TALM AGE'S SEEMON. THE TEMPTATIONS OF COLLEGE LIFE THE SUBJECT. 9nggeBtk)|.tii for Thine Who Are Required to Leave Their Hornet — tfelpfulnest of Early Christian Teaching and lntlu ence. (Copyright, 1900, by Louis KIop»ch.) Dr. Talmage staid In London to oc cupy the famous Wesley pulpit In the City Road chapel, where he haB preached several times before, always receiving a hearty welcome. Thence he went to Ireland, preaching In Bel fast and Dublin. The discourse he has sent this week describes the be havior of a young man away from home and suggests practical lessons for people of every age and class. The text Is Daniel 1, 5: "And the king ap pointed them a dally provision of the king's meat and of the wine which he drank; so nourishing them three years, that at the end thereof they might stand before the king." My text opens the door of a college In Babylon and Introduces you to a young student seventeen years of age, Daniel by name. Bo not surprised If In the college you find many hilarities. Put a hundred young men together and they are sure to have a good time. There Is no harm in that. God does not write out the trees and the grass and the blossoms in dull prose. The old robin does not sit moping In the nest because of the chirpings and the lively adventures of the fledgelings that have Just begun to fly. Do not come into an orchard looking for win ter apples on a May morning. But Dunlel of (he text is far from being gay. What oppressive thoughts must have come over him as he re membered that he was a captive In a strange land! The music that came Into his study window was not the song of Zion, but the sound of flute, sackbut and dulcimer In the worship of the heathen god. Moreover, he had no hope of ever getting back home again and meeting those who had missed him bitterly, wondering If he were still alive and finding many a luxury tasteless because they did not know but Daniel might be lacking bread. Krhool and « ollege inj». When you and I were In school or l^ollege, and the vacation approached, we wore full of bright anticipation, and we could not study the last day, and we could not study the last night. The lexicon and the philosophical ap paratus were transparent, so we couJd see right through them Into the mead ows. Not bo with poor Daniel. He did not know that he should ever es cape from captivity, or escaping, he did not know but when he got home the loved ones would be dead, and he would go wandering and weeping among the sepulchers of his fathers. Besides that the king tried to make him forget his home and forget hi country; for that purpose actually changed his name. The kjng wanted him to be a prodigy in personal ap pearance, so he ordered meat and wine sent from his own table to Dan iel, but Daniel refuses ail this and puts himself upon the humblest diet the poorest of all herbs, called pulse, and plain water. His attendants cry out against this and tell him he will perish under such a diet. "No,” he says, "you try us for ten days, and if at the end of that time we are not full cheeked and robust as any. It will be surprising.” Ten days pass along and the students come up for exami nation, and all declare that none are so ruddy and robust as Daniel and Ills fellow captives. The days of indus trious pupilage and the years pass by, and the day of graduation has come, and Daniel gets his diploma, signed by the king and reading as follows: "In all matters of wisdom and under standing that the king Inquired of them he found them ten times better than all the magicians and astrologers that were In all his realm.” And so Daniel took the first honor, and here the story ends, for Daniel the student hereafter will be Daniel the prime minister. Peril# of Young Men. The young are more in peril because they are unsuspecting- The lions are asleep in their soul, and their power is not suspected. The time when a ship's company makes mutiny Is when the watchman is off his guard. When a spider meets a fly. it does not say, ‘’Go down with me to the place where I murder Insects." No; it says, “Come and take a bright morning walk with me on this suspension bridge of glit tering gossamer." Oh. there is a dif ference between the sparkle of a ser pent's eye and the crush of its slimy folds. There is a difference between the bear's paw toying with a kid and the crackling of the bone* in the ter rific hug Tike's p« uk looks beautiful In the distance, but v*k the starved travelers u> the roadside what they thiuk of i'lke's peak. Are there thus around whom suspicious companions are gathered? |to their jests and their etih rtainiuenta mtka the hours go blithely by when you are with them'* Have you taken a sip from their cup of »tn or gone with them in one path of unrighteousness* Turn bark, f'rum lUli>Ion they came and to luhylon they would carry you. If so many plague stricken men would like to en ter your companionship, before any one is allowed in pass into the inti mo y of your h--trt pu% on them w teresi quarantine t ■»«*rag«**«»«I l'#i»i>le !.c i wo say to those Christian par ents who are it ins their beat In the education of their «hlidreti Take good heart, your sous thia wuikiai may be far away from you and in a distant city, but God to whom you dedicated them, will look after them. 1 The God of Daniel will take care of them far away In Babylon. "Train up a child In the way he should go, and when he Is old he will not depart from it.’’ He may wander away for awhile and fall into sin and break your heart, but before he 1b done with this life, you have commended him to God, he will come back again, for I put the emphasis in the right place and on the word “old" when I repeat that passage and say, “Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he Is old he will not depart from It.’’ May you all have the glorious satisfaction of seeing your children walk In paths of righteousness and peace! One with them on earth, may you be one with them in heaven! But I learn also from this subject the beauty of Christian sobriety. The meat and the wine that were to come to Daniel’s table were to come from the king's table. Well, Daniel had no right to take that food. The king was a heathen,and like all the heathen was accustomed to ask a blessing bo foro he partook of food, und in that blessing they always dedicated the food to the gods. So that if Daniel had taken this food he would have broken the law which forbade the taking of food dedicated to Idols. He chose pulse. It was a miracle that he did not dwindle away. There la nothing in pulse, such a poor herb, to make a man ruddy and healthful. Some people talk as though that were a kind of diet which would make a man swarthy and competent to do the duties of this life. That is not the lesson at all. But for a positive mir acle Daniel would have dwindled away, and when God for his self de nial puts upon him tills benediction he puts a benediction upon all Christian sobriety. TemptKfInn to J>i«Nlpittlon. But, oh, how many temptations to dissipation! W.th so many things to tempt tile appetite, how many tempta tions to gluttony! With so many sparkling beverages, how much temp tation to drunkenness! Could I bring before you this morning the mothers and the wives and the sisters who have wept at the graves of the inebriate, your soul would be overpowered with the spectacle. Could I show you the manly forms robbed of their beauty, the eyeflashings quenched in the wine cup, the ruddy check from which rum has wormed the rose, your souls would recoil with horror, and you would rise up and cry, "Begone, thou dr<«m of hoi!!’’ Charles Lamij, who made all the world laugh at his humor, and then afterward made all the world weep at his fate, who outwitted everybody and was at last outwitted of his own ap petites, wrote thus: “The waters have gone over me; hut out of the depths, coulu 1 lie heard, I would cry out to all those who have set a foot in the perll ous flood. Could the youth to whom the flavor of the first wine is delicious as the opening scenes of his life, or the entering upon some newly discovered paradise—could lie look into my deso lation and be made to understand what a dreary tiling it is when a man shall feel himself golug down a precipice with open eyes and a passive wLll; to see his destruction and have no power to stop it. yet feel it all the way em anating from himself; to see all god liness empty out of him, and yet not able to forget the time when it was otherwise; to bear about the piteous spectacle of his own ruin—could he see my feverish eye, feverish with last night's drinking and feverishly looking for tonight's repetition of that folly— could lie hut feel the body of the death out of which I ery hourly with feeble outcry to be delivered, it were enough to make him dash the sparkUng bev erage to the earth in all the pride of its mantling temptation.” A Touching: Ko proof. I was told at Des Moines of a train oi cars going through a very stormy night over one of the western prairies, 'i he young man who was present told us the story. In the night there was a little child in the sleeping car, fret ful and worrying and crying hour after hour. A man on the opposite side of the car lost his patience and said, “Either make that child shut up or take it to its mother!” Then another man on the opposite side of the sleep ing car—a man with a broken heart pushed hack the curtain and looked out and said, ‘ Voting man, that child's mother is dead in the baggage car, and the little thing is wailing for her.” Then the man who liad committed the afTront rose and offered hiB services for the night und took cure of the ehlld until the morning, und nil the pas sengers in the cur were broken down with emotion. Oh. if the cry of one child could arouse s > many sympathies, what ought to lie the elTect of the ten thousand voiced shriek of orphanage and widowhood from the inebriate's grave'* Ood save this couutry from the peril* of strong drink ■ 11 • • i think th«’ moat thrilling |ia*angr of a young man a lift* l< whtii Up la.it*** bum* to gukr hi* fortun* li<* la mt tluwn amid rltlirmnlii and a nil it »* aortataa a ho nr* nut o»»rr*r»ful about 'htir worda and thought* and artiona Morning *■ tn»-« No family ul ar dab bath WBir> ,\o rural gulal. Th* »aiu-» tuary roiura. but all lit* hrn ar* atrang*. and no on* him nhrthar b«> i'iniim tu i burvb «»r d>u» hot n««. i*n bU nuy hi mr ruin rh* alor* h«- a*oa a |daiar>l autmonting a rar» and tlvg ■ on* .imuui aid llt< baa no greeting at ih>- iliiif of thv boar dine li» baa Do for tbt fotitf No on* ir< a nb«‘th*i ha pat* or d>>«*« n«n ait— rather bo would not Ml It in ch«a|wf! thir th# <»» h* mto th« t>«rl*>r tab#* o|> a b>mb bud* I dull, no *i»f#r to took otar It nitb bin* Uo«* up stairs to his room in the third story, I finds It cold and uninviting, and in 1 despair he rushes out, caring for noth ing but to get something to make him stop thinking. He Is caught in the first whirl of sin. He has started out on the darn sea where the gleam of the joy is the flashing of the pit and the laughter is the creaking of the gate of the lost. Oh, how many graves there are In ihe country churchyard which. If they could Lpeak, would tc'.l of young men who went off with high hopes and came back blasted and crushed to dis grace the sepulcher of their fathers! itH|i Them Faithful. And yet this exodus must go on. As from distant hills the rivers are poured down through tuuuels to slake the thirst of our great cities, so from dis tant country places the streams of in corrupt population must pour down to purify our great cities. Tomorrow morning on ail the thoroughfares, in every steamboat and in every rail car will be >ouug men going forth to seek their fortunes in our great towns. O Ixird God of Daniel, help them to be as faithful in Babylon as they were In Jerusalem! Forget not, O my young friend, In the great seaports the moral and religious principles inculcated by parental solicitude, and if today seated in the house of God you feel the ad vantage of early Christian culture for get not those to whom you are most Indebted and pray God that as old ago comes upon them and the shadow of death the hope of heaven may beam through the darkness. God forbid that any of us through our misconduct should bring disgrace upon a father’s name or prove recreant to the love of a mother. The dramatist made no ex aggeration when ho exclaimed, "How sharper than a serpent’s tooth it is to have a thankless child!” Ob, that God would help you as parents and as young people to take to heart the les sons of this important subject, and if we shall learn that there is danger of being carried into captivity, aud that early Impressions are almost inefface able, and that there is something beau tiful in Christian sobriety, and that there is great attractiveness in piety away from home- then it will be to you and to me a matter of everlasting congratulation that we considered how Daniel behaved when he became a col lege student at Babylon. MUMMY IN CEILING. Itody of Mil Inc|tilslilV8 fat Found After Many Year*. Egyptian mummies are not ko much of a rarity nowadays us they once were, in fact they may even at pres ent bo looked upon ns an article of commerce, but the body of a mumml lied cat found at Germantown has claims to be regarded as a curiosity. The mummy is now to be seen in the window of 14 Clielten avenue, Ger mantown. The preservation of the body is perfect, the ears and even the tall being In good condition. The house indicated is occupied by the family of J. S. Pryor. Mm. Pryor says that when the ceiling of the Methodist Episcopal church, oil Guinea street, wus being torn down for repair Oct. 24, 1877, the workmen came across a hard substunce embedded in the ceil ing. On being dug out the substance was cast aside. Mr. Pryor, who was watching the repairs, brushed the ac cumulated dust and dirt from the cast off object, and the mummified body of a cat appeared. How the quadruped got Into the Interior structure of the ceiling, there to die, is a mystery. The church was built in 1858. The only plausible theory so far presented Is that the cat, by some means, got Into the ceiling while the original plaster ing was In progress and tarried until sealed in. The plaster on hardening became air-tight and the cat by ex hausting the air in its adopted prison cell unconsciously preserved its body intact. The Pryors intend to give the curiosity some day to the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences.—Phila delphia Times. l'or I he Young Housewife. A point a mistress should know is the difference between simmering and boiling. This is readily tested with a cook’s thermometer, when boiling point will be found at 212 degrees, simmering only demanding 180 de grees. Roughly speaking, it is easy to see the difference between the two. When a liquid boils at full pitch its surface will be closely covered with bubbles, and the whole surface will, so to speak, rock and swell with the heat. In which condition it very quick ly boils over. When it simmers, how ever. the surface of the liquid will simply ripple like a pond Into which a stone has been thrown, the water keeping all the time at a gentle shiver This rippling is called hy French cook* the sour ire or smile of the water. I |t.tr< lilt-* «»f I tmr> h. The present orthodox church of Rus sia is divided into tii eparchies, in cluding one in Alaska, and 43 vicarial scats of bishop*. Russia h is n >w 117 archbishop*. In eluding Hire- metro politan*. •>' cpurcliiat vicarial arch bishop* and d'.i bishops Most Russian hierarch* huve attended the semina ries and academies Atvhblahop Juve nal of l.ttua was formerly an officer and attended the artillery academy at St Petersburg Archbishop M.irkel no mher of tn* holy synod attended ■ iIsm lti« tilii el title. it Vlenii I an | I., tn iter g Arnold Lewi. tlllltn. m Chl< ago Re. tird, s.i.m Us* Haiti at lilstb I s Will 1 \ptl. >rp a fe of * mtui al entb ynimlMit la itat >g. baa fnvenicd a mi in ling tstar.I ptala gla.s WhU'b Will tia UMa of the novel faoturws of ih* mm Cht. Mrtng hall In that idly RUIN WOULD FOLLOW BRYAN’S ELECTION What the Manufacturers of the Country Believe Would Happen Manufacturers and their Immediate : customers are beginning to get them selves in shape for the dull times that they know would ensue In the event, of the election of Mr. Bryan. Reports from all over the country Indicate that "Bryan" clauses are soon to he the ruh in signing new contracts. The latest Is .a contract entered Into be tween the New Haven Carriage com pany and the J. Curley company of Brooklyn. The contract specifies that the New Haven company shall furnish the Curley company with a certain number of carriages at a certain price until November 15th. 1901. With the contract received by the Curley com pany was the following letter from the N’< w Haven company: "We inclose herein agreements sign ed. You will notice that we have made an Indorsement at the bottom. Will you pb .ihc Indorse this yourself? It is just a: good policy for you to indorse tt as It is for us, for you do not wish to be hound down by anything in ease of su h adverse circumstances as would occur In the event of Bryan's election." The indorsement rends: "Thi agreement to be null and void in oas William .1. Bryan is elected president of the United States in No- | vember, 1900." Otlu i large concerns are Indorsing Important contracts In this way, their managers well knowing that a long season of business depression would follow the success of the Democratic ticket. A large Philadelphia dry goods house In placing contracts abroad insists that the contracts be similarly Indorsed. The busiue^g men know what four years «.f Bryanism would mean to them and the working people are equally aware of the fact. If those classes are not prosperous, they will be un able to consume as much of the prod ucts of the farm as they would in the event of Republican success, and the farmer knows the value of having an era of prosperity among those who eat and wear his products. PATRIOTISM NOT IMPERIALISM. "Was it imperialism that like a mighty torrent swept across this great prairie state and called to arms your boys in 1861? Was it imperialism that caused thousands of the boys, young and aggressive and equally as patriot ic as you, to respond to the nations call in 1898? Those boys who went forth two y«nrs ago went to keep the old flag here, to defend it at Santiago, | San Juan, Cavite and to keep it from defamation at the hands of Aguinaldo and his Tagal Malays, and all the sym pathizers both abroad and at home. No imperialism in that; simply patriotism —a term unknown to some of our hoy orators. 1 say to you that when any one tries to scare you about the atti tude of the hoys of *61, say to them that they went forth, not for gain, but that the ilag that went up at Vicks burg, Missionary nidge, Cavite—car ried, too, by those heroes Dewey, Sampson and Schley—went there to stay; to stay forever, to stay as long as a drop of American blood courses In the veins of our American young men. We all demanded that the war come; we were all imperialists and I ! hope that we will always bo remain, for I tell you that when Ood Almighty gets done with the American army lu the Philippines, then, and then only will the bpys In blue march away.”— General John C. Black (Democrat.) SCHURZ ON MANY SIDES. This Is not the first campaign in which Carl Schurz has changed about and worked with his former political j opponents; nor the first time that he mine. • • • I must say that I need success more than l need sympathy, and I must say that I have not seen so much greater evidence of getting success from my sympathizers than from those who are denounced as the contrary.” General Schurz did not undertake to conduct the war for President Lincoln after that, but he has never been any too loyal a Republican. He has twice left the party before this campaign, the most notable occasion being when he would not support the late James G. Blaine. It might be added that Mr. Schurz sees only "Imperialism" in this cam paign. anil that he Joins Mr. Bryan In hiding the financial Ibsuc, the most Important of all. National Honor Kndangerad* “Although a lifelong Democrat, I cannot refrain from placing myself on record against the party which has elected, since about five years, to es pouse the cause of free silver coinage A Story in Figures EXPORTS TO ASIA 1895 $17,325,057 1900 $64,913,984 EXPORTS TO OCEANICA 1895 $13,109,231 1900 $43,390,927 has criticized his own party. In the latter part of 18G2 ho nttaeked tho conduct of tho civil war and gavo his opinions to President Lincoln in un measured terms. On the 24th of No vember In that year, Mr. Lincoln wrote him a long letter in which he said: “If I must disregard my own judgment, and take yours, l must also take that of others; and by the time that I should reject all that I should be advised to reject, I would have none left, Republican or others—not even yourself. For, be assured, iny dear sir, that there are other men who ‘have their hearts in It,’ that think you are performing your part as poorly as you think I am performing and other equally dangerous Populis tic fallacies. What I am surprised to find Is to hear of many Democratic business men express a doubt as to the necessity of again voting for McKin ley on account of the improbability (?) of Mr. Hryan permitting any legisla tion ufter his election, which might prove hurtful to the business interests of the country. I shall continue to vote against populism and repudiation and will vote for President McKinley, and will not throw my vote away by voting for a gold Democrat.”—Adolph Hirsch, Merchant. New York. People, as a rule, hear better with their right ear than with their left ear. A NEBRASKA FARMER DISPROVES BRYANS CLAIM Mr. William Jennings Bryan, the Popo-Democratic candidate for the Presidency, insists that the farmers of the United States have not derived any benefit from the existing prosperity. A Nebraska farmer proves that Mr. Bryan is wrong. He sends us a statement showing what he realized from his 160-acre farm in 1896 and this year, taking exactly the same qualities of each product from his account books. Thus: I 896 400 bushels wheat at 48c- SI 92.00 1,200 bushols oats at 14c.-... 168.00 2,500 bushels corn at 15c. 375.00 I 3,500 pounds steers at 4c . 520.00 5,COO pounds hogs at 3c. 150 00 200 pounds butter at 10c-*.. 20.00 200 dozen eggs at 7c . 14 00 $1,439X0 Balance in favor of 1900. 1900 400 bushels wheat at 60c. $240 00 1.200 bushels oats at I 8c. 2 16 00 2,500 bushels corn at 30c. 7 50 00 I 3.000 pounds steers at 5 c-.». 7 15.00 5.000 pounds hogs at 4.7c. 235.00 200 pounds butter at l7c-«.« 34 00 200 dozen eggs at 12c --.-. 24 00 $2,214.00 1.419.00 ..... . ..... $775.00 Mr. Bryan will observe that this Nebraska farmer received over 60 per cent more moneylthis year than he d.d in I 896. for precisely the same quantities of his products Mr. Bryan should study the exhibit. It will be interesting to Farmer Bryan, who might compare it with his own account rales this year. Candidate Bryan should not tell falsehoods about the prices of farm products. If he is still in doubt let him run over to Everett, in his own state, and have a chat with the farmer who supplied these figures