CAPITAL CITY COURIKK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1892 AT THE TAMEMACLE. THE INGATHERING SEASON THE OC CASION OF AN IMPORTANT LESSON. Dr. Tntmngc Thliilm tlm Anrltnt( Were Ac qunlntett with Our American Corn Tlm Ilitnrrnt or tint Year hut u rrctiuliiw Iiir 11 f tho lliiricst of Kurlli. Hiiooklyn, Nov. i!7.-ltcv. Dr. Tnlmugc ioday clioso for lilt subject of dist-oiitse one eminently suited to tho timi following tho ingathering of tho harvests mill to thu thanksgiving season. Tim decorations of tho Thanksgiving day still remained on tho platform and tho naileries, mid long rows of yellow and whlto corn on tho fiont ninl Imck of tho platform were In accord with tho sermon. Tho text selected was Job v, so, "As u shock of corn conieth In In Ills K'UMIII." This Is thu tlio of thu year for husking corn. If you have recently been In thu fields of Pennsylvania, or Now .Jersey, in Now York, or JJuw Ktighiud, or in any of tho country districts, you know that thu corn is nil cut. Tho sharp knlfo sttuck through thu stalks and left them all along the fields until a man camo with a bundle of straw anil twisted a few of these wisps of straw Into a band, and then, gathering upns much of thu comas hu could compass with his arms, ho bound It with this wisp of straw, and then stood it in the Held In what Is called a shock. Thero are now at least two billion bushels of com either standing in thu shock or having been al ready busked. Tho farmers wither one day on otio farm and then another day on another farm, and they put on thulr rough husking apron, and they take thu husking JH'K, which Is a pieco of Iron with a leath ern loop fastened to thu hand, and with it unshcath thu corn from thu husk and toss it into thu golden heap. Then thu wagons come alone and taku it to thu corner! b. tiii: nint.i: usks coiin as a type. About corn as an Important cereal ot coxu nsta metaphor thu Hililo Is constantly " speaking. You know about thu peoplu In famlim coining to buy corn of Joseph, and tho foxes on flru runnliiK into thu "stand ing corn," and about lliu oxen treading out tho corn, and about tlitt suven thin ears of corn that In Phnroah's dream devoured the sevun good ears, mid tho "parched corn" handed to beautiful Kuth by thu harvest ers of Bethlehem, and Abigail's live meas ures of "parched corn," with which she hoped to appease tho eiiemlesof hcrdrunk cn liusbaml, and David's description of the valleys "covered over with corn," and "the umulnil of corn in tho earth," and "thu full com in thu ear," and Christ's Sabbath morning walk through com Ileitis, and thu disciples "plucking ears of corn," and so 1 am not surprised to llutl comhuskingtline referred to in my tuxt, "As n shock of corn cometh in in his season." How vividly to all those of us who wen born in tho country comes thu remem brance of husking time. Wo waltetl for i: us for a gala day of thu year. It was called a frolic. TIk; trees having for thu most part shed their foliage, thu farmers waded through thu fallen leaves and euti.c through thu keen morning air to the glee ful company. Thu frosts, which hail sil vered everything during the night, began to melt off thu top of I he corn slim Us. While thu farmers wuru waiting for others they stood blowing their breath through their Angers or thrashing their am.: around their body to keep up warmth of circulation. Hearing mirth greeted the lato farmer as liu crawled over thu fence. Joku and reparteu and rustic salutation abounded. All ready now! Thu men taku hold of thu shock of ,10m and hurl it prostrate, wlillu thu moles and nilco which ltuvu secreted themselves t her . for warmth nttumpt escape. Tho withe of straw is unwound from thu com shuck, nnd the stalks heavy-with thu wealth of grain. am rolled into two bundles, between Pilch thu busker sltsdown. Thu husking 'peg is thrust in until it strikes the corn. anil then the llnrs I In oil' the sheathing of thu ear, and flkru Is a crack as thu root kof tho corn is snapped olT from the husk, Smiinu grain disimprisoned Is hurled up to thu sunlight. Thu air is so tonic, the ork is so very exhilarating, thu company i to blithe that somu laugh, and some shout, and somu sing, and somu banter, and somu teaso a neighbor for a romantic rldu along thu etlgu of thu woods in an eventide fu a carriage that holds but two. nnd somu prophesy as to thu number of bushel to thu Held, and others go into competition ro which shall rifluthumcst corn shocks ncfoyu sundown. After nwhilu 'hu dinner horn sound.4 from thu ftuvulin.se, and thu table issue rounded by u group of jolly and hungry men., From all the pantries and thu cel lars anil thu perches of fowl on thu place tho richest nullities come, nnd there is carnival antl neighborhood reunion, and a scene which 1111s our memory, part with smiles, but more witli tears, as wu remem ber that thu farm belongs now to other owners, anil other hands gather in the Held, and many of those who mingled In that merry husking scene have themselves been reaped "like as a shock of com com eth in in ills season." tiii:ri: is no death to thk christian. Theru is a dlll'ereneu of opinion as to whether the orientals knew anything ultout thu corn as it stands In our fields, but recent discoveries have found out that thu Hebrew knew all about Indian maize jor thero havu been grains of corn picked uji out of ancient crypts and exhumed t ijum hiding places where they weru put vn many centuries ago, and they have . euu planted In our tlmu and havo come p just sttclr Indian maize as wu raise in w lork and Ohio: so 1 am right when I .that IllVtl'Vt mill- refill- Inn uIhu,L' rtt . ------ --- ".--J .-. - . ...... u. Justus you and I bound It; just as I mil I threw It; just as you and I Intl sked It. Thero may comu somu nractlcal fud useful nnd comforting lessons to all our souls while wu think of coming in at last "like a shock of com cometh in in his season." It is high tlmu that thu King of Terrors were thrown out of the Christian vocab ulary. A vast multitude of people talk of death ns though It wero the disaster of -disasters, Inutead of being to a good man the blesslogof blessings. It Is moving out of a cold vestthulu Into a warm temple. It .is migrating Into groves of redolence and perpetual fruitage. It Is a change from .bleak March to roseate June. It Is u ingeof manacles for garlands. It is the ksmutlng of thu iron liandctiirs of ijily Incarceration into thu diamonded tlets of a bridal party, or, to usu thu estton of my text, It is only husking It Is thu tearing oil of the rough lb of thu body that thu bright and the Itlful soul may go free. Coming in 1 a shock of corn comet Ii lu In his sea- Christ bioko up a funeral pinccR- Fat the gnto of Naln'by making a riTcctlon ilay for a young man and Ids Ihother, and I would that I could break tip your sadnesses mid halt the long funeral procession of thu world's grief by i,()ine cheering mid cheerful view of tlm -lust transition, Wo all kluw lint) husking 1 1 mo was a time of frost. Fronton thu fuiees frot on thu stubbles frcst on the gtound; host an thu bare branches of thu trees; frost In tho air; frost on thu hands of thu htiskcM You tcmeinbcr wu used to hide bctwein the com stacks so as to keep oil' the wind, but still you remember how shivering n the body and how painful was the elieel. and how benumbed were thu hainls. lint I after awhile the sun was high up, and al. i the frosts went out of thu air, and hllatl lies awakened thu echoes, and Joy from mi com shock went up, "Aha, ahal" and n nuswercd by joy from another corn slus k "Aha, aha!" So wu all reullzu that tli death of our friend Is the nipping of main expectations, the freezing, thu chilling, the frosting of many of our hopes. It Is fat from being a south wind. It comes out of the frigid north, and when they go a way from us wo stand he numbed in body and hcmiinhcd in mind nnd benumbed I4 soul. Wu stand among our dead neighbors, our dead families, and wo say, "Will we over get over It?" Y--s, wo will getover Itnmlil tho shoutings of heavenly le'iiilon, nnd wu will look back to nil these ills) t esses of bereavement only as thu temporary distresses of husking time. "Weeping may endure for a night, but Jnv comet h In the morning." "Light, and but for a moment," said thu apostlu as he clapped his hands; "light, and but for a moment." Thu chill of tho frosts followed by tho gladness that cometh In "like a shock of corn cometh in In his season." Of course thu husking tlmu Hindu tough work with tho earof com. Thu husking peg had to bo thrust In. and the hunt thumb of tlie husker had to come down oil theswatliiugof thu ear, and then there was a pull and theru was a ruthless tear lug, and then a complete snapping nu b. fore thu corn was free, and If thu husk could havu spoken It would havu said "Why do you lacerato mis Why do you wrench nief" Ah, my friends, that Isthe way (its! has arranged that thu ear and husk shall part, and that is the way he has arranged that thu body and tho soul shall separate. You can alTord to have your physical distresses when you know that they aro only forwarding the soul's liberation. Kvery rheumatic pain Is onlj a plunge of tho husking peg. Kvery lieu ralglo twinge hi only 11 twist by thu busker, There is gold In ytmihat must comu out Somu way thu BMBr must he broken. Somu way thu jBt bo launched for heavenly vnyugJHfiust let thu Ileav cnly HushuiiilmiUTJPi olT thu mortality from thu immortality. Theru ought, to bV great consolation In this for all who hae chronic ailments, slncu thu Lord Isgradu ally and inoru mildly taking away from you that which hinders your soul's libera tion, doing gradually for you what for many of us In robur.t health perhaps he will do In emu fell blow at thu last. At t'.e close of every Illness, at thu close of even paroxysm, you ought to say, "Thank (ii .1 that is all past now; thank God. I will never havu to stiller that again; th. 1 ' God, I am so much nearer thu hour of lib t-ratlon." You will never suffer thu same ikiim twice. You may havo a nuwpalu In an nl.i place, but never thu satnu pain twice. TIk pain does its work and then It dies. .In -t so many plunges of tho crew-bar to free tin quarry stouo for thu building. Just n many strokes of thu chisel to complete tie statue. Just so many pangs to sepai.iii thu soul from tho body. You who li.ivi chronic ailments and disorders are nulx paying in Installments that which some ol us will have to pay In ouu payment win i we pay tho debt of nature. Thank God. therefore, ye who havu chronic dl-ordeis, that you havo mi much less suffering at thu last. Thank God that you will havi so much less to feel ill the way of pain at thu hands of thu Heavenly lluslmtulniii;i when "thu shock of corn cometh In in hi season." tiii; soititowB or this i.in;. Perhaps now this may be an answer to a question which I ifsked one Sabbath morn ing, but did not answer, Why Is It tln.i so many really good peoplu have so dii-iul fully to sutler!' You often find a good man with enough pains ami aches and ili tresses, you would think, to discipline a whole colony, while you will find a in. 111 who Is perfectly useless going about with easy digestion and steady nerves and shin Ing health, nnd his exit from the world N comparatively painless. How do you ex plain thatr Well, I noticed in tho husking tlmu that tho husking peg was thrust into thu corn, and then theru must be, a stout pull before thu swathing was taken off the car and thu full, round, healthy, luxuriant com was developed, while, 011 the olln. hand, then- was com that hardly seemed worth husking. Wu threw that into a place all by itself, and wu called it nubbins. Some of it was mildewed, and somu of it was mice nibbled, and somu of it was great promise and no fulfillment. All cobs and no corn, Nubbins! After tho good corn had been driven up to thu barn wu came around witli thu corn basket, and we picked up these nubbins. They wero wortli saving, but not wortli much. So all around us there aru peoplu who amount to compara tively nothing. They develop into no kind of usefulness. They are nibbled 011 onu side by thu world, and nibbled on thu other side by the devil, and mildewed all over. Great promise and no fulfillment. All cob? and no corn. Nubbins! They aru wortli saving. I suppose many of them will get to heaven, but they are not worthy to be mentioned in thu same day with those who J)'1'"1, k"'K' went through great tribulation into thu loin of our God Who would not rather have tho iialns of ' this life, Hie misfortunes of this lift who minute!" Great sociality. Great neigh would not rather bu torn anil wounded and ' borhood kindness. Go in and dine. What lacerated and wrenched and husked and though John .Milton sit down on one side at last go lu i-.mlil t liu very best grain of 1 mid John Howard sit down on thu other thu grauery- than to bu pronounced jot shlef No embarrassment. What thoiieh . ,....-. .,. .. ,,, . . """" "'"Mugm-niir .uiminsr in other J?'8!,1 w,,ia ." hnyl" )0" ,K',,nU' "'"' nut 1- iimni-sri tu iiuiij nun iiisiress III oilnl ness and distress of all sorts, thu Lord has not any grudge against you. It is not de rogatory; it is complimentary. "Whom the Lord loveth he chasteuetli," and it Is proof positive that thero is something valuable in you, or thu Lord would not have husked you. iiuoici: tooktiikk. You remember also that In the tlmu of husking it was a neighborhood reunion, Ily thu great llieplace In the winter, the fires roaring r.round thu glorified backlogs on an old fashioned hearth, of which the modern stoves and registers are only the degeneratu ilesceiidants, the farmers used to gather anil spend tho evening, and theie would bu much sociality; but It was not anything llku thu joy of thu husking time, for then all thu farmers came, and they came in the very best humor, and they camu from beyond thu meadow, and they camo from beyond the brook, and they camu from regions two and three miles around, Good spirits reigned nnprfine, and thero weie great handshakings, and there was carnival, and there was thu recital of the brightest experience in all their lives, and there was a neighborhood leiiulou the memory of which makes all the nerves of my body itcmhlu with emotion as thu trlngs of a harp when thu flngeri" of It player havu swept thu choids. Tlielni-' lug tlmu was the time of ncluhhorhii..ii 1 union, and mi heaven will ho Jusi M 1 Tliexu they come tip! They slept In 1 old vlllagu church) unl. There I 1 Upl They reclined amid the nuur 1 1. . 1 tho sculpture and (ho partcitvs i.f ( cemetery. There they come .-; ' 1 went down when the ship round ! 1 Capo llalleras. They come up 11.1 1 sides- from potter's Held and out m solid masonry of Westminster a'i . They come upl They conm tip All the hindrances to their belter n u husked olT. All their spiritual ilest .,. nicies husked olT. All their hlndi u to usefulness husked olT. The grain 1 golden grain, tho God fashioned in visible nnd conspicuous. Sonic of t m , earth weie such disagreeable Cm , , ou could hardly stand it. In their pn s Now In heaven they are so radi.it 1 m haully know them. The fact N, all r,. . Imperfections havu been husked oil' T , did not mean 011 eatth tiibedisami ' They meant, well enough, but they , you how sluk joit looked, mid thev i. you how many hind things they had' , 1 about you, ami they told jou Imw ,. ,,, they had to stand up for jolt In soie 1 1. ties until you wished almost thm (l(. 1 , been slain In some of thu battles (', i pious, concentrated, well ineanri;: -agreeables. Xow In heaven all I Inn 1.1 fetislveness has been husked olT. L.icli .u Is as happy as hu can be. Kvery otu ' . meets as happy as hu can bu Heaven one gieat neighborhood r union. All kings and queens, all .... sters, all millionaires, all batiqueteis i tlio Father with Ids chlliheu all amiiil him. No "goislby" In all the air. N grave cut In all tho hills, Hlver of enstnl rolling over bid of pearl, under arch i chrysoprase, into seas of glass mln ,1 1 with lire. Stand at. thu gatu of the griiuut.i and seethe grain come in; out of the fn .' into the sunshine, out, of the daikness Ii m thu light, out of thu tearing, and the 11 ping, and the twisting, and thu wreiiehin;i mid lacerating, and the husking tliueii eatth Into the wldo open door of Ihekin-' granary "likens a shock of corn cometh in in Ids season." tiii; Rociirrv or iii:avi:s. Yes, heaven Is a great sociable, with J llku thu Joy of hushing time. No one tin feeling so big he declines to speak to si 0110 that Is not so large. Archangel will Ing to listen to smallest cherub. No boll ing of thu door of castu at one he.ivi nly mansion tokeepout thu citizen of a smallet mansion. No clique In one corner whisper Ing about a clique In aiiothercorner. David taking none of the airs of a giant killer; Joshua making iioouuhalt until liupassis, because he madu thu sun ami moon ball; Paul inakln.'; no assumption over the most ordinary pieacher of righteousness; Nun man, captain of thu Syrian host, no more honored than the captive maid who told 111 111 where ho could get 11 good doctor. Oh, my soul, what a country! Thu humlm-il man a king, the poorest woman a queen, tlie meanest house a palace, tho slim tea lifetime el ei nit j. And what Is more straiiL'e about it all is we may all get there. "Not I," sajs somu onu standing back under I lie galleries. Yes, you. "Not I," says some one w ho has not been in church in llfteeli ear.s befoie. Yes, you. "Not I," says some one who lias been for lift years tilling up bis life v lib nil kinds o'f wickedness. Yes, j 011. There urn moiiup olles 011 earth monopolist lu railroads and monopolistic elegraph companies and mo nopolistic, grain dealers, but no nionopo lies lu religion. All who want to bo saved may bo saved, "without money and with out price." Salvation by thu Lord Jesus Christ for all tlie piople. Of couiso use common seno In this matter. You can not expect to get to Charleston by taking the ship for Portland, and you cannot get to heaven b going in an opposite direc tion. Ilelluve In thu Lord Jesus Chivt and tlmu shalt bu saved. Thiough that onu gatu of pardon and peacuall therme may go In. ALL will 111: at iiomi: Turin:. "Hut," says somu one, "do you real j think I would bunt homo in that siipern..'i society if I should reach Itf" I think jo.i would. I know 3011 would. 1 reineml that in tlio husking tlmu theru was a rre.n equality of 'cling among the nclghlmts. Theie at 0110 corn shock a farmer would ta ut work who owned two hundred acres 1,1 ground. The man whom he was talkm-j with at the next corn shock owned but thirty ncii-s of ground, and tierhans nil that covered by a mortgage. 1 That evening, at theclosu of tho husking 1 day, ouu mail drove homo a roan span t 1 frisky, so full of life they got their fee I over tho traces. Thu other man walked ' home. Great illlfurencu in education, great 1 difTerenco In worldly means, but I notle.-il ! at the husking time they all seemed to enjoy each other's society. They did not ask any man how much property he owned or what his education had been. Tliej all seemed to be happy together In those good times. And so it will liu in heaven. Our Father will gather his children around him, and thu neighbors will come in. ami the past will bo rehearsed. And some one will tell of victory, and wu will all celebrate It. And some ouu will tell of great strug gle, and we will all pralsu thu gracu that fetched him out of it. And somu onu will say: "Heie Ih my old father that I put away with heartbreak. Just look at him! Hu is as young as any of usl" And somu one will say: "Here Is my dar ling child thi.t I burled In Greenwood, and all thu after years of my life wuru shad owed with desolation. Just look at her! Shu doesn't seem as If shu had been slnL- , Charlotte Llizabeth sit down 011 0110 side and Hannah .More sit down on thu other siduf No embarrassment. A nionaich yourself, why lie embarrassed among inon nrchsr A tJtigstor yourself, why bo em barrassed among glorllled songsters? Go in and dine. All thu shocks of corn coming in in their season. Oil, yes, in their season. Not one of you having died too soon, or having died too late, or having died at haphazard. Planted at just the right time. Plowed at just tlie right time. Cut down at just the right time. Husked at just thu right tlmu. Garnered at just tho right time. Coming In in your seaton. Oh, 1 wish that the two billion bushels of core now in thu fields or on their way to tlm seaboard might ben type of the grand )le!d of honor and glory anil immiirialln vhcu all tu shocks come lu. . Tin. mi Moiuiljnr Yorni. J Idonotkno. ho. you aru constituted, but 1 am so eoiirtililtPil that there Is uoth lug that so awukc;ay reminiscences in me as the odors of n jprn Held when I cross it at this time of ,r after the corn liasbeuu cut mid It i.t.toJs'in FiocLt. nw so I have thought It nnjli't be practically useful for us toibi) to i',osi die cot n Held, and I liavi thought pirhaps theru might, bu some icmiiiisftaivc roused in our soul th r mlghtb salut.ii) and might In s.imii. In Swuleii u prima donna, while her lums In the city was being repaired, took 1 housti In thn country for temporal-) 11 dence, and she btought out. hergteat 11 of Jewels tn show a ftleiul who whin I sen I hem. One night after displaying these ji ,1 nnd leaving them 011 tlie table, and u.l t friends had gone, and the servants hu gone ouusuiumernlght sliesattiln . -mid looking lulo 11 mirror Just in Mm-t . her chair, when she saw lutliatmlr , face of a robber looking In at the win- n behind her and gaiignl thosu Jewels :;i , was In great, flight, but sat stlil. m hardly knowing why she did so slu- b . to slug an old nuiseiy song, her feai ,m 1 Ing the pathos of the song mole ti liu-.-Suddenly she not Iced, while looking it I- minor, that the robber's face had it- . fiom the window, and It did not conic b , A few ilas after tin- prima dunlin 1 celved a letter fiom I lie robber, nylii ,, heanl that the Jewels weiu to he until-. Iilghl. and I came to take them at w'm ever himinl, but when I heanl jmi si, that niii-serv song with which my nun 1- . so often sang tne to sleep I could iiot si -i,i It, and I lied, and I liavo tesolved up . new and honest life," Oh, lit) fi lends, thcto mo Jewels In pi , richer t linn IIiom' which lay Upon thai t 1 lilethat night. They aru the Jewels of Im Itiimotlal soul. Would God that so,,,, song rolling up out, of the deserted nut-.. 1 of your childhood, or somu song tnllllu u, out of tlie col 11 llehls, (hu snug of the hu-' ers twenty 1.1- forty ) eats ago, might in: , all our feet out of the paths of sin Into fn paths of tlghteoiisiiess. Would Gml II. ,1 those meinoiles wafled In on odor or so 1 might st, ut us this moment with huh. fist tnwaiil thai blessed place where so many of ourloed ones have alreadv pit- ceded lis "as a shuck of c 1 lellilliiii his season." 'I lie Color or tin. lltiinil, Having 11 cent I) i-amlui-d a large nun, her of specimens of Immaii blood fiom persons of illilen-nt ages, ranging f four to seventy six )ears, some being ilinv III robust health, others belngtube lotf. I was struck with the gieut dllTeieiiei It. the shade of 1 olor pi.-setiteil, some being or a very ileh tint, others wry pale. T. , richest color was In the blood of a girl twenly-slx ) cms of age, n graduate of Va sar college, who had the highest aiitlirop't luetic nieasiin-uii-Mt for respiratory capi-.i I ty in a class if about .'Oflglils, Her health was excellent, and she consumed wither mine llesh ioml than Is usual. The next highest Hut was found lu the blood of a woman about seventy years old, with u somewhat unusual chest measiiie mint, having also excellent, respiratory capacity and being lu line health. This woman, on the contrary, does not eat llesh at all. I expected III her ease to llud a more than iiriliu.xy minihirof wldte blood corpuscles, but there were far less than Usual, it being ililllculttofliid them, the) Were so few. The palest blood was from a chloiotlc servant girl of twenty five ) ears and in a tuberculous boy of f -. Theie was not milch peiceplilih-illllelenee ilithelrca is Tim gill hail uatuially good lesplratory power, but -he had lessened it by light clothing and an almost constant Indoor lite for a long in a-. After spending a month at tho seaside I examined her blood au-ain and found 1 - tint somewhat deeper than oeioic ai. is. iiiiinrool; In .Science. .nla's I)i fciiKi-, M. .ola altul. i his ei It les for being an gry with him for slating the whole tiitth about I he war. To ilos,, was, he dcclnn-, a duty. Fiance was nearly ruined because she believed in the Flench Hooper "as the conqtietorof Hie world, singing as hu runs across fallen kingdoms." II 11 resolved to teach hit- f"ll..w i oiintrj men that war was "a thiiiK 100 serious, too terrible for us to lie about." "I eoncealiil nothing, I sought to show how a nation like out-own, after su man) vlctoi les. could Ix-sohiIm-i ably beaten, and I w ished also to show nut of what depths we have raised ourselves in twenty ) cars, and in what a blood bail, a strong people can be regenerated. Ah profound convict Inn is tliat if the fiil-i h patriotic lie begins again Hl. shall again be health." That at least is sound advice. Loudon Spectator. A I'lueu of Itefugu. Tom Anjcrry has heretofore been one ol tlie most trilling students at college, but of late liu has attended thu lectllles legu larly. Onu of the professors observed t his change for thu butter, and took occasion to remark to his friend, Judge Cowing, wlio is ncqu-ilntcil with thu young man: "I'm very glad to see that jotiug man Tom AnJerr) attending tho lectures regu larly. IU seems to havu turned over a nuw leaf." "Turned over a new leaf be Mowed," exclaimed JuilgeCnwIng, ''don't you know why hu attends the lectures regularly)'" "To improve his mind, 1 suppose." "Nothing of thu kind. He goes to the lecture room becaitso that Is thu only phieu thu bill collectors don't hunt for him. Hu goes theru to throw them oil the scent." Texas Slftlngs. Kilt rigs nnd lie llrlllliint. Stimulation of some branch or other of the fifth net vu seems to Incteasu thu circu lation in the brain, and thosu who un making their utmost calls upon their mental powers are accustomed to stimu late this ni-rwi in one way or another. The latu Lord Derby used to eat brandied cher ries, and an 1 xpcriiiient of Marcy's proves that mastication will accelerate thu How of bloisl through the carotid art cry, and serves to show the wisdom of an editor whom I knew who used to eat figs wlillu writing a leading article, and even of those who in dlllge in tlie practice so disagreeable to their neighbors of chewing tobacco. - Pop uliir Science Monthly. Thunder Years Ago. For hundreds of )c.irs thunder accom panied by hail, nr thunder in tin- north 01 west, was thought to portend evil to all Htltis.li subjects. During the time when this superstition was nfc the great bell at Malmeshury abbey, Kugland, the oiu known as St Adelm's bell, was always! rung for the purpose of driving away tho thunder nnd lightning. St. Louis llepuli lie. luilgmi'iit of the People, lu thu eyes of myriads of persons the one thing ill done wipes out thu memory of a dozen tilings well done. That is one of the penalties of greatness. And It shall be the same with the great man for geiieiatini s after he has gone. Thiough ail iuioi shall loom thu shadow of that ill ilmi, overshadowing the good. All the Ve.u Hound. si. Hot mention. An Lugllsh In ah Ii ollicer lecentl) iu celved the following note fiom one of the rtildcuts of Ids district; "Dear sir. I beg to tell )ou tliil my child eight months is siilVerllu of mi ,isi s as rtqiilteil b) m t of parliament '- hicliange. AN liMWWIIiKASYIiUJH A OmmopoNDENT DCSCHIUES A'I INTCIIESTINQ INSTITUTION. Hnw Hillilrcn r feeble Intellect An, Tmhn-il to II mo, Nt-lf Ntmtitlolug- Th,. ('loiiiliii A)hini lias 11 -Ihoiisiinil lu. iiiati-11 unit Admirably Muniim-il. INpeeiiil Ciirri'spniiih-nci'.) (.'ol.tlMIII'H, )., Nov. Ul. -(lliiwlllgo.il of any rellei-ting glory upon our Nine leeiith century civilization is tlm gn-ai linpoilaiu-o given In tho education of tin physical mid mmtal tiiiforlunatcH or lln Iiiiiiiiih race. Literally almost tho blind see mid the ileiif bear, mid now tlm child of feeble Intellect, tho most titirortmmtn or all, id beginning to understand ami know. It Is wotiiUiiful what has been and In bi-ln-r dono with tlio liubecllo. Ftoinahelph dependent member of snclnty, otu- gi, 1 stato iiiKtittltliiHsuro traiisfotiulug Join Into a Holf supporting Individual and lilting him in ninny liisliiin-es to ill! t least a lilliulilo sphere iu life. MAIN lll'II.IHNII. COI.PMIH'M AHVMM. Porltaps tho must notable school for thu training of feeble minded chihlii-u is ill till city, it is the largest olio in the country, having nearly 1,01m Inmates. It is bcuuttritlly situated, and h-tlng been under 0110 capable lnaniigeinent for a good many years has been developed systematically, intelligently and stead ily. Tho Mtiperliilendent, Dr. Doren, 1ms uxeetitlvo ability ,iml tho instinct of or der to a marked dog , ami Willi these qualities combines sympathy for tho tin fortunate with an Intense, love of bin work, which is unusual. Tho asyliiin is ptiiiiarily for imbeciles that is, children of feeble intellect who can learn if stilllcient care and pa tience in given to (iieir training, but who aro utterly unable to advance by in ordinary methods of education outside Very often the first thing to bo done with them is to teach them to use their physical nioiiibor.s. Home children 1110 literally taught to walk who, before coining to the institution, were ut'erlv tiuablo to, not from physical dl-uhilii, but from niituinl backwardness anil .. cause no one liml sulllcleiit, patience to try to teach them. The hands are made is largely aftor kindergaiten methods Ho is taught color, form and arrange ment. Tho molding in clay and sand dono in souieof tlioschoolrooiusis really remarkable, and when otto considers the material with which the teacher labors, tho patience and tact which shoinust bring to her work, 0110 realizes that she Is truly a missionary, bringing light mid iimleistaiiding to the intellectually titilte. After tlio kindergarten training th-.-child is taught tu rend. To begin w itli, lio is given words 011 cardboard nanus of objects around the schoolroom, of domestic animals ami of things about tho farm witli which ho is familiar. Uo learns to inline all these cards, point out tho objects to you or tell whero they 1 aro in words or if ho cannot talk by signs, Then charts aro given lilin 1 with simple seutuueos illustrated timiii ' them. Afterward hu is put into a very easy reader, arranged uccording to tho word method that is, tlm words hid taught before tho letters. Obj.-ct teach ing is necessarily ust-illn tho beginning almost entirely, and largely throughout his entire courso of study. From thu word muthoil ho goeH into tho first re.id- or, and theuco on bis course ofstudv is very much that of tlio ordinary child, but his progress is necessarily very slow. He must bo tntight indivhlyfnlly al most everything. It is finite imjMissiblo until ho lias attained some degree of ad vancement to put him into u cities with others, mid oven when so placed he has to havo many little diiliculties explained to mm separately, hvery device must 1 bo used to attract and hold hint to tin subject of study. Ho is tmuflit counting by tho objects with which ha is familiar, by different colored balls, by buttons, corn, by bits of cardboard and overv device which thu teacher can inWnt. Thero must always bo as nearly as pos sible it material tepreseutation of the idea which sho is trying to convey. From molding figures iu kindergarten schools he advances iu tho higher grades to molding maps, and so gains 11 better idea of geography than by an other method. Iu connection with tin work in the schoolroom, and following out thu manual training idea, the pupil is taught to sew. The girls make under clothing, diessesand bedding. Tlie boys learn tailoring. Physical culture, too, iccvives a large share of attention. Kvery child who is not helpless and crippled is put into a gymnastic diss and spends une-half hour each day 111 oxercise. Thobenellt isincalculbale, for many of the children aro physieall weak and imperfectly developed! In tho lower classes tho child is taught to propel ly lift his feet, uso his arms follow a leader, oltoy an order and keep time. In ciuiM-queiieo of such drill ho nilvances little by ltttlo until ho is able to execute complicated movements 111 a reinaikably perfect manner. The love of melody is as often an instinct with the feeblo minded child as with the bright one, nnd music is a powerful factor in hi education. It attracts and holds him as notiuiiiC else can. Thu th'.ldien sing beuutitully patt songs as well as simple melodies, mid learn from dictation by heart the wm-ls of all their s nigs, so that they sing In "ueiuh with an abandon nut t'oaud III llll limit- Ulltll II ilP lilt. it'. .fir 1 .1... wanderimr ..tt,.,.tl Is 11, .,1 ii"" ., Hnitur) lo.idition of tho liouso, too, .1..1.1... ti ir . '....v.. .,.' ".",. foiiHtniniy watched. Uislnfcctnntn i ..;. '.. .1.. '...:. "'?""'""' "'" '" used iu every comer, nnd during .V;r -v v...?;.,.,. ' ' T . , , '" ly " .l-nultorh-s aro thorough ...,.. .t . u.l, limn mis 101 iv minimi.' i,..i t.. 11...1- runoiiK children who read tholr songa by ntitoiind word, After the boy has ptogiusi.ed anf. llclently In the schoolioom to etiablo him to lei.in a trade he Is put to work at one timliir the Immediate stipur vlslonof a liiilneil iiieuliimlu. A largo number of boys mo in tho shoe nhon. iiialin till of the shoes worn by tho chil dren mid do all or tho inentUiig. In tho tailor Mitip tho suits aro made for all tho boyH In tlm Institution, ami tlm plumber, blacksmllh, carpeuler ami painter i:i niuh a teacher lu his siK-clalty of a titnii bef of pupils. Tho rami employs tho largest number of boys naturally, mid employn a clasn incapable or employment elsewhere ex cept in tho cleaning department. Many or tho children can be taught (ho sim plest brunches or farniwork who could not understand the mote complicated trades. All of the cleaning about tho house is dono under direction by tho lunmti.H, mul out) fuels almost tempted during n. morning journey to the institution to iuniiliriiso tl Hong of the Hhlrl." nntl iiuiko it ".Scrub, semi), scrub," thero aro such ai inli-s of scriibbets everywhere. Thu girls after leaving dm schoolroom aro taught dressmaking mid inondltiir. cooking, laundry work and general I housework, lu the sewing room aro 1 nuidn all the dresses worn by tho pupils. J After the training given at tho Inslitu- Hon is completed the child, if eupahlo of I I.,. I, ,,..,.,. I. ,,!.. ......I.... 1-.... 1.1 ir 1 "i'"'l ii-iiiiiij lining nir niiuni'ii, in Mini. out into the world to earn his living. If not, bo is kept ami nmdo useful at tho Institution until his place is required by smaller children coining in, when ho in returned to tlm olllcials of tho county from which he camo as being tho only agents responsible for him, JUany of tlio children could bo made self mippoiting under competent supervision who, if allowed to go out into tlio world iilono, become burdens to society and propaga tors of their kind. Menial weakness means invariably moral Weakness, mul though tho institu tion limy make the child ordinarily ca pable and seir supporting under Hh man agement it cannot iu all instances make him so when he is sent out into tlio world. However, Homo ilo go out who are enabled by the education given them to make a fair living. Among tho greatest benellts conferred by t ho institution is tho orderlhtess which it teaches its pupils. Tho lives they lead are perfectly regular and directed according to the best known principles of health. Hvery child is given each day, unless it Is stormy, it largo amount of outdoor exercise. In case of storms thero are long covered corridors attached to tho buildings so arranged that thu sides ci n In- almost entirely opened up, and in these corridors, clothed as for outdoors, the children promenade. Tho is aro tho ly sitting rooms nnd slcon-i ing rooits ami during iiicuIh tho childrcid aro under lio care of nttondmits. The liibtlluTftlfrWMiTn of tho best literattiro extant for tho young, which is iu constant usu in schooh nnd leading rooms, and which, by means of its illustrated books, its siniplo hlsto- tiii: toweh. ries and its great fund of information o general topics, is an aid to tho teacher greater almost than any othor she can re ceive. It would Imi impossible to more than outline tho great work dono by such an institution, and that Ohio has one so per- feet in all respects is duo entirely to Dr. Doren, a man whoso every thought bus been for tho unfortunate, whoso lifo has been given to the work, and who is 11 phi lanthropist mid leader par excellence. Louisk Manette. A IVrnlliir Aiilninl. (Special Correnponilcnco. Nouwicii, Conn., Nov. 21. Whiloont hunting a day or two ago James 1). Peck ham, a well known resident of the neigh Isiring town c,f Preston, caugVt and killed a jieculiar animal, tho exact pedi greo of which ho is very curious to k-nrn. Ho was tramping through tho woods whun his attention was attracted to tho animal, which somewhat resembles thu polecat. Carefully approaching it in tho renr, ho succeeded iu killing it with n club and brought the freak home. Tho animal is about eighteen inches in length, ami with tho exception of its tail is covered with lino soft hair of a dark gray color, tipjK-d with brown. Tho head is of a very jieculiar slinpo, with a long, stioutliko mouth, nnd l.oso and ears that closely resomblo those of a raccoon. 1 ho teeth aro very long and sharp and very regularly sot. Tho tail is several inched in length, witltoi t a hair, and a pinkish white in color. Tho feet also are hairless to tho nnklo ji una. , and are tipped with long, sharp cl iws, 1 ideiitly used for digging. There is a very slight odor aooitt tlie bodv similar uie noiiy similar ul the uuimY is s. Not hiiu oil. Im uro iu this vicjni- to that if a skunk, mul prnnai-iv in unit species. kind was ever set n before i l. .fid Mr. Pet kbaiu is very anxiouJ to I le.iru just what ilu- animal is. IIohtu, , t.iki-u 1 ale t preserve tho lxdy, nnd thu cun"it now occupies a prominent i.l... 1 .. his museum. J, F. , 4 A WMtVliK f lea t t r' jf rs I I 1