ADVICE TO OUR GIRLS. DR. TALMAOE PREACHER TO AMERICA'S DAUGHTERS. n>« Hum WnailB. a« Popularly Da dec •laad. Will Xmr I um« liod I* T.... Wood to Allow Mar la IMapraaa All Wf •mankind. AHHINOTON, D. £j|( Nov, 17, lk!*r> ' Rev I »r Tolraage look for the sub ject of to day'* *cr mon: "A Word With Women;" the taxt for the occaalon ho eing the following letter reaerved hy the dlatlngulahed preacher: Cincinnati, Ohln. ftrter»nd Sir You delivered « dlrrourra In arirwrr to a letter from *1* young men of Payrtie, Ohio, rdguealfn* you lo pyoaob a aarnmn on "Advice to toun* Men. Are wo JuetlAed In aoklng you lo |>ree Young Women, f'hrlat, who took hi* text from a flock of bird* flying overhead, naying, "Be hold the flowla of the air," and from the flower* In the valley, Maying, "Con alder the lllle* of the field," and from the clucking of a barnyard fowl, say* trig, "A* a hen gatherrih her chicken* under her wing,” and from a crystal of aalt picked up by thn readable, Maying, "Halt I* good," will grant u* a blcaa ing If, Inalead of taking a text from the Jllble, 1 take for my text I hi* letter from Cincinnati, which la only one of many letter* which I have received from young women In New York, New Orleana, Han Kranclseo, I.ondon, KdIn boro, and from the end* of the earlh, all Implying that having xome month* ago preached the sermon on "Advlcu to Young Men," I could not, without neg lect of dutv. refuse to preach a sermon on "Advice to Young Women, It Is the more Important that the pul pit he heard on this subject at this time when we are having such an Illimitable discussion about what Is called the "New Woman," as though some new creature of Ood had arrived on earth, or were about to arrive. One theory Is that she will be an athlete, and boxing glove and football and pugilistic en counter will characterize her. Another theory Is that she will superintend bal lot boxes, sit. In congresslonsl hall, and through Improved politics bring the millennium by the evil she wll extir pate and the good she will Install. An other theory Is that she will adopt masculine attire and make sacred a vulgarlanlsm positively horrific. An other theory Is that she will be so es thetic that broom handle nnd rolling pin and coal scuttle will be plctorlallzed with tints from tort skies or sugges tions of Rembrandt and Raphael. Heaven de!lv< r the church and the world from any one of these styles of new woman, hhe will never come. I have so much faith In the evangelis tic triumph and In the progress of all things In the right direction that I prophesy that style of new woman will never arrive. She would hand over this world to diabolism, and from being, as she Is now, the mightiest agency for the world's uplifting, she would be the mightiest force for Its downthrust. I will tell you who the new woman will be. It will be the good woman of all the ages past. Here and there a difference of attire, as the temporary custom may command, hut the same good, honest, lovely, Christian, all-ln Duentlal being that your mother and mine was. Of that kind of woman was Christian Eddy, who, talking to a man who was so much of an unbeliever ho bad named his two children Voltaire ana rom mine, neverinensg saw nun converted, he breaking down with emo tion as he said to her, “I cannot stand you, you talk like my mother," and tell ing the story of hla convention to twelve companlona who had been blatant op pose™ of religion, they nuked her to come and see them also, and tell them of Christ, and four of them were con verted, and all the others greatly changed, and the lender of the band, departing for heaven, shouted, "Joyful! Joyful! Joyful!" If you know any bet ter style of woman than that, where Is she? The world cannot Improve on that kind. The new woman may have more knowledge, because she will have more books, hut she will have no more common eenue than that whlrb tried to munage and discipline and educate us, and did as well aa ahe could with such unpromising material. Shu may have mure health than the woman of other duys, for the sewing machine ami the sanitary regulations and added Intelli gence on the subjects of diet, ventila tion. and exercise, and rescue from many forms of drudgery, may allow her more longevity, hut she will have the same characteristics which (lod gave her In paradise, with the exception of the nervous shock and moral Jolt of the fall she got mat day when not notic ing where she stepped, she looked up Into the branches of the fruit tree, Hut 1 must be specific. This letter (•efure n* waul* advice to young wo men Advice the Kirat: Uet your soul right with Uod end you will be In the beet .tiltudr for everything thet cornea. New ways of voyaging by eea, u«w ways of traveling by hind, new way* of thresh ing the harvests, new ways of thresh hook*, and the patent elB< s Is enough to enehaul a man who has mechanical Ingenuity and know* a goad d«al of levers and wheels, and we hardly do nnytblng as It used to t*» dune, inven tion after tavnntJen, Invention on top of intention Hut H> the o »hm >•( net ting right with tied (hero ha not b*«a an inrention far etx {ham end >- It la on the mik Hit* of repentance vtiat Itnvid exercised about III »tu* end ih« same old ntjlo of ptwjtr lbs* th* P“b lit an used wb*a he empha I I' <*y an Inward stroke both Mu«U aa-l the same faith In t*hr»*»l ‘Ml Ihtol »*‘sg«st ed in tbo Jailer the nigh* ihe p witi n linry biuhn dow a. Ay* that ti the r*n j non that f have more confidence In It. j It ha* been tried by more million* than I I dare lo atate leat I com* far abort of tha brilliant facta. Ail who ibrough Christ earnestly tried to get right with Hod. are right, and always will b« right. That give* tha young woman who get* that position superiority over all rival ries, all Jealousies, all misfortune*, all health falling*. *11 social disaster*, and all the combined trouble* of eighty years, If »h* shall live to be an octo genarian. If the world fall* to appre cl*te her she **y»: "Hod love* me, th* angel* In heaven are In sympathy with me, and I can afford lo be patient until the day when the Imperial chariot* shall wheel to my door to take me up to my coronation." If health go**, ehe »aye, "I can endure the present dis tress, for I *m on the way to s climate the flr*t breath of which will make me proof against even th# *l!ghte*t dis comfort.” If she be joatled with pertur bation* of social life *h# can *ay, "Well, when I begin my fife among tbe thronea of heaven and Ibe king* and queen* unto Hod shall be my a**o< late*. It will not make much difference who on earth forgot me when the Invitation* to that reception were made out.” All right with Hod you are all right with every thing. Martin Luther writing a letter of con dolence to one of hi* friend* who had lost hi* daughter, began by auylng, "Thla I* a hard world for girl*.” It 1* for those who are dependent upon their own wit* and the whim* of the world and the preference* of human favor, but those who lake the eternal Hod for their portion not later than If> year* of age, and that 1* ten year* later than It ought to be, will find that while Martin Luther’* letter of condolence we* true In regard to many, If not moat, with re spect to those who have ibe wisdom, and promptitude, and the earnestnesa to get right with CJod, I declare that thla I* a good world for girls. Advice the Second; Make It a matter * II I_ 4- 4 »...Lu.l »/1 I ' HqiMM vw «•»*« 'HI *■ V> cal health. I do not wonder that the Greek* defiled health and hailed Hygelu as a goddess, I rejoice that there have b? end "where did yen form that acquaint anew, tier* fund ‘where did you get that ring. Mytaf" I’m mother* have stub unprecedented meeu* of knowing everything they no/ "14 woe n bird In lb* alt" that told them Aloe, for that bird In lb* air, Will not some one lift bit gun and shoot It, It would tab* whole libraries to hold the wisdom which tbe daughter knows mors than her mother. "Why cannot I have this?" "Why cannot I do that?" And tbs ques tion In many s group has been, although not plainly staled, "What shall we dc with tbs mothers, anyhow? Tbty ars so far behind tha times." • • • • • • Young woman! draw out, snd dsclds what you will be, and do, God helping. Writs It out In s plain hand, not like the letters wblcb Josephine received from Napoleon In Italy, the writing so scrawling and scattered that It wae sometimes taken es n mep of the seat of war. Put the plan on tbe wall of your room, or write It In the opening of a blank book, or put It where you will be compelled often to see It. A thou sand questions of your coming life you can settle now, but there Is one question you can aettle Independent of man, woman, angel and devil,and that Is that you will be a God's womun now, hence forth and forever. Clasp hands with the Almighty. Pythagoras represented life by tbe letter Y, because It early di vides Into two ways. l( Toklo, Japan, formerly eonmil gcixral of the Japan ese empire at Honolulu, ha» founded a monthly temperance paper, Kunl No Hlkarl ("The Light of Our Laud"). Mr. Ando, who 1b a layman of the Metho dlBt Episcopal church, la doing a great work in temperance reform, PERSONAL. LI Hung Chang Haa been empowerea to negotiate a commercial treaty with Japan. Ixird Wolseley Is the son of Major (1. J. WoUeloy, who wus In the King's Own Scottish Borderers. William Norris, the 05-year-old coun terfeiter, ban been convicted In tbe United Htatoe court at Birmingham, Ala., on four counts. Ten plate* of John Itnakln. some of them In colors, will he published soon from the Orpington press, with descrip tive passages from his works. (Jeneral lx>iig»trest’s tall form Is somewhat bent with time. Ills eyes have lost their luster, hie hair la white and ecant aud his step Is haitlug. The orientalist and ou»-t!uie famous traveler, I>. Oluseppe Hapeto, died the other day In (lenoa. Es-United Males Senator Ueorge P. Edmunds of Veimont has luksu up hia residence la Philadelphia It Is staled on what la aald to be good authority that the proprietor* of the Hally Telegraph have conierred upon t), A Hnta a pension of |i,on When a married man buttons hi* •uspender* on elgktpsnair nails It I* sum erideneo that he has Seen iLaap pointed la loie. If them te anything whltk will make a loung man niter) whether etuluHen is not a failure It ts is too a pretty girl kle* a pug dog Teas* hUHng*. DAIRY AND POULTRY. INTERESTING CHAPTERS POR OUR RURAL READERS. •low aanmf.l larnin (l|i«rila lhi« l>r|..rimont of tha Faro. A Fow limit at lo Ilia I'ars of l.lta aitrk anil roullry. K a factory that makes 1,000 pounds of cheese per day could by some con centrated plan of Action union a Ha patrons and maker add a half cent a pound to Ita quality It would amount lo fft a day, or more Ilian |7M for the summer. No small amount In Itself toward paying the expenses of the concern, and leave to the patrons Just an much more with which to pay lax*c, pew rents und claw-hammer coats. And yet this la the experience of factories reported, who had demanded that all milk to be delivered shall, as soon aa milked, lie aerated and cooled before being sent, in one factory a loss of two cento a pound on all cheese made by Inferior quality and flavor was recovered, and ibe cheese sold after with the beat, followed the rule of every patron night and morning aerating Iho milk and cooling to a certain degree before plac ing on the factory wagon. In quite a number of factories thla season where this rule le being rnudo mandatory, there baa been not only a noticeable Improvement In the quality of tha but ter made, but an tucreaac In amount, I. e., the milk creamed better, and the churn did more perfect work. There la a place for the "coming" factory man vermin was destroyed. The hen-house was sprayed with the same mixture, thoroughly cleaned and emptied of ev erything but a block for pounding hone, boxes for neats, and movable rooals made of green cedar poles fastened to gether In pairs and set up on cadar legs eighteen Inches high. The neats are kept clear of vermin by occasionally Inverting them over a blu/.e made of their straw filling. The roosts staud out from the wall to prevent their acquir ing vermin from that source, though cedar Is said to be proof against them. The houae Is twenty feet square, with a sand floor, which la cleaned every oili er day and freshly spaded, or routed with a layer of road dual. The fowls are confined In ■ pork of 120 feel circuit, Kvery morning they are fed a hot mush of bran and potatoes, sightly sailed and stirred up with Die liquor from boiled meat sera pa. Twice a week a handful of sulphur la thrown Into this mash. Corn Is given on the cob lo make them work a little for their food. Hcraps from the neat market malm them a meal every second day. For greens they buve fresh, erlsp, pig weeds, turnip tops and onions, Wllb tomatoes and refuse fruit they are abundantly sup plied. All summer, from twenty-eight hens, I have bud an abundance of eggs, and now that limy arc moulting, the egg supply keeps up from fourteen to seven teen a day. Kvery evening tlm bena are let out to eat grass and seeds, Hun flowers grow within easy reach, to Which they freely help themselves. l,ater, I shall dip them again to destroy all body lies that may remain, and put them In the best of trim for winter, I am convinced ibat their productiveness Is due largely to freedom from vermin; cleanliness and care In feeding do the rest. I kc< p a dally egg record, and an ac count with all outlay and Income from V »+«ar; who auya that the loss dues not amount to much? More I ban half this loss van lie saved by setting tbv milk la deep cans sud putting them tn void water, and nearly ull of H by the use of a hand separator Where one has the facilities a tuamery Is vary Bond, hut lee or running wate> pvlow t ■ dvgttes must tie at hand and this Is uot convenient on many farms Hut s rteannry costs tews sad Is less work ta wash and cats for than a asps ralot. although, as a rule, ft does not i site unite as much of lha cream, Miopia* t*welter Marly last spring I dipped my fonts In a t * uurw of half a pint of aenoleum and lie gallons of warm water This killed ike large gray lice with which they were iitlealed, writes M A lloyt tn Journal of Agrt< allure loiter when the mtleo appeared, the process was re piated Hitting hens were taken front their ousts and given a noth, shirks, a* they hatched were dipped and thue all my poultry, und I know Just whut they are doing. Points About I:bs». It Is not always safe to Judge an egg by It* appearance. It may he appar ently fresh, yet If It absorbs enough air to permit It to float In water even a little above the bottom of the dish It may not he perfectly fresh. The white of a perfectly fresh egg cannot he beaten to a froth as easily a* the white of an egg that Is a day or two old, and If the egg Is very cold the heat ing of the white will he accomplished more easily. When the shell of till egg will peel off as If the egg hud been hard boiled, II Is not fresh, us the content* of a fresh egg i adhere closely to the shell and must be removed. When held to a strong light, a fresh egg Is dear, and If shaken In the hand no Jarring motion of the contents must be fdt. Muuy who use eggs daily are unable to Judge of their quality. und Indeed It Is illtllcult to determine the frustiuess of HU egg by any one, hut the ubovu may he of us* to some who are Inexpert cured. Poultry >ot»s Whole wheat Is better for growing fowls than corn. There are few kind* of poultry that pay heller than guineas, Mine will kill lire; It la a good ills In (octant; It *Hl purify the air. It will make the poultry house dvau aud (tee from vermin. ttats stimulate without enervating or fattening They form a good ration lu rrdtir* the fat of liens that are too (at to lay well. tVather pulling la largely due to tdlenee* it I* niuet liable to occur In , a, live breeds that are kept confined aud : ; have little until* The only hrns that It will pa> to keep I I through the winter are those that ran he retied upon lur winter layers ur that i are needed ter breeders lu raising h»ut (ur uiarhet the prod! Ilea in hatching early, pushing the I j < hlvhens forward as much as poeelbte : and marhetlng »h»m early One great r*< emmnidaOou that Ike | larger kin ds of (owls have over Ik* I • mail on** I* mat (h* one# have i to stay wkeia tkey are put. watte the , small on** g« whet* 1*0 mot di »»p emu win** ■ and begin to 1*11 off in condition complaints would be made. We would be pleased to have the view* and < x perlenoe of-feeders on this subject. Texas Live Stock Journal, Hedging on Pork. -The pork packers are contracting to deliver January bog products on u very low basis, mess pork, for Instance, about $1 lower than u year ago.' They had the figures too high last year and lost money, but there are good Judges who think they have It loo low now and are aw likely to lose money as they were last year. There Is only one thing that is favorable to their side of the argument at present, and that Is the handsome supply of corn. Present supplies of hogs are cer tainly not large and there has not been a fall for a long time when there was so much sickness among young pigs. Time arc large areas loo where farm ers have suffered heavy losses among old nogs. Of course hogs are very pro lific and on the right kind or feed, which they would surely get almost v anywhere In this your of plouty, it ’ takes only a few mouths to lit them for market, but It looks us If the packers and speculator* were discounting 11,,, big corn crop too heavily, Drovers' Journal. Oten Law In Wisconsin A great many people were very skeptical as to the S"“d effect ef the law passed by the Wlsonslit legislature last winter Nualnet filled cheese, and forbidding the sale of oleomargarine In the yellow color of butter, A very significant frt, t, relative In the taking out of Pulled Hietce licensee In this stale slue# the pcsesge uf the law lusy serve to retak llsh Judgment on that i|ue*Uvu We leant that the applications fur license have fallen off from M l to nine. That te(ta the story conclusively. Without the permission to tell the stuff in the color of butter, and therefure os butter the trade is practically worthless thus • hewing beyond cavil that the IrtMiUsoe ta built on decrptlun, as Its opponents have always loatni lined. Alike effect 4^ ha* been uh«*rved In alt the elates where similar legletatloa haa been had. The great wonder Is that any man or newspaper of docent character could he fuuad to iacuity It Hoard* tratrym*n Ike hi **v*» hate the cholera, reap nor gape* ha whs wilt aet touch them, they lay more eggs that will hatch hot ter than hen egg* tt ith good t.»dtog they can readily bo grade to weigh five pound* ta ten weeks after balthlug • d Lou I. It. public