: .. NOW AND THEN. Oh, now and tlin then eo-ne a day Whm nil our skies are I -ight, An 1 All of Ufa's nppolntn 1 way Is bnthed In golden light , When roses hide no thorn beneith , When love has no alloy i Anl Rophyr. full of pcr'time brent ho From out the hills of Joy. The present Is a flwtlng thing The pt will llv for aye, And all Its store of pleasures tiring Forever and a day. Anil softer slwill th echoes coins From time's receding shore; Etch will glean a pleasure fro Tho Jys that are no mor. Oh. memories of such, awake And glad tlio weary Now t A wreath of recollections make To crown the dreamer s lirow. Oh. silent voice nu.l v.inishe I tin a 1, llring ftni-lj the goldeu sheaves The ripple of tho waters an I Tim laughter of the Imv. "N'.x ju Waterman, In Chicago Journal. SEVEN DAYS! KATR rrtNAM OS'IOOP. , T wan a Lot day . ' in nnwtw asst.. ....u The t i il of tnotmtain travel had not yet net in for theseasou, nml Nina Cal.l- well was tho only tMlMKntriir itl t'l.n y vw iuuhi.v uiti stage coaeli which ha I jogged heavily along for twelvo woarT inili K. The journey was enlivened by simoons of lut that etrengthoueil the camel-like suggestions of the four gauut jailed horsea. Tho young la.ly who sat in state ulouo in thin uncom fortable vehicle was thoroughly worn out with heat anl headache, an !, worst of all, bored with her own so ciety. Nma Caldwdl was eightoen a::.l very pretty. She was also exceedingly spoiled, ami subject to occasional flu of unreiMin. In ono of thesn the hud left her Muter unil brother-in-law, a week in advance of the time appointed, and was now reupiug the benefit of that rash net. Khe had leisure and to sparo for bitter reflection. She tried to read, yawned, counted the flies, attacked some caramels and finally relapsed into somber depression. "VVho.i, Jetniny! Whoa, there!" Xiua started nud looked uround in . l-. i i . . '.' . . . " Dowaaerinent. A moment later the driver's sunburned face appeared ut the door. She must have slept u little. 1 "Here you arc, miKg, Maple Hotel. Stop half an hour, then chuuge with coach from Greene. Uoin to stay, though, you be?" , Nino, even in alighting, took in hor rroundina. st a glance, - Maple a Btorrning.place rarm imnu .. mere - . v, onmgrring. I sojourn hero a poo;. so she had decide li.. iroamed as to r joined her. li Under the great maple, from which the house was named, a 'gent'emaii lay asleep, his straw hat and news paper beside him. "The only cool place," thought Nina. "How intensely seltish." From the piazza, the yellow paint glared hot in tho sunshine, she looked disdainfully at her recumbent enemy man of about thirty, and, so far a could bo judged from his position, de sidtdly RooJ-looking. His hair vM light and close cut, his forehead square, ud his inoutb, evu iu sleep, and tin der the shadow of his mustache, wore look of imperturbable good humor. The merits o' his ligiir.! rather of tho massive order wire uudeuiublo. On a bench near Nina was a book. Shu took it ti.. On the flyleaf was written, Merrick Uryoe. Undoubtedly bis, bhe thought, as sho turuoi it over. Meanwhile tho late sleeper had awak ened. Oj the piazza sat tho prettiest girl he had ever seen, with black, will ul hair, ami evenbut th book Hs book, monopolize.! those. Just then she looked up, and he sjw that they were durk gray. His own light brown oues were keeu though in lolout, and llttlo escaped them. Ho arose and sauntered awav, while bhe was vexed to find herself spjculat ing about him. Maple Hotel was, p. rhai.s, the dull. Mt place in the world. T0 call it a "one hors... concern" would bo rank flrtttery. It was tho merest ciniiie fractioi, And if there were ever jus titial.I.) homicide, it would have been assuredly in the taking oil of the com pounder of its pies and pudding. Nina's cerculean mood deepened to indigo at the sight of the conglomerate nightmare supper, which sho enjoyed in aohtary state with Mr. Urvce, mar veliut;, tho while, to behold" his up petite. There seemed a certain an tagomsm between them, the more uu fortuiiale since they would bo throwu on each others society for buveral days. Nina explained her position. She was in advance of friends obliged to llay their arrival ( !) after which they WerU fill Hr.lll.r In II . Bryco remarked that his own case was somewhat similar. His party, also was delayed -they were to have met here yesierday-and ho was consoling hilu-elf as best he could with tish lug. "Odious people," thought Xina pet tishly. "It is wonderful how u.auy such there are in tho world, and how one always meets thoiu. Ethel would ay it served mo right-a married sis ter w so unsympathetic, liut I will never own to homesickness." Next day she made further acquaint ance with Mr. Bryoe on the basis of he book aforesaid. They ducuwd iU characters and iucideuts. C "San n .T "The story is entertaining. Bui the hrroino " and Nina made a little grimace. ' "Exactly my ideal, smiled Mr. Bryce. , "I wonder how many men Lave said that," flashed Nina, "rfhe is abso lutely slavish. Most worn-Mi, thank heaven, have a little prtdo left." "But she ha so much heart. Per haps, though, yon object to that?" "Oh, I have none at all." "You are to be congratulated, has always Won my misfortuno possess too much." Nina had taken a great dislike Mr. Bryco. He had a vexatious way of involving her in a discussion -which left her angry and bewildered. She felt tempted to goaway, but pride and convenience alike forbade. For seven days she must endure it. Bhe would remain in her room, or seek the fields and woods. As this seemed a tramp less country (even tramps disdained it, thought Niua bitterly) the idea was practicable. The next morning she had her break fast sent up to her. Then she slipped out of doors to a fragrant nook she had discovered. But the air was vitia ted by a cigar, where Mr. Bryce sat smoking. He rose and tossed it away. "I have something of yours. Com meud my honor that I have not pressed the spring. " He had in reality examined it, and knew that it con tained merely a woman's picture. Bat she believed it, as she took the miss ing locket. There was a truce established, and time even passed pleasau ly there in the locust shade. "I am going fishing to-day," he said presently. "What is the attraction in fishing? Tho idea, after centuries of civiliza tion, of reverting to the original savage." j ".Shall I confess that I am driven by ' the same motive that urges the sav i oe by the pangs of hunger?" "I understand," replied Nina, j laughing at his rueful look and tone. ! "And if you are successful. I will re i tract my criticism. When do vou re Iturn?" "To-morrow night." Toward eveniug Nina, with an odd feeling of loneliness, was sitting bo- side a laughing little stream, shaded i by elms and Aiders, a long-legged bird ! siood near by, balancing lumself thoughtfully on one foot, and eyeing her cautiously, while at intervals he uttered a long plaiutive cry. From a neighboring field came the low of an- ; proaching cattle. j "Picturesque, rather," said a voico ; b-'hin I her, "Mr. Bryco !" ahe started. "Is it posaiblyyott are here." "I am here to be congratulated and gouorally laurel-crowned," he an swered with a lazy laugh. "I have left at Maple Hotel the result of my labor, and to-morrow t nrooared from famine." "But your two days ihing?" "r.oduced to one." Jf" She colored ii- of herself, and turned. a-"''i-d.9 cattle. "You are afraid ofSem?" "he said, looking at her with a surtle. "A little why?" "Most city girls aro or soemso." "No affectation, I assure you. Think what horrors they must appear 10 us an norns an. I hour." In a novel I should rescue vou from th em stolid as they really are. What do they know of 'the wtariness. the fever and the fret' that vex humanitv ? j However, a novo! incident ia at baud, worn with age, but still vigorous enough to work us woo. Tho atorm ! Look at tho wet. " ' The sky was piled in Mack and leaden masses. As ahe looked at it a quick lightuiug flash made her start. "That vacaut house youder will shelter us," said Bryce. "Only we must make haste. They reached it aa the first thn):i b r rolled around tho hills. Enormous hailstones rattled on the roof, and a cold wind suddenly arose. Nina, over heated by her violeuut exertion, uuw shivered iu her thin dress. Bryco threw olT his ooat, and pro pared to put it over her shoulders. , "You o.ignt, Miss Caldwell," he urged as sho objected. "I am used to rougU ing it, and run no risk whatever, but it is dangerous for you. Very well' impertut-bably, -as sue still refused. "J will try it outside." i He suited hia action to the wor.lA I his was morn than she could bear Alio wont to the door where he stoo coolly among the hailstone. "Uomo iu, and I will do as you WISH. Thoy looked into each other's eyes as uu wrappon tue coveriug about her, no Halt smiled. ".Shall we call this E lo Ion or the arkff land? IshouL'd Or, perhaps, a desert isl build you a hut with tools saved frolm the shipwreck, and bring you friit and goats' milk. Possibly we shoild havo rescued an ice cream freezer.'' "And I could braid our hat arnV do tho estlu tie generally," laughed Wins. 'Aud some day it always enids so a wandering vessel iu searnh of a cocoauut cargo, or something) of tho kiud, wcul.l take us baok to civiliza tion and then " Nina dropped her eyes, anddrummed on a broken pane, "Is tho shower over?" she asked, coldly. "Kegardiug this a,he ark, I will act the double role of KoaU and the dove," ho rejoiced v'-J'i "uemiug un consciousness of her j ered manner. "I will send myself foV.th to see if the rain has abated." He speedily returns d, bearing a given leaf iu triumph. "Lo I hive found t. plaoe for my foot not being a Chio.i go girl" "I am a Chioago girl ," sne hastily interposed, with a flash of the eyes. He gave on glanoa a t the small foot in its perfectly tittine . dainty boot. For th4 first lime in th 4 o-vreer of that legal gentleman, Merrick Bryce was taken aback. "Beware of general ities," he mused, and made his peace as best he might. The last evening of their week's tete-a-tete had arrived. Once more they sat under tho lo.ust trees. Mr. Bryce seemed moody, aud showed a repressed excitement. "My idea of the battle of life, lie said suddenly, "ia to treat the mind and bo ly to their utmost, and then give up the contest." Nina looked astonished. There was; a certain latent weariness about him which she had never seen before. "Merely a breath from the Palace of Truth," he said iu reply to her questioning glauce. Do you dare enter it?" "Yes," she said, wondering still more. "Then do you care for me? Yon must answer," as sho sat in confused silence. "l'es" just audible. "As for me, I envy the earth be neath your feet. What if I have known you but seven days? That is the talk of fools. Nina say that yon have a heart, and that it belongs to me." "You know it already," she mur mure.!. "This is tho hour of my triumph! What has become of your dislike aud pride?" She felt in a half deaui, controlled by her voice. Suddenly he started. "It is I who am a fool and worse ! Miss Caldwell !" abruptly, to restore her to herself. "Mr. Bryce?" with her usual man ner. "The stage-coach is due," taking out his watch. ".Shall we go to the piazza?" The coach came lumbering tip. A young man sprang off, and assisted a pretty blonde girl to alight. "That is the one I am engaged to," said Nina, meditatively, to Mr. Bryce. "An ! that is the one I am engaged to," responded Mr. Bryce with equal calmness. From the inside appeared three other figures, a young couple and an elderly lady. "Fro ! and Ethel," exclaimed Nina. "And my prospective mother-in law," said Mr. Bryco. "What a happy family." After mntual handshakings, Frod whispered to Nina: ".So you have been flirting hero these seven days by yourselves? Well, I cau assure you that your own Char ley aud the future Mrs. Bryco have taken ample revengo for their wrongs." "Poetical justice," mused Nina, as sho started for her room. Ou the stairs sho met Mr. Bryce. "Nina, forgive me," he whispered, "aud four mistakes may be set right. We are not the only culprits." sue withurew her haud, but her heart sang as she continued on hsa way. In her tli-vu-ViVs Hi was going orer a,. ,Wicf interview with her brothr-in-law. You know I never approved of your ball-room engagement with Char ley Feruald, Niua," he had sid. "Miss Nellie Liuwood is much better suited to him. Hint is perfectly shal low and rattle-headed. Fancy hor tell ing us ingeniously that she and Mr. Bryce were engaged, but did not cart! anythiugfor each other. He is hei Kuar.liau, aud sho declares that sue be lieves he was going to marry her be cause she bothered him au I lie did nol know how else to dispose of her." Xina could uotrefraiu from a merry peal of laughter. "Now, this Mr. Bryoe, bo far as I can judge on hj very short au ac quaintance, seems to be a good sort of fellow, aud ono who will keep you in order. Oh, no u.so to flash your eyes you need it." "But what makes you fancy, you absurd Fre.l, that there is anything between Mr. Bryco and mo?" Tho blindness of a bat has not hitherto been considered one of my distinguished characteristics, "respond ed Fred or iciilurly. "But there is Ethel waiting for me. Tell mo when you expect congratulation!, ch, Xina?" With which provoking speech ho had left her to go her own way, with the result, altogether described, of a meeting with Mr. Bryco on tho stairs, and some words uttered which changed the w hole outlook of life for her. De troit Free Press. (ilassblowpM Frmii T.iurliijia. There is settlod now unou the odtro f the Herman quarter in Xow York a nttlo euloay of artistic and soientitio glasablowers from Thuriugia. The colonists say they are the llrst aud only persons to undertake m the United .States exactly such work us they aro doing. Tho show wiudow of this little fac tory displays a curious variety of works in glass. There aro delicately wrought vases in many colors, ther mometer tubes, surgical appliances ; little double bulbed glasses with water in the bwer bulb and gold tish in tho upper. The glass flowers are the pride and specialty of the proprietor. He wai one of the earliest men in (iormany to make them, says his voluble assistant, and they are really marvelous product of the glassblower'4 art. i'uor. are roses, rod, white and yellow, with soft and pliant-lookiug petals, curiously like tho geuuiue rose. There are spray of lily of the valley, a plant iu which the Hermans specially delight; moss-rose buds, forget-me not?, aud all of flfty other flowers that one may name. The glassblowers use ordinary llluminatiug gas, to which they com municate extra pressure by a simple devioe. Thty work with astonishing rapidity aud uieety. ChiDa, Ula aud Lamps. Charles Lamb, the English essayist, was buried iu Eimoutou caurohyard. TRAGEDYJF DRESS. SACRIFIZES FOR FASHION. Men Are as Bad as Woman. Bays niaae Effort to Be tn Style. Tal- Tsxt? "Whose a'lornln lot It not he that ontwaM ailomlnff of plaiting the hair and the wearing of gold or of putting on of ap paral. hut let It h the hidden man of the heart." I Peter III., 8, 4. Tbat ws should all be otad Is proved by the opening of the first wardrobe In paradlso, with Its apparnl of dark green. That we should all, as far as our means allow us, M beautifully and gracefully appareled is proved by the fact that Ood never made a wave but He elided It with golden sunbeams, or a tree but tie garlanded it with blossoms, or a sky but Ho studded It with stars, or al lowed even the smoke of a furnace to ascend but He columned and turreted and domed and scrolled It Into outlines of indnscribahlo gracefulness. When I see the apple or chards of the spring and the pageantry of the autumnal forpsts. I come to the conclu sion that, if naturedooaeverjolnthechurob, while she may be a Quaker In the silence of her warship, she never will be a Quaker in the style ot her drees. Why the notches of a fern leaf or the stamen of a water Jily'r Whv. when the day departs, does It let the folding doors of heaven stay open so long When It might go In so quickly? One summer morning I saw an army ot a million spears, each one adorned with a diamond of the first water I mean the gray", with the dew on If. When the prodigal came home, his father not -.ly put a coat on his back, but jewelry on his hand. Christ wore a beard. Paul, the bachelor apostle, not afflicted with any sentimentality, admired the arrangement ot a woman's hair when he said In his epistle, "If a woman have long hair, it Is a glory unto her." There will ne a fashion In heaven as on earth, but It will be a different kind of fashion. It will decide the color ot the dress, and the population of that oountry, by a henutiful law. will wear white. I say these things as a background to mv sermon to show you that I have no prim, precise, prudish or cast Iron theories on the subject of human apparel. but the goddess ot fashion tins set up her throne In this world, and at the sound of the timbrels we are all expected to fall down and worship. The Old and New Testament of her Bible are the fashion plates. Her altars smoke with the sacrifice of the bod Ik, minds and souls of 10.000 victims. Ia hor temple four people stand In the organ loft, and from them there comes down a cold drlnle of music, freezing on the ears of her worshipers. This goddess of fashion has become a rival of the Lord of heaven and earth, and It Is high time that wo unlimbered our batteries agnlnst this Idolatry. Vhn I come to count the victims of fashion, I Dnd as many masculine as feminine. Men make an easy tlradu agalnt woman, ns though she were the chief worshiper at this ldolstrous shrine, and no doubt some men In the more conspicuous part of the pew have already cast glnncMH at the more retired part of the pew, their look a prophecy of generous dis tribution. My sermon shall be as appropriate for one end of tho pw as forthe ottior. Men are as much the Idolntors of fashion as women, but they sni-rillnn on a different part of the altar. With men tha fashion goes to cigars anu olubrooms and yachting parties and wine suppers. In the t olled (state the men chaw up and smoke 100 -000.000 worth of tobacco every year. That Is their faihlon. In London not long ago a man died who sinned In life with t76O,0OO, but he ate it all up in gluttonies, sending bis agents to all parts of tne earth for soms rare delicacy for the palate, sometimes one oliA- ill' roJ V,,n" btvn 30 or oa- He ate rup "Is whdie fortune and had onli- mil... lelt. With that he bought a woodcock and had It dressed in the very beet style, nte It, guvs two hours lor digestion, then walked out on Wefcimintterbrldgennd threw himself Into the Thamesand died, doing on a large scale what you and I have often seen dona on a small scale. But men do not abstain Irom millinery and elaboration of skirt through any superiority of humility. It is only because such appendages would be a blockade to business. Whut would sashes su 1 trains three aud a half yards long do In a stock market? And yet men are the dis ciples of fashion Just as much as women. Home of thetn wear boots so tight they cau hardly walk in the paths of righteousness. And there are men who buy expensive suits of clothes nnd nover pay lor them, and who go through the streets in great stripes ol color like animated chnckerhosr.ls. I say these things because I want to show vou that I urn linniiril.'tl In my discourse, and that both sexes, Iu the iHUguage of the surre but m's onW, sliull "share and share alike." As Ood may help me. I shall show you what are tb destroying and doathful luflueucos of Inordinate fashion. The first baneful Influence I notice Is in fraud, Illimitable and ghastly. Do you know that Arnold of the revolution proposed to sell his country iu order to get money to support his wife's wardrobe? I declare here belore Ood and this people that the effort to keep up expensive establishments in this country Is sending more buslnes men to temporal perdition than all other causus combined. What was It that sent Ollmsn 10 lha penitentiary and Philadelphia Morton to the watering of stock, aud the lifo lnsuranes presidents lo perjured statements about their assets, and has completely upset our American finances? What was it that over, threw the United (states secretary at Wash ington, the crash of wuose fall shook the continent? But why should I go to these fa mous defaulting to show what men will df in order to keep up great home style and ex pensive wardrobe when you aud I know score of mon who are put to their wits' end and are lasbed from January to Decembei in the attempt? Our politicians may theor ize until the expiration of tbulr terms of of lice as to tha best wav of imnrovinir nnr monetsry condition in this ooumry. It will be of uo use. and things will be no beitei until W'l can learn to put ou our heads and backs and feet and bauds no more than w can pay for. There are clerks In stores ami mnk nn limited salaries who. In the vain attempt to keep th wardrobe of their family as showy ns other folk' wardrobe, are dying of muffs and diamonds and shawls and high hats, and they have nothing left exaept what shey give to cigars and wine suppers, and thoy die be fore their time, and they will expect us min isters to preach about them as though they were the vU-tlms of early piety, and after a high class fuueral, with silver haudles at the side of the coffin of extraordinary bright ness, it will be found out that tha under taker Is cheated out ot his legitimate ex ponies. Do not send to me to prune. n the funeral sermon of a man who dies like that. I will blurt out the whole truth and tell that be was strangled to death by his wife's rib bons. Our countries are dressed to, death. You are not surprised to find that the put ting up one publlo building in New Vo.-k ooit millions ot dollars more thau it ought to have cost when you Hud that the man who gave out the coutraets paid more thau tSOOO for his daughter's wedding dress. Cashmeres ot a thousand dollurs each are not rare on Hmadwav. It I timated that there are 10,000 women in these two cities who have expanded oa their personal array trtooayear. What are men to do In order to keep up such home wardrobes? Steal? That Is the only respectable thing they oan do I During the last fifteen years there have been In numerable flue businesses shipwrecked on the wardrobe. The temptation oomes Iu this wsy: A man thinks mors of his family than of an the world outside, and if tbey spend the evening In describing to him the superior wardrobe of the family across tha street that theyoannot bear the sight ot the man is thrown on his gallantry and ou his pride of family, and without translating his feeling into plain language he goes into ex tortion and. Issuing falss stoek and Skillful penmanship In writing somebody else's name at the foot of a nromlssorr note, and they all go down together the husband to tne prlon. the wire to the sewing machine, the children to bo taken, eare ot by those who were called Door relations. Oh. for some new Bhakespeare to arise and write the tragedy oi nnman oi nnn i Will you forgive m If I say in tersest shape possible that some of the men have to torre and '.o perjure and to swindle to pay for their Ives' dresses. I will say it whether yon lorgrr me or not i Again, inordinate fashion Is th foe of all Christian almsgiving. Men and women put so much In personal display that they often have nothing for Ood and the cause of suf fering humsnlty. A Christian man cracking dis ratals iioyal glove across the baok by shutting up his hand to hldethe cent he puts mv mo poornox. a i nristtan woman, at the story of the Hottentots, orvlnff eonions tears Into a 123 handkerchief and then glv- in iwo cent piece to tne collection, thrust ing It under bills so people will not know but It was a 10 goldpleee. One hundred dol lars tor inoenso to fashion i two cents for Ood Ood gives us ninety cents out of every dollar. The other ten oents by command of His Bible belong to Him. Is not Ool liberal according to His tltblng system laid down In the Old Testament? Is not Ood liberal in giving us ninety oents out of a dollar when He take but ten? We do not like that. We want to have ninety-nine cents for ourselves and one for Ood. Now, I would a great deal rather steal ten eents from you than from Ood. I think one reason why a great many people do not get along In worldly accumulation faster Is be eausa they oo not observe tms oivine rule. Ood says, "Well. If that man Is not sstisfted with ninety cent of a dollar, then I will take the whole dollar, and I will givs it to the man or woman who Is honest with Me." The greatest obstacle to charity In the Chris tian church to-day Is the fact that men ex pend so much money on their table, and wo men so much on their dress, they have got nothing loft for the work of Ood and the world's betterment. In my first settlement st Belleville, N. J., the cause of missions was being presented ono Habhath, and a plea for the charity of the people was being made, when an old Christian man In the audience lost hi balanoe and said right out In the midst of the sermon, "Mr. Talraage, how are w to give liberally to those grand and glori ous causes when our families dress as tbey do?" I did not answer that question. It was the only time in my lite when I had nothing to ssy. Again, inordinate fashion Is distraction to public worship. You know very well there are a good many people who come to church Just as they go to the races to see who will come out first. What a flutter It makes Iu church wheu some woman with extraordt nary display of fnshlon comes In ! "What a love of a bonnet !'' ays one. "What a per fect fright !" esys 600. For the most merci less critics In the world are fashion critics. ! Men and women with souls to be saveil pass- : Ing the hour In wondering where that man 1 got his cravat or what store that woman I piitronlm-s. In many of our churches the preliminary i exercises are taken up with the discussion of wardrobes. It is pitiable. Is It not won- I derful that the Lord does not strike the meetinghouse with lightning? What dis i traction of public worship 1 Dying men and i and women, whose bodies are soon to be j turned into dust, yet before three worlds ! strutting like peacocks, the aw:ul question ,of the soul's dnstlny submerged by the ques. , lion of nsvy blue velvet and long fan train I skirt, long enoug to drag up the church aisle, the husaand'3 store, office, shop, faa I tory, fortune and the admiration of half the I people In tho building ! Men and women i come late to church to show their clothes, ! People sitting down In a paw or taking up s hymnbook, all absorbed at the same time iu personal array, to sing ; ai-i. i.ij an,,... Mix. ,v. ku, t. tUf .... Tb better portion trace. ' ( Rl from lrollorr talus i Towtr J ntavta, tay satire plac. I adopt the Kpls?optllan prayer and say, Oood Lord, deliver us !" Iusatlate fashion also belittles the Intel lect. Our minds are enlarged or they dwin dle just In proportion to the important of the subject on which we constantly dwell. Can you Imagine anything more dwarfing to the human intollect than the study ot fash ion? I see men on the street who, judging from their elaboration, must have taken two hours to arninge their appirnl. After a few years ot that kind ot absorption, which one of McAllister'.! magnifying glasses will bo powerful enough to make the man's oharaa 1 ter visible? They all land In Idiocy. I I have seen men at tho summer watering j places, through fashion, the mere wreck ot what they once were. Hallow of cheek. Meagre of limb. Hollow at the ohnst. Show Ing uo animation save in rushing across a room to pick up a lady's fan. Simpering I along the corridors the same compliments ! they si-npered twenty years ago. A New i York lawyer at I'olted Htates Hotc', 8ara I toga, within our hearing, rushed across a room to say to a sensible woman, "You ara as swmit na poaches !" The fools of fashion I ar myriad. Fashion not only destroys the body, but It makes Idiotic the intellect. I Yet, iny Irionds, I have given vou only the I milder phase of this evil. It shuts a great multitude out ot heaven. The llrst pent ol ' thunder that shook Ktual declared, Tliou sbalt have uo other Ood before Me," and ( you will have to oboose between the go bless I ot fashion and tha Christian OoJ. Thorn are it great many seats in heaven, nnd tbey j are all easy seats, but not one seat for the ; devotee of fashion. Heuven is lor meek and ; quiet spirits. Heaven is for those who think more ol their souls than ot their bo lies. Heaven is for those who have more Joy la Christian charity than In dry goo is religion. Why. if you. withyoiT idolatry of fashion, should somehow get into hnaven, you would be for putting a French roof ou tha "house ot tnauy mansions." Give up this idolatry of fashlou or give up heaven. What would you do standing ielde the Couutee of Huntington, whose joy it was to build ohapsl for the poor, or with that Christian woman of Boston who fed 1600 children of the street at Fanuull Hall ou New Year' day, giving out ns a sort ot doxology at the end of the meeting a pair of shoes to each oueot them, or those Dorcases of modern society who nave consecrated their needle to the Lord, and who will get eteruul reward lor every stltoh they take? Oh, men aud women, give up the Idolatry of fashion ! The rivalries and the competi tions ol such a lib) are a stupendous wretch adness. You will ulway Hud soma oue with brighter array aud with more palatial resi dence, nnd with lavender kid gloves that make a tighter tit. And If you buy this thing and wear it you will wish you ha I bought something else and worn It. And the frets of such a life will bring the crow's loot to your temples before they nre due, and whan you come to die you will have a miserable time. I have seen men and women of fash ion die. and I never sw ona of them die well. The trapping off, there thev lay on the tumbled pillow, and there were Just two thlngsthat bothered them waste 1 life and a coming eternity. I could not pacify them, for their body, mind and soul hud been ex hausted in the worship of fasiion, and tbev could not appreciate the gospel. When I knelt by their bedside, tbey were mumbling out their regrets and saying OQoi! O Ood!" Their garments hung up in the war irobe, never sgsin to be seen by them. Without any exception, so far as my mem ory serves me, thev died without bops an t went Into eterulty unprepared The most ghastly deathbeds on earth are theone where a mnu dies ot delirium tremens aud the other where a woman dies after hav ing sacrltlced all bsr faeultie of body, mind and soul in the worship ot fashion. My friend, we muit appear in judgment to an swer for what w have woru on our bodies as well a for what repentunoe we have exer cised with our souls. On that day I see coming In Beau Brun roel of the last century, without bis eloik, like which all Eaulsnd got a cloak, and witb out bis can, like whloh all England got a cane, without his snuffbox, like srbioa all England got a snuffbox he, the fops, agee, particular about everything untie, eaii aerou uurr wiinoni tns ins i: MsrxhJj L n I J- mat uown to old age he showed prove his early wicked gallantri salom without his hair, and Man Arnold, the belle of Wall street, wh05 was the center ot fashion, without her 3 perl of restore. , umimnvui hiiuvvi imr iiui-v. en And In great haggardnese thev tha away Into eternal expatriation, while tIJ the miM.nl Af hM-nlv aMui will k. . 1 Vasntl, who wore the modest veil hofonj palatial bacchanalians, nnd Handsh J annually made a little cost for Hamuel'.l temple, and Orandmother Lois, the tress of Timothy, who Imitated her ij nH U..r T nk.l-. . 1 ' -", rt ti-j ,na mrmwf bll.m I Q world, and many of you, the wivs mothers and sisters and daushters af present Christian church, who, through J tribulation, are entering into the klnt vi.. viii nil nuuuutlimi WUQ WOUI1 up the royal family of heaven whon H, J I'Whnan.v.p K- .III nff f.l . l. 1 is My brother, My sister, My mother." T!io Wonderful Gulf Stream. IVop'.o who visit the east coist Florida, and especially the Ind Itlvcr nnd tho Luke Worth re. men wonacr wny mo annate or til lection la so delightful at all tl J r the year nnd o different lo nost evtry particular from what i would expect In thoso latitudes. ixplanatlon Is simple enough, i lluercnco be'iween northern wrultroptcal Flo Ida. apart from atltudlnal distance. Is due to levatlon of the former and the ;ance from it of the Gulf sire The waters of th tiulf of Met vempcr the immediate coast 1, Their effect does not extend far '.and. The stream Is pressed clus? ;he east coast shore alon Dade Co: ly by the Ilahama banks. At Ian iteatnshlps southwatd bouml, l void tho force of tho current, st Id so near the shore that they car. lonie points bo balled from la The Gulf stream Is an old story, It Is a xreat fact. This vast, d blue ocean river, a thousand ti the volume of the Mississippi. II thirty miles wide, 2,000. feet de tnd has a velocity of five tulles hour the year round. Tho temp ture of the stream Is eighty-four jrcos, or nine degrees libber t! the waters of the ocean thr which It flows. Tho trade w; blowing nine-tenths of the time, tcr and summer from tho eustw bear the stratum of warm air for oy tne if uir stream wenward an tho land. This is why the east o Is milder and more o.'uablc than west, coast in the "satuo latlt With the Gulf stream arc found tti other dualizing agencies the Iti winds, the Everglades, with a wu Mirfaeo preventing a land brei and the zone of high barometric p J ure. mo midsummer heat, : might otherwise bo ninety-five grees. Is reduced to something eighty-eight degrees. The mid ter chill, which might get dowt thirty degrees, Is warmed up to so v-o liito Iorty degrees, A Government Puppy. Apropos of the distribution of seeJ from the Department of AgrlculturJ which was under discussion in til Ilouso recently, Rep e tentative Tuc sr, of Virginia, to d a Jtory. He sa that down in Appomattox Gout: there lived an old farmer to whoni-1 had on sove-al occasions sent pa ages of seeds and shipments of ft from tho Fish Commission, wi which to stock tho creeks nnd ionf, on ills place. Ono court day, wh; the Representative was In town, 1 farnior friend approached and in confidential way said: "Tuck, you ' jent me scuds and tish two or thr times, and I am very much obllg to you for them, but there Is o: other thing I wish you would do you can." "What's that?" asked tlio Reprl scntatlvo. "Well, I want a thoroughbriii,' hound pup for my kennel, and thought maybe you folks up at Wu ington could een I It down to me Jul as well as not, if I only asked for I "Why, ceitalnly," responded Tut or. "Itwlllglvo mo great plcast to send the pup to you, and as soY' as I get back to Washington you u look out for him." Tho Represent tlve said that, so far as ho could s thore was no reason hy tho Coven ment should not go Into tho busin of supplying the constituents Congressmen with dogs t lmpn their breeds as well as seed to u prove their crops and tlsli to add their food supply. "So," he o tlnued, "I hunted up a thoroughly houud pup, bad hliu nicely era t1 prepaid the express charges and s him down. And you can bet tli constituent is solid for TucUcr." Washington Tost Fruit bating to Cure All Hie A new society of cr.inks has ne. started by a former lieutenant In t German urmy. His name Is Wat! He Is the leader of a new "ism," u; as such sailed recently from S Francisco to Honolulu. The Fruit: rians" I the namo o. tho new soch he represents, an1 their belief rather notion I that modern civi zation Is fun of vanities and stran. notions, and greatly needs reformln ine uiein tiers eat notning but n trust, eschew cooKcd loon of ui kind, and drink only water. Tli ure to live in huts, bare of the con forts of civilization, and go nakei .x-L.leut Wat lie intends to buy largo tract of land In the and wit Islands, or perhaps a small lsl.ui outright, for the purpose of lound.n u colony. Itubbor Tires. In the use of rubber tires fnr till cycles it must be borne In mind thiitl no oil, varnish or grease should txtl allowed to touch them. OU Is aol enemy to ruDDer. uare in this ro-l spect should be had la applying the uu i.u ueariainti ii l! 0 Ii:i til 1 II 1 I MHNiMUttaamaaattMeau.