Witt Talma-f , nacle, Brooklyn:, this evening. His subject inatioa from Evil Habits ' and Proverls xxiii, 33: "When shall I I will seek it yet again." He raid With an insight into human nature Buch as no other man ever reached, Solo mon, in my text, sketches the mental operations of one who, having 6tepied aside from the path of rectitude, desires to return. With a wish for 6onu-lliing lietter, ho Fays: "When shall I awake? When fehall I como out of thu horrid nightman) of iniquity?" Bat. seized upon by uneradicated habit, and forced down hill by his passions, ho crie3 out: 4 'I will seek it j-et again. I will try it onco more." Our libraries are adorned with an ele gant literature addressed to young men, jointing out to them all tho dangers and Ierils of life completo maps of the voy age, showing all the rocks, tho quick sands, tho thoals. But suppose a man has already iuado shipwreck; suppose ho i already oil tho track; suppose he has already gone astray, how is ho to get back? That is n field comparatively un touched. I propose to address myself this evening to such. There are those in this audience who, with every passion of their agonized soul, are ready to hear this discussion. They compare them selves with what they were ten years ago, and cry out from tho bondage in which they aro incarcerated. Now, if there be any in this house, como with an earnest punjKwe, yet feeling they are be yond the pale of Christian sympathy, and that the sermon can hardly be expected to address them, then, at this moment, I give them my right hand and call them brother. Look up. There is glorious and triumplmnt hope for yon yet. I sound the trumpet of gospel deliverance. The church is ready to spread a banquet at your return and tho hierarchs of heaven to fall into line of bannered pro cession at the news of your emancipa tion. So far as God may help me, I propose to show what are the obstacles of your return, and then how you aro to surmount those obstacles. .The first difficulty in the way of your return is the force of moral gravitation. Just as there is a natural law which brings down to the earth anything which you throw into the air, so there is a cor responding moral gravitation. In other words, it i3 easier to go down than it is to go up; it is easier to do wrong than it is to do right. Call to mind the comrades o your boyhood days some of them good, some of them bad. Which most affected you? Call to mind the anec dotes tiiat you have heard in the last five or ten years some of them are pure and some of them impure. Which the more easily sticks to your memory! During tho years of your life you have formed certain courses of conduct some of them good, some of them bad. To which style of habit did you the more easily yield? Ah! my friends, we have to take but a moment of 6elf inspection to find out that there is in all our souls a force of moral gravitation. But that gravitation may be resisted. Just as you may pick up from tho earth something and hold it in your hand toward heaven, just 60 by tho power of God's grace a soul fallen may be lifted toward peace, toward par don, toward heaven. Force of moral gravitation in every one of us, but powe. iu God's grace to overcome that force cf moral gravitation. The next thing in the way of your re turn is tho power of evil habit. I know there are those who say it is very easy for them to give up evil habits. I do not believe them. Here is a man given to intoxication. Ho knows it is disgracing his family, destroying his property, ruin ing him, body, mind and soul. If that man, being an intelligent man, and lov ing his family, could easily give up that habit, would he not do so? The fact that he does not give it up proves it is hard to give it up. It is a very easy thing to sail down 6tream, the tide carry ing you with great force; but suppose you turn the boat up stream, is it so easy then to row it? As long as we yield to the evil inclination in our hearts and our bad habits, we are sailing down stream ; but the moment we try to turn, we put our boat in the rapids just above Nia gara, and try to row up stream. Take a man given to the habit of using to bacco, as most of you do, and let him resolve to stop, and he finds it very- difficult. Twenty-one years ago I quit that habit, ana I would as soon dare to put my right hand in the fire as once to indulge in it. Why? Be cause it was such a terrible struggle to get over it. Now, let a man be advised by his physician to give up the use of to bacco. He goes around not knowing what to do with himself. He cannot add up a line of figures. He cannot sleep nights. It seems as if the world lias turned upside down. He feels his busi ness is going to ruin. Where ho wa3 land and obliging he is scolding and fret ful. The composure that characterized him has given way to fretful restlessness, and he has become a complete fidget. What power is it that has rolled a wave of woe over the earth and shaken a por tent in the heavens? He has tried to 6top smoking. After a while he 6ays: "I am going to do as I please. The doctor doesn't understand my case. I'm going back to the old habit." And he returns. Everything assumes its usual composure. Hi3 business seems to brighten. The world becomes an at tractive place to live in. His children, seeing the difference, hail the return cf their father's genial disposition. What wave of color haa dashed blue into tho slrv, and greenness into the mountain foliage, and the glow of sapphire into tho sunset? What enchantment has lifted a world of beauty and joy on his soul? Ho has gone back to smoking. Oh, the fact is, as we all know in our own experi ence, that habit is a taskmaster; as long as we obey it, it does not chastise us; but let us resist, and wo find wo are. to bo lashed with scorpion whips, and bound with ship cable, and thrown into the track a m spring i.. therefore will reduce nil leather goodi 20 it: below regular prices fur casdi onlr. C V Is iMarlzcd in Plain STigurc.., grinds hi w a determination to-keep Jui i . dare not look at the bottles in the dows of a wine store. It is one lo.w, bitter, exhaustive, hand to - hand light with inflamed, tantalizing ami merciless habit. When he thinks he is entirely free tho old inclinations pounce upon him like a pack of hounds with their muzzles tearing away at tho flanks of one poor reindeer. In Paris there is a sculptured representation of Bacchus, the god of revelry. He is riding on a panther at full leap. Oh, how sug gestive. Let every one who i3 speeding on bad waj's understand ho is not riding a docile and well broken steed, but he is riding a monster, wild and bloodthirsty, going at a death leap. How many there are who resolve on a better life, and say : "When shall I awake?" But, seized on by their old habits, cry: "I will try it onco more; I will seek it yet again 1" Years ago there were some Princeton students who were Bkating, and the ice was very thin, and some one warned the company back from tho air hole, and finally warned them entirely to leave the place. But one young man with bravatlo, after all the rest had stopped, cried out: "One round more!" He swept around, and went down, and was brought out a corpse. My friends, there are thousands and tens of thousands of men losing their soul in that way. It is the one round more. I have also to say that if a man wants to return from evil practices, society re pulses him. Desiring to reform, he says: "Now I will shake olF my old associates, and I will find Christian companionship." And he appears at the church door some Sabbath day, and tho usher greets him with a look, as much as to say: "Why, you here? You are the Last man I ever exiected to see at church! Come, take this seat right down by the door." In stead of saying: "Good morning; I am glad you are here. Come; I will give you a first rate seat, right up by the pulpit." Well, the prodigal, not yet discouraged, enters a prayer meeting, and some Christian man, with more zeal than common sense, says: "Glad to see you ; the dying thief was saved, and I sup pose there is mercy for you." The young man, disgusted, chilled, throws himself on his dignity, resolved he will never enter ?nto the house of God again. Per haps not quite fully discouraged aboui reformation, he sides up by some highly respectable man he used to know, going down the street, and immediately the re spectable man has an errand down some other 6treet. Well, the prodigal wishing to return tak&s some member of a Chris tian association by the hand, or tries to. The Christian young man looks at him, looks at the faded apparel and the marks of dissipation, instead of giving him a warm grip of the hand, offers him the tip ends of the long fingers of the left hand, which is equal to striking a man in the face! Ohl how few Christian people understand how much force and gospel there is in a good, honest hand shaking. Sometimes, when you have felt the need of encouragement, and some Christian man has taken you heartily by the hand, have you not felt thrilling through every fiber of your body, mind and soul an encouragement that was just what you neeeled? You do not know anything at all about this unless you know when a man tries to return from evil courses of conduct he runs against repulsions in numerable. We say of some man, he lives a block or two from the church, or half a mile from the church. There are people in our crowded cities who live a tbousand miles from church. Vast deserts of indifference between them and the house of God. The fact is we must keep our respectability, though thousands anil tens of thousands perish, Christ sat with publicans and sinners. But if there came to the house of God a man with marks of dissipation upon him, people almost threw up their hands in hoiTor, as much as to say: "Isn't it shocking?' How these dainty, fastidious Christians in all our churches, are going to get into heaven I don't know, unless they have an especial train of cars, cushioned and upholstered, each one a car to himself. They cannot go with the great horde of publicans and sinners. Oh ! ye who curl your lips and scorn at the fallen, I tell you plainly, if you had been sur rounded by the same influences, instead of sitting today amid tho cultured, and the refined, and the Christian you would have been a crouching wretch in 6table or ditch, covered with filth and abomina tion. It is not because you are naturally any better, but because the mercy of Goel has protected you. Who are you that, brought up in Christian circles and watched by Christian parents, you should be so hard on the fallen ? I think men also aro often hindered from return by the fact that churches are too anxious about their membership, and too anxious about their denomination, and they rush out when they see a man about to give up hi3 sin and return to God, and ask him how he is going to be j baptized whether by sprinkling or im- I mersion and what kind of a church he j is going to join. Oh! my friends, it is a poor time to talk about Presbyterian catechisms, and Episcopal liturgies, and Methodist love feasts, and fcapt jstrjes to a man that is coming out of the darkness of sin into the glorious light of the 'gos-ik-1. Whv. it reminds me cf a man drowning in the sea, and a lifeboat puts ! out for hmi, ana tne man in mo Doatsays to the man out of the boat: "Now, if I get you ashore, are you going to live on my street?" First get him ashore, and then talk about the non-essentials of re ligion. Who cares what church ho joins, if he only joins Christ and 6tart3 for heaven?" Oh! you ought to have, my brother, an illumined face and hearty Crip for every one that tries to turn from his evil vray. Take bold of the came the late war, 1 . . . . went into the hospital ai. 'and said to a man; "Wbeie ... hurt?" He made no answer but held his arm, swollen and splintered. I saw where ho was hurt. The simple fact is, when a man ha3 a wounded soul, all ho has to do is to hold it up before a sym pathetic Lord and gpt it healed. It does not take any long prayer. Just hold up the wound. Oh, it is no small thing when a man is nervous and weal: and exhausted, coming from his evil ways, to feel that God puts two omnipotent arms around him, and says "Young man, I will stand by you. The mountains may depart, and tho hills be removed, but I will never fail you." And then as the soul thinks the news is too good to bo true, and cannot believe it, and looks up in God's face; God lifts h'i3 right hand and takes an oath, an affidavit, saying: "As I live, eaith the Lord God, I have no pleasure in the death of him that dietli." Blessed bo God for such a gospel as this. "Cut the slices thin," said the wife to the husband, "or there will not be enough to go all around for the children; cut tho slices thin." Blessed be God there is a full loaf for every one that wants it! Bread enough and to 6pare. No si in slices at the Lord's table. I re member when the Master Street hos pital, in Philadelphia, was opened during the war, a tele-gram came, saying: "There will be three hundred wounded, men to-night; be ready to take care of them;" and from my church there went in some twenty or thirty men and women to look after these poor wounded fellows. As they came, some from one part of the land, some from another, no one asked whether this man was from Oregon, or from Massachusetts, or from Minnesota, or from New York. There was a wounded soldier, and the only question was how to take oil the rags tho most gently and put on the bandage, and administer the cordial. And when a soul comes to God, he does not ask where you came from or what your ancestry was. Healing for all your wounels. Par don for all your guilt. Comfort fox all your troubles. Then, also, I counsel you, if you want to get back, to quit all your bad associ ations. One unholy intimacy will fill your soul with moral distemper. In all the ages of the church there has not been an instance where a man kept one evil associate and was reformed. Go home today, open your desk, take out letter paper, stamp and. envelope, and then write a letter something like tins: "My Old Companions I start this day for heaven. Until I am persuaded you will join me in this, farewell." Then sign your name, and send the letter by the first post. Give up your bad companions or give up heaven. It is not ten bad companions that destroy a man, nor five bad companions, nor three bad companions, nor two bad companions, but one. What chance is there for that young man I saw along the street, four or five young men with him, halting in front of a grogshop, urging him to go in, lie resisting, violently resisting, until after a while they forced him to go in? It was a summer night and tho doer was left open, and I saw the process. They held him fast, and they put the cup to his lips, anel they foiced down the strong drink. What chance i3 there for such a young man? I counsel you, also, seek Christian ad vice. Every Christian man is bound to help you. If you find no other human ear willing to listen to your story of struggle, come to me and I will by every sympathy of my heart, anil every prayer, and every toil of my hand, stand besido you in the struggle for reformation; and as I hope to have my own sins forgiven and hope to be acquitted at the judgment seat of Christ, I will not betray you. First of all, seek God, then seek Chris tian counsel. Gather up all the energies of body, mind and soul, and, appealing to God for success, declare this d.iy everlasting war against all drink ing habits, all gaming practice?, all houses of sin. Half and half work will amount to nothing; it must be a Waterloo. Shrink back now and you are lost. Push on and you are saved. A Spartan general fell at the very moment of victory, but he dipped 13 finger in his own blood and wrote on a rock near which he was dying: "Sparta has con quered." Though your struggle to ret rid cf sin may seem to be almost a death struggle, you can. dip your finger in your own blood and write on the Bock of Ages: "Victory through our Lord Jesus Christ." " Ohl what glo rious news it would bo for some of these young men to send home -to their parents in the country. They go to the. postofiice every day or two to see if there are any letters from you. How anxious they aro to hear ! Nothing would pleace them half so much as the news you might send home to-morrow that you had given your heart to God. I know how it is in the country. The tight comes on. The cattle stand under t he rack, through which burst the trusses r hay, The horses, just having frisked at nightfall, stand knee deep in tl.e Lright straw that invites them to I t down and rest. The pen h of the hove,' i3 full of fowl, their feet wtrsa under t! ; f withers. In the old farm h""--at night no candle is lighted, fvr tho flames clap their liancU about the great backlog, and shake the shallow of the group up and elown tho wall. Father and mother sit there for half an hour, Baying nothing. - I wonder what they pro thinking of. After o while tLe father- breaks the silence and says:" "Well, I wonder where our boy is L town to-night;" and the mother answers ; ii .. borhoou. ... lou-.i for forgive.nt.ss aa you may over the mound in the church yard, they will not answer. Deael! De-ad! And then you will take out tho white lock of hair that was cut from your mother's brow just l?fore they buried her, and you will take tho cane with which your father used to walk, and you will think and think, and wish that you had done just as they wanted you to, and would give the world if you had never thrust a pang through th'ir dear old hearts. God pity the young man who has brought disgrace on his fathe r s name. " God pity the young man who has broken his mother 'a heart. Better if he had never been born better if, in (he first hour of his life, . instead of being laid against the warm bosom of maternal tenderness, ho had been cof fined and sepulchred. There is no balm powerful enough to heal the he-art of ono who haa Lrought parents to a sorrowful grave, and who wanders about through me uismai cemeierv, renumg uie air and wringing the hands, and crying; "Mother! mother!" Oh, that to-day, by all the.memories of the past, and by :ll the hope's of tho future, you would yield your heart to Gxl. May your lather's God and your mother's God be your Goel forever. ITEMS OF INTEREST. Another English industry asparagus beds are being laid down in Kent in great area. Atlantic steamships are still encounter ing logs from the great raft which wa3 broken in pieces about two and a half mouths ago. A sensible celebration of the silver wedding of the Prince and Princess of Wales will be a tea to 1,000 poor children in Folkestone. A Baltimore eompany i3 going to try to heat and sharpen horseshoes without removing them from the horse's hoofs. All the police stations in New York aro to be painted white, so that they may be easily recognized by strangers anel others. The archbishop of Canterbury pays that one of the greatest evils by which tho working classes are afflicted is tho cus tom of early marriages. A hard worked dry goods clerk o: Waterbury, Conn., dreamed the ofhr night that he sold a number of drtsrf patterns to a customer. When he awoke he found that he had torn the sheets itito strips in lus dream. A check for $2,000,000, drawn on a national bank in Sheffield. Ala., recently passed between two merchants of that place. Jt was ono of the largest, if not the largest, cheek erer drawn in the Elate. At the trial of a Wooster, O., man for murder it was brought out in the course of the testimony that at the outbreak of the war he had himself convicted of sheep stealing in order that ho might avoid military service by going to the penitentiary. Among novel knickknacks intended a presents for ladies are ball programmes, not just for one evening, but fer Eever.il seasons. One of tl.era is book shaped with the lids tiny mirrors bound in gold. On the inside are ivory tablets, on wlch the names of the favored partners ma be written with a jeweled pencil. A tropical dinner given in Philadelphia was the height of luxury. Twenty courses were served, and a bouquet of ten straw berries was placeel before each guest. Roman punch was served in oranges hanging on natural trees, so that tiie guests coulel pluck their own fruit. The floral decorations were all tropical. A. citizen of Srnithville, Ga., says that the" other morning, hearing a voice in an old log pen by the roadside, he looked in. He saw an aged and dilapidated stranger on his knees praying: "Oh Lord, soften the hearts of the people that I may not lack for bread as I go along." In an swer to questions tho tramp 6aid that he never failed to get bread when he prayed for it, and that he never failed to pray. Randolph county, in West Virginia, lias many things to be prouel of. Its area is nearly as great as tlmt of Rhoele Island. It has the highest mountain in the st'.o Mount Bayard. The Wilson vein cf coal 13 tho richest in tho world. ILg Scott family, on Roaring creek, v.iil out weigh any family in the United Stal-r.v and Winchester park, in the cou:r.v, i j i ;he largest game preserve east cf tL. Rockies. Loading Tror.t w!h rvbblcu. The citizens of Virginia, Nov., hav;. : complained that the Lake Tthoe fish r ; men cheated Ihvci I y fcrcirsrt dow;i threat of each trout caug'-t as i : ' unco'ih iebble-3 c;3 it would held.. V : the Virgininns objected to buying r by the pound r.t trout rr.'.es. tho : men wore in::;giiaiit. They :i ' tV.cv had u.t bv.ni chca:i-:g. but t: .cr-.t !' d swa "lowed the r.toncs u- 1;.:: f. -.s the l.ik wr.ii of great i, . f-::d h:. 1 eiil.tt irr.ean pa vuges toDoi; . l.-.ke. cud that thi trout had to ewalic. the stones in order to sink deep enough to find the passages. Tliis explanation was not entirely satisfactory. New York Sun. Mrs. Garrett Anderson, the leading woman physician of England, makes ar Income of 10,000 a year. ,A 5 00 20 per cent, dif count 0 ..- lA 4 :0 " " 3 60 vii-Li iJongola 4 00 " , " 3 20 Ladies' Bright Dongo a 00 ' " " 3 40 Lades' Kid..." 2 25 . " " 1 fO Dadiea' Peb. Goat 2 50 " " " 2 00 Ladies' Pel. (Unit 2 25 " 1 0 Men's Burt Shoes 8 00 " " " 6 40 Men's Shoos 4 50 " " 3 60 Men's Shoes ... 3 75 " " ' 3 00 Men's Shoes . , ... 2 f.O " " " 2 00 Childrens "Little (iiant School Slices," the Lest in the market, iim reduction. .Now is your chance to lay in a cheap "euppljr. L. I). B E T T E T T. JUST RECEIVED. I have just received Neufchated Cheese, Edam Cheeco. Bosuia Prunes, Macedoni a Prunes , Cal i for nia and Turkish Prunes. Celery Relish; Clam Chowder; Beef Tea very fine. Fresh Dates and Figs; Oranges, Bananaa, cheap. NETT. STABLGQ iUve anything you wane frc n. a two wheeled go cart to a fwcntjfot r passenger wagon. . Rd i 0 PLEASURE AND SHORT . DRIVE, always kept ready. Cals or tiht carnages, pall-haarer wagon and cverythir.g !' fiiiierahii"! ihed ; phort notice. Termt cat iWk i B H lPE?FAflM ANH0ALFdai888 h'A M .72 E.S? f3 v Will bo Mut FKEE to ail who wrr tnt . !! 3 EsSl 6V l l SS Z-:rvi llC far t?" Hnd.Tino Book A 128 bb.. whd biUfa of iBh. I 3 2 i37j& fcJG5 M 13 li fc-V-j Wkrjg U-u:ui Colored Plate, and ulUtii Ik. 1 1 asm i. r iScf rent vni . wlLcli cannot b obtained elsmraara Smd aZiM kiBiiS? S Jon s postal for the nioftt complete .'tniirMe rnt'lUhtid tot W, ATi.EE BURPEE & CO., PHILADELPHIA. fXj IMPORTERS SANGER, Bfl?rt . wv-". . ' SP HARDWAKL JOBBERS KAILS, y " ffgji C77IS7, T1CXL3 ft 22, 24, 2S, 23, 30 & 32 Lake Street, CmCAOO. ILLS. liurrv ilmr. bu.-;iK- uu.r:;f-r f tr Uo 1 ud R-t-cl, in th-city Ut night, and i s't ti-i' IT u CiiT," w'.ii-1' i the cm a xt ttun a. Itch. Marge, and scratches of erery kind on human or animals cored in f9 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. Tbi never fails. Sold by JF. O. Trick & Cv. dragon t, FlatUmontb Neb.