COT THE 3LESSINQ. Tstst Hnndsv thar mm prnarbln', an' ws (II sratil nut to hear ; The MMIerniireli mia led, fur tlia rlrh eu' poof was tilers; It a r a spltti .Id anriuon an th ilTiRlu' (all n fras 'Alnsstn grace, ham i the sound that Itr4 a wrsteb Ilk In. Wbsntosll ilia ,rnim wm In kind (plen.lil. I tuaan It To laka (leap runt an hear git frul j In asry ainnat mirei , It M (nil of onaolillia f r wear lM - '! lull uf invltatlnu to Christ craai. hearts lit an I Dot I? Tha tit w 'bout tha prodnp.1 who spent lilt 11 I ii' tiaal. t'ntll ha ama at Isit t won the husk tlia win old aal , Hut a rat ill itiiflit gs linn comlm t whan b hardly llnl to lia I will So nntu hit father for my father will torsi a in talkiit' to vdii f,il lr a. " ani l Mm ur her, 'hare ti iliy, Wbo 'ot tlia Miint llvlu In a i-otui'rr f'ir ; away , Too va got til go abate I lint fa'lrr an veil ! caul lall alii hp how Hut coma tia-k lo 1 1ri tattici ha wmulla fit yo no : i f-'mm th amen rorncr to tlia li-r tlia ti l.atltarnl Da. An' "Tray fur iib ' (li'iv -tliimled ;m II leoajnd . tha l.nnt u tlieia . An' ti-a a (reat titii laliaklu'f well I ha prseiou I I uiua U i-atl Hut tha old Hum Ii in liu Mi kao-ds gut lil- u III .1 II Is.i I - Aumtl onstiiiitioii. IYI50XK DAYS. 'J ho day was in .Inly, and tin- limit mid af tcrnuwii. 'Jh! situation Is a liontler town in tho thiidiivv i,f trim old ii"utudiin ' a rulleelion nf sliintcs, tent, and! iliiiC'Mit and facing tin one i"iig and narrow street up and down wh eh ' th ui.iil-coucbes trjtcl ai tlie.v otut; and go. i 'I'no typical Iron'ier town, as it j wns, hut never will tut .igun. Jl ih type of town that li.ts vanished vv.tl: the lier.lsnf buffalo and t lie count les- i ncies of mic'a tni'd land. In the six I lies and seventies the town rune 1 tlisi law and order next. In the ; eighties law and order bej.iti to take. ; llie iilaet! of tins i! in and the tenor. In t ho slxt ie men who refused to I Irink with a stiaiui-r w !( sinitdetd :i tit the bartender dragged tie corpse elear of tho door. In thomj days t ai'h low.) had its terror, and it was a matter of pride with hi m to see his victims hur ried and headboards erected with his ally-mark. In the oihlie the terrors disappeared fiom sl;lit, and the cowboys held up the town at int.-rvals. Today both tenor and row boy are but names, and law and outer rules. Law Is kinn. and his heavy hand Is tespected. Order means progress and clvllial.ou. and therefore there is order. "Whoop! Hurrah! Pop:" The yells and the ;istol shots startlo t he whole tow., for an in stanU but only for an instant At flight, the noise would not have ex- - f - ila'"t lld remark, but now some miij i'.ircli-ssl v iii'iiires the imiiv, and he is as carelessly answered' "Oh! I;ig .la k has bor 'd atioih'r man. Just got out of led and is fuel ing ugly. He'll soon cheer up now. That one makes the seventh, 1 be lltne." The typical 'town terror is no ino.'o nor less than a burly, big l ufllan an ex-miner, ex-prospector a gambler, advctitiiier, and outlaw. He lias set himself up as "the boss'' of the town, of saloons and gambling hells. Some bad men are bl infers ami duffers. This one isn't Tliev "tried him out" several weeks ago an I toiind him t'ame. Two or three men tried to make htm "take water' who i are ! burled ov 't there in the gully. He brags and he bluster, but he is no iv.ward. The vlg lance committed sent him warning, and he sent back th ' ears of their messenger. Other terrors resented his taking possession and reaping t he honors and he paid a Chinaman a dollar apiece lo dig their graves. Yes. 1'iig Jack was drunk last night and has slept later than usual. He awoke with a headache and a parched throat, and while stumbling across the street to a bar some one ran against him. lraw level pull trig ger, and liig Jack, swearing like a lilrate, doesn't even pause to see who bis victim Is. It is a stranger to (be place some one on the railro;id sur ve. "Iig a grave ami plant him with the others?" says liig Jack to the smirking Chinaman, and that ends It. The lody is dragged awav to the Kulch and the murderer, feeling more like hiinsell for the drink and the "booting, touches up the street to the ll.ipiy-(io-Lucky" saloon. This is his head .uat't ts. He has killed two men in here, but has promised the proprietor not to kill any more if he can restrain himself. Not that a murder hurts the proprietor's feel ings In the least, but that makes him extra laUtr and Paralyzes business for ten or fifteen minutes. There are a dozen or mote men in the sa loon wait ing lo fawn upon "the boss" and bask In the sunlight of his entile. An emperor has his follow lug: so ha the meanest ruffian. When Hlg Jack laughs, all laugh; wheu he asserts and declares, all agree. He pulls the string and tho 'lull I I'NNKII Nil H I'I IHtlNK Willi HITS : iltilWIl" I p-iippoH dance, and yet ill hte and despiae him and would like to too him wi)od nut. At a roiitfli t.il.le in a corner of tho T'ioiu sits no tindersted man, aboutf ihirty jrrar bid. tie wran hi half lontf, hi sombrero is one of the larif est, and In hi Imlt are his two Colt :md ,i knife. No one Know h m. Ill tnimtunn is tit the door, and he Is inside t break his fast It Is Charlie White, a Government srnut, wIki has served with Croolc and Custer ami others on tho plains, and who has stood in the shadow of death a hundred times. A irood-looking ma'i, mi- ur. srnoi) r ui i n K me onus a aviso ion'Kr.tso." : with a calm, blue eve. aquiline nose. thin lips and a unlet voire The i Towd ha I sized bun up: '(Julet, I luit d. Ulcerous " The estimate was ' oltect. Ititf Jack swa uers into the salooa ; to receive tliu salutations and con jrattilat ions of the crowd. He is I l etter-ti itured than bo was. bulthetu i is a look in his eyes which forebode' ' I. inner. Three or four men slip ' iinetlv out nf the back door, while j the others rawn and tlatte- and press ; "the bos" to drink with them. He is willing enoiiun: that Is a part of the homage he demands. As he stands at the bar, glass In hand, his eye lights o:i the stranger for the first time. Instinct tells him tho man's occupation and warns lilui nut to pick a quarrel. Unite strength ind bull dog courage overpower his instinct. It Is a golden opportunity to make a man "crawl" for the amusement of the crowd. It is "all i hands take a dr nk." but the stranger ! has not left h s seat. That is an ex. pressioti of contempt and dellance. 'Dt I Vt ye hear." bellows KlgJark as he r;is on the bar with his knuckles and eyes the stranger. The stranger looked up. Ileknew with whom he had to deal, and he knew what was cwtnlii'- 'J'hosa no .t -"I-1 ,y If - iue lino nia eyes, anu compressed. Hlg Jai'a turned bis back to the bar, rcstid both tellows iikjii it, and there was u leer on his face as he ontliiued: "Too cussed nice to drink with this "rowd. 1 expect: M-bbe ye ar' lookln' fur champagne tind a while shirt gang! Mebt o je want a carpet spread down lo walk on as ye move ai out:" The stranger looked lilg Jack straight in the eves. The lines mi his 'nee hardened and t hero was a Itngerous flash in his eyes. The t'uliiin noted these s'gns, and real, li-d that the s"out was a bad man to stir up He had gone too far to re treat, however. The crowd had fall en back lo right and lc:t, and the j tw i had a clear Ileid. To turu from I (be stranger was to lose prestige. I Loss of prestige meant death to him. 1 Two kinds of courage were opposed I to each oilier that coarse-grained I fearlessness which Is born with brute j strength, and which delights in gl itig and receiving blows and that I iiilet but dangerous characteristic j which men call "sand,'' and wh! h l Is never cruel nor brutal. For a ! long minute the two faced each ! other, and liig Jack's adherents saw l him change color. He was figuring i on his chances. He might blutT the stranger down, but failing In this he honed to get the droD on him. "The man who won't drink witli in j insults me. and the man who in sults me has got to crawl outdoors on his hands and knees or git a bullet In his head:" So growled the rufliaii. It was his blutT. He looked bis fiercest as he spoke tho words, but in his own heart he Knew that they would have no weight with the man whose blue eyes had the gleam of a new bowle knife, but who had not st rred a tin ge r. "(iit down anil crawl -git down, will ye, or I'll riddle yer carcass with lead:" Tho bluff had fai'.od. Now for the drot, Of a su Ideu liig Jack druped his right hand to the butt of a revolv er hardly six inches away and pulled the gun and tired. Two or threo men started to cheer, but almost as the sound left thoir lips, and following the other report like the stroke of a bell, came a second discharge. Tho k'iaut did not fall to the right or to lb" left. Ho stood for five seconds, swaying and tottering, eyes wide open and llxed on the stranger, and then without a moan or a souna he sank down in a heap on the floor, shot plumb through the heart. His bul let had passed through the brim of the stranger's sombrero a poor shot for any sort of marksman only four leen feet awav. "Is his pardner here?" asked the scout us ho looked over the awe stricken and silent crowd, while from the tnu.leof hit revolver A thin streak of blue smoke curled lazily up wards. All looked at hloi but no one an-sworod. 'Has he any friends who wish to tak It ii pi"' 'lo had no pardncr no friends:" said one who had cringed and fawned and Haltered without mint "Then let his Chinaman plant him:" said the scout; and throwing a silv r dollar on the tabln he rose up. relumed his un to Its holster and walked out without another look around. Three minutes lator he had ualloped out of sitfht on his way lo lrt (.lister. CKEIETONIZINGI LEAVES. A I'laaaaat I'aatlma for Ilia tall anil Onr Protlfle or Haatitlful Kaaulta. There will fie found an interesting pastime din ing the month of Septem ber. The leaves chosen must bo (juite perlcct and not too young, of gathered on late In the season. Haiti w ile- i best for the soaking process Cxposo the tub to the suu and repNynish the water as required. Place the lenes in the water and let them remain until partially decayed, until the skin becom s decomposed; but remove them before the tlhrou veins of the leaves ate atta ked. The time usually needed to carry the proc?ss of decomposition to the right Hiiut is about a fori r.lght, after which they should bn examined twice a week, or daily If the weather Is warm. When thoroughly soft and pulpy iemove them to a basin of clean water. They will bo too ten der to touch with the hand, and must is1 lifted gently .on cards Into the clean water. Have two brushes at hand, an old toothbrush and one of camel's hair, soft, but thick as a pencil. Having lifted a leaf out of tho water on a card, brush tenderly with the soft brush until the whole of tho skin is removed, then dip into water, I and having reversed the leaf under the water, tepeat the process on the i oihor side. If the skeleton Is riot i by this time unite dear of the pulpy i matter, use the toothbrush, not with a sweeping motion, but with a few I gentle laps. ;ivo the skeleton an- other washing in clear water the samo I way as before, then lmturse In the bleaching solution, made by pouring water on chloride of lime, and pour- ing off the clear water when tho sedl ' tnent has unite settled I Delicate Ic tv. s, such as the Ivy, I will bo thoroughly I leached in a couple of hours, but others take i longer. They will be spoiled if al lowed to remain too long. Th n Im merse in several clean waters, and leave for half an hour in the last. ' Alter tins noat too si -letou on a I cjrd, in as natural a position as pos l si hie, and drain preparatory to the I drying, which should follow lulckly. An oven not too hot Is best The skeletons will now bo strong enough to bear delicate handling, Leaves like the oak, which contain tannin, resist decomposition and ate unmanageable. The best leaves foi sk" iling are those of the Ivy. wo.iy, iiii uu. orange, lemon, walnut, willow, chest nut, white hawthorn and vine. The petals or th hydrangea are excellent tor the purpose, theroolsof tho hem lock, the calyx of Winter cherry, the seed vessels of the thorn apple, henbane, canterbury bell, and colum bine. It will be wise to interest the chil dren In this work, and thus create an liuCT.sL in the stu lv of bolativ. lllSl(HlS. Hospitals, as we now i.tuletsfaud the term, are of modern urowth. True it Is, as Mr. P.urdette tells us in the historical section of 'Hospitals and Asylums of the Wor d," that in the records of Kgypt and ancient India we tlnd allusions lo institu tions that, foreshadow the hospitals of later times, and even our asylums for si -k animals are bort owed frotu the Kast An inscription engraved on a rock uear tha city uf Sural tolls how Asoka, a King who rcighed in liuje rat in the third century K C. com. luanded the establishment of hospi tals in all his dominions, unit placed one at each, ot the four gates of the royal city of Pain a. Six hundred jears after thi, Pall Ian. an Intelli gent ( hlnese traveler who visited India in A. !., reeurds that Asoka's- hospitals otlll existed and flourished, but the successive foods of con tiest swept all away, and by the beginn ng of this i entury only a hospital for animals remained of all tho pious King's foundations. Ancient Kgyptiau records arc more vague it, their allusions to the treat ment of the sick; but it seems likely, from a legend which is given in the Papyrus Khers, . that a clinic exist d in connection with tho temple of Hcliopolis. It is equally ptobablo that. If tho h story of the temples of Aesculaplous could be tin veiled, w should find that in them also a hos pital supplemented tho shrine, and that the sick who o ,ered sacrlllces there found comething more than "fa th healing" within their walls. Put fiom none of these are our hos. pilals derived; they were destroyed or forgotten In the barbarian con quests, and so utter Is the oblivi n Into which they fell that It is now an article of the popular creed that It is lo Chrstianity we owe the tlr.st Idea of care for the sick and afflicted. The tvuarterlv Poview. No Mules Mentioned. Arkansas has 1 00,000 farms which produce 000,000 bales of cotton, 1)00,. 000 bushels of sweet potatoes, 1,000. 0)0 pounds of tobacco, 42,000,000 bushels corn and 2,000,000 bust els of wheat From the Arkansas forests are cut over 20,000,000 feet of lum ber every year. Rtoe Climate. At Great Falls, Montana, the mer cury has been known to drop 23 de gree inside of five minutes. REV. DK, TALMAQK. TIIK IIUOOKI.YV llVIK3 SlX 1.V SKKMOX. Subject: 'T:ie flare Ann of Soil., Trtrr "T' t.,nl hiili ,i hire rfh'u arm." Ismail III., 0. If nlmoat tfikaa. our br'ttli awsr to nntd soma oftlm llllila imtgarv. Tlmra la urh bolilnass of metaphor In my ti-Kt that I hava b-nn tor ao-iia tiiiin ir-ttlnir mv eotiraira npfo rrMi-li from If. Issinl.. tha avauirnllatin pMihr, la aoiimllug tha JiiMlntn of oar tlnnt railmMiiail an. I i-rios out, "Tha I.ortl liivlh tnitda nra Ilia holy arm." Whnt over wliMlminir auxirtlviiia4 In thnf nVUra of apoech, Tim bara arm of Ornt !" Tha pan fla of I'nlMatlii to I his ila v wa ir much blminr lug aiipsril, an t wlian tliv want fo run a ap s-lal Miss, or lift a apsoial linrl.-n. or tlht a Mim-lnl I'MttK tlmy put off tin oulsldx apptral, aft in our lanil wlimi a msn proposes a niiwIiiI exertion hit puts off hla post and rolls up hla alwvaa. Walk through our ioiiiiilns. our ms.i'hiiis sho;i, our mln-n, our f"torl. nii'l you (111 fln l thm most of tleMollMr liav tlimr eons oT an 1 their l"vfa rnllx up, Isilnli iw tliat thar" must l,a a trains, ilons nuiuitut of work dona liefora this woriit lia.-onia wlml It oiiulit . lie, nn I hn fora wlt nil ni-.MinpllMiia.l. ntnl in-cotuplishail I v th Almiijlity. ii. t as w- orlinarily think of Him. tmt liv tha Almliity well tha slaava nflliarolw rll,l hark to Ilia ahoutiiar, 'I'll.' I..int Inith mil. I.- Iinr If in holy arm." Nothing mor l'nirfsss ma In the tlllila llinn Iho i-nsa w.tti whl.-li So. I doaa moat t'Uiiifa. ')'lnra is su.-ii n r-srva of power. H- Ims tiuii-.- ihnn li-rUilis than Ha lias avar ItiiiCMii ir.i llirht than Hi has avnr iliatrlb. utM.I. itn.ru IiIiih ttisn with which Ha ha oviT.ir-ln'1 tin sky, mora irrcau tlmu thnt with whl.-h H hits Hmralila.1 the grna. mora .rima.iu than that with which Ha has liiirinsiia.l tha iinals. I s.iv It wit it revar-mi.-e, from nil I i nn s-f, tiod liua navar half tnl. You know n wll ns f ilo thnt many of tha most i-liiliur.il ami expnlv Iniluntrlea of our worl.l hnvn liwn amplnyisl In rreatiog nrtlll i:il lluht . Hulfof tlia tlm tha world is iliiri. Th maun iin.l tli- atar hava their gloriiuis iiaas. but us nistriiiiinw of llluml- ; linn. hi tny nr tut i o r. Thi-y will not i iiliuiv ymi to rn.iil n Imoi or stop tha rnnian , Imii yuiir Krnt itl.w. Il.i l not tha dark- I II persistaiitly lullKlit Im.-k I'V nrtlll- I i'iiiI im-utH. th most of tha world'a entar ; pnsi-s wuiil.l IrivH hnltail half the time, while , th i-rlitii- uf our KrHt munii;lpilitlHa would i tor hull tin lima run mmpiint and unra i liuko.l ; hi'u.-a nil lti Invantions for cnvillnif I iirtilli-inl lliflit. from tha Mint struck attains! j aleel iu ci-iiturli M past tottia itvnamo of our elm-trienl mnnuriii-torlia. Whiit um-ouutad I niiiiiiH-r ofpwipiK nt work tha yanr round In in.'ikin i-liioiilMlifrs and lamps and fix! urea , and win-a and liatti-na wharo litfiit ahnll bo iiimle, or nlun which liudt ahull run. or wiht.) iiiint nli.-ill p.jiae: How many bar Hruia of human toll -atul aoma of thoae lra arms ara very tirad - In tha creation of light an. I ila apparatus, nud after all tha work tha Kr.'ati-r part or tlin coutinants unit hernia-pln-ras at ulu'lit have no llifht at nil, except pi-rlinps tho llri-llli-s fl islilu than- aiuall ian terns acrosa tlia awtimp. j Hut mh how oasy (io I mndx tha light. Ila did not makit linn Ilia nrui ; Ha'did uot a van put forth His rohed arm : Ha did uot lift s niui-h us ii llnniT. The flint out of whien H a Htrni-k the noonday uu waa tha wort I. 'Light." "I.at thera I iKht !" Adam did not smm the ami until the fourth day, for, though the aim waa erf hi fd on tha first da).-, it took Its rays from the first to tha fourth duy to work through the douse mass of fluUU by wiileh this aarth was coinpHfd. Did y1U ever hnr of anything o n-y n thai? tjio iini.iur.' Out of a word eamatha blncltm aim, the fath-r of flowora. and warmth at id light I Out of a word buildlun a flre-dfuv lor all tha Nation ot the earth to warmth aolruabvl Yaa. aevaa othrr worlds, flra ' . . .noriti, m nallar aoala ! The warmth and light or thla Kt-aat brotherhood, gmat aiatarhooJ. ur.iut funilly of worlds. Hliitr-aaven laru-r or ftiiiB'ler worlds, nil from tluit ona niagnill ; flit llreiilaoi', mada out of the ona word l.litht. Tin" nun SMl.O(K) mllea in diBmater. I lo uot know how iniK-h grandiT a aolar ays ti'in liod c-oulil Iiihh entuled If Ha had put forth Ilia rolatd urni, to any nothing of an arm nmdo tinre ! put tlna'l know, that our noonday aiiu was u xpnrk atrm-k from tha iinvll ol una wnr.l, mid thnt word "Light." Hut." says some. one. "do you pot think t lint in m.-ik uu; t li iiia. liiui-ry' of ihn unl-i-tTSe. of wiii -ti our solar svitom la com piir.ili v.il v :i small wliml workinit Into mlKlit-l.-r whavls. it must hava cost liod ouia ex rtlon' The uplK-aval of an ami niftier robed or an arm made Lara'.'" No ; we are dmtin.'tly told otlierwiaa. The machinery of a univi-r-iiCod iniidnslmply with Uu tinkers. Int id. Inspired In it ullit souu, uy o 'Wlieu 1 c insider Thy heaveus, the work of Thv lliiifers." A Scottish I'leritymiiu told me a few weeks ago of dyapeptii: Thomas t'urlyle walking out with a frii-ud one starry night, and as the trieiil looked up nud Slid, "What a fpli'inhd aky!" Mr. Curlvlo replied ua ha Kluuend upward. S-td sight, aad algid !" Not so thought Unvid ns lia read tha great H'-ripluro of the night h-avein. It waa a sweep of embroidery, of vast tapmtry, (Joi manipulated. That is the allusion of the psalmist to the woven hangings of tnpeatry as they weie known long iietora Llavid'a time. I-'ar back In the ngtm what enchaut luentof thrnnd and color, the I'lorentlua velvets of silk and gold and J'entlau earpcli woven of goals' hair ! If you have beeu iu the (iobeliu manufactory of tapestry In Pari alas, now no more! you witnessed won drous things ua you saw tha wooden needle or broach going Im.-k and forth and in and out ; you were transfixed with admiration itt the pattern wrought. No wouder that I.oui MV bought It, und It became n possession of the throae, nud for a loug while noue but thronca nud palaces might have any of lis work 1 What triumphs of loom I What victory ot skilled lingers ! Ko bavid ay of the heaveus that tiod'a fingers wove into them the light ; that Ood'a lluger tapeatrled them with star; that (iod finger em broidered them with worlds. How much of the linnu-nsiiy of the heavens f 'avid i.uderatood I do not kuow. Astronomy w.ts lioru iu I'hlna asiM) year before Christ tv.w born. Huriug the ruigu of Honug- IT astrouoiiiers were put to deuth if they tuade wrong nalculations about the heavens. Job understood Iho rairactiou of the auu's rava aud said they were turned as the clay to the eul." 'J'ho pyrnmlds werenstrouonilual ob servatories, nud they were ao loug ao built that Isaiah refers to one of them in bis nine teenth chapter nnd eHl it the "pillar at the uoruer. ineiirstol nil t lie sciennes porn wus asironomy. wnetui-r irom knowledge ulreudy ubroad or from direet liispiration, it seems to me lavid hud wide knowledge of the heavens. Whether be understood the full force of what ho wrote. I know uot, but the Uod who inspired him kuew, und He would uot let David write anything but truth aud therefore ull the world that the tele- eopc over reached or Copernicus or Galilei or Kepler or Newtou or J, unlace or llersuliul or our own Mitchell ever unw were o easily made mat they were made, with the linger. A easily as with your llugers you mold the wax, or ine eiav. or the dougli to parllo- ular shapes, so lie doe Mod the shape of our world, and that it sliould weigh alx sex llllioutlbus aud appoiutad for all worlds their orbit und decide.! tueir color the white to Hiriua, the ruddy to Aldebaran, the yeuoy to I'ollux. the blue to A It air. marrr lug some of the stars, as the 2400 double stars thut Herscbei observed, administering to tha whims of the variable wnr a their glauoa liecomes urlguter or dim, preparing what aslronsinor called, "the girdle of Androme da," and the nebula iu the sword handle ot Orion. World uu worlds ! World under worlds I Worlds almve world t World be youd worlds ! Ho many that arithuiatlc ara of uo use iu the calculation I Hut liecouutod Iheu) ua He made them. niiJ He uaiiu thei r U His fingers! Ttnaorvstion of power! Ku reaa'on of omnlpotenea ! Hsonrnns as yet Intouchad I Almlghtlueas yet undemon atrate l t Now. I ask. for the benefit of all 1lshartaned Christian workers. It flod ac eore dlahail so mucb with His tin era, what oan fa do when Ha puts nut all His strength and. 'hen He nnllmlvers all the bntleriea of Hia nnipotanee? The Ilible speaks again and tain of Ond'a outstrate'.ie I arm. but onb nee, aud that In the text, of the bare urn flod. V text makes it plain that the rectiilea tloi f this world Is a stupendous under tak It takes more power to make this wot -er again than it took to make it at fir. word wns only neeeasary for the flra creation, but for the new creation the nnlved and unhindered fore arm of the Almighty I The reason of that I ean under stand. In the ahipvarda of Liverpool or tllar.w or New York a grant vessel I con structed. The architect draws out the plnn. the leoirth of tha beam, the capacity of ton Data, the rotation of wheel or aerew. tha ealilo. the masts and nil the appoint mauts of thl arrest palaea of tha deep. Tha nrchitect flniahaa his work without any perplexity, and earpeutera and the artisans toll on th1 craft so many hours a d.-iv. ea"h ona lo ng hia part, until with Riga Hying, and thruaands of people humaing on the docks. th vessel is l.-iun-hed. put out on the sen that ataamer breaks herahnft and Is limping slowly along toward harbor, when Cnrililieau whirlwinds, those mighty hunter nf the deep, looking out for prey of hiM, surround that wounde. vessel an I pit. -h it nn a rocky eoaat. and she lifts nnd falls In th breakers tint II every joint is loose, and every spar la don. and every wave sweeps over the buTlcane deck ns s'ie parts midships. Would If not require more skill and power to ('t that splintered veas d off the rocks an reiHiustriiet it tlutn It retpurni origin allr to fiiiibl her.' Aye! Our world thnt Hod tniflt so liaautiful. and which started out with all the flags of Kdcni foliage nnd with th chant of paradisaical bowers, has been sixty centuries pounding in the skerries of sin and orrow and to gt her out. and to get bar off, and to get her on the right way again will reUlr" more of omnipotence than It required to buital her and laun -h her. Ho I am not surprise,! that though In tha dry doek of one w' our world was made. It wi l take the nnsleed arm of Ood to lilt her from the rocks an 1 put her ou tha right course again. It is evident from nivtaxt an I Its comparison with other texts that It would not las so grent nu undertaking to make a whnle constellation of worlds, and a whole galaxy of worlds, and a whole astrono my of worlds, a 'id awing them in their right orfills as to take this wounded world, this stranded world, this bankrupt world, this d eat roved world, aud make it as good as l.en It started. Now. just look at the enthrone I dltTb'uMes Inltba way. the removal of which, th" over throw of which, seem to require the bare rlijtiit arm of omnipotence, fhera stands beMtlieniim, with Its StlU.OOO.rHHl victims. I ibJ not care whether you call them Prahmans nrl5uddhlsts. Confucians or fetich Idolaters. Atitbe World's Kair in Chicago last summer tble monstrosltiea of rellgiou tried to make themselves reapeitable, but the long bair and baggy trousers and trinketed rohes of thoir representatives cannot bide from the wbrid the fai-t that those religions are tha authors of funeral p; re, aud juggernaut crtisblng, and llangaa liifnn'icide, nnd Chi nese shoe torture, nud the aggregated mas-s-i'res of ninny penturies. They hava their he-da ou India, on Chins, on Persia, on Borneo, on three-fourths of the acreage of ou poor old world. J know that the missionaries, who are the mcst u-rltloiug and Christllke men und women ou earth, are making steady and glcrlous inroads upon these built up aboml na'lons of the centuries. All this stuff thut yo sen Id some of the newspapers nbotit the missionaries as living in luxury nnd idleness Is .iroinulgated by corrupt American orKug llftl or IScotch merchants, whose loose be lli vior In heathen cltii-shas lieen rebuked by t ie mlsaionnrles, nnd these corrupt mer- ihants write borne or tell innocent nud un . uspectlug visitor lu India or (,'hlua or the sarkauea uiaii ot the sea these taiseuoods . " - ... '-" Tho luruUi itielr tatek on noma nud civilixatiou aud emolument and comfort, spend their lives In trying to Introduce the mercy of the gospel amoog the dowutrotdeu of heathenism. Home of those mer chants leave their families iu America or Kugland or Hoot land und stay for a few years in the ports of heatheulsm while they are making their fortune iu the tea or rice or opium train, nud while they are thus ahseut from home give themselves to orgies of dissoluteness such ns no pen or tongue could, without the abolition of all decency, attempt to report. The prete-u.v of the mis sionaries, with their pure and imble house holds. In those heathen ports Is u con-duut rebuke to such debauchees and mlacreuuts. If satan should visit heaven, from which he was once roughly but justly expatriated, j and lie would write Home to the realms pau- i demoniac, til correspondence punusue,! iu lUalioios (ia.ette or Apoiiyouic .New, a'siut what he had seen, he would report the temple of (iod aud tho l.ainb as a brokeu dowu church, uud the house of many mansion as a disreputable place, ami the cherubim a suspicious ol mor al. Kin uever did llku holiness, and you hod better not depend upon satuuic report of the sublime aud multipoteut work of our missionaries lu foreign lands, lint notwith standing all that these men aud women of uod have achieved, they reel and we all P-el that if the Idolutrous iunds are to Im Chris tianized there needs to be a power from the heuveus thut has not yet coudoseended. aud we feel like cryiugout iu the wordsof Charles vt t-sley i Ann of I lie Lord, aakc. sa-skf! 1'ut uo Thy atrengili. the Nslious hake! Aye, it is not only tha I. or I's arm that Is needed, the holy arm, the outstretched arm, but the bare arm t There, too. stands Mohammedanism, with it 170.000,000 victims, it bible i the Korau. U book uot quite as large ns our New Testa ment, wul. -li was revealed to Mohammed when In enllentle tits, and resuscitated from these fit he dictated it to scrllies. Yet It is read to-day by more people than any other book ever writteu. Mohammed, the founder of that religion, a polygumist, with superflu ity ot wives, the first step ot In religion on the body, mind and soul of woman, uud uo wonder that the heaveu or the Korau Is an everlasting Hoc'oru, an inllnite oraglio, about which Moliummed promises that ouch follower shall nave in that place seveuty-two wlvea, iu addition to all the wives be hail on earth, but thut no oil woman shall ever auter heaveu. Vt ben a bishop or J-.nglaud recently proposed that th best way of suvlng MohammeJnus wus to let tbem keep their rellgiou, but engraft upou it some new prineipltst Irom Chris tianity, he perpetrated uu ecclesiastical joke, at which no man cau laugh wbo ha ever seeu the lyrauuy aud domestic wretchuduee which always uppuar where that religion get foothold. It bus marched across conti nent j uud uow propose to set up Its llllhy and accursed banner in America, aud what it baa doue for Turkey It would like to do for our Nation. A rellgiou thut brutully treut womanhood ought neverto tie fostered In our country. Hut there uever was a re llgiou so absurd or wicked that it did uot get disciples, uud there are enough fools lu America to make a large discipleship of Mohammedanism. Tbl corrupt rellgiou bus lateu making steady progress tor h uud rods of years, and notwithstanding all the spleudld work done by the Jessups. aud the floudelU, nud the blisses, and the Vau Dyke, aud the Posts, and the' M!ji-s Dowens, aud the Misses Thompson, aud scores of other men aud wo men of wuorulhe world .was uot worthy, there It stand, the giant of sin, Mohamme danism, with one foot on the heart of wo man aud the other ou th heart of Christ, while It mumbles from its minarets this stu peuduous blasphemy i "Uod is great, aud Molisiumed Hi I prophet." Let lb Chris tian printing ireas at be) root nud Constanti nople keep ou with tbelr W)rk aud the meu aud women of Uod lu tha uiiaslou Held toil uutiitlie Lord orown them, but what we are all hoping for Is some superuatural fvoiu tha beaveua. as vet uusecu. soiuetuiug sfreleheil down out of the skla. something like en arm nneov?reJ, the bare ami of tha God of Natious! There stand also tha nrc'.i demon of a ' no holism. Its throna la white ani msdn of Maaeheil human skulls. On one side of that throne of skulls kneels In obeisance anil worship democracy, aud on tha other aide republicanism, and the one that ktane tba cancerous and gangrened font of thla daapot the otteneat gats the most banedictinns. There is a Hudson River, nn Ohio, a Missis sippi of at rot drink rolling through this Nation, but as the livers from which t taka my figure of speech empty into the Atlantlo or the Oulfthls mightier flood of slckneaa and Insanity and domestic ruin and crime nnd baukrnptcy and woe e-nptles Into the hearts, and tba homes, and tha churches, nnd the time, and the eternity of a multitude beyond all statistics to nnmlieror dascritte. All Nations are mauled and vsrlll-! with baleful stimulus, nr killing narcotic. Tha pulque of Mexico, the cashew of Ilrar.il. the hsheeah of Persia, tho opium of China, tha guavo of Honduras, the wedro of Kussla, the soma of ludls. tha aguardiente f Morocco, thearaknf Arabia, the mast in of Hvrla. the rakl of Turkey, the lew of Oar many, tha whisky of Scotland, the ale of f'.ngiand. the nil drinks of America, ara do ing their beat to stupefy. Inflame, dement, impoverish, hrutalir.e nn I slay the human race. Human power, unless re-tuforeai from tha heavens, can never extirpate tha evils I mention. Much goo I has hnnn ac complished by the heroism and fidelity of Christian reformers, but the f.vt remains .1... . i. i 1, i ... .... .. . I I iihi i nin ain iirii -ii.-ii.iii iiii-ii ail'i iimn- tillleent women this moment going ov.tr tha Niagara ahvam of iiiliriety than nt any time ' sluen the first grape was turned Into wins : aud the tlrst head of rye liegm to soak In a brewery. When people tou-h this subject, they are apt to give statistic as to how many I millions nre in drunkards' grave, nr with quick tread marching on toward them. Tba Inud Is full of talk of high tariff and low I tariff, but whnt aliouttha htg!i9t of all tariffs III this country, the tariff of a'00.0O0,000 I which rum put upon tba Tinted Htntea in s). for that Is what it cost us.' You do not I tremble or turu pale when I say that. Tba fact Is we have become burdened by atn- tistica. ami tney make nine impreas;on. Hut If aomo on" could gather into one mighty lake nil the tears that have lieeu wrung out of orphanage and widowhood, or Into one organ diapason all tint groan that have been uttered by the suffering victims of this holocaust, or luto one whirlwind all the sigh of centuries of dissipation, or from the wicket of oue immense prison have look upou us the glaring eyes ot all those whom strong drink has en liingeonad, we might perhaps realir.e the appalling desolation, lint, no, no, the sight would lorever blast our vision , the sound would forever stun our souls, do on with your temperance literature; go on with your temperance plat forms: goon with your tcMiperane laws. Put we are all hoping for something from anove, an-l while the hare arm of suffering, and the bare arm of luvalldis-c. und the bare arm of poverty, and the bare arm of domes tic teolntlon.' Irom wnieti rum hath torutbn sleeve, are lift ed up ill beggary nu l suppli cation aad despair, let the bare nrm ot Go 1 strike the breweries, and the liquor storea, and the corrupt poltt.-s. aud the license laws, nud the whole inferno of grogshops all around the world. Down, thou a "cursed bottle, from tha throne! Into the dust, thou king of the demijohn ! Parched be thy lips, thou wineeup, with ilrds that sj tll uiver be quenched ! Hut I have no time to so tcily the manifold evilt thut challenge Christianity. And I think I have seen lu so ne Christians, nnd rend in some newspapers, nud benrd from some pulpits n ilishearteiiment. as though Christianity were ao worst oil that it is bar lly worth while to af tempt to win this world for l bid. und that nil Christian work would col lapse, und that It is uo use for you to teach a Sabbath class, or distribute tracts, or exhort iu prayer meetings, o.' preach In a pulpit, aa mtau is gaining groiud. To Dhuke that pessimism, the gospel of smashup, I prauob this sermon, allowing that you ara on the winning side, tiouhead! Fight on ! What I want to tnakeoi't to-y Is that our ammu-oitln- not exh tat all k ' bee a accompllsli4 una umu ute,'- Ishing before the great Armageddon ; that ti at more than one of the thousand fountains of beauty lu the Klug's park bus begun to play : that not more than one brigade ot ths innumerable hosts to be marshaled by the rider on the white horse has yet taken tba field ; thut what liod lias dous yet has been with arm folded In flawing robe, but that the time is coining wheu He will rise from Histhroue, aud throw off thut robe, nud come out of the palaces nf eternity, and come dowu the stairs of heaven with all conquer ing step, nud halt lu the presence of expec l ii i it Natlou. uud tlaslUug Ills omniscient eyes ucross the work to be done will put buck the sleeve of Hi right arm to the shoul der, nnd roll It up there, and for the world'a llual und complete rescue uiake bare Ills arm. Wbo can doubt the result wheu ac cording to my text Jehovah does His Isstt i when the last reserve force ot omnipo tence take the Held; wheu the lust (word ot eternal might leups from Its scab bard? Do you know what decided the battle of HedanV The bills a thousand feet high. T.leveu huudrod caunuus on tha hills. Artillery on the heights of Olvonue, and twelve Herman Isitteriei on the heights of l.a Moncello. The Crown Prince of Has ony watched tba scene from the heights ol Mairy. Between u quarter to 0 o'clock la the morning und 1 o'clock in the afternoon of Heplenile-r 'i, 1H7I). the hills dropped the shells that shattered the French host In tha valley. Tho l-'reucu I'.mperor aud theSo.000 of bis army captured by the bills. Ho In thla couflict uow raging between boliuess aud siu ''our eyes are unto the bills." Down here In the valley of earth we must be valiant soldiers of the cross, but the Com mander ot our bust walks the heights nud views the sceue far better than we cau in the valleys, nud at the right day aud the right hour all heaven will open it butteries on our side, and the Commander of the hosts of un righteousness with nil bis followers will sur render, and it will take eternity to fully oelo hrate the universal victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. "Our eye ureuuto the hills." It is so certain to be accomplished that Isaiah ia my text looks dowu through the field glass of prophecy and speaks of It ns already ac complished, ard I take my stand where tha prophet took his stand aud loo' at it as all done, "Halleluiah, 'tU done." Kee! T hoae cities without a tear! Look! Those con tinents without a pang. Heboid ! Those hemisphere without a siu! Wby, those deserts, Abrublnu desert, American des ert, uud t reat Hahara desert, are all irrigated into gardens where Uod walks iu the cool of the dnv. The atmosphere that eneirole our globe flouting uot one groan. All the river and lakes aud oceans dimpled with uot oue falling tear. The climates ot the earth have dropped out ot tbem tho rigor of the cold aud the blasts of tue beat, aud It Is universal spring ! Let us change the old world's uume. Let it nu more be called the earth, as when it was reeking with everything pestiferous aud nialevoleut, scar let ed with buttlellelds uud gashed with graves, but uow ao changed, so uromatlo with garduus, and ao resouuut with song, mid so ruboaeeut With beauty, let us cull it Iuimanuel's Land or Ueuluh or niillennlul garden or paradise regained or heaven I Aud to Cod, the oul wise, the only good, ' the only greut, be glory forever. Auieu. Domestic Diamonds. That the United Htates uu tubers the diuruoud amount its many precious atones is an uudoubted fact, aud, al though none of uy size to compare with those from India, Brazil and South Africa have beau fouud, yet front the niHuy evidences of finds of uudoubted specimens of merit, there is reason to hope that some geu of ex cvptioual value may be evoutually dis covered, either acridoubilly or through avstematio seat th. New Orleans l'icavune. V