but now be is satis'led to mak. a comfortable living. He thougat be hai rhetnriesl power that would bring bint iuta tha L'oitel Htits senate, noiv he is eonlon if he cm suc3aatfully arue a orumon ear ooiore a p jtit Jury. tie thought be had meJical skill tlis. wnuld make him a Mott or a Uroueort Willard 1'arker or a biins: now he flnla liii snhere is that of a family physicitn, pn scribing for tho ordiniry ailments that al- met our rac?. lie was stiling on In a roi and oiild not take a reckoning, hut now l clears up en iuh to allow him f fin i out ha real latitude an t longitude. He has beat climbing, but now he has got to the top of the hbl, and he takes a long breath. He a In It way through the journey at leant, aul he is in a position to look backward or for ward, lis has mora good sense than be eve had. IU knows human nature, for he hai buHii cheated often enou jli to res the baS side of it, and he has met si many grsciotk and kmdlv and spleudii souli be also know the good ti le of it. ; Now conn yours -If. Think God firth? past and deliberately set your compass for another voyage. You have chased enoul thistle lowu. You have blown enough soap bubbles Yo.t have sn the unsatisfying nature of all esrthly things. Ojoti a nea chnpter with Uj 1 and the world. Tais de cide of tlie forties on ;ht to eclipse all iti preuec.'ssors in worship, in uisruin-MS an 1 is h ip,lnes. "Forty' i a grest word in th Hiule. lio I s ancient people were 4J vaar in the wilderness. iCIl julged Israel 4(1 years. David nu I Holouun and Jehoash reined 40 years. W nen Josopa vuited his brethen, ho was 4 ) years old. (hi, this mountain ton of the forties! You have now the character you will probtbly have for all time and all eternity. Go I, by His grace, fometimes changes a man after the lorll-s, but after that a man never changes himself. Tell me, oh men and women who are in the forties, your titbits of thou (ht and life, and 1 will toil you vr.iat you will forever te. 1 may make a uil-ta!e once In a thousand times, but not more than in tint proportion. i My sermon next accosts the fifties. How ()tier it looks when in writing your age you make the first of thi two figures a "3." This is the decade whicU shows who", tne other decade have been. If a young man has sown wild oats aud he has livsd to tols time, be reaps the harvest of it in tbs fifties, or if by necessity be was eompello I to over toil in honest directions be iscmllei to settle up with exacting nature som time during tne tittles. Many have it so harj in early life 'that thay ore octogenarians at ft), tioiatfeas and rheumatisns and neuralgias anl w 1 170s an 1 iusouinias have their play f roe, iu the fit tins. A man's bair begins to w I in, and, although h inay bava w yrn .. uscles be. tvw wsksthinHiilf . iaJ.' No. 1 or. ' ' ' 1 ' 1 1). Whn be geti'a oouzh lills! -it r,J' haoks and clears his I -gob hileaftorward. Oh, ye who ore r.i the fifties, think of it I A bait century of blessing to be thankful for, aula hslf century subtracted from an existence whioii in the most mar Lei esses of longevity hardly ever reaches a whole century. By this time you ought to be eminent for piety. You hive been 111 so many battles you oujbt to be a brave soldier. Vou have muds so many voyajei you ought to be a gooi sailor. Ho long proljcted and blasss.l you ought to have a soul full of itoxology. In liible times in Cansau every C) years was by Hod's command a year of jubilee. The people did not work that year. If property had by misfortune gone out of 0111's posses sum 011 the liftieth year it came back to him. If ho had fojled it away, it was returned without a farthing to pay. If a man had been euslaveJ, he wit in that year emaneip it', A trumpet was souudel lou 1 an I cleur au l Ion;.-, and it was the trumpet o( jubilee. They shook hands, tbey laughed, they congratuln'ed. Wuat a time It was, that fiftieth year! And if under the old dispensation it was such a glad time, under our new and more glorious dispeusi. tion let nil who have come to the fifties hear thu trtrupH of jubilee that 1 now b.oiv. That was the hIIimioii male by Mr. Toplniy, tbejreut hymuologist, whea 11a wi-otc; ltlow yc tha trumpet, b ow Tlie gladly solemn sound: L'.'t all tin nations know. To esrll s remotest tiouail, The yesr of Jubilee is conn. Hciain y rsuiouicJ siuuais hmo. Ye whn bsve sold for niu;ht Vour ti'Titse sIhivs v Hhsll bsvs It litelc uubouc;llt-; Th irift nf .Is. m s love. ' ". To year of JuMlos has corns. ltetura ) rsusuaisd sinners uom. My sermon next nccoits the sixties Tho beginning of that decaio is more startling than any other. In bis chronological jour ney the man rides rar.her smooth I v over the figures "; ' and and "4" and "o," but the figure "tl" gives him a big jolt. He say: "It cannot be that 1 am 6 ). hit me ex amine the old family record. 1 guess they made a mistake. They got my name down wrong iu th9 roll nf births." ltut, no; the older brothers or sitters remember the time of his advent, and there is some relative a year older, and another relative a year younger, and, sure enough, the fact is estab lished beyond all disputation. Hixtyl Now your great danger is the temptation to fold up your faculties and iput. You will feel a tendency to reminisce. l( you do not look out you will lie; I n al most everything with the words, "When 1 was a boy." Hut you ouibt to make the sixties more in noorabie for (lot and tho truth than the tiftios, or the forties, or thi thirties. Ycuoujtit to do more during the next ten years than you did iu any H0 years of your life because ut all the experience you have had. You have committej enough mistakes In life to make you wise above your juniors. Now, under the accumulate t light of your past experimenting, go to work for (iod as never before. When a man in the sixties folds up his energy and feels he has dous enough, it is the devil of indolence to which he is sur rendering, and Clod generally takes the man at bis word and lets bitu die right away. His brain, that under the tension of hard work was active, now suddenly shrivels. Men, whether they retire from lecular or religious work, generally retire to the grave. No well man lias aright to retire. The world was made for work. There remalnetb a rest for the people of Ood, but it is in a sphere beyond the reach of telesoopta. The military charge that decided one of the greatest battles of the ages tha battle of Waterloo 'Was not made until S o'clock in tha evening, but some of you propose to go into camp at U o'clock in the afternoon. My subject next accosts those in the seventies aud beyond. My word to tbetn is congratulation. You have got nearly if not quite through. You bava safely crowed tne sea of life and are) about to anter the harbor. You have fought at Gettysburg, and the war is over. Here and there a sklrmUb with the remaining sluof. your own .. . - - J heart an1 the sin of the world, but I guess yon are about oonew There may be some srork for von yet on small or large soale. Bismarck, of Germany, vigorous In the eighties. The prime minis ter of England strong at Rl. Haydn com posing his oratorio, "The Creation," at 70 years of a?e. Isorratea doin? some of his best work at 74. Plato bny thinklnr for all stooeedingeentnriesat84. William Blake at 67 learning Italian, so as to read Danta in the original. LordCockburn at 87 writing bis best treatise. John Wester stirring great audiences at 85. Willi im C Bryant, without soecteolea, raiding in my bouse "Thanatopsis" at 83 years of age. Christian men and women in all de partments serving Gl after beootnlnir septuagenarians and octogenarians and nonagenarians prove that there are possi bilities of work for the aged, but I think you who are passed the seventies nre near being through . How do roe feel about it? You onght to be jubilant, becauss Ufa is a tremen ious struggle, an t if you have got through respectaoly and usaftilly you ougnt to feel like peop.e toward the close of a sum mer day sentei on thi roc'ii watching the sunset at Bar Harbor or Capi May or L!t out Mountain. 1 am gin I to sav that mo it old Christians are c.ieerfnl. Daniel Webrter visited John' Adams a short time before bis death and found him in very infirm health. Ha aald to Mr. Adams: "lam glut t se you. I hope you are getting nlont pretty well?" The rply wss: "Ah, sir, quite tne cjntrary. I find I am a por tenant ociuoyitg a housr much shatter j t by time. It swavi and tr am bles with every w'inJ, and what is wors, tir, the laodlor.I, as near ns I cin make out, does not intend to make any reoairs." Dr. Boman, after passing into the S3vn ties, was asked by my frirnl, llev. Dr. Hpenr, "Dr. Beman, how is your halth now!" an t he reolKl. "I bave on me an In curable dlseas." "What is that!" asko 1 my frlon4, and tie septus jcnariaa replied, 'Old age." Both of the oil men I have mentions! in ten let th'lr remarks for facetiousness, an 1 old peoolu have a right t j be facetious. An ajo 1 woman sent for her p'lysician and told him of her ailments, ani the doctor said: "Wast would you have me do, madam? t cannot make you young again." Hherepllel: "1 know that, doctor. Wuat I want you to do Is to help un grjw old a little IjiigiT." The youtig have their troubles before them. The old have their troubles b"hin 1 tuein. You bavo got about all nut of this earth that there is In it, Ite glad that you, an aed servant of UoJ, are going to try an other life an i ami I better surroundings. 8top looking back and look ahead. Oil, ye in the seventies, an i tho eighties, and tin nineties, your best days are yet to come: your grandest associations aro yet to be formed; your best oyeilght is yet to be lilnilloi; your best hearing is yet to bj awakenel; your greatest ooJ i Ttft to be traveled) our glud lest sjug is yet to be sun;. The most of your friends have pone over the border, and you are going to join then very soon. They are waiting for you. Tbey arj watching tho golden snore tt see you In 11 J. They are watching tho shining gate to see you come through. . They are stand litl by the throne to see you mount. What a glad Dour wuen you drop the staff an I tale, the scepter; when you quit the stiffened joints and become an immortal athlete! lint iinar! hear! a reniara pertinout to all people whether in the twenties, the thirties, the forties, the fifties, tho sixties, tin evetitlu, or beyond. What we nil n:e l is to take the supernatural Into our lives. Do not let us depend on brain nn I muscle and nerve. We want a mighty supply oi the sunernatural. Wo want wi't'a us a di vine (ores mightier than the waters anl the teaipjsts. and when the I.irJ too.: two steps on beitormed O iltlee, putting one foot on the winds an I tlm other on the wave?, Hi Erovei Himself mightier than hurricane and Mow. We want wit I us a divini force greater than the fires and wusn tho LirJ eaoied Nebuchadnezzar's (urnacs until Hand rach. Mehach '" I Abe'lneio did not even h1" Jtfe J5'TtfUo,vl U'mself J 11 a want a uitiiio iorce sironzer ionn wua besst, nnd when thn Lord mads Daniel a lion tamer He proved Hiuuelf stronger than the wrath of the juuglo. There are so many diseases in the world wi want with us a di vine physician capable of combating ail ments, and our tar 1 waen ou earth showed what Ho couid do with catalepsy and paraly. sis and ophthalmia and dementia. Oh, take this supernatural into all your lives! How to get it? Junt as you gee anything you want oy application. IC ycu want any thing, you apply for it. By prayer apply for the supernatural. Take it into your daily business. Many a man bns been able to pay only 60 cents on the dollar, who it be had csllo I in the super natural c.iuld have paid 100 cvts on the dollar. Why doll") men out of lis J fail in busini's- Because thore nre not more thau two men out of a hundred who take God in to their worldy alfairs. "Bahind the great, unknown stanloth Got within the shadows keeping watch upon His own." A man got un in a New York prayer meet ing and said: "liolis my partner. 1 did business without Him for twenty years and failed every two or three years. I have been doing business with Him for twenty I years und have not failed once." t h, take the ktiournatui'ul into all your affairs! I bad such au evidence of the goodness of Got iu temporal tnings when 1 entered active lifo I must testify. Called to preach at lovely Belleville, in New Jersey, I entered upon my work. But there stood the empty par sonage, an J not a cjnt had I with which to furnish it. After preaching three or four weeks the officers of my church asked me if 1 tiid not want to take two or three weeks' vacation I said "Ye;," for 1 had preached about all I knew, but 1 fenrod they roust bo getting tired of me. When 1 returned to the village after the brief vacation, they bauds 1 me the key of the parsonage and asked me if I did not want to go and look at it. Not suspecting any thing bad happenod, I put the key iuto the parsonage door and opened It, uud there was the hall completely luroisbei with carpet and pictures aud hatrack, ant I turned into the purlor, and they wero furnished, tho softest sofas I ever sat on, and Into the study and lound it furnished with book-casas, aud 1 went to the bedrooms, and they were fur iiinbed, ani into tha pantry, aud that was furuisliei with every culinary article, and the spiceboxes were filled, aud a Hour- barrel stxij there ready to be opened. and 1 went down into the dining room, and the table was nt and beautifully furnished, and into the kitchen, and the stove was full of fue!, au 1 a match lay ou the top of the stove, aud all 1 had to 00 in starting house keeping was to strike the match, God in spired the whole thiug, and it I ever doubt His goodues", all up aud down the world, call me un ingrate. I testify thut 1 bave been iu many tight places, aud God always got ms out, and lie will get you out of the tight places. but the mott of this audience will never reach the eighties, or the seventies, or the sixties, or the fifties, or the forties. He who passes into the forties has gone tar lieyond the average of human life. Amid thu un certainties take Uod through Jesus Christ as your present ani eternal ssiety. The longest lite is only a small fragment of the great eternity. We will ull of us soon be tuore. , Kteralty! hour nesr it rolls: l nuut ins vsst vs.uu of your souli. Hewsra suit count lbs swful cost Wast the bsvs gsinsd whose seals are lost. Two great Corsicau families, the most powerful in tbe island, the Gavinis and the Casabincas, bave Just been recon ciled after a political hostility of more than thirty years. During, this entire period the politics of tbe tslaod centered about tbe beads of these two bouses. Italy expsnds every year $96,000,000; for her soldiers, and leu thau f 4,000, 000 for schools. . , ! ilEHPERANCE. t ' bow ncmra arc ud. Tha way In which peranoe often become tha unoonacioos victims of alcohol la stated by tha "Feullle do Hygiene et da Poiioa Banitalre," of NeafcbateJ, Hwitseriand, as follows "Tha small dosea frequently re peated, email glasses of liquor regularly taken every day, are what mas of an honest cltiaen a victim of alcoholism without his baring ever, perhaps, passed through a state of complete intoxication, and without bia baring suspeotavt the danger to which he was exposed.1 ALCorfOL lastJHOttRT. Mr. Frederick Treves, the well-known surteon of the London Hospital, In hit "Manual of O.ierative Surgery," has some striking remarks on the risks attending operations on the bodies of drunkards. He sayst "A scarcely worse subject for an op eration can be foun i tunn is provided by the habitual oruukard. The condition contra indicates any but the moat necesary ani urgeut procedures, suoli as amputation for severe crush, herniotomy and the like. The mortality of these operations among nlco holies Is, it is needless to say, enormous. Many individuals who state that they Mo not urluk,' and who, although perhaps never drunk, are yet always taxing a little stimu lus In the form of 'nips? and an Vxjcasional glass,' are often as bad subjects for surgictl treatment as are tbe ackuowiadged drunk ards. Of the secret drinkers," continues Me 'irever, "the surgeon has to ns indeed aware. In bis account of VJaiaiuitiei of tjurgery,' (Sir James l'aget mentions the case of a pur sou who was a drunkard on tne sly, and yes not so much on tbe sly but that it was well knowu u bis must intimate friends. His babtts were not asked aftm', and one of bis lingers were removed b-cause joint disease bad spoiled it. He die I in a week or teu days with spreading cellular inflaiiiintciou, ueh as was lar Iro.u unlikely to occur in ait habitual drunkard, F.ven abstinence from alcohol for a weak or twj before an oper ation docs not sem to greatly modify the result." Dwelling ou tho immense import ance to an operator of cultivating "a sur gical hand," tne seine writer p ints out tuns "ashnky hand" may bs develops 1 by ins ular nioJes of livio, by tbs mojernto uwof alcohol, and by s uoinj. Journal ot 1 u ju ris ty. IXDUSTIUAt, PROOHES RXTARnnO. The industrial progress of many European Nations is materially retarded by t le drink ing habits of wage-earners. In F.nilan t, Hcotland and Ireland alone l'rofessor Leone Levi has estimated that the wngo-earnlng classes are spending; t4.,",iXRi.W)t) a year in Intoxicating drink. There has recently been a strong temperance movement in Be., gium, wbcre tbo working population can hardly be regarded as models of sobriety. As the opponents of tbe movement insisted tbat the evil had been greatly exaggerated, n manufacturer made a curious anil practi cal experiment by way of Jttling the ques tion so far us bis own employes were con cerned. He marked 700 flv-f ratio coins with a punch and distributed them in equal numbers among his workmen when he iid tbeui their wages. At tbe earn 1 time Ua re quested the keepers of tbe saloons adjicsn to his works to band over to hint all tba coins so marked that came Into tUeir poisea sion Two days after more thau thras bun dred of bis silver pieces were returned to htm by tbe salooa-keeperi. Hubscquent calculation sbowet thut in less than two tiays each workman had spent more than half bis salary at tue saloon. .Uioizj News Hevoi-d. A WAKMSO. Look 1 'Jee yoir boy as he turns Into these neat" '.riling places ;he liquor sa loons on bia way from work. Hee bun as he turns in agnin at night. See him as he turns out at midnight; stupiHed.daz d, niadd-ned, ready for any crime, eager tor vlolenc-.and perhaps, netire tbe sun rise, bearirg the ir 01 uuin ou me brow. 1 ou stand with- C.J pwjjf the gallows, and vouahud der trot ot a sou bear his last wo lllliuor nt me here." What matte M cry oisb, "Jly son! My son! Woild to could have died for you!" You helped God to tring him there. Ycu voted to keep the places open where he oould bring bis fearful tluoei Upon himself. You are a consenting party. You were oca of tbe signers ot bit death-warrant. Christian patriots, lathers, mothers, can't you see it? Won't you ses bow this applies to you. Demurest' s Family Maisiue. SJVOCI.D PnOHIBITIOM PROHIBTT? Tbs riummory, a weekly published at th New York Htate Reformatory at Elinira, the work ot tbe inmates, asks In a recent lsue editorially. Would Prohibition Pro hibit"' From Its answer we quote the fol lowing: "Legislate against the sale of liquor. W kuo, or take it for granted, that law will not prohibit. No prohibitory law ever did. It will not even do much good, at least are pnreiitiy, to begin with. But we withdraw from civilization the temptation contiuually piowd beiore them, at every comer ot the streets of our American cities, of liquor saloons own for young men, not there in Uulgiug tnem in a taste alaaly acquired, but developing this taste within him. How many of those not aiidictej to driuk do you suppose would trouble themselves seeking tor some hidden saloou were public saloons auoiinueu oy iar a ery lew, ludeed. And yet we hear it said, Vroulbitiun does not prohibit.' o: course it does not, if you du not tfive it time to, if you do uot mako it kutiluieutiy ueueral to testify its actiou." TKMPER1XCB KEW4 AD WOTH. The devil's uusterpieo is a drunkard's borne. Don't attempt to drown your sorrow In drinlf ; you will find that sorrow can swim. In Victoria one out of every sixty of tbs population is arrested for drunkenness. Mr. Moody secured 4 JO subscribers to tbe pledge in one meeting recently iu Dublin. Tho number of all kinds of distilleries opened lust year in the United (States was Kioto. Lady Henry Somerset has Just opeued a lodging bouse tor men at one oX tha Loudon doc la. The consumption of beer in Bavaria reaches the enormous quantity ot DOO quarts year for each inhabitant. On Guard, the organ of the Army Temper anos Association, says that there are lb,0iil abstainers le the British army in India. "No member will ha permitted to drink the white man's grog," is the pertinent regu. lation of the newly formed Zulu church in Africa. AtjLlntorf. Dusseldorf, Germany, is th oldei i' inebriats asylum iu Kurop.-, founded In lb 11 for tbe retention aud protection of reletsj.id prisoner whose intemperance led to their imprisonment. A leading chemist, Professor Gilbert Wbeoler, of Chicago, is authority for tbe stateiuout that beer has almost no nutritive qualifies, but more frequently introduces into tbe systsm disease-prcJuoing elements. In tbe last fivj years the saloons in Chi. cago bave iuoreasad eighty- five per cent., while tbs population has increased fifty per cent. Tilers is now in Chicago oae saloon for every KS people, includiug men, women aud (children. An thut under high license. Did you ever hear a saloon-keeper saying to a would-be customer in tba shape of pour, wretched sot 1 "No, 1 cannot take your money. You bava too much liquor now. Take your money and go buy soma bread with it lor your starving wife and cbildren?' ' Out of 317 ministers whose name ware n U e official year-book of tbe Congregas tlonsi Union of Kngland and Wales there are W-X abstainers. Of the B40 students be ing rawed for tbe ministry, or as misiioo ariesiu the theological colleges, &j& are total Abstainers. STORMS CHECK THADE. Tbe Weither An Important Fsotoe la Business the Past Week. What the Bank 21arlns Show. It. a. pun x co.'i weekly iieview or Trade says: Storms have greatly interfered with business and at the same lime mone tary uncertainly has been felt. White the volume of trsde Is still very large, actual distribution seems to have been scarcely up to expectations of late, though orders still Continue sufficient to give the great Indus tries full employment. The great leaturj for the past lortuight bxs u the unususl demands for money from the West and Houth, which has drawn large sums from New York, and telegraphic reports show that while money is tight at only one or two small points, there is strong demauds at ether c inters. The defeat nf the antl-ontion bill was fol lowed by an improvement in grain, and while wheat had fallen 2ic.lt has since risen Sc. sales lor the week being 2.0UO.OOO bushels. Corn is c and o ts e higher, but pork pro duct slightly lower. Cotton declined 4o because lie expected settlement of the Kng lish sirike did not come. Butter and eggs bave declined sharply ami copper is weak er. I.enl is nt H'e, thniiKli speculation has lifted tin to 3).37e. The dry goods trade is strong. Cottons ars stronger, sheetings be ing all sold nheud, Intliu iron business consumption Is enormous, but production relatively greoier, and concessions are fre quent lor pig not of the best grades, while bnrlsnt tne lowest point ever known. 1'ls .s are demoralised in price, though the luilis are busy uud structural works are well employed, in general the industrial pro duction has never .been surpassed at this season. Tho business failures the Inst seven days number for tne I'niied Stntes i. for t'an nda i. or 11 total of '2(1, us compared with H'W last week an I iU the we-k previous. For the corresponding week of last year Iha figures were '.'40. nrsisr.as nmoMKTrn. The bank clearing total lor the week ended Mnrsli J, li.l. with com 1 orisons. as leicgrapiiiu 10 itmut-rr, ere: New York... .K.M.Wi.noO 1 12.1 . H)7.!l74..')o I 14.1 . li:t.l'l. t. ft I i:i.l . M,:mMi 1 0.1) . '2.:i7i,.-iM I 11.8 . IT.'.iii.JH . Hi.H.T..Vs) I IJ 5 . lii,ol!72 1 ll.a ,. l.'i.MKI.-.'l.'i Chicago Boston Philadelphia ... St. Lint's hau Kranci.eo .. incitiiiutl Pitrburg Piiltiiuore . . . . . . Cleveland . ll.libl.4J5 I 30.0 (I iiulicut s iiitreasc. Ddecresse.) The elenrins of TS cities aggregate $l.:i;i),")!.tMS, n:i increase of I2.:l per cent. F.xelit ive of New York tliecleiiringsamotitit to .'lf.'.ilO,:)0;i, an increase of 12.5 per teu t. LATER NEWS WAIFS. WASIIIXUTOS. President Harrison approved the car con pier bill on Pridav and tho pen with which be signed it was presentel to K. A. Mosely, secretary of tho Interstate commerce com mission. Mr. W. P. Grinstead, of Bowling Green, Ky., has provided a ksvcI made from a;i oak grown upon the farm upon which Abraham Lincoln was born, to be usod by Yieo 1'resnieiit Stevenson in bis olHclal duties. The President Friday evening afilxed his signnture to the bill known as the Chandler Immigration and Contract I-ubor bill. VVSCiLii'.iVS.- w The Arkansas State . Benate passed vriith but one dissenting vote the House bill ahJj ishlng thexon .i.j'.Vor .!.., lTOIMHTir. At ew nt'ean s. alter la roinrts or. nm jinru imtimiiz. r.o niiiiiu til i uuuurv iiuviue hitherto tttibeatcu Barrier Champion Joe Goddard to sleep by a ter rific swing on the jaw. Smith was cheered to the echo. The fight was fit a purse of f lO.bOO and a stdo bet of $2.5-. The loser's end of tho purse was tl.WJ. Fully 0,0ixj (icople saw the battle. MSSKTKPS. All ItlKVTS AND fATA MTtRS At Marksville, I.a.. In a cyclone Max Brotiilette and a child were killed and hun dreds of buildings were destroyed. Five children, ranging in n?o from 0 months lo 11 years, wero suffocated to death during the burning of a tenement bouse in one of the poor quarters of New York City. The parents had gone to work and left them locked in. Four of the children belonged to one family named Bernstein. roKKIU.N. Three quarieri of the city of Itaub, Aus tria, is timler water, the river having over flown. Three hundred bouses have been destroyed and 40.0 X) aeros of land inundat ed, The river is carrying dead bodies of meii women and children along in large uuiu hers. sltSCKI.I.ANFOfS. At Columbus. Ind., the grund jury issued service on UK) society leaders cf that city, being (he wives and daughters and heads of prominent families, for playing progressive euchre in which prizes were offered. The profession gamblers, who aro seeking re vengo for being suppressed, are tho insti gators. LIVES LOST AT A LAUNCHING. A Frightful Disaster at Bay City. 30 People Thrown Into Icy Waters: - Three Drowned and O.hers Missing. A frightful disaster occurM at Bsv City, Mich., on Friday, in connection withula inch ing at tho shipyard of F. W. V.'heelor A Co The steam barge Kittie M. ForLt s lay froi in the ice on the north side of the slip which the launching wus to take p';1 Hundreds of boys and many men 1! 'h-1. to the steunicr uud climbed to the Varne deck. When oil was ready the lust ha v cut and the schooner with a rush i t;. Hi: into the slip and an immense wave f the ice and the steamer Forbes im . :i The Forbes rolled until half over :r i the crowd on shore saw a sight w 1, i -U li''" ed them. Those who had reuiuii. upper deck were clinging on for lib' 1 i!"f could find protections, while less ( just ones were Hying headlong toward tl..' tor. Fully 30 were thrown overboar f. sul in an Instant the black forms rose to &t urfsee between the two boats ami i" field of broken ice. How many are lost has not bwen sts!" ed, but George Hawkins and Hose H ''uttl and Fred Peel are missing. Fully a m were Injured, William Battisliull pntJablf fatally. iir Whek you pray loragooa rue imfc ioa't take your dots tocburcb. -' ie . '1. a.