* Opinions of Great Papers on Important Subjects. tfa lfa < fa < < W tW$6tttit&1&t&1& Banish Hallowe'en Mai ciou ness. N one sense , Halloween and the Fourth of July are alike. Both days give license for almost unlimited lawlessness. On the Fourth gunpowder reigns supreme over the law ; on Halloween all sorts of mischief hold sway , often resulting in heavy property loss and bloodshed. The murder of the chief of police f Morgan Park emphasizes the Halloween evil. Halloween , as a feature of American life , deserves to fee laid to rest. There is no reason why one day in the year ihould be set apart for the perpetration of malicious mis chief. On Halloween hundreds of thousands of youths , ind often grown persons , turn their attention to damaging other people's property. During the rest of the year these persons are generally law-abiding. They have no thought 6f destroying fences or sidewalks , daubing paint on houses , or carrying off whatever they can find loose. On Halloween they regard these depredations as strictly legitimate. In Morgan Park a married woman , colored , dressed he-- * elf in the clothes of a man and proceeded to play havoc tvlth a sidewalk. She was discovered by the chief of police ind struck with a cane A rash and quick-tempered negro ivenged the blow by cutting the throat of the chief. This killing illustrates the Halloween extreme , but all . over the country minor acts of despoliation took place , which in the aggregate amounted to heavy loss. It is to be tioped that the coming generation of boys will be educated out of the Halloween idea. Chicago Journal. Money vs. Faith in The Pulpit NE of the questions that caused the most anx ious interest at a recent annual church con vention in Michigan was the cause of the clos ing of churches in half a dozen cities and towns in the State. The explanation was that young men are not attracted by the idea of spending $1,000 or $2,000 for an education to fit them selves wliose financial rewards run from ? 700 to $1,000 a fear , where other callings offer much brighter prospects at . less outlay of time and money for technical training. It is rather discouraging if the financial consideration la sufficient to deter young men who feel that they h'ad a vocation for the ministry. A faith which begets no devo tion superior to material gain , that inspires no spirit of fcacriiice and personal consecration , lacks something that is necessary to the growth of a religion. When Heine was asked why the world built no more such cathedrals as that of Cologne , he replied that cathe dral builders had convictions , while moderns had oijjfy opinions. In order to forego worldly success and comfort and devote himself joyfully to a life of struggle and hard ship , it is necessary that a man have a very fixed convic tion as to the vital importance of the work he is under taking. That he must be filled with fire and zeal , and that he must accept literally and unquestioningly the theory I hat the salvation of his own soul and of other souis is a matter which wholly overshadows the trivialities of earthly existence. Religion diluted with rationalism does not tend to create enthusiasts or to foster the missionary spirit , and those sects which adopt it must either adjust their salaries to their own particular circumstances or continue to find a paucity of candidates for commercially undesirable pulpits. Chicago Journal. Martyrdom of the Housewife. HE difficulty of securing domestic help is not new , and it is not peculiar in New York. * * * Some of the reasons for the present plight are obvious. There have been and must continue to be certain inherent difficulties in the prob lem. These have often been pointed out : lonji and irregular hours , confined and often lonely routine , varying quantities of work , vagaries and caprice.- , of mistresses , and the so-called "social stigma. " All these combine to draw women into factory employment , with its lixod hours , opportunities to be on the street in going and coming , congenial companionship while busy , definite tasks , formal rules for conduct , consistent supervision , and gen eral independence outside of hours of labor. * * * There are , however , some new factors in the reckoning. The demand for the work of women is keener than ever i * % A FRONTIER MISSIONARY. ' The Methodist Episcopal Church in California recently held memorial ser vices for William Taylor , the first mis sionary of that church in the State , "lie is , " wrote Charles Spurgeon , the famous London preacher , "the Paul of the age. and his experiences in estab lishing Methodism on the frontier of America , Australia and South America have no j.aralh'l in church history. " The st6ry of William Taylor's career in th 1 wicked mining camps and in San Francisco during the early fifties is more thrilling than fiction. Lawless ness was unbridled in the town. Mur derers went without trial. * "In all my travels over fife world , " Mr. Taylor used to say , "I never have seen such human degradation , such woful immorality and recklessness of human life as in San Fraacisco in -ISJO. " ifjr / vIt took courage to speak to the swearing , drunken crowds who spent their time in gambling and intoxica tion. Many a time he was threatened with personal violence. One of his first efforts was made In Pat Donovan's dance hall. A murder had just been committed * The body was hauled into an adjoining room , and the drinking , cursing , gambling and dancing -were resumed as noisily as ever. Suddenly Mr. Taylor's stalwart frame appeared in the door of the place- Catcalls and yells of derision greeted I the missionary ; and one man drew his pistol and told Mr. Taylor to get outer H or be shot. He stood quietly for a few 'moments , and th'n paid : Hn "I have not come for trouble. If you n will let me sing a few songs and say a few words , I'm sure you won't regret it , " "Go ahead ! " some one yelled. Mr. Taylor began to sing in Ills full , clear voice some of the familiar church ,1 before. With the last decade a number of occupations have opened up to them for the first time. * * * Not only is the demand greater than before , but the supply Is smaller. The very prosperity that has enlarged the servant-keeping class has enabled poorer people either to maintain their daughters at home or send them to school ; and many girls who in 1893 would have been seeking places are now living in ease on the abundant earnings of their fathers and brothers. Statistics on this point are not avail able , but the facts are patent. It is plain , also , that em ployment at good wages has allowed many young mechan ics to marry , and has thus transformed possible house maids into actual wives. The "steady company" has been much in evidence , and his attentions have still further disturbed our domestic economy. New York Evening Post. Refuse to Scare. HE statisticians are beginning to frighten us about the consumption of iron. They say that 30,000,000 tons of ore was taken out of the ground in this country alone last year , and as the world grows older , and its inhabitants more numerous , the demand for iron must increase until the" end of the supply is reached , and then what will they do , poor things , who are on earth in that remote day. We do not scare very readily over the prospect of the failure of the world's resources in any direction. When it gets so that human beings cannot exist on earth they will probably cease to move on the planet , but it seems as if the generation living had much more occasion to be concerned about its own comfort , and wisdom , and virtue , than about the prospects of health and happiness of those who may dwell In some distant period. This fear of what is going to happen to some one after our end has been common with humanity for many centu ries. Predictions of the coming io the end of the world it self -are numberless , and the prophets are still working overtime 01 that problem , but uunl the earth itself has been 2ntirely looked over and Its treasnros estimated at their true bulk there is no need of any one being alarmed for fear of a fatal scarcity of anything necessary to human happiness or human existence. Buffalo News. Reform in China HE man who crl for reiorm in China takes his life in his hanrt A century ago the Japa nese who had a public grievance to complain of could present his petition with the assurance that it would be uly considered , but he lost his life. The Chinese reformer loses his life without effect. And for some time past there has been a deadly conflict between the Dowager Empress and the ex ponents of reform. Only the other dny f member of the reform party was beaten to death with bamboos , while the fate of others at Shanghai is hanging on the firmness of the British representative. Now we learn that five others have been arrested at Pekin , and their terrible fate is , we 'i ' fear , assured. Shen Chien , befoie his death , wrote a moving - ) ' ing appeal to his own people and the foreign powers. "I I have won but little , and my day is done.It is a pathetic cry from this young man of one-and-thirty , standing and falling with a few against scores of millions of fellow- country men bound by immemorial tradition and led by the Dowager Empress. The life-blood of many must run in the market place before the reformer is welcomed in China. London Chronicle. Lynching Must be Stopped. E do not believe that the civilization of the United States is going to be wrecked in this way , but we do believe that it can be saved only'by a combination of the sane elements of society to assert and , if need be , to maintain by lawful means the supremacy of law. Every sheTiftlias the power to summon a posse. The peaceable and rational majority of citizens within his jurisdiction , if they should place themselves under his orders , would con stitute a legal force , and a force competent to restore order wherever it was invaded. There are some unhappy indi cations that a state of things is 'approaching for which such a remedy as that must be somewhat widely em ployed. New York Tribune. hymns. The crowd was quickly won by the music. "Go on ! " shouted the men when he stopped. Then he sang one or two Scutch songs , and finally , getting up on the platform where the fiddler sat , he spoke plainly and forcibly upon the evil life his auditors were 1 ( " .tiding , and they listened quietly. When the preacher had ceased , a big strapping Irishman , who had served time in prisons in Australia and New Zealand and had been the terror of the water front in San Francisco , pro posed a collection for the new Metho dist church , and he himself passed his old battered sombrero among the men and women. Money , gold dust and jew elry -went into the hat. With an invitation to them to come to the new church , the preacher with drew. The next morning he came with a coffin that he had made with his own hands during the night , and with the help of several sailors properly buried the body of the murdered man , and at the same time called on the bet ter feelings of his listeners In the les son he drew from the crime. Fearless , kindly , of firm faith , he was the type of man to succeed as a missionary. IN DISMAL SWAMP. But Little Better Known Now Than When Washington Pair It. The name "Dismal Swamp" Is a by word everywhere , and a legend has grown up round it of a dreary , boggy , unknown region of snakes and dark , damp thickets , -where runaway slaves fled for refuge. Frederick Street , in Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly , in telling the story of this region , says that it is but little better known at this day thnn it was 150 years ago , when George Wasliington himself laid out a route through it. The swamp is old historically. The first settlers at Norfolk and the region round about knew of it as a wild , im passable bit of country full of game and of valuable timber ; cypress , so good for making shingles ; juniper , black gum and beech. In 1728 Colonel Byrd , while trying to establish the boundary line between Virginia and North Carolina , ran a survey across it , working with the greatest difficulty and making only a mile a day through the thick growth. He It was who named it 'The Dismal Swamp. " ] Later surveys and government maps I show that the wilderness contains about SOO square miles of wood and water , lying In a tract twenty miles wide and forty-five long , and extend ing twenty miles into Virginia and twenty-five into North Carolina. The soil is a sort of rich , black vegetable mold , dry and caky at some seasons , and saturated with water at others. The whole region Is like a huge sponge , alternately dry and wet ; and as the swamp level , curiously enough , ! is twenty feet above tide-water , it is ( the source of many rivers and streams. There are deer in the woods , but It ! is the wild cattle that give the best sport. The ancestors of these "reed- ( fed" cattle , as they are called , strayed in from the fields and took up their abode in the swamp. The result is a race of small , active , wild cattle , the flesh of which is a delicious combina tion of the qualities of wild game and tame animals. There is a chance that before many years the greater part of the swamp will be redeemed from its present wildness - ness into civilized farm land ; but it will be many years before the bear and wild cattle and moccasin snakes disappear from their refuges , and before - ! fore the rare plants and birds that still ( draw botanists and ornithologists from all parts of the country will be found only in museum show cases. For each big man at the top there are a million little ones at the bet tom. Many men want to be great and a few try to be good. Lemon Dnmplliics. Half a pound of grated bread Irmubs , quarter pound of chopped suet , lialf a pound of moist sugar , two eggs , ) ne large lemon , a pinch of salt. Mince : he lemon peel very finely. Put all the iry ingredients in a basin , and mix ivell. Moisten with the eggs and the itrained juice of the lemon. Stir well a.nd put the mixture into small but tered cups or moulds. Cover with but tered paper. Set them in a kettle of boiling water , and let them steam for two and a half hours. Turn them out In a dish , and strew sifted sugar over thorn. Salted Almonds. Blanch the almonds in boiling hot water. Melt a tablespoouful of butter , and let the almonds stand in it an hour. Put a tablespoonful of salt into a dish , stir in the nuts until all are lightly covered with salt , spread on a shallow tin and set in a warm oven to brown delicately. More or less salt may be used , according to taste. Pea- uuts are salted in the same way , ex cept that they do not need blanching , as the brown hull conies off easily. Chocolate Custards. t To two cups of milk add two well- beaten eggs , two slightly rounding tea- bpooufuls of cocoa , three level table- gpoonfuis of sugar , and one-half teaspoonful - spoonful of vanilla flavoring. The co coa should be mixed with the sugar and dissolved in half of the milk heated , and when this has cooled a little add the other ingredients and pour into cups. Set the cups in a pan of boiling water and bake in a moder ate oven. Pepper Sandwiches. Remove all the seeds from a green [ > epper , chop fine and simmer ten min utes in a tablespoonful of butter. Do not allow it to brown. Add a dash t > f salt , and when cold spread between Lliiu slices of bread minus the crust. [ Crated American cream cheese may be [ ) laced on the top of the pepper layer ivith happy results. These piquant lit tle sandwiches are said to be especial ly nice witli cold meat. Cranberry Fritter * . Beat one egg thoroughly and stir it into one and a half cups of milk , add ) iie tablespoonful of sugar and one cup jf flour in which has been sifted one reaspoonful of baking powder. When kvell mixed stir in one cup of thick , ich cranberry sauce , and drop in spoonfuls on a hot , buttered gridiron. Brown very lightly and serve with but- .er and powdered sugar. Good House- ieeping. Creamed Put one quart of oysters , with the jroth , into a stewpan , and let the oy sters heat through. When the edges ) f the oysters curl , take them out and idd two cups of milk and two tablespoonfuls - spoonfuls of butter to the broth. When ) oiling , add two tablespoonfuls of flour which has been stirred smooth in a ittle cold milk , with salt and pepper. tVheu thickened , add the oysters , and ; erve at once on slices of toast. Apples with Cream. Peel , core and quarter six large tart ipples ; boil in a rich sugar syrup till ; ender , but not broken. Place in a jlass dish , boil the syrup a little long- jr , and then pour over the apples. iVhen cold cover with a thin layer of ed currant jelly , and over all pour a : hick layer of whipped cream sweet ened with sugar. Ham Toast. Mix some pounded cold ham with a jeaten egg , season with pepper and ay on buttered toast ; put in the oven mtil it gets thoroughly heated. A nice vay of using up small pieces of ham. To Make Dried Beef. Make a plain brine of four gallons vater , six pounds salt , one ounce salt- > eter. Cover the meat with this , and eave it in three weeks , then hang up 0 dry. Sales at Fair * . Sales at fairs have long been a fea- ure of the English cattle shows. In ! act , they have become so general that uany of the English shows are really narket days and are held at frequent ntervals. Sales have played a more > r less important part with American exhibitors , but have always been made jrivately , and fair officials have taken ictle or no interest in encouraging hem. There would seem to be an op- jortunity in this country for advance- nent in this direction. If sale classes ire arranged for and a certain part of he day set aside for auction sales of tattle or other produce both the fair nanagement , exhibitors and general mblic might be benefited thereby. It vould help the farmer out at the spot vhere he is weakest thnt is , in inar- : eting what he grows. American Agriculturist . Cleans Out Vermin. A writer in the Scientific American ; ays he has cleared his premises of : ermin by making whitewash yellow vith copperas and covering the stones ind rafters in the cellar with it. In > very crevice in which a rat might go ic'put the copperas and scattered it in ; he corners of the floor. The result vas a complete disappearance of rats ind mice. Since that time not a rat or uouse has been seen near the house. 3vi > rjr spring the cellar is coated with ! h yellow whitewash as a purifier and 1 rat exterminator , and no typhoid , lysantery or fsvor attacks tke family KEKPlNvJ THE Hi.ART TENUEK. By Rev. L. A. Banks. Rejoice with them that do rejoice , and weep with them that weep. Rom ans xii. , 15. The Christian is to be no hermit , no recluse who draws his heart into his shell , and goes self-absorbed along the way of life , thinking only of his own affairs. His heart is to be open to the cries of joy as well as sorrow. He is to have a tender heart , easily reached \vith the gladness or the sorrow of his iieighbor. "Rejoice , " says Paul , "with taein that do rejoice ; weep with them that weep. " The way this command is put robs it of all possible selfishness. We are to rejoice with other people in their joy. A great many selfish people envy the joy of others , and would , if they could , rob them of it and leave them bare , carrying all the joy away for them selves. Hut the Christian idea is to rejoice with the one who is glad and thus re-enforce and Increase his glad ness. And we all know how much there Is in that. Every man who has hud a sudden gladness come upon him lias had the desire to tell It to spine one else. The joy of any great vision , such as a splendid waterfall or a glimpse of a great snow mountain or some scene of wild beauty in the for est , is a small thing , if one has the experience alone , compared to what it is if you have a congenial soul with which to share it. Such sharing , in stead of dividing and subtracting from your own delight , multiplies it many times. "And the same law holds good in all other joys. We have a desire to impart it , a desire to talk about it with others , anil we often have the opportu nity of greatly increasing the joy of another by listening and putting our selves into sympathetic touch with the gladness which has come to his soul. You know some lonely man or wom an who has few joys and few friends , and when a letter or some little expe rience tiuit seems trifling to you with your many friends and your numerous sources of happiness comes to that man or that woman it is a real oppor tunity given of God to you to listen with kindling eye and appreciative luce and word while they talk to you of their joy. Such a privilege to them is a little foretaste of heaven , where all selfishness will be banished and ev < ry one will be seeking to give joy to others. There is no more regrettable mistake for any Christian to make than to per- iLiit Limself to become so self-absorbed , no m-irtur how great his work may be , tl.iit he shall become a kill-joy to weak and ordinary people who look to him fjr appreciation in the gladness which comes * to their lives. Jesus Christ was ucvfiso self-absorbed in his sublime .Mission for the world's salvation that 1- could not enter with sympathetic aeart and tender appreciation into the , oys as well as the sorrows of others. h > east no dark shadow at the wed- Iug : least , but added to its gladness. 'a. ' .y we have no right to be above Lord and hold it beneath our dig- > ro be-'tow our smiles on the whole- o ni" gladness that has come to any .01 ! 1. * jatve must not only keep our . . . ( 'arts tender in appreciation of the oys of others , but in sympathetic rela- on to their sorrows as well. We nould be so sensitive in our relation i > oui' fellow-men that it will be im- vjssible for us to see a sad look on , .n } t'uce and our own heart not feel ouiething of the flow of it. How sen- tive Jesus was to the petition of the id. . to the lonely wail of the leper , < > thy silent shame of the disgraced . oman , to the anxious appeal of the u her whose child was sick , to the .uiet tears of the poor widow follow- ng her only son to the grave ! In hese and countless other cases 'hrlst's heart mourned as though he imself were blind , or leprous , or anx- ous. or a mourner behind the bier. He ntered with perfect sympathy and fel- owship into the sorrows of the people vith whom he lived. His heart was so ender that every breath of human sad ness swept his soul as though it had been a harp. So we must keep our uearts tender. Do you ask me how we can do this ? The answer is simple ; by putting our- ; clves constantly in helpful relations o others. Do the kind deed on every pportunity , and you may be sure that lie kind feeling will soon come to be mtural to you. The difficulty is that u-p often curb our kind feelings and restrain them. We shut back the sym pathetic word that is on our lips until our tongues become dumb to that kind of speech. Give your heart a chance ro show its kindness. Give your lips ' : e opportunity to speak the sympa- hetic word. Give your hands and feet roe will to go on their missions of ind ness and cheer and you will soon ee that your heart is growing tender ind mellow , so that none rejoice and on are not glad and none are sorrow- "ul and you are not stricken. HUMANITY'S HELPER. BY Rev. W. A. flarf/eff. When I read about men who attack he beJefs of the church and call a halt > n prayer , on the Bible and other kings \vaich have beea held sacred I conclude that these men do not com * into contact with real life. By real life I mean suffering humanity. Not a day goes by but demands are made on the live church. Poverty , which doea not change , knocks at the door and to , the name of Jesus asks for help. I can think of family after family of worthy poor who would go to the tvall but for the church. Sometimes it is the sia of the father. Sometimes unavoidable sickness , disaster or accident , but tlie need Is urgent. We do not find the In fidel or the demagogue or the salooa- keeper helping In these places. They are too busy talking against the chmli. and selling death and the sources of poverty. Humanity still continues to sickea and die. Where do they send then7 To the church. The wife of a saloon- ke.per died the other day. He and ila la.rjoin companions sent for the min is er of the church. The man who has not been to church for years loses his old mother to the church he comes ! with eyes full of tears. lie must havej a prayer at the laying away of mother. . Here is a family suffering from Jacto of fotd and clothing- Father is sickj mother has pneumonia. No fraud ! about that. So the church supplies food and clothing. Let men lift their voices against the church. The same voices may one day plead for the tea d-r services done In the name of Jesus , who Is the same yesterday , to-day and | forever. There may be opportunity for critii cism of the church which does not do these things. Our churches need to be equipped with helpers just as any Im portant business must have them. Tha church does not consist of a platform speaker and an audience. Mighty com * fort and help may be given through a true sermon and many souls fed on tha bread of It , but the congregation must go from there inspired to do good and to be no longer hearers , but doers. WANTS FLEXIBLE RELIGION. By Bishop Samuel Fallows , The keynote of St. Paul's words , "k am made all things to all men , " Is sym pathy. As a Jew he saw with Jewish eyes , heard with Jewish ears ami felt the hones * pride of a noble Jewish ancestry. With the Gre &i he was transform ed into a Grecian. He mastered their language , studied their philosophy. quoted their poetd BISUOP FALLOWS. deferred to theta prejudices. He admitted the truth. which their pagan religion contained and from a common ground of agree- ' inent proceeded to unfold the special doctrines which Christianity aione con tained. A religion for all men must win by versatility and adaptability. Its meth ods of outward , approach must be aa varied and changeable as racial or In dividual needs. It must recognize the good wherever found. It must speak the language of refinement and tha dialect of the street. It must look , with the owner of wealth , on the valiw of money and claim with the ODC denied it that "A man's a man for a- that. " It must demand of the employee justice toward the employed and of tb employe honesty in work and observ ance of the sticredness of contracts. It may recognize social distinctions , but never proclaim religious ostracise on account of race or color. With tha Pauline principle prevailing , thert could be no car line strike , no persecu tion of the Jews , no unjust discrim ination against the negro. Sentenc Sermons. Sin sharpens sorrow. All things are easy to the earnest. A leader Is never afraid of being : alone. J i Burden-bearing brings blessing-shar ing. Self-indulgence Is the secret of indl. gence. Faith's forelook brightens to-day outlook. s There are no rights without response bilitles. Honor Is too big a price to pay fet any honor. Blows from the bellows of ridicrda leave no bruises. Shining lives seldom come out ol soft circumstances. The best cure of a bad habit is culture of a good one. Where vulgarity passes for wft vin tue passes for folly. The man who has time to burn haj to borrow a match to start it The best way to bury your sorrows If to get your sympathies busy. The man who needs a place should look for the place that needs him. It Is folly to boast of your frills be fore you have built your foundation. No man thinks of his life as a grind who has any grist worth grinding. He best expresses his own gratitude causes another to b grateful. It does not take much of a saint t denounce the sins he cannot digest. They-who laugh at another's dis reea have no ability to share another's joy The man -who hasn't enough religio : to last tin he gets home from meetin hasn't enough to take him through heaven.