a. jtyjjgjifcgj.ria wi i ii mm &mtihHlnhiS nyunvntmtmta TflHMrnnm,,,.... --..-. H L1 ' i' FALL OF BABYLON. 'Bormon by Dr. Talmnno on Political Corruption. "ThU Orcitt Itepul.lto Wnrnoil ARitltut the l'nto of thn Ancient C'lty Corruption In Anterlcnn l'olltlcn Llcon-tluuitii- ltobukcd. In a ncrmon preached at Brooklyn the Sunday previous to the general election titer. T. DcWltt Tnlmngo discoursed on tho tendency to corruption In politics, 'taking his text from Revelnttons xvllL, 10: "Alas, alnt. that great city llab ylon, that mighty cltyl for In one hour 'is thy judgment come." Ho said: Modern scientists arc doing n splen did work In excavating the tomb of n dead empire holding In its arms a dead city, mother and child of tho same name llabylon. Tho ancient mound invites ithe spades and shovels and crowbars while the unwashed natives look on in surprise. These scientists find yellow fbrlcks still Impressed with tho name of Nebuchadnezzar, nnd they go down into tho sarcophagus of a monarchy burled inoro than two thousand ycurs ago. May tho explorations of itawllnson and iljaynrd and Chevalier and Opperto and iLoftus and Chcsncy be eclipsed by tho (present arcluuologlcal uncovering. lint Is it possible this is all that re mains of llabylon? a city oneo five limes larger than London nnd twelvo times larger than New York? Walls three hundred and seventy-three feet lilgh and nlncty-threo feet thick. "Twenty-five burnished gates on each :slde, with streets running elenr through to corresponding gates on tho other side. Six hundred and twenty-ilvo squares. Mora pomp and wealth and splendor and slu than could bo found In any live modern cities combined. A city of palaces and temples. A city having within it a garden on an arti ficial lilll four hundred feet high, tho sides of the mountain terraced. All this built to keep the king's wife, Amy lis, from becoming homesick for tho mountainous region lu which she had spent her girlhood. Tho waters of tho Euphrates spouted up to irrigate this great altitude into fruits and flowers nnd urborescenco unimaginable. A great river running from north to south dear through tho city, bridges over It, tunnels under It, boats on It. A city of bazaars and of market places, unrivalled for aromatlcs and unguents nnd high mettled horses with grooms by their side, and thyme wood, and African evergreen, and Egyptian linen, nnd all styles of costly textile fubrlc, ond rarest purples extracted from shell fish on tho Mediterranean coast, nnd rarest scarlets taken from brilliant in sects in Spain, and ivories brought from successful elephants in India,' nnd dia monds whoso flash was a rcparteo to the sun. Fortress within fortress, em battlement rising abovo ctnbattloment Great capital of the ages. Hut one night, while honest citizens wero asleep, but oil thesnloons of saturnalia wero In full "blast, nnd at tho king's castle they had filled tho tankards for tho tenth time, and reeling and guffawing nhd hic coughing around tho state table wero the rulers of tho land, Gen. Cyrus or dered tho besieging army to take shov cls.nnd spades, and they diverted tho river from its usual channel Into an other direction so that tho forsaken bod of tho river becamo tho path on which tho besieging army entered. When tho morning dawned tho conquerors were Inside tho outside trenches. llabylon had fnllon.nnd hence the sublime thren ody of tho text: "Alas, alas that great city llabylon, that mighty elty.for in ono hour has that judgment come." lintdo nations die? O, yes, there is great mor tality among monarchies and republics. They nro llko Individuals in tho fact that they are born, they havo a middle life, thev have n decease, they havo a cradlo and a grave. Sorao of them aro assassinated, some destroyed by their own hand. Let me call the roll of some . of tho dead civilizations nnd sorao of the dead cities and let some ono answer for them. Egyptian civilization, stand up. "Dead!" answer tho ruins of Karnak aud Luxor, and from seventy pyramids On tho cast side of the Nile thcro comes up a great chorus, crying: t'Dcad! deadl" Assyrian emplro, stand up and answer. "Deadl" cry tho charred ruins of Nineveh. After 000 years of magnifi cent opportunity, dead Israolltlsh kingdom, stund up. After 250 years of divine Interposition and of miraculous vicissitude and of heroic behavior and of appalling depravity, dead. Phoenicia, stand up and answer. After inventing tho alphabet and giving it to tho world, ond sending out her merchaut caravans in one direction to coutrul Asia, and sending out her navigators to tho At lantic ocean in unotnor direction, ucno. Pillars of Hercules and rocks on which the Tyrlan flshermon dried their nets, nil answer: "Dead Plifonleia." Athens, after Fhldlas, after DcmosUioncs, after Miltlndes, dead. Sparta, after Leonldas, tiftcr Euryblades, after Sala mls. uftcr Thermopylae, deud. Roman empire, stand up nnd auswer. Empire onco bounded by tho Ilritlsh channel on tho north, by tho Euphrates on the cost, by tho great Sahara dosort in Africa on tho south, by tho Atlantic ocean on tho west. Homo of three great civiliza tions, owning all tho then discovered world that was worth owning, Roman emplro, answer. Gibbon In his "Rise nnd Fall of tho Roman Empire," says "Deadl" and tho forsaken scats of tho ruined Coliseum, nnd tho skeleton of tho ncqueduetj, nnd tho miasma of tho Campagna, and the fragments of tho marble baths, and the useless piers of tho Brldgo Triumphalls, and tho Mam ertlno prison, holding no more apos tolio prisouers, and tho Bllont Forum, nnd Uaslllca of Constuntlno, nnd tho arch of Titus, and tho Pantheon coma in with, great chorus, crying: "Dead, dead!" After Horace, after Virgil, f tor Tacitus, after Cleoro, dead. After iWbHr mi tho bridge, and Clnoln- natus, tho farmer oligarch, after Pom pcy, after Sclolo, after Casslus, after Constantino, after Ciusar, dead. The war eagle of Rome hpw so high it was blinded by tho sun ond camo whirling down through too heavens, and .the owl of desolation and darkness built Its nest In tho forsaken eyrie. Mexican empire, dead. French empire, dead. You see, my friends, it Is no unusual thing for a government to perish, nnd in the same necrology of dend nations, and In the same graveyard of expired governments will go the United States of America unless there be somo potent volco to call n halt, and unless God in his mercy Interferes and through n pur ified ballot box and a widespread pub lic Christian sentiment tho catnstropho bo averted. This nation is about to go to tho ballot box to exercise tho right of suffrage, nnd I propose to sot before you the evils that threaten t6 destroy the American government, nnd to an nihilate American institutions, and If God will help mo I will show you be fore I get through tho mode In which each and every ono may do something to arrest that appalling calamity. And I shall plow up the whole field. Tho first ovil that threatons tho anni hilation of our American institutions is the fact that political bribery, which was once considered n crime, has by many come to bo considered a tolcrablo vir tue. Thcro Is n legitimate uso of money in elections, in tho printing of political tracts, and in tho hiring of public halls, and lu the obtaining of campaign ora tory: but Is there any homuuculus who supposes that this vast amouut of money now being raised by the polit ical parties Is going In a legitimate di rection? Tho vast majority of It will go to buy votes. There used to bo bribery, but it held Its head In shame. It was under the utmost secrecy that many years ago a railroad company bought up tho Wis consin legislature nnd many other pub lic officials In that state. Tho governor of tho state at that tlmo received J50, 000 for his signature. His private sec retary received $5,000. Thirteen mem bers of the senate received $175,000 among them In bonds. Sixty members of tho other house received from 15,000 to $10,000 each. Tho lloutonant-gov-ernor received $10,003. Tho clerks of tho house received from $5,000 to $10,000 each. Tho bank comptroller received $10,00i". Two hundred nnd fifty thous and dollars were divided among the lobbyists. You see, tho ,rallroad com pany was very generous, llut all that was hidden, and only through tho se verest scrutiny on the part of a legisla tive committee was this Iniquity dis played. Now, political brlbjry defies you. dares you and is arrogant. Unless thU diabolism ceases in this country, llartholdl's statue on lledloo's Island, with uplifted torch to light other nations Into the harbor, had bet ter be changed and tho torch dropped as n symbol of universal incendiarism. Unless this purchaso and salo of suf frage shall cease, the American govern ment will expire, and you might as well bo getting ready tho monument for an other dead nation, and let my text in scribe upon It theso words: "Alasl alas! for llabylon, that great city, that mighty city, for lu ono hour is thy judg ment come." My friends, if you havo not noticed that political bribery is one of tho ghastly crime's of this day, you have not kept your eyes open. Another evil threatening the destruc tion of American institutions is the solidifying of the sections against each other. A solid north, a solid south. If this goes on wo Bhall, after a while, have a solid, cast against a.soiidwcst, we shall iiuve solid middle states against solid northern states, we Bhall have a solid New York against a solid Pennsylvania, and a solid Ohio against a solid Kentucky. It Is twenty-seven years since the war closed, nnd yet at every presidential election tho old- an tagonism is aroused. When Garfield died, nnd all the states gathered around his casket in sympathy and in tears, and as hearty telegrams of condolence came from New Orleans and from Charleston as from Boston and Chicago, I said to mvself: "I think sectionalism is dead." ilut. alasl no. The difficulty will never bo ended until each state of tho nation is split up into two or three great political parties. ThU country cannot exist unless it exists as one body, tho national capital tho heart, sending out through all the arteries of communication warmth and life to the very extremities. This nation cannot exist unless it exists as one family. . Another evil threatening the destruc tion of our American institutions is the low state of public morals. What killed llabylon of my text? What killed Phoenicia? What killed Rome? Their own dopravlty, and the fraud and tho drunkenness and the lechery which havo destroyed other na tions will destroy ours unless a merci ful God prevent To show you the low state of public morals I havo to call your attention to the fact that many men nominated for offices In different states at different times aro entirely unfit for tho positions lor which they have been nominated. I havo to tell you what you know al ready, that American politics have sunken to such a low depth that there is nothing beneath. What wo Bee in somo directions wo see in nearly nil di rections. The peculation nnd tho knavery hurled to tho surfaco by the explosion of banks nnd business firms aro only spcclmons of great Cotopaxls and Strcmbolls of wickedness that boll and roar and surge beneath, but have not yet regurgitated to tho surface. When tho heaven descended democratic party enacted tho Tweed rascality it seemed to eclipse everything; but after awhile tho heaven descended republican party outwitted Pandemonium with tho Star route infamy. My friends, wo havo In this country people who say the marriage institution amounts to nothing. They scoff at it Wo havo polite parlors in our day who aro not good enough to bo scavengers in Sodom! I went over to San Francis co ten or fifteen years ago that beau tiful city, that queen of tho Pacific, May tho blessing of God corao down up on her great churches and her noble men nnd women! When I got into tho citv of San Francisco, tho mayor of tho city and the president of tho board of health callcu on me ana insisteu mat i go aud seo tho Chinese quarter, no doubt so thnt on my returu to tho At- lantlc coast I might tell. what dreadful people tho Chlneso ore. llut on tuo last night of my stay n Fan Franolsoo be foro thousands of people In their grant opera house, I said: "Would yon Ilka mo to tell you just what I think plainly and honestly?" They said: "Yes, yes, yesl" I said: "Do you think you can stand 11 all?" Thev said: "Yes, yes, yesl" "Then," I said, "my opinion Is that tho curso of San Francisco U not your Chi nese quarter, but your millionaire liber tines!" And two of them sat right before mo Felix nnd Drusllla. And so It Is hi nil tho cities. I never swear, but when I bco a man ro unwhtnt of justice, laughing over his shamo nnd calling his damnable deeds gallantry and pec cadillo, I urn tempted to hurl red hot anathema and to concludo that If, ac cording' to some people's theology, there is no hell, thcro ought to bet There Is enough out-and-out licen tiousness In American cities to-day to bring down upon them the wrath of thnt God who, on tho 24th of August, 70, burled Herculaneum and Pompeii so deep In ashes thnt tho eighteen hun dred nnd thirteen subsequent years Imvo not been able to complete tho ex humation. There nro In somo of the American cities to-day whole bloaks of houses which tho authorities know to bo infamous, and yet by purchaso they aro silenced, by hush money, so that such places nro ns much under tho de fense of government as public libraries nnd asylums of mercy. Theso ulcer on tho body politic bleed and gangrene away tho lifo of tho nation, nnd public nuthorlty in many or tuo cities look the other way. You cannot cure such wounds ns theso with a silken bandage. You will havo to euro them by putting deep In tho lancet of moral surgery and burning them out with tho caustic of holy wrath and with most decisive amputation cutting off tho scabrous nnd putrefying ubomlnutionB. As tho Romans wero uftcr the Celts, nnd ns the Stannous wero after the llrltons, so there aro evils after this na tion which will attend Its obsequies unless wo first attend theirs. Superstition tells of a marine reptile, tho ccphuloptera, which enfolded und crushed a shin of war. but It is no su perstition when I toll you that tho his tory of many of tho dead nations pro claims to us the fact that our ship of stato is In danger of being crushed by the cophaloptera of national depravity. Where is tho Hercules to slay this hydra? Is it not time to speak by pen, by tongue, by ballot box, by tho rolling of tlio prison door, by hnnginau's halter, by earnest prayer, by Slnaltle detonation? I wont to put all of tho matter before you, so that every honest man nnd woman will know just how matters stand, and what they ought to do if they vote, nnd what they ought to do if they pray. This nation is not going to perish. Alexander, when ho heard of the wealth of the Indies, divided Mace donia among his soldiers. Somo ouo asked him what ho had kept for himself und ho replied: "I nm keeping hope!" And that jewel I keep bright and shin ing in my soul whatever elso I shall surrender. Hope thou In God. He will set back theso oceanic tides of moral devastation. Do you know what Is tho prize for which contention is, mado to-day? It is the prize of this continent Never since, according to John Milton, when "Satan was hurled headlong flaming from the cthcrlnl skies In hideous ruin and combustion down," have tho pow ers of darkness been so determined to win this continent as they aro now. What a jewel it Is a jewel carved In relief, tho cainco of this plan J. On ono side of us tho Atlantic ocean, divid ing us from tho worn out governments of Europe. On the other side the Pacific ocean, dividing us from the superstitions of Asia. On the north of us tho Arctic sea, which is tho gynaslum in which tho explorers and navigutors develop their courage. A continent 10,500 miles lotg, 17,000,000 squaro miles, and all pf it but about one-seventh capable of rich culti vation. One hundred millions qf popu lation on this contlnont of North and South America 100,000,000, and room for many hundred millions more. All flora and all fauna, all metals, and all precious woods, and all grains and all fruits. Tho Appalachian range the backbone and the rivers the ganglia car rying lifo all through and out to the extremities. Isthmus of Darlcn, tho narrow waist of a giant continent, all to bo under ono government, and all free and nil Christians and the sccno of Christ's personal reign on earth, if, according to the expecta tion of many good pcoplo, He ehall at last Bet up His throne in this world. Who shall have thlshcmlsphors? Christ or Satan? Who Bhall havo the shore of her inland soas, tho sliver of her Neva das, the gold of her Colorados, tho tel escopes of hor observatories, the brain of her universities, tho wheat of her prairies, tho rice of her snvannntiB, tho two great ocean beaches the ono reaching from Ratlin's bay to Terra del Fuego, and tho other roru Iiehrlng straits to Capo Horn and all tho moral, and temporal, and spiritual, and ever lasting interests of a population vast beyond all computation saved by Him with whom a thousand years are as ono day? Who shall havo tho hemisphere? You and I will docldo that or help to decldo it, by conscientious vote, by ear nest prayer, by maintenance of Chris tian institutions, by support of great philanthropies, by putting body, mind and soul on tho right sldo of nil moral, religious and national movements. Ahl it will not be long bofore it will not mako any difference to you or to me what becomes of this continent, so far as earthly comfort is concerned All wo will want of it will bo seven feet by three and that will take in the largest, and there will be room and to spare. That is all of this country wo will need very soon, tho youngest of us. But wo have an anxiety about tho wollfare and tho happiness of tho generations that are coming on, and it will bo a grand thing If, whon tlio aruhangol's trumpot sounds, we find that our sepulchcr, llko tho ono I Joseph of Arhnathca provided for Christ, is in tho midst of a garden. Ily that tlmo this country will bo all naradise or all Drv Tortmus. Eternal God, to Thee wo commit tho destiny ol j this people. PRESS OPINIONS. What IttnuMlcan tfournnt-. Sny of S lt- ult- ol tin' t'.lrutlon, UKMOCItATS WIN. Tho democrats have carried the coun try. All tho doubtful states nt the north havo declared In their favor, and they have held their own In ull the ox slave states. Tliey have carried New York by a larger plurality than that state gave to any party before in n presidential year since 1872, when Grant swept it by MJ.OOO. Their lend In Indiana apparently Is greater than was that of tho republicans In 1888, which was 'J,!H3. They have also car ried Illinois, with seven or eight of tho electoral votes of Michigan. The re publicans have lost In tho went, In ad dition to these states, the states" of Kansas, Colorado, Nebraska, Wydinlug nnd Nevada, which have been won by weaver. Tho house of representatives has also gone democratic, and tho senate proba bly Is keeping It company. Republican reverses have been sustained In several states which elect legislatures that are to ehooso successors to republican sen ators whoso terms ond on March 4 next. In the present Rcnato tho republicans have forty-seven members; the demo crats thirty-nine and the farmers' al liance two. Thus tho republicans havo a plurality of only eight and n majority of but six in that body. Considerably over hall of tho twenty-nine senators whoso terms expire next March are re publicans. If tho democrats win four of theso republican seats without losing any of their own tho senrtle will bo tied ns between the republicans and democrats, with Stevenson's oust ing vote In their favor. Ab tho repub licans are gaining nowhere, but losing In many places, tho democrats are like ly to liavo tnc next senate. The democrats, therefore, will bo In undisputed control of nil branches of the government for tho first half of Cleveland's now term at least. Their majority In tho house will not le so great as It is in the present body, but It will bo great enough to give them a do cldod preponderance on nil questions on which partisan lines nro drawn. Tliey will thus be entirely re sponsible for all the legislation of tho two yenrs beginning with March, 181)::. Often in tho past eighteen years control bus been divided owing to n luck of partisan harmony between tho two branches of congress or between ono or both and the executive, and for this reason each party has been enabled to Bhlrk re sponsibility for legislation In some de gree. With the democrats for the next two years, however, tho situation will lo different They will have complete and undisputed sway In all departments of the government, ond tho people will bo nble to hold them to a rigid ac countability for the management of Its affairs. St Louis Globe-Democrat SILVER 1'I.KWJF.S. The democrats havo won on their silver pledges, and a party in which the free silver south occupies so command ing a position, o party which has prac tically been out of power for thirty years, and docs not know how to rule, a party which has not shown at any time in Its history tho capacity to deal with financial or economic subjects, will now bo called on to settle tho sil ver question, while tho republicans wntch the performance critically. After the 4th of March the govern ment will bctin tho hands of democrats und nil tho responsibilities will bo on their shoulders. A democratic presi dent and secretary of the treasury .will havo to Bee to it that sixty-five cent silver bullion Is kept at a parity with ono hundred cent gold,, and that thcro will not bo a sud den demand for the last-named metal which will exhaust tho government's stock of gold and causo tho silver cur rency to drop to its commercial value, and give tho country a dollar whose purchasing value will bo less than two thirds its face. Should that happen there would be a 6udden revulsion of feeling on tho part of hundreds of thousands of those who voted for Cleve land, and they would begin asking themselves what they had gained by exchanging a party which bad given them currency at par with gold for fourteen yenrs for one which broke down the moment it came Into power. Chicago Tribune. Ct.KVKLAND's DIT.KMMA. The election of Cleveland places him and tho democratie partyin" on embar rassing dilemma. The party , which supports him is pledged by Its platform to repeal tho McKinley bill and to enact a tariff for revenuo only. It will not do this, because it dare not do it if it could, nnd would not do it if it dure. Ilut during the next four, years it will have to face Its broken pledges with all that section of the party that were fooled Into bollovlng them sin- ' cere. It will make, of course, a noisy jjuruuu in rvumiu)C iaj iuvi&u biiu mint. If it shall undcrtako to do so with any tariff scheme which seeks to subvert the protection which tho McKinley bill affords to American industries, tho at tempt will only have the effect of dem onstrating tho valuo and importance of that measure, and will urouso n popu lar feeling In defense of thnt policy which could be awakened so effectual ly In no other way. It Is easy enough to deal In generalities of denunciation. Hut a tariff measure is necessarily a matter of specific detail, and the mo ment the democratic party Is forced to abandon its ground of negative criti cism and frame an actual tariff policy upon the lines its leaders have been urging; tho moment, In other words, It begins Its threatened assault upon the American industries that havo been or nro being built up under tho republic an protective policy, that moment will seal its doom with tho pcoplo of this country. St. Paul Pioneer Press. I'llKSIDKNT JIAltlUBOX. Whatever moy havo been tho result of this election, llenjninln Harrison, tho president of the United States, r.onit out of tho contest in honor and tn growing esteem on the part of cltl- zens. Irrespective of their political uf filiations. lie embraces in his char acter the solid virtues that mark men und gentlemen. Ills career in its public rspects had won him distinction nt homo nnd abroad; while In the relations of private lifo ho has displayed that eumestness nnd sinceri ty which Inspire confidence mid pro mote admiration. The republican party ma n tr mistuhu In elevating Kcnjamln Harrison to tho presidency, ns shown by his triumphant administration, soon to close the most eventful and Important of any since tho war aud republicans mado no mtstuko lu naming him as their standard bearer lu the recent contest. Aside from tho personal as pects of his recent overshadowing be reavement, It was extremely unfortun ate, politically considered, in thnt It re moved from tho enmpalgn during the critical weeks Immediately preceding the election the splendid personality of the president. His utterances have never failed to inspire that solid enthusiasm and confi dence which find expression in practical support nnd lu votes. The future his torian cannot well mult reference to the sad death In thn white houso as nn active, potent factor In tho result The noble manner In which President Harrison has conducted himself during these trying weeks und months, preserving his balance nnd self control, neither allowing the public service to suffer, nor yet unmind ful of the duty at his home, malting no unseemly effort for honors which lie deemed the province of tho people to confer nil this attests nnow tho splendid manhood of lleiijamlu Harrison, whoso public career must ever redound to tho credit of the re publican party. President Harrison grows dally In the regard of the American people. History will rank him on the list of America's' greatest statesmen. N. Y. Mall aud Express. CURRENT COMMENT. Wit Is, better for a party or a candi date to have deserved success and en countered failure than to have achieved victory nnd deserved ilefenl. Itostou Advertiser. tWRopubllcans will generally take their medicine without a grimace. The heroic stuff of which they are built will assert itself on top In 181)0. Min neapolis Journal. CdBLot all worklngmen take note of their wages and comforts on the second Tuesday of 1MIJ so ns to compare with the same datu of 1M)0. It may be lu terestlng and will do no harm. Chi cugo Inter Ocean. t35?"In 181)0 thn republicans will sweep everything. Tho free sliver and wild cat currency programme of llm west ern nnd southern cuds of thu democ racy will be antagonized by the caMern end nnd by Cleveland aud the party w 111 bo split for tho time being. Thus 1800 will be u great year for tho repub licans. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. tarWhcn democrats shall have "re formed" the tariff to n practically free trade basis If that day shall ever come worklngmen who in tills year of grace 181K! deserted tho republican party to join the ranks of tho free traders will have an opportunity to mourn a reduction of wages which will be necessary to enable America to com pete with foreign manufactures. Chi cago Journal. tSTTho great cities of New York and Chicugo have elected the demo cratie president without much appar ent change elsewhere, except In com munlllcs subject to the same great in flux of population. The republican pnrty has, by the operation of tho pro tective tariff, built up tho cities ut tho cost of the rural districts, mid the cities huvo requited It by flinging it out of power. Detroit Evening News. HTThere Is nothing now to prevent tho democrats from complying with the wishes of the trades unions. Cleve land can call au extra session and by next July a pungent tariff "reform" bill can bo enacted, and the, country cun have tho benefit thereof. And then the workmen will find out whether their employers can continue to pay them high wuges while they get goods at foreign prices, u hero is no other way of convincing them they have been fooled and voted against their own interests. Experience is a dear school, but many people novcr learn In uny other. Chicago Tribune. tJTTho republican party of the na tion is defeated but it is not destroyed. It Is a party of principles, not of make shifts. It can afford to wait for the certain vindication which must como when tho people have had a full exhi bition of tho lack of business capacity on tho purt of tho democracy. That party's lease of uncontrolled power cannot bo long unless the people of thu north submit to tho introduction of tho election methods which havo rendered tho niimo of southern democ racy a hissing nnd a reproach to every honest man. Toledo lilade. CcPWhnt tho republican party needs to do Is to organize at onco for the campaign of 1800 on strictly republican lines, which have always been populur lines. New blood must bo Infused Into the management of the party, llefore four years of democratie rulo have pasied, tho country will bo porfectly ready to restore republican supremacy, provided tho party is in touch with tho greut heart of tho people, us it used to be, und is ready to lead them to even greater hoights of liberty nnd prosper ity than they havo enjoyed through nil the years sinco the closo of the war un der republican administration. Minne apolis Journal. t3"It is needless to say that the result will be a great disappointment to repub licans, because they have confidently relied upon the assurances of long-experienced leuders in different Btutes, whose knowledge of tho people's wishes has rarely been defective. It had been hoped that the splendid re- suits uttalncd under President Harri- bon's administration Jiod placed be - vond doubt the maintenance of tho re- publican policy for years to come. A result in doubt Is therefore most disap pointing and it it proves that a demo- j emtio president and n democratic con- - ' gross huvo been elected the consc-, quences to the business and Industries of the country will not be such as to insure tho party a long lease of power. N. Y. Tribune. Vvl STOCK ITEMS. Too much fat with growing pigs wilt check tho growth of bono and muscle. Tho hog pens should not glvo off of fenslve odors any moro than tho stables for the other stock. Growing pigs should not bo given wholly fattening ration; feed somo thing for bono and muscle. It Is only in exceptional cases that 11 will pay to keep tho brood sow penned up, glvo hor n good range. The slops from tho house should never bo niado to take tho plncoof pure water for tho hogs, rather glvo both. The start that a pig guts In tho first three months of lis life has muoh to do with Its thrift and future profit To keep young pigs thrifty end grow ing nil winter they must havo'o warm", clean, dry IhhI ns well ns good feed. Good wool brings the best price, nnd It does not cost ono cent moro to raise good wool than It does that which is never saleable at good prices. To mako the best mutton the animal should be mado to grow as rnpldly und mature ns young an posstblo aud al ways bo kept In n prlmo condition. Sheep raising Is divided Into several branches and Is subject to many condi tions on account of tho difference .In climate und the distance from market. No one could rensonnbly expect an animal to bo profitable that Is allowed to pick n living from thn refuse of the farm and yet ninny expect this of the hogs. Hogs should novcr bo ullowcd to run where there Is stagnant water, as such wallows aro apt to begot cholera. Hogs need plenty of water, but st should, be pitro and fresh. A large amount of feed can easily be fed to cattle without tho stock showing uny decided Improvement, heiico It Is qultu nu Item to know how to food to tho lest advantage. Tho future feeding qualities of the steer nro shaped, to a great extent, the first month of tho animal's life, und un less it Is started right' It will uovor make n good animal. Tho farmer who has his cows como la this fall will rccolvo a Just reward 'for his business foresight by getting a high prico for butter this winter providing tho butter Is well made. It Is rarely a good plan to soil the younger or yearling animals ns long as there are older stock that can be sold to nn ndvuntugo and that will not be growing into more money. ,. It is easier to-kpup a cow to her regu lar flow of milk with a little feed than it Is to bring' her back to.it after sho has shrunk off It with a good deal of feed This Is nti instance where"an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure." FARM NOTES. With stone fruits rather $han other kinds, potash is an essential element of plant food in their growth. ' Unlcachcd ashes make an excellent fertilizer for strawberries and bono dust can bo used to a good advantage; with raspberries. , Whonever tho ground freezes the nee cssary mulching should be done and the extra covering bo given the fruit and vcgc.table.plls. rt From now on a good feed qf whole corn given at night will add materially ' to the comfort of the fowls and will help to keep them warm. i , ( Carcass is a good point to be regarded even In the fine wool ahcep, for on its form and constitution depends' uthe health of tho animal. , , , t Some one says that coal tar placed In the drinking water Is u sure euro for running nostrils, that so often afflict poultry nt this Benson. All kinds of fruit trees, nnd especially peach trees, should bo headed low and all branches that grow out long and slim should be cut back. Tho dally useof fruit helps materially to mako the people independent of .the doctor, but tho cheapest and best fruit is that grown on tho farm. ' f ' When the fruit and vegetables ars stored In the cellar, good cure should be taken to afford good ventilation un til cold, freezing weather sets In. , To bo certain of a good supply of eggs In winter the pullets should bo at least nine or ten months old aud then be well fed and comfortably sheltered T To keep up a good nnpply of small fruits It is nearly alwayn lest to plant two or three varieties of each kind' so that one will follow another in ripen ing. It in a mistake to think that peach trees will do bent on a thin soil; it the trees aro to mako a vigorous growth and bear good fruit the soil must be reasonably rich. If plants aro growing In comparative ly small pote or boxes they will bo greatly benefitted If wntered occasion ally with a weak solution, of guano or sulphate of ammonia. To make house plants grow and flower In winter It is essential to glvo them good care. The plants should be not out In a good rich soll,(and then liquid manure, uramunln, bono dust or other fertilizers of this kind can be used as needed during tlio winter., Then see that plenty of water Is given. To procure eggs In wintr the fowls mnst be kept warm, must not .be over fed, must be made to exercise, mus be guarded against disease and must be of somo breed possessing the qualities de sired. Tho main essential Is warmth, for no matter how well tho fowls, ma I be fed thoy will not lay if tho, poultry house is damp, cold una uncoratorwuua. tinut ' Tho protection necessary to "keep rab bits from injuring tho trees 'sliould b applied ns soon as possible, When eggs alone are wanted there is ' no necessity for keeping roosters; the hens will lay fully" as well without them. Chickens that havo not grown ton fair slzo by this tlmo often got '.stunted as soon us cold weather approaches; such need good attention. Tho noxt two months Is the usual time for marketing tho' tnrkoys.. 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