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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1888-12-27, Page 6AMINNIONINIMMENNEOMMos, SOW BEADING. Ii * EverY year ikhonid mark. mane new step, Dr. Thomas' Views. taken. Ti an immense audience et MeTicher's — Omens Dr, Thoome proeheel last Sunday on " Tee Churto Rev. a. s. DAVID SATS HEISa PORTE= The speedo" interact of the unison lay in Pnoioarroze IR THE lienneteentit. its effort to answer, in a comprehensive way, the emoted' question of chnrch attendance in jet relatien to ertheileXy, The weaker 'held the monuchical principle at the bottom of the older religions( to he the cense of Medern dieutiefaction with the church, and, that to be popular xeligion must now be re. Tublican. The sernon wee as followe z (In passing along the street, of our otty one notices that the many oh:melees and placea of worthip have each some qualifying mime hy ethic* one is distinguished from mother. Buck of every one et theoe lames is a history. The Jewish comes to us from l'OB, their 'eve and benevoleece /wve grown. I tion, oat became they fear clothe bat that , AND , ABOUT WOMEN. The aervicee at the New Ohercle Temple on Eine kitroet, Tereinto, weee conducted least Suoday by ftev..7. S. David, Perted.ale. In the:evening beteg-tamed on " Vreleetiou After Death," Probation, he said, is not terznineted by any arbiteery divine A.M. It is 4(4 tOte thAt Q0c1 levet! the unregenerate. only until death, and theo pestle RtO wrath,. epee, them forever. "o4 Is love," and God is infinite, ; themfore He. is iefinite, eternal and nedversal ame can never tedA Away .trozeri any soul, OtA Oyen to Otero. lty, yet divine love 'never Corepele, for the Old Totontent tisnO ; the Catheint freM C.4907:1:11hTic:Qw14044e1P44.1b1r: raaa4m70-f,trtItaufor;a°: the earlier .Chrietlan ; the Lutheran !met A tbe Gorip4a komph ; tbe Epko)pit from om .tiee! And would make bins a dead machine, tbe 44d fjo preabyrorm.4 from tuo. ueSe for the perfermeoce of even. those ne. gativereme whiols the devileeprefont, Bee, Swam and Scottioli brenebee of the. -Peoteate. bailees IS: the period in which the moral wet Rormatiost of the eixteenth cootetry.. vha maefthadlata, Oppg,...pottorlig. Character ia forizig d liet yet ivinploted bite, and Liberate rePreemst the diettent frees the Reformers, or the prottetante of the Even -steeds. formin' g on tile basis of the free choree of good or evil. Thia tux:Patton MaY he etet- pleted LI general even before death, or the proems may he continued long after death. "Thus one rause go back to the QM World mach depends, on eiremnsteenee aid the to find the sources of the many forms of length and brevit of life Them wh! o die belief and eineehiee that nue ;undo their in infancy or 61;01100a cticanct e n_a sail eie tn.. went out to see what kmd of a night d tart reply, "We cannot allow may of that nonseme here," said the (Metal ; "ye' An Waiinto our ceuntree And though at firat have any probetion in tbiz lite, and yet thee, "- taatig, it ieIlessible .to eltmeifY theee meet he regenerated under the Sargelomo of mwat give your eX4ct age if you denee to be regletered. Thie aim peratetently.deelhed various fen= for better Andy. In thetr free thelee ee thege whe live lame in tile to do, and ceneeettently her porno us not on emoptione ao to the origln and nature of werfill tet Fte 'Who le 8 one " 1;1440 ONO Seta 11"i WQM414. Bg.ST. I libeeraCrTICChai anttlYtIrearrateonClatlq04nilltro it)411:/etieeneeMirdaerh°11Td'rregneUdereande°tIl'eett4OtlisvniletcileQeYeet 1411? ditrereutlY MUL "4 "ruell 14thave the "11138 114t.-tj314t94 gez144' side are them whet claim that a church Can tact with evil, they. have centieetel nse for itelee only from the clergy -that there is the feeulty of choemeg in the other world, TY wIth the 'Priesthood A Certain divine Tibia ObeiCe is between TariMia 'degrees end deposit et grace, found in no other order of qualitiea ef good. All eceecielatigea heathen =en, which makes it neeeasery for thie order who would fain have received light in this eel eettabliale charcliee And administer the world, hue -eke witigrat hearing the imund of eacrameute. Fludieg lte etree4eat negertiee the GOapel, Will he leetrueted in the other le the Catholic, this" le the idea of the Epley life and will gladly receive the light oration and Freebytertao elturehee. It ef we. No oue who leaves the world Pleoee the title of Qhureh PropettY, not ht with a germ of eineere deeire, or a Spark Of ehe hands of the people whose money bonged genuine conecierice will go into hell, for the it, but in the handa of the chexcla as repree firet founation of tree etmeeienee is the he. muted by the clergyginning of regeneratioxi and the laud el 44 The tridental eonception differe radically eternal life. Bet these who persietently and front this in that it reakee the people the warily rsteet the light and COPfirre them. eonroe ef the eherela. 14 is growled On the selves be evil will cantinne to choose evil Ile- eadmild of the race. .A.Dy ethepaily of with all its miseries in the other life. AU 115411 tuld w‘933°111 nec-°°1•Pg to It, ma T erge pereoneof mixed states!, enehaa honetthigota, 13374 a Cllareb* 'al'alkia tIn* retw.her* ail4 en' Mliat become homogeeewas before they can tebils13, their toren et worship. The Mee car- eijtor Into Beaeen, which la a state of iter. zumende to the republioan in governmeot. 133013y, one splzite inprieen, to whom:kite Churehee of this order, the IteRtiett, Crum' Lord went and preached (1. rat.. ilie 19), rtgutiouellete, 1-Tateriertu* tattePectleutet lnelbeen in Bides from the time of Noth until templets'and separate congregations, own and. the redemption heel been accomplished, when oontrol their P'rePext7- Doctrinal lade through inetrraetion they amid wend. Thle minuet be divIde(1 according to thee lines of Radea intervenes between Heaven and hell, origin. But ill the hierarthicel and some and is a state of further preparatioo. It in of the fraternal churches hold in common notpurgatory, though the Roman and Greek With the Catholic the Angus:Unita: tboo1oy purgatory le a corruption of what waa,mong of the fall of mato °risingm elan a eebetant 1 the :temente, a true docbrino, and was not a 'eteeemeut and anal= Puniehment, while creation aub et nothing. the Uniteriane, Linkerealiste, Independents, A BWCSI, OPIRIOR NUR. Wife,- The Bible Sap: nadeli bm favor .91 WOrnen* 4-ebn;1 thenklit that tbe fereelitee kept their women- in thebaChgeountl, bet if they did, the -Bible, whiels is their his tory, doeteele litsetood-fiemple 1 The Israelite* did well. by hoping their weesen, in the beck, gamed; thatta where women should he, Wife -But Atilt the Bible says, Roberti -Oh, I know there are a few women mentioned in the laitia-rther0 WAS ).-ezebel, el= WAS a woman. Wife -;Yee.', and the.re IVaa Abele ;bo was a man. Ala there wat---, Husband -ft is no wee talking, Meier The Bible ie a histore, of nen! Women are mentioned only incidentally, as they had influence on the actions of men. The book says very little about women compared to whet it does Omit men! year' when he wa,a living in New Bond street; Tim hero wile km famed pinch stupendous difficulties was too modest or shy to tell her of his love, but confidecl it to her brother, requesting him to be hie mediator. Be might have remembered the femoue old American precedent, of which Lengfellow made so tells ing a use in his "Niles Standish. " The English lady refused to take the initiative; site woula neither deeliee nor eceeptthe lover w ho had net Mirage to "speak foriiiinselta but peoreised to think over the problem. While she watthieking can3ethecalt to Stern ley to march off to Africa for the liberation of Ernie. His old love for Africa reViVed and he left the English Calypso delileerating. A lioe'rele WOMAN'S Min. There oPPeors to have been no lack of kumerenekeldeets attending the regietta- thin of the women voters here in Boston. The lateat story comes feonethe headquartem of the registzars, and may be accepted as Wife (musingly), Yon may be eight, Ale!, entirely anthentse. A large number of the now when I come to think of st. There as one thing, at any rate, it says about Men thet it does not say about women. Itheband (smiling) -I thought you would eon° to yoer goof!, Missy. What is it the Itoek oar about men that it dem not say about moot I Wife (phseielly)-It eve all men are liars. Then the husband (Yoe and pet on his hot sleeve there in ,Another favorite method is th sew the straight sides of some costly lace together, to form a scarfecovering the points where 11 18 ought ep with apraya ot fine flowers. The same scarf is arranged to form sleeves, ethieh can be shortened by raising the ecalloped edges on the outer portion of the arm, carrying them, high on the shoulders, arid as fastening them with epanieth of dainty blossoms and foliage, (Ne Y. Evening Poet. wernen See* to have heel): exceedingly an- rieyed at being obliged to give flack age to the mist:re* aesdle .hnrabor -010 they forfeited their right te Veto rather than to mote how ..eld they Were. Ite one ineteoee • epineter gave ber ego. "twenth.one plots." "What do you mean by *twenty-oee. p iwer inmetred, the registrar. "1 mean, - sir, that 1 an over twenty.ene," wee the vitelly a cie ffected by The q tion is ues---0,---tion of chineact mil tome of the Congregationalists' do not accept these views. Imola and the Chinese. " Church attendane these broad difference!. The high (thumb, or new begmeing to trouble the Russians. For bierarebtal VieW 18 that the church :sustains Nem time the esongolicana have been moving a. divine relation to the means of grace and Into the adjoining Rueetan territory juet that ita benefitseats be hid in no other way north of the „Ammer sloven At first they were than through the saCratnents. Hence it is welcomed, but they have now begun coming AS neccatiary to go to church for religion es in such numbers that the authorities ere Iv the County Court for a marriage license. alarmed. Not only would their premence be But the low church or fraternal Idea is that *At Can go to Gred for himeeli-that the fining dangerous an cane of war, but they are inter - with the worklugs of the Amain church is only a. helpful meana of grace and plans to settle other colonists in tbo eountry. There, as eleewhere, tbe Chinese drive out till other labourers. The Governor•General of the province has therefore recommended that a head tax be impoeed on all Chinese living and doing business 'in Russian terri- tory, the proceeds: to le used for local public' purpoeee. It is enderatood that hie ideas bave met with favour at St. Petersburg, and will soon be put into force. a necessity only for the greatest good. Ita elero are invested with no prteetly powers oilier than arise froze a consecrated life, This in accordance with the genius of de. =acetate government. "Revolt from the monarobiosi compulsion 'of the older forma, loss of faith inorthodox dootriees, have brought about a condition of antagonizm and indifference threligiot which keeps many from attending any aort of church. Others stay away from habit, some from overwork dming the week. Many preachers are even claiming that the Sunday papersare zuining the churches; it is hard. that the preachers cannot be as interesting for an hour as the reporters. SOIDO :nen stay away bemuse their con- sciences will not let them face -truth. "But the fraternal church ohould offer no obstacle to any, let his peculiarity of belief be what it may. It should be the spiritual power at all who love the beautiful, the true, and the good, who love song- and prayer and would walk in the light of eternal hope 1" PRor. SwIED`S SERmo X. Prof. Swing preached to a large audience at Central MunceHall kat Sunday. Hie top. 18 cmusidered the many duties and calls of the hour. Among other things he said: "In life there axe many lessons to learn. Civilization is a vast public school. The activity of every succeeding century has A Baby's Accomplishments. The author of "The Five Talents of Wo. man" has time tabulated a baby's accom- plishments : "A baby can beat any alarm clock ever invented for waking a family np in the morning. Give it a chance, and it can smash more dishes than the most industrious ser- vane:Orlin the country. It can fall down oftener and with lees provocation than the most expert tumbler m the :Areas ring. It OEII make more genuine fuss over a, simple brass pin than its mother would over a bre): en back. It can choke itself black in the face with greater ease than the most ace complished wretch that ever was executed. It can keep a 1e,mily in a constant turmoil from morning till nightend night till morn- ing without once varying Us tune. It can be relied upon to sleep peacefully all day when its father is away at business, and cry persistently at night, when he is particular- ly sleepy. It may be the na.ughtiest, dirtiest, ugliestemoot fretful baby m all the world, but you can never make its mother believe it, and .you had better not try. It can be a charmmg and model infant, when no one is around, but when visitors are present it can exhibit more bad temper than both of its parent, together. It can brighten up a house better than all the furniture ever made; make, sweeter music than the finest orchestra organized; fill a larger place in its parents' breast than they knew they had; and when it goes away it can cause a greater vacancy and. leave a greater blank than all the rest of the world put together." "Stoop, Stoop." Benjamin Franklin, when a lad ot eigh. teen, had a bit ef advice literally "beat ink his head." Ife went, at one time, to call upon Rev. Cotton Mather, who received him in his library, but when his guest lett :Mowed him a shorter way out of the house through a narrow passage, -which was cross- ed by a beam overhead, They were busily engaged in conversation, when, the Min- ister suddenly cried "Stoop, stoop 1" Not understanding what was meant, Frank- lin bumped his head against the beam. Mr. Mather never rained a chance for moral k- r:traction, so he said to the boy, "Yon are young, and have the world before you; stoop as you go through it, and you will mies many hard thumps." Franklin was often reminded, .in after years, of the advice so forcibly given, and said that it did him good service. Added eomethmg moral and mtelleetnal to the history of the preceding one. The Aryan race had potent influence on the subeequent gab -tory of the world. From time to time -there has been some loss to humanity. The gain made has always been greater than the lose. Man's purposes have been growing in ernraber in the haat centuries. That ie be- came our world to -clay is so .rnuole broader than the world of the andante: These pur- poses and duties meet man at every path- way in life. Though Solomon with all his wisdom declared that " all was vanity," I say all is not vanity. What of the many good deeds of bene- volence accomplished, the great education wrought, and still to come There is one great evil to be found in college walla. Teachers and students have been led to think that a four-year course is sufficient in a world where all duo must be students for life. Human rights have not been taught behind college walk." Referring to the literary and eocial clubs of the day Prof. Swing saw some good in -them. They were inducements to run over paths trod in earlier life; they make the heart and the mind obeervant and progres- sive. Men learned old lessons anew and remembered. them, because there the books were retrieved. These -lessons simply repeat- ed that man was made a etadent forever. There is some good in the pages of Homer, Dante, Milton, Shakepeare, but none of thee great men's thoughts, or liven or pur- poses can be made ouree Their books may temporarily satisfy, they cannot sufficeelen cause We must be :Ancients of the present. We do not want any of the past great men or women. Not one of them foresaw our world of to -day, not one saw clearly the rights of the child. What was mercy in the past is cruelty today. Pilate would willingly have saved Christ from death, to hand him over to flagellation. That would have been mercy with Pilate, it would be cruelty in our age. Benevolence, my friends is an infinite sentiment ; education themeelvee in whet !at celled a reaurgeopell. "1 gem 131 sit down end wed these etookingo arta rot awhile," Saya the wife, bet: the hotbauci theowe hineeelf epee the Noy lounge or site back ip Witim hand; at rot And feet pieced leerizon, wily upon another chair. The reselt le that hie whole body gains full beeeAt of the hell hour he glove himeelf from week, and the wife ouly receives thet indireot help Mitch comets from a (*tinge Of ReCepatien, phyeichen would tell her that takieg even ten minutes' relit in a horizontal possitem, as ohnege from standing or sitting at werit, would, prove more benedcai to her than any of her otakohift at resting. Busy women have a habit of keeping on their feet inat AS leugete they can, In epite of backaches; and VZirrnlig pane. Ae they grew older tisey ase the folly ef permitting such draft* upon their etmegth and teem to tales things easier, let whet will heppen. They say ;— "1 used to think I must do thus and le, but rVa grown wiser and teamed to aUgbt things," The drat year of houstekeep are truly the heedeet, for wattled and un. familiar earea are almost daily threat upon the mother and boneedmeicer.-EN, Y. Gra- phic. INAPIT.ECIATED Dzvoioc. 11 18 true that the young wife and mother ie mere oftou, too often'too oelf•eacrificino than otherwine. She einke herown individro salty altogether too mueh 18 the aervice of her funity. It is the oneleet thing to do, to reierve nothing in the way of devotion, but it le not the WiSeSS Way. It develop; flehrtosa inateed of thoughtfuloon in the be. loved ono; whom ;he eerven end ittoo often happens that the wife dad mother who denies hereelf constantly in waiting upon others, aed demands no eon:lactation for herself, wakes later in life to find that the has made a rohtake, Out of the !ennuis of her boort sbe hes sought for the Sake of her family as well as herself. Tho daughter whom comfort betredways been consulted before that of her mother, the son whose hours of etudy of play Intuit never be interrupted for his mother's sake, the husband who knows that Ma wife is a saint for unselfishnese, impone, unconacious- ly upon her goodneat. And they develop dullness of sympathy, an nnreadinese to think of her neede, which is as hurtful to their own moral growth ask is heartbreak- ing and incomprehenalble to the woman who has us:dewily laid down her very life for there. A KOCH ADDRESSED LETTER. The Pittsburg Dispatch says :-A month begged, a omot of when she leave& ngland next month instead certain hotel in this city note paper from the clerk. The clerk gave her a sheet or two of the paper, and the girl, who was a Hungarian, wrote on it stetter to her znother in the Old Country, At the top among the fabrics designed for dinner and tenowns the latest being stripes both wide and narrow af faille francaise and velvet, in unique and novel arrangements of colour, the silk being in most cases of the lighter hue. Among these harmonies and contrasts are those of moss green and gold on reseda, pale rosy -violet on apricot, lilac and gold on dark Florentine bronze, damask and Venetian green, tea rose and sapphire on mow green and pale terra cons, andbronz3 on cameo -pink. There are elm very eta gant materials with a stripe of heavy lustr- ous satin with a magnificent Pompadour - brocaded stripe alternating. Far less ex pensive patterns show narrow velvet stripes on grounds of heavy oorded alik. These, however, are vita handsome enough for any dress occasion, and preferred to the ex tremely wide striper by many women of irreproachable taste in dress. or tyro ago one of the female servants at a Womeeis Invetertetr. One of the biggeat liltia bavezmtiotma oi ceet date la the slatted owieg mutable Ole, a patent for which wo =Imo cot a ort time sea by a Woman 7 yeara flf age. blind !Ad grandmother need not loom the elightot difdeulty in sewiug now. Nothing could be simpler than the eletted needle, and all who See it weeder why it WM; nOt tliett&bt el years and yeaxe ago. The ieventor told me the other day that it cost $31i,009 to make the experiments 'Watch rooked in producing precisely the hied of slot which while readily admitting the thread to tint eye, prevents hat the same time from &tiepin out in the operation al aewitag. What a been thie will be to our reethere and wives may be eaaUy realized when 11 18 uuderstood that one sewing reechine cam. if pany alone in IS''ew Jeremy turas out every reeuth crer 2,C00,C00 needles, Ane i WA PASIZION. 1796, Jan. .° -The Ifeleht of Faehl Lady Cerellee-40ampbell displayed In flyde park the other day a feather four feet higher than her boned. April 29. -The Deohees of Devonthire was at the levee of Weelnetdey, but without powder. Atey 28. -Green ben - eta are now so much in vogue that Ryde park on a Sunday loolre like A moving forest. July 23. -The straw bonnets now eo muoh the fashion originAted in Ireland; and from a praiseworthy mottve in Lady Loftily. Comity, who, to employ the poor of Cell. bridge alittle village near Ceetletown, the seat ofher lerlyehip and hie. Cortolly, toati- tuto a manufenture of straw into hetet and bonnets, whiob rapidly improved and gave breed to hundreds. Foroslee wore the mann. facturera.-[SsalI Advertiser, 1796. PASILION NOUS. A lady who was taker, to the county infirmary at Bellefontaine, Ohio, a few days ago, with her three children, escaped the other night, and, taking the wheelbarrow belonging to the institution, loaded her babies into it and. walked end wheeled them ten miles to her former borne. Her pluck is so much admired. that she will be so as - slated with work and pecuniary aid that the will not be obliged to return th the poor- house. The Empress Frederick and her daughters aro umbra figures at Windsor. The Em- presa wears a widow's; cap with long string - teething nearly to her feet, and her daugh- ters, in addition to their orape robes, weer what would be termed here widows' caps. The Empress has decided to return to Berlin of prooeeding to Italy, as was her original intention. There is an immense display of stripes eif the sheet, as is often the case, were printed the peculiar advantages of the hotel, among them being enumerated electxie bells, bathe, barber shops elevator, special rate's to commercial travellers, etc. The other day a letter came to the+ hotel which had puzzled the Poet -office authorities and amused the hotel clerks immensely. i'he letter was very much addressed. Here is a tolerably close copy of the aupersoription Is Marriage a Failure. 44 Marriage %failure 1 I should gay not 1" remarked an Oregon farmer, whose opinion was desired on one of the great questions of the day. "Why, there's Luoindy gits up in the neornine milks six ,cows, gits breakfase starts four childern to skew], looks Deter the other three, feeds the hens, likewise the a life long process asking as much in the hogselikewise some motherless Sheep, skit= fiftieth year as it did in the fifth. Art, na- twenty pans o' milk, washes the clothes, tare, humanity, God, all these are tran- gitedmner, et eetery, et cetery acendent with the last Memory kilo early, "Think I could hireanybody to do it so dem beauty; the first may fall off the fur what the gits 1 Not much 1 Marriage, tree, but the tree grows on. Men come in air,, is e =cowls, sit; a success, air,; a gret later yearn to offer their property for educa. success!' . Miss Anna Maria KatcherteriskY, -- Hotel. Pittsburg. Electric Bells, Baths, Barber Shop. Elevator. Special rates to commercial travellers. United States, Pa. The writing was also of the strikingly ob- scure Hungarian order. The explanation of the amplitude of the address is thit the Hungarian writer, in ignorance of English, supposed the advertised advantages of the hotel upon the letter -head were part of the address.. THE SECRET HONEYMOON. The newest thing in wedding tours is sensationally called the "Secret Honey- moon." Neither bride nor groom have any idea where they are going. The beat man arranges it all, prepares the scheme of travel and the plan of campaign and gives the bridegroom a, paper, with the whole thing drawn up and schedule of arrangements made, as he steps in the carriage, when the happy pair have the whole new, fruitful subject to discuss as the opening converse: lion of their married lite, instead of having, worn it threadbare during the preliminary engaged period. So long as best men exer- cise their functions hi this respect, with discretion, and don't send happy couples up in balloons or down coal mine:1;11e plan ought to work well. Another great advant- age would be the possibilities of laying th blame of bad weather and other inconveni" onus on the beet man, whik all thepleasnres ofithe trip would, of course, be due to the perfect happiness of being together. On the whole, t,he inventor of the secret honeymoon is to be congratulated. The simple, straight lines and somewha severe style of the Directoire redingote fav- our the utilization of fur am its garniture. The baok is out in almost exace resemblance of a gentleman's great coat, and the long skirte are open up the back. There are re- vers, very handsome fastenings, and a deep Russian collar. This model is also conspice nous:a:no:3g elegant indoor gowns of velvet and brocade. As wraps they are highly favoured by cloak designers, but severely frowned upon by modistes, who aver, and very truly, that they cover a multitude of deficiencies in the cireas, beneath which may be a simple Quaker gown devoid of garniture of any description and this seldom varied, on account of the elegant and luxurious wrap which envelops is. But there are cloaks and cloaks, and every one him a lav- ish choice this winter, for the styles are almost limitless, and range from the jaunty Hanged= jacket, short to exaggeration, to the stately and regal Reagan pelisse of sealskin or sable, that reaches from the threat to the very, edge of the these it com- pletely hides. In the preparation of elaborate winter dress toilets, theta are thus fax been shown but little nevelt? in the arrangement of the skirt portion of the gown, either short or demi-trained. Ansi compensation tor this, the corsage is all the more varied, and very lovely and novel effects, accomplished by the liberal use of lace, tulle velvet, _ and ewers, are constantly multiplying. One of the greoeful features which finds specie' favour m full evening toilets is the arrange- ment of cream tulle on the corsage, known as the "Roomier bertha." Thi e as draped like a veritable cloud about the top of the decollete corsage. The airy scarf is carried moos theirent a,ncl back, being fastened down once in the middle and on each aide of the shoulders, this Making a billowy puff over the shoulders that forms all the A WOMAN IN THE CrisE. A Brussels writer In The " Weser-Zeie tang " places Mr. Renry M. Stanley by the side of Ulysses and Ewes, and impliee that in the wanderings of the modern American, as in those of the ancient Greek and 'the Trojan, there was a women in the case, Mr. Stanley's Calypso, orDido, was a young English lady whom he met in his forty-fourth 1 1 .DoulgIng gegt, .Where are the, swallows 4e41. ranee 404 dead, 1'ereidine4 Open some Meek and etorneY Shore. O. deviating heart 1 Zile Over purple epee They wait in sunny saw The haisoy soothern brume To lecrolegtce zoleoetreee.,to their Pothole. hole by root tbet .flowers die Etheaned, thsy tie In the eold lomb, beedloo of team, or rain, o doehthagheert They only deep below ThWAIgfwtittliteetreinm4u-de.e.11119171ew, To breathe and Emile upon, you 5000 again. The PUP ban hid its ray4 UM* many days; Will dreary hourenever leave the It? 0 deobting Melt 1 The otermy eloud; on high Vell the eatile eonoy aky That ecene-for Sprang= nigh Shall leek!! the .ouromer. .W4 golde mirth. Fair hope 18 deed, end light mut tom& con break the eilence of .476,:e1271441/4 Odoubtiug bort 1 The aky .fa! evereast, 74 et Aare simail rise et laet, Brighter for derkneee pot, And Angela' :silver velem ett,r the air. MISR PROCTOR. Eyes and Woe& 1. ould look witim gently perfect !Wes Oa Waist:range linManWerld-44 one wimo fear* No duty and zo tads, and who reveres Truth more than any dream that mind; tise ; One who can trao the Woes the weeks the vile* ; In each new deg that dawns and disep. pore ; Who, through eons° wild, hoot breakieg clamor, hors Rope singing sweetly in the earth and 'Mee ; Then I should be what men and women are When they aro wholly teat ao4 wholly bravo; Then 1 "Imola apeek from life and from tho grAve, From every meson globe And throtblog attar; No word of eabse would, be a word of wroug, Ami there would be no discord in my song. 11. There axe two voices in a human life - One, the sharp cry of pogo!, bluing hot ; The other, calm and aweet, as though be. got Of perfeat peace in some heaven hallowed spot ; One is tho cruel, mocking voice ot strife, Which falls to every heart, to every lot, And (MO the voice that whispers to the clot, "Riao to thy living spirit: Death is not?" Hearing these voloon, there are men who hear No message to their soul; they lust and plod Under the flashing menace of a rod; But there are natures touched no deep and near That, like the seed of beauty piercing sod, They break their flesh and crave the thought of God. GEORGIE EDGAR MONTGOMERY, The Land 0' the Leal. I'm wearin' awe', John, Like onaw-wreaths in thaw, john, Pm weatin' aw To the land,o' the leal. There's nae sorrow there, John; There's neither mild nor care, John; The day's aye fair I' the land o' the teal. Our bonny hairn's there, John'- She was baith gude and fair, John; And, oh 1 we grudged her oak To the land o' the teal. But sorrow's eel' wears past, John - And joy'', coming fast, John - A joy that's aye to last I' the land o' the leal. Sae dear's that joy was bought, John, Sae free the battle fought, john, That einfu' man e'er brought To the land o' the kat. Oh, dry your glintenin' ee. John 1 My saul tangs th be free, John! And angels beckon me To the land o' the teal. Oh, hand ye teal and true, John 'Your day's wearin' though, John! And I'll welcome you To the land o' the leal, Now, fare-ye-weel, my ain, John; This wand's oaths are vane John; We'll meet, and we'll be fain, I' the land o' the lea HaRoNEsS DIAIRNE. 411•11111•1104.4M4 A•04401101111011 that elegniar way which 1 beve Teemed for want of better term, vitalizing power. For electricity is clue kin to life; how mar, no one can tell. r.bove and Serve, The New Testarneeti while every Pagened verse of it breathes of righteousness, scarcely °ordains any religioniem at all, acareely any organisation even the most rudimentary,. scarcely any ritual even the simplest, ecattee- ly any dogmatics creed even, the meat What was the emu total of the preaching of the glorious Eremite, John the Bapttet Just two werds : Repent, Obey. What is the Bum total of the moral revelation of Cnnet ? just two words, the two words carved on the atatue of that noble philan- thropist which has jnet been added to our Abbey -the twa 'garde.; Love, Serve. Aro you in truth, each of yen, a good man or a good woman ! 11 you are, then, though every Pharisee who lived shorl4 hate yen, and though every Chinni, in the Worldshoold excommtmleatey on, and though every riot that ever lived should hurl at you WS separate anathema, as they once did to the Ring of Saints, yet to you the golden gates of heaven shall open, harmonious CM their golden hinges, and you obeli be folded for over under the whine of Eternal Love, Bot ff yen are not simply in God's eight a god man or a good woman, then, like ;la zaint of cid, you may rortureyourself for long years together with fasts and miser -lee, or, like St; Simon atylitee, you may bow youraelf twelve hundred tireva a !ley, or like Another aebv, 7ou may roeke your beget Om you daily offer eeVeii heudeed prayers, and_afrer afl this you may easy to Christ your Lerd, "Hew; wo net propheeled in Thy none, mad in TI y MIMS wrought miracles, and in Thy erne dyne in any woraderful ?onkel" but it, unite ef thia eXternalletn and prefeeeim, have not truly hayed God, and tru been tree to your neighboreetr by 'a ettedarel, and not by the vonve t a derd of the world, -04 the onehen heretical and party On the other " te hese not been thee eatonatiallt true (I man, then ihallile !layouts, you never knew you." If any one, while be prides himself ou Ka orthodoxy or on his Churcionanahip, Mean in WA Oondnet, false in lila jeldgMetir, diehenetit 18 trede, a eloaderer in welety, impure in life -if he he e liar-asod twiny man who ealle himselfreligiefue and many man who trite to steed on good tome 111 the world, is a liar down to the very hilt -If itt lib' heart, in spite of hie profess. lan, be A Wee Witileae, or 4 meet:rue men o is An idolater, he envy prima leimielf at the wedding RAO, hut tie has notan e wedding garment. But if, on the other band, you be indeed pure,and kind And tree - you alwets Adire that which 18 adtzirable and follew thet which le moble; if in humility toad love you be a, follower of Chrieee example, you nosy die !feted by II the world end hated by all the nominal Church, yet your Saviour, he whose foot. ratan* you heve humbly 'desired to walk, shalt decide your destinies for over when he abate wnisper to your weary opirit, "Well done, good and faithful mega." Eleotrical Execution Lem. January I, 1589, the law of New York StAte multiple electrical execution" gory into create tut until Wedneeday the amount mad character of current An:need to make death certain aud Instantaneous had not been determined. The experiments upon dogs last auroral r by Harold P. Brown, the electrical negieie were criticised becalm the weight of an ton heal killed was len then that of a man, and It was supposed t.hat more cursene would be required to kill A humus being on that ace count. Thin afternoon Mr. Brown was given an opportunity to make a demonstration he - fore Air. Ethridge T. Gerry, Author of the eleotricssi execution law, and the committee appointed by the Medico, Legal Sookty to re- port on the beat means of patting the lew into effeot. The experiments were made et Mr. Edison'a laboratory at Orange, and the first viotimwas it ca11weighing124i pounds. The hair wee cut on the forehead and on the spina behind the forelegs, and eponge.cover- ed plates mohtened in ti nolutIon of sulphite of zik were fastened In place. Tlie reabt- mile of the tanked was 3,200 chime An al- ternating current of 700 voile was applied for thirty-five seconcla and the animal - was dead. It was at once diem:dad by Drs. In- gram and Meyer, and the brain, heart, a.nd lungs were found to be in normal oondition and the meat was pronounced fie for food. One metal plate carrying the current touch- ed the hair of the forehead and alightly burned it, but otherwise there were no ex- ternal indiastions of iejury.te?ev qt CZI The eecond calf weighed 145 pounds mad had a resktanee of 1,300 ohms. The deadly alternating current of 700 VOUB pressure was applied for seconds, and produced death. To settle permanently the weight question a horse weighing 1,220 pounds was next killed by passing the alternating current at 700 volts from one fore leg to the other. The re- sistanee of this animal was 11,000 ohms. There were present Mr. Thomas A. Edison, Prof. R. Ogden Doremus Prof. Charlet, A. Doremns, Dr. Frederick Petemon Dr. Frank H. Ingram, Mr. Elbridge T. Gerry, Dr. J. M. Bleyer, M. Bourgonoi, and Mr. John Murray Mitchell. The experiments proved the alternating current to be the most deadly force know ,•.' um used in this city for electric lighting b te science, and that lege than half the preee) . dtheaisthye. stem is sufficient to cause instant 40, ----- November Clothing. Proper clothing for November 'includes sett, firm woolen textures next the skin. If some of the various varieties of health wear cannot be obtained, a good substitute may be found in vests and pants made of pure flannel. Looseness of fit is essential; for in such pliable folds as these garments are forced into by pressure of outer garb, body heat is entangled as in a net and retained while outside oold is barr ed entrance. My patients often say to me, Dootor, I cannot bear wool next my skin. It muses intolerable itching and is uncom- fortable." "Very well," is the answer, "but try it just for twenty-four hones longer; and if you are still restless .you may change." Insid.e the 07011 unie outaneous nerves have become accustom(' to the new -comer, and have welcomed him as a far better friend then the one se aside ; and in a. week the indat dello& patient WOold not change baok again at all Beside additional warmth, there is an electrical action aroused by fie:Alen of wool against human skin that promotes capillary circulation, keeps skin function going and largely contributes to general health in