The Exeter Advocate, 1898-9-30, Page 7quuIVAn
MO ISMISERY.
Dr.- Talmage Discourses on the Dangers of
Excessive Wealth.
The Uselessness of the Giant—The Service of the Cornmonplaca,
A
..They Who Do the World's Work—The
1
6 Divinity of Service.
i tao.o....e.eateen • --ate
I•Wasbington, Sept. 2io 50.—Froa res- 'riding on horseback, his medicines 'in the
, sego in Seripture Met probably no other seediebags, periwig on the ninth day
1 element:en ever preachea feoro flee. Da ' et the lever, and corning in to tette hole
Taint/Age in this discourse sets forth A Of the plate of the petient, while. the
truth very .eppmpriate. for those who • family, pale with alEliety, and leakin
ba.Ve unhealthy ambition ler greet wealth on and waiting for his deeision in xegaril
or fame. The text Is I. Obronieles xx, to the ratient, end heariug him say,
10, 7: "Thank faod, I IlaVe mastered. She case;
Mt- "A man of greet stature, whote Ana- he ts getting well!" excites iu. me an
Op
and toes were four and twenty, elle admiration quite •equal to the mentiou
ton each Jamul and six on eeth foot, and of the lumps of the great metropoliteu
ibe• also •was the sot* of e giant. But, when doctors of the, mu or tee, 'must -roma ter,
he dared Israel, Jonatham the son ot tug men of the present
'Saline:A, David's brother, slew bine," Yet whet de we sea in all .depertmentsi
atelforinetten photographed, dud few People not or:netted with ordintor *bereft
!what reasou? Dia not this gestage slip of work and ordietary duties,. Instead of
--. :by misteke into the sacrea Scriptures, as trying to see what they erin do with a
lpornetimesa paragraph utterly Omani- bend of five ang,ers, they went six. In -
ees to the editor gots into his emvseaper steed of usual eerie:we:rent of iie taanual
dialing bis abate:lee? Is not this eteriptur- and redid adeepele, they want 24. A cm'
'al errata:4, No, an: there is nothing bap- tain amount ot money for livelihood, and
isetzersi about the Bible. This restage of ler the spy of thate SOMA WO IWO
"neripture wee ae certainly int:nee:I to be hehlna us attet we have dorerted this
'Irat. in the Bible at. the neete. "In the lite. is Intetatant for we have the beet
beginninft BO crowed the havers end authorty for ming, "lie that providerh
the emelt." er "Ged FO loved the world uot few his own, tied etpecially 1110i'e ot
that be :gave his only le -gotten Son." his own hoesehold, le worse than an
And I select It fee my teen Melee ife- infidel," but the izirge and febuiout sures
eauto it Is eherael evith peter:cal and for which teeny grugele, if obtamta,
tromensione Evening. Be the Teeple of ilvould Le a bindeince rather then an ite-
died tee l'hilinenes had leen commove:I, vantaee.
. with tee ewer,. m et a few signet. Tho ahe an �t' anti annoyaotat of thote
ram of inants le weeny ember. 1 um wiioto ettates %tea 1,,,Tilite pleirmla can
gil'al ta eire. ilhere is no uto for' glente only to tual by . th we wee potase them.
i now wteept to eitierge tho ineeeen ef It will be a gra-41 thine uteri, threueli
:
mitseurns. But there were many of there your industry arail ;leeway, yea en
t
In olden times. tialiarit wee. ..aecordine otert thO beuto in witieli yeti live. lint
:to the BAP. 11 feet i'; ir•1t13 Melt, or, septette you owe et: Limas raid you Lam
'if von doubt this, tbe fallleas Pliny de- ail theta tante to watt.; and all Woo
t t
iCiarce thee at Crete be an ear beitatte a Maine to plate, Sapp ate you base
,elveuurneut Wai' LTA:MI area, irrirworing branebed eat in bun:tete eneeeeten Wail
l.the rentairre ot a giant ;le ciliate lame in alrecte everynarettien yeu Lave Invett
tor 69 tot atea, See whether yen tato mente. Tire Ere WI rings at night; you
neared or Protons Meter -ea you rang come rued upstarts to awe one et lite window
to Cie cantle:non that there 'Mile 111f410SZ to see it It le auy of ewer mills. lipidentle
:Units caste of hutuan althwie neenstroue of crime •eontere awl there aro vralieerle-
'and appellina. . wrents and ntsreeditet in all dineetiona
1 David Ind smashed the saull et ono of alid on Wader' vtheiber any of your
1 -
these giants:, tett there were three giants boatikeepers wall move raiment A pude
..thet the Davide:in were leel not yet sub- strthes the near:neat wail, and you are
:clued, and one of them ettude in tee like a bon under e sky full of bawks and
;text. Ho 'wag not orty of Alp:no Mantra trying with :anxious cluck to get your
but bad a -surnius at digits. To theordint overe,rown chlolzeas eettay under wing.
, ary fingere wire :renewl an edditional Atter a certainfiteet. of suerese has bon
] finger, and the foot had also a Silperilowe reached you, bawl te tree% 50 Infin7 irn-
!addendum. lie bail tel terminations to portant things to inhere that you ore apt
bands and feetwhere enters Wive ed). It te become the prey of ethers, and you
. was not tbe may Inge:nee of the kind. aro sevindied one riefrauded, and the
„Tavernier, the leerned writer. stye that anxiety on had on wine brow when yen
- the Emperor of Java had a son endowed were earning Mir lint e1,000 is not
with the tame number of extremities. equal to the anxiety on pour brow now
tVoleatine, the plot, had six timers en tbat you base wan emir e8110,0llO.
'each hand. alatiperane, in his of:el:rated The trouble with :eels a one Is, he Is
tenter% opeate of two familial near Berlin npread out Illia nee uotortuuate one In
!iimilarly equipped of band tied foot Ail my text You. have mitre lingers and locs
, of whieh I win believe, for I bay° seen than you know wine ta do with, Twenty
- two eases of the snore phytital super- were usetta; 24 an a hindering super -
'abundance. Tiut title limit of the tet hi nutty
in battle, and as Meld, tee etritatrie Disraeli Ws that a King et Poland
warrior, bad disnet that eno giant, tee ateneatea his threw a itt tonall the peo-
nephew of David *nays -Chia memeter et
nie text, and there he lies after the battle
in Gnth, a dead giant. Hie Vette° iii -1
not owe hint, and :tie suuerations append.
lees of hand and teat ilea tett tam him.
The 1:mien:ally an-' Wet, in the battle his
saah -Meta on hie hand lea& him
clumey hi the tist; of bis waren, and
his sixth 'en eelpelett ale gait. Behold
the pm:twee and uraformtel :ant of the
text: "A luau of erett stature, whoto
fIngere :tea Wee vete f err and twenty,
siv on 0:4.h hand alai -tie rat each Snot,
and ht el..) wat tie" .on oi a Millit. Lill!
•wben Le tiellea Itriel, .Tonathan, the son
'of rillineet, David's brother, slew tarn.'
I Beheld 'IOW superilainee ere a bind -
trance rather than a help! In ell the
battles at Gatb that day there was not a
1 man rith ordinary stature that was not
better oft thau this physical curiosity of
my test. A dwarf on the right side is
stronger tban n giant on the wrong side,
and all the body and mind and estate and
opnortnnity that you cannot use for God
and the betterment of the world are a
I
teeth linger and a sixth toe and a terrible
'hindrance. Tbe 'nest of the good done in
Ithe *world and the most of those who
win the battles for the right are ordinary
People. Count the lingers of their right
hand, and they have just five—no more
and no less. One Dr. Duff among mis-
elonariet but MOO miseloneries that
would tell you they have Only ocanmon
endowment. One Florence Nightingale
to nurse the sick in conspicuous places,
but 10,000 woinen who are just as good
!nurses, though never heard of. The
"Swamp Angel" was a big gun that
during the civil war made a big noise,
but muskets of ordinary calibre and shell
ot ordivary heft did the execution. Presi-
dent Tyler and Ms Cabinet go down the
Potomac, one day to experinient with the
1"Pethemaker," a great iron gun that
was to atright lyith its thender fitteign
navies. The gunner touches it off, and
terdinary bore, able to be the defense of
uditthepaoe daxnpoal no nation idteobsweaanndn edodoukrre, loavesaowdoyahslait Ctzatabwbtienet lobe:. aa to tal 1 itnti ionmnuolecus,ht °nor: to
waken to duty. The curse of the world
, ts big grins. .After the politicians, who
have made all the noise, go home hoarse
from angry discussioe on the evening of
the first Monday in November, the fieit
day the people, with tho silent ballots,
will settle everything ani settle it right,
a million of the wl.ite slips of paper they
drop making about as much noise as the
fail. of an Battle biossoN,
Clear baok in the 0ountry t� -day there
1. fashlened On .0 rough Test ' by a shoemaker
are mothete I-. plain apron and shoes
the the end of the lane, rocking babies
thee are to be the Martin Luthers and
I Ilisnutroks and the Gladstones and oho
i" Washingtome and the George. Whitefield
at the future. The longer I live tee mote
f I like oorninon foles; They do the world's
; work, bearing the world's burdens, weep -
i ale the World's synipathies, carrying the
World's consolation. Among lawyers we
see rise up a Rufus Choate or a William
Wirt or a Samuel L. Southard, but
eat:laity would. go to pieces toenorrow if
attere were not thousands of common
;lawyers to see that men and womeie get'
. their rights. A Valentine Mott or a •Wil-
lard Parker rises up eminent in the
medical profession, but what an unlimit-
ied sweep would pneumonia and diph-
' theta and scarlet fever ham in the
can tell you how you can do more to get
your health back and your spirits raised
than by drinking gallons of bad tasting
Water at Saratoga, Hamburg or Carlsbad
—give to God, bennanity and the Bible
10 per cent, of all your income, and it
will make a new man of you, and from.
restless wanting of the floor at night you
shall have eight hours' &hop without the
help of broraele of potassium and from
no appetite you will hardly be able to
wait for toner regular meals, and your
wan °been will au no, and wheu you
die the blessiegs ot those who but for wen
would have perished will bloom all over
your grave.
Perhaps some of you will take this
advice, but the most of yon will not,
And, you will try to cure your swollen
band by gottieg on it mare Angers, and
your rheutuatio foot by getting on it
mere toes, and there will be a sigh ot
relief when you are gone out Of tile
world, and wben over your remains the
minister recites the words, "Blessed are
the deed who die in the Lord," persons
WhO have keen appreciation of the Incia
moue will bardly be able to keep their
faces straight. But wbether in that
direction my words do good or not, 1 em
anxious tbat all who have only ordinary
mettipment be thateliful for what they
leave and rightly employ it. I think you,
all have, Aguretively as well as literally,
Angers enough. Do not long for hinder -
the, supertlfalties. Standing be the pros,
said the beautiful tinge made hers the
most beautiful. .A.na another put her
band in the mouth:tin brook and suit], as
the waters dripped oft that her hand was
the most beautiful. And another plucks:
flowers off the bank, and under the
Mem contewled diet her baud was tin
wog attractive. Then a poor old wonme
appeared, and, looking up in her de•
°repine:to, asked for aims. And a womati
who had not taken part in the rivalry
gave her alms. And all the women re.
solved to have to this beg.gar tbe ques-
tion as to width of all the heeds present
was tbe most attraetive, and she wed,
"The most beautiful of them all is the
one that gave relief to my necessities.*
And as she so said her wrinteee and rags
and her decrepitude end her body dte.
appeared, and In place thereof stood the
Christ, who long ago said. "Inatanneh as
ye did it to one of the least et these Fe
did it unto me."
IN THE CZAR'S RICHOST CHURCH.
Allan Dan Describes the Famous 'gas',
at Saint Isaac's in St. Petersburg.
"The famous IllaS0 held on Chrlstelae
Eve in the Cathedral of Saint Isaac was
one of the most beautiful services I ever
attended," writes Lillau Bell frau St.
Petersburg., Rustle. in the Ladies' Horne
Journel. "In the first place. Saint
Isaac's is the richest church in all Bus
?ace of thts fallen giant of my text and 'la IG bus' too, the most wonderful
ID this post mortem examination of hien. choir, for the Czer loves music, and tvber-
d, ne.lawn bow much hotter oa wo ate ever in all his Erepire beautifol voice
14;tun 3ituaeot:13teduasoUdaeldkaanodd, f%111,9 aUStraf5Qaanta liestguati tehirecbleisbi;r2rnt;et?thretn't;
toms, but wotrtu„eu _tee tueeeed the Ltapeter a cheer. Wheu we entered
him for those tw7) inalpittrunievil;.4 ".‘"Iir°or k the nhunIII the ser""o 1114 'Leen In /4".
and leemuinton diet no ono hut the Ind- tgoree:'1,,tettlet.fier houre III;"11111"Iincinn"
alto unit annipotaat cod tool bow eta :he,: teous:etstligtilizitn. Inumthtte4irheat
plehned rnado—the hand and the foot "*".1.1" everF
Charles Bat was sa invrec,:e4 Wig ti 7 Iterwee, tor there are no teete
With the wandraus militated:1n of the 94 '''''"""e'rl';''d our way °ward
buntan bend that when the Bari of the sitie, re-ertal for tilt Diplomatic
Itruleowator gam etatale tor estade where no were intitel to enter.
the wittiom and grednese of Goa, and ' Our 'are s Were Viten ani ehaire WZre
eleht imetie were wraton. Sir Cheeles g/;''a "6: IV° a"r"v'e UR tic'
Boll wrote his entire Peon an the wittiout 13/11-f"r1?•"1"., P(4-4, 'in-411aelr' (4 the
and newness or 0,14 at ditvioyed In the • eienr. le wit 44c:tee:ay voltam What woa
Tee et- Lanes tu tee bead derfut 1:20 Lae lealas on to tee
buinan band.
and wrItt with cetera:lee and ligtmente lase!, neet. :eel tee rioreele and echo of. it
Fla phatanee of tea !angora all uvula k Mai ter ieetit throe vaulted doinee like
ate: Tartly to keit ti The long-haired
?Iowa To pound, to wriella to battle, to voiee ineminge lie teased direetty
sew, to build Tip, tbe ten. e ef an organ.
hy
prlytt,_ t.. eat reaulerfully rotonant
to pull (Iowa, to wawa, to write, t*
tipt or itt r us l'1:4 corgeane eletit of gold N•eq,
give friendly salutatien. Tbo
Angina are so many telegraph anima by um" a' 11° uut'
reaetin et their eeneitivenees at touch.
The Wane% the tUnnels, the cities of the
'whole earth ere tau vietories of the bend. .
7.,anteoz nuttedlielet far One's Itosteere
Tito hands am not dumb, but often speak Utica you vreit your friends try to
as distinctly as the lips, With our hands ' 1.4-ty f"r TQur 1/31.11 ly bel"g a be44131
we smite. we repel. we invoke, we out , welter,: ens Atiee if, Poore in the
them in joy, or epreed thorn abetted in ! that eou are to ray In dollare and cents.
Tour enter*,,liner gives to you thee which
cannot Le measured or handled. I know
there ie joy in giving, hoping tor nothing
in return; and a hottese, if sho be ono in
treat, we mina them lo tspiet or dap Ladiee Home ammo d. "I do not mean
beneslietion. The malformation of the
glentts hand In the text glorifiet the
meal hand. Fashioned of Ood more ex.
quisitely end Wonarously than any
- - the fnliett sense, bestows far more than
huinan tneohanisin that VMS °car eon- food upon her guest.; tate gives to them
trivet], charge you to use it for God
and the lifting of the world out of its
moral predicament. Employ it in the
sublime work of gotpra handshaking.
You can nee the haul Is just made for
that. Four fingers just set rIght to throat
your neighbor's hand on one side, and
tree antrum to one of the most Faded
shrines upon earth—the home. Do um
fail to show that you aro appreciative of
the efforts made for your conefort and
pleasure. If you do this in a sincere and
pleasing. way it will carry you far into
the good graces of your enterteinets.
eytollilerathstildrao.b sty 11:11asittsobOintne:hanitdojnoltnit7i $alct isti oa fertiveant4detaeleentltatennewt ittnugt step% al
ad unseal° and '''IrL11"Ilas 414 llgaulaute onterialaing my friends in return. I tun
tho voice of nature pine with the voice
FRENCH FLESH FOWL A Friend's Advice
OF Leads to Health
SOME OF THE CHARACTERISTICS
THE NEW FAYEROLLES.
It Xs the Largest of All the rreuoi
Fowls, alio is the Result of Accidental
Crosses With Mongrels and, licutians—
The Cut Gives a Good Illustration. of
the 'frpe.
The Faverolle fowl is reinerkable for
cfoioknosa of growth, easy fattening and
quality and amount of flesh. It was a,
result of a demand in Frenele markets
for a larger fowl tean the He -laden. The
breed was developed in the distriot about
the town of Few:x.011e. a emaliplageabont
a death miles to the south of lasudan,
and no doubt the Faverolle fowl ie a re-
sult of varione crosses with the Houdan,
breed. To obtain a true explanatioe et
their variety it is necetsary to go back
about 40 years. The district about Fay -
done, at that time, possessed a race of
mongrel poultry, together with the pure
ot God commanding you to AA° bands. uot brilliaut, but 1 en make buttonholes
well, and 1 nm pretty sure in discove.
The custom Is as old as tho Bible, any. that that is something say frionde
how. Joine Old to Jelmaatiabt "Is thine
eteett right as my heart is with. thine to do for theinstlyeen tem the spirt
which prompted the little buttonhole
heart? It It be, give um thine herd." ,
W,1i ;letter tnan the wort iteele
And Some one teilial tain. why he del so. a gospel electrieity tenets the , and lath tiould be' appreciated by any
Vie and bootee a worter V> carry burdens, en nnt s to 11 441 1 - a a • • g
thzrilis and he replied: elates my beam, goutie- palm from beam te heart, end from the buFtY h°4tais'n
Men, the load viral, va off was by fax shoulder of one to the shoulder of the
Wavier than the ore teen 80 ine mina, other.
The Welebtlest 14 1 al .. -tem when man- Witt' tbe timid mei for their 011e011111:40.
raTe.,t to that wel th. metier which I ment, retake bands With the troubled in
lebered. I bare elier re .S.5111 four al ilea warm !warted s,ymprithy, nbalto banns.
than /have til.rIn I ail : e rake. I 14 :en With the young man .1114 entering linen
to live awl to ho a Le i InenielL Mot nets and illszeuraged ;et tho small sales
whom you thente. el. 1 .1 r me. I 8111 80 nee the large oaten" shako eneda
well it would be seadielee to return ti With the child who is now from God and
mute." started on unending journey, fax whiett
"Well," says sten .1aly, "Melt over- be needs to gather greet supply of
Varied person.; ot. la to be pitied, for strength, and who eari hardly reaell up
their worriment.: ale reel, rind their In to you now beraute you are so ninth
ta tale and their liereets proetration aro taller, shako hands. Aeross cradlee and
emluine." I reply thas they could get rid dying beds and grans, shako bends.
of Wm bothersome ea:miles by giving it With your enemies who have done all to
awny. If a man has mom houses than he defame and hurt you, but wbom you
Call carry without vexation, let lam drop can afford to forgive, shake hands. At
a few of thorn. If his estate is th great the door of the churthes where people
he cannot manag,e it -without getting
neryoue dyepopeia from having too much,
let him divide with those who have
nervous dyspepsia Lemma they cannot
get enough. No, the: guard tbeir sixth
finger -with mom care tban tatty did the
original live. They go limping, with what
they call gout and know not that, like I handshakingl Tbe difference between
the giant of my text, they aro lamed 1Y. those times and the millennial times is
a superfluous too. A few of them by that ziew some shake hands, but then
charities bleed themeelvos of this financial all will shake hands throne and foot -
across seas, neition wite nation,
elaesity and monetary plethora, but mane stool,
of item hang on to the hindering super- 6 od and man, ohuroh militant and
flinty till death, and then, as they are
compelled to give the money up anyhow, ohuroh triumpbant
Yea, the malformation ot this fallen
In their last will and testament they giant's foot glorifies the ordinary root,
generously give some of it to the Lord, for whioh I fear you have never once
expecting, no doubt, that he will feel thanked God. The 26 bones of the foot
very much obligee to them. Thank God are the admiration of the anatomist. The
that once in awhile we have a Peter arch of the foot, fashioned with a grace
Cooper, who, owning an interest in the and a poise that Trajan's aroh or Con -
iron works at Trenton, said to Mr. Lester: stantine's arch or any other aroh could
"I do not feel quite easy about the not equaL Those arches stand where
amoupt we are making. eVorking under they were planted, but his arch of tLe
iine of our pateets, we have a monopoly foot is an adjustable arch, a yielding
whioh gems to me something wrong. aroh, a flying emit, and ready for move -
Everybody has to come to us for it, and. ments innumerable. The buman foot so
we are making money too fast." So they fashioned as to enalue a man to stand
reduced the price, and this while our upright as no other creature and leave
philanthropist was building Cooper In. the hand that would otherwise have to
stitute, which mothers a hundred testi- help in balancing the body for for any,
tutes of kindness and mercy all over the thing it °Waco The loot of the camel
land. But the worla had to wait 6,800 Unlined for the sand, the foot of the
yeere for Peter Cooper! bird fashioned for the trea breech, the
I am glad for the benevolent institu- foot ot the hind fashioned fax the slip -
Mons that get a legacy from men who pery rook, the foot of the lion tashioned
during their life were as stingy as death, to rend its prey, the foot of the horse
bestowed money on hospitals and mis- fashioned for the solid earth, but the foot
but who ii, their last will and testament
eionary societies, but for such testaths I of man made to cross the desert, or
climb the tree, or scale the cliff, or walk
every cent of it with them if they oould the earth, or go anywhere he needs to go.
With that divine triumph of anatomy
have no Raped. They would have taken
and bought up half of heaven and let it in your possession where do you walk?
out at ruinous rent or loaned the money In what path or righteousness or what
to oeloStial citizens at 2 per cent. a month path of sin have you set it down? Where
and got a "corner" on harps and have you left the mark of your footsteps?
trumpets, They lived in this world 50 or Amid the petrifections in the rocas
. 60 years in the presence of appalling have been found the marks of the feet of
suffering and want and made no efforts birds and beasts of thousands of years ago.
for their relief. The charities of such And God oan trace out all the footsteps
people ate in the "Paulo -post future" of youe lifetime, and those you made 50
tense. They are going to do them. The
probability is that if such a ODO in his years ago are as plain as those made in
last will by a donation to benevolent ed for the judgment day. Oh, the footi
the last soft weather, all of them petrill-
olosefistedness the heir e at law will try from the time you stepped out of the
Give me the autobiography of your foot
societies tries to atone for his lifetime
old man was senile or crazy, and the cradle until today, and I will tell your
to break the will by proving that the
expense of the litigation will about exact character now and what are your
leave in the lawyer's hands what was prospects fax the world to come,
meant for the Bible society. 0 ' ye over. That is the most beautiful foot that
weighted, suecessful beeiness •men, goes about petits of greatest usefulnen,
NiVhother this sermon reach your ear or and that the most beautiful hand that
; does the most to help others. I was read.
come in, and at the door of churches
wbeze people go out, shake hands. Let
pulpit shako bands With pew and Sab-
bath day shake bands with week day, and
earth shake hands with heaven. Oh, the
strange, the mighty, the undefined the
mysterious, the eternal power of an honest
world if it were not for 10,000 common Yeas eves, Y lug of three women In rivalry about the
1 t me sa that if you aro
doctors I The oal physician in his gig. emigrated with anxieties about keeping appearance of the hand. .A.nd the one
t d f ortunes I hand with barrios and
driving up the lane of the farmhouse or or investing these rattan ous reddened her
• it at'e ience.
To hear your murmuring and repining.
tt venila seem that you aro the
nfii'on'l SOW Lift% nna thnt it la great
it-tuaieci that you are net rein:Wei inet
tire eriestial eatadlee. Rementber how
7fISON Ofeendea GA, and you must
isekihilVialge 1118 righttons deallug
with yeti. Conceal to Him with the bre
pante of the pradiell eon, "Father, I
have sinned tourintt Ileeren and Theo:"
I know hew Irern lira:Wed to Thy are -
thee but I have not myself the courage
to dlieearge the debt. If IC were left to
me. I should deetive, I should spare I
she:ad-betray myself. But Thy merciful
hand esthetes what I should never have
bad the courage to do: it corrects ine in
love. Grant atm that I may endure with
patience its salutary eorrections. If a sin-
ner bas just izalignetion against him-
self, the :east ho eau do is to receive the
correction whith ha has not the fortitude
to oboose.
4t1; Zee
,Sg•
anti letelitenatt ruffle
Heudan. This was the time when Cote .
ine, Light Braltmas and Iterinuge firsi
beeame popular la France PoUltry keep -
era intreducel males of these breeds to
erosa with the liou-lan. Fecuzi these
armee; witaout any espeelal method, the
proton* Faverolle was ileveloped, in much
the Smile manner that the RhoOo Island.
Red bee beeu developed in our own eaun
try, The various typo e of ;he Feverolle
rare considerably, mane showing deeided
Cochin or Brahnea eberaeteristhe in Oil
and build, also the Week raettled plum-
age of the Houdam
The distinetive paint of the Faverolle
Is the size as competed with other Franca
breeds, together with the amount and
delteaey of the fiesb, which makes the
poultry from this eleinity especial);
esteemed in the large markets ot France.
It is regarded for table purposes 85
superior to the Ilauden, baying greater
size, rapidity of growth, and tendency to
fatten, besides poeseesing the One flavor
for which tbe Rondan is noted. The
Faeerolle b an excellent layer and has
been recommended as a good variety to
keep fax profitable eg,g production. The
chickeris are exceptionally hardy as com-
pared with other Froach breeds, en ad-
vantage which breeders have come to ap-
preciate. Very SOW growers in this then -
try keep the Favorolle, says the Amnion%
Agriculturist, hut it hat been introduced
to a conslderable extent into England,
where it is quite well liked.
The Finished Character.
There are, within the range of every•
one's life, processes ot lite which must be
solitary; passages of duty which throw
one absolutely upon his inalvidual moral
forces, and admit of no aid whatever
from another. Alone we must stand some-
times; and if our better nature is not to
shrink into weakness, we must take with
us the thought width was the strength of
Christ: "Yet I am not alone, because the
Father is with me." The sense of right
can more readily maturate the tender
than melt the rooky soul, and that is the
most finished character which begins in
beauty and ends in power; that leans on
tbe love of kindred while it may, and
when it may not can stand erect in tho
love of God; that shelters itself amid the
domesticities of life while duty wills, and
when it forbids own go forth under the
expanse of immortality, and face the
etorm that lies beneath the canopy.
Grumbling at One's Self.
Don't be deceived. In grumbling at
yourself you may be really complaining
against God and against His permissive,
if not His active, providence. Moreover,
growling at yourself only keeps up in you
the spirit of complaining. What right
have you to murmur against yourself
any mom that. against others and against
God? Are you sure that these groan ings
against yourself are not so many valves
by whith you ventilate a complaining
disposition that dares not yentilate itself
on God, on others, on your eirourastathest
Can you not find some batter business
than finding fault even with youteelf?
Tiry repentance, reform, regeneration,
entire sanctification —any thing b u t growl -
Ing.
and Happiness
Paine's Belery Compound
Used by a Mother and
Her Daughter.
Rheumatism, Nervousrnss and
Kidney Disease Banished.
A Letter That Should Inspire Hope.
A Guarantee of New Life tat
Every Sufferer.
'Wells Ficherdson o.
Dear Sirs. -1 think it a dote' -vrrite
to you regarding the benente derived
by nay daughter end myself front nee
of your Pahre's Celery Compound.
For years I was treuided with rhe'
metistu and nervorenee- wax treated
by deetors, and treat] utedieine otter
medicine withent any geed results. For.
tenatelee a fried nape advised ine
to try Pairess feenar, eetimpoenet„
so., and nfter taFree Weir bottles I
forma I was stroneer and better Man 1
bad bren for Yeeria dalighten Iva!
cured of kidney de -alert, after eagereaa
for twelve yenee, I,y usinc n few butt
ties of Paine"e Celery (town -mine, I
eilviee all eeeTer!tee ereei dogmatism,
nervousness leeiney trembles to give
'tbe tomponnd a
Toure siceereaze
ntItS. 1.01,lee TeelleAVE.
Clinplean, Ont.
4,0 lea noin-eal goose
A Min:wean s einney fee
a dozen deli e reere Nil:died of feel.
The boiler be neee 5s large. and ene.e.
Shaped. being tqn- olinea, two feet la
diameter and tine f r4. deep. It cOVeill
the fire WI reeee'e eumil eortiOn
(of the lower Part et alle eteee..but tIm
beat and names erifeld the req., Water end eice are put at the bottom with
a frame over them. and on thes are
piaeed diebes fr.h. fowl arid Tear
*tildes to boil. The wbol-s is covered
with a wooden rover, in the centre of
whith is a hole ol ent four i110105in
diameter. and In this another dish Is
often pieced, the contents of which
are coolted by the steam.
A SILO FOR POULTRY.
Full and Explicit Directions for the Con.
struation of This Desideratum,.
Farniers and poultrymen aro partial to
green food in winter and some am Inter-
ested in ensilage. The following form a
few rules wbich will include the whole
subject in a nutehell:
1. A silo is a barrel, tank, hogshead,
pit, box, or anythine that will hold green
food. They can bo bougbt ready made of
any size.
IL Tbe iarger the silo the better, and it
must bo sufficiently strong to resat ttreet
pressure,
8. The more pressers on the contents
the more perfectly the air is excluded. If
pressed as closely as tobacco in boxes, so
much the better.
4. Corn, clover, alfalfa, grass, beet
tops, pea vines, or anything may be put
in the silo, but all materials least be
packed in firmly and then weighed.
5. All materie's must be as near ma-
turity as possible: that is corn is used
wben the ears are about beginning to
glaze, and clover is cut when in blossom
before the blossoins turn brown. This is
beau e very young plants contain too
much water.
6. Everything that goes into the silo
must be cut as fine as possible so as to
pack well. Tbe teetotal' will than be
ready for use for poultry in the winter
season.
7. The contents will keep for a year or
more provided the pressure is sufficient
to exclude the air. If the air enters
fermentation will result.
8. Cabbage and snob watery substances
are not suitable for ensilage.
9. A get should be about 8x8 and
eight feet deep, though it may be smaller.
A barrel is too small, as the top and sides
of the ensilage spoil first.'
10. To explain how to give pressure
suppose that a barrel is used. Have the
head of the barrel a trifle smaller than
the opening Pack the contents into the
barrel, put on the loose bead, and then
put heavy stones on the head, the more
weight the better. Keep on tilling in the
material until the barrel is full, leave the
head on and set a beavy stone on it.
11. When using the material always
replace the head (or top), and the con-
tents should be so closely packed as to
require picking out with some instru-
ment.
12. It will prove the cheapest food that
-ruin be used. will provide a variety, and
the material will be succulent and highly
relished. They will readily aooept the
bulky food as an agreeable change from
the dry grain.
Faith in the Invisible World.
To get the best enjoyment from earthly
things, we need faith in the invisible
world. That unseen realm inoludes the
soul of God and tbe spirits of men.
Christ is the true scientist, for ale shows
that the physical and spiritual worlds
are the twin, hemispheres of a perfect uni-
verse The purpose of Ilia life is to it: -
crease our knowledge of God, and to re-
veal,to us the ceaseless marvels of our
own natutes, The most aeourate defini-
tion of self-knowledge it God -knowledge.
rifeee never was, and never will be, et
universal pan:tee:a in one remedy, for eal
ills to witieh &eh is ileir—the very nature
of many curatives being such that were
the gentle of ether and differently seate4.
diseases rooted in the system of the
patient—what would relieve one 111 in
turn would aggravate the other. We
have, 'however, in Quinine 'Wine, viten
obtainable ta a sound Unadulterated
gate, a remedy for many and grevious ills
By its gradual and eueicious use, the
frailest systems are ied into convalescence
and strength, by the ix:Mince iehich Quo
nine exerts on Nature's own restorattves.
Itrelieves the dee-Tie; spirits of time
with whom a chronic state of raorbld des.
pendency and leek of intereet in life is
dieeate, and, by tratamilizinet the nerves,
dieposea to Mind nzoi refreeiziag sleep—
impart e vigor to the melon of the blood,
which, beiug stlinulated, courses throngh-
out the veins, strentniattnug the healthy
animal functions of the sye-tem, thereby
makiug activity a necessary reenit,
strengtheniug the frame, aud giving life
to the digestive tagaes, which naturally
demand inereated sulotance—reeult, im-
proved appetite. Northrop la Lyman of
Toronto, have given to the puleic their
superior Quinine 'Wine at the usual rate,
and, gauged by the opinion of scientists,
this wine approaches r earest perfection of
any in the market. All druggssts sell is.
Signs of a Good Cow,
One or two signs will denote a good
cow, Prof. Heacker says, as well as
twenty; in a poor COW the thigh runs
down graight, so there is no span be-
tween the thigh and the udder on one
side and the tail on the other. There
should be plenty of daylight between the
udder and tbe tail, One of the best ways
to tell what kind ot a cow you "lave is
her temperament. A good dairy type has
a share spine, strongly developed nervous
system, and sharp hip bones. A good
cow has a large, wedge-shaped stomach,
for she must have a large mid powerful
digestive systemto use up her food
quicely and make tbe best retums for it.
To Dry Pick Fowls.
A Shrewd Mao.
Many and strange are the methods
the westerners adopt in money making.
In the early days of Seattle a man
pre-empted a site on the water front
of the town. The law Tequired that
he have a house. Near by on the beach
was a weather-beaten hull of a vessel.
He drew the remnant to his lot and
started a second "Rudder Grange." It
was not long before sites on the shore
were in demand, and the shrewd squat-
ter sold his lot for $250,000.
Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.
The only way to cley-piolt fowls with-
out tearing them is to pick them as soon
se killed, while the bodies are yet werm.
The Earth's Shadow.
The earth has a shadow, but very
few ever see it, except in eclipses od
She moon, or else few recognize it
when they see it. Nevertheless, many
of us have noticed it on fine. cloudless
evenings in summer, shortly before
sunset, a rosy or pink arc on the hori-
eon opposite the eon, with a bluish
gray segment under it. As the sun
sinks the are rises until it attains the
zenith, and even passes it. ILInis is the
shadow od the earth.
C. C. RICHARDS & Co.
Dear Sirs,—I have great faith te
MINARD'S LINIMENT, as last
year I cured a horse of Ring -bone,
with five bottles'.
It blistered the horse, but in a
month there was no ringbone and no
lameness.
DANIEL MURCHISON,
Four Falls, N. B.
A.nother View of It.
Smith—How do you maintain that
Goal° helps labor—he haa no money?
Jones—Bust he is the cause of °thee
People's bill collectors having employ.
merit.
Quickeirre for Rheumatism. 15c., 25ea
50e,
A Kansas recluse who died recently
at Olathe begueateeel a dollar to 0/1411
of hie fifteenbrothers and sisters and
$40.000 to a elnrreh at Sparta,. Ill.