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GLORIES OF HEAVEN. HMV. 1>1U TAtiMAUK TO 'I'ifttO MIC Rt&AVftCO AND KAINT IIHAHMICO. IIH IMOTVRIDI THM AT THACTIONI OF WOHUD IIKYONI). The ll?Mltli, the M|?l?ndor?, (ha H*? union* nuil th? Noun of H?HV?n. Now York, Auk. 26.? For the bereaved n n?l faint hearted there could be no wordtdtof alrongor conftolatloiuor oucour Hifomcm than those of the sermon pro pared by ltov. l)r. Talma fro fot today. Ills subject was "Surpassing Splendors." With inimitable touch, ho has pictured the glorh* and attractions of the; world beyond tbe nklos in ? way to bring joy t*i believing souls and to fascinate even thoughtless and Indifferent. Tin* text ehoHen waa, "Eye hath not s eon nor ear heard," T Corinthian* ii, 0. "I am going to heaven! I am going to heaven! Heaven! Heaven! Heaven!" These were the last words utterd a few daya ago by my precious wife hh she ascended to ho with tlod forever, and it i* not natural an well as Christ jnnly appropriate that our thoughts be much dlrcetad toward the glorious residence 1 have choHon? Qarluth . The city of Corinth has l?een called tho ParlH of antiquity. Indeed for splen dor the world noma no such wonder today. It atood on an istnmus washed by two seas. tho one sea bringing the rommnrcn of Kurope, the other tho com inerce of Asia. From her wharves, in the construct ion of which whole king dolus had been absorbed, war galleys t with three hanks of oars pushed out. and confounded the navy yards of all the world. lingo handed machinery v such atj_ modern Invention eannot equal, lifted ships from the sea on one side and transported them on trucks across the isthmus nnd sot them down in tin sea on the other side. The revenue officers of the city went down through tho olive groves that lined the beach to collect a tariff from all na tions. Tho mirth of nil people sported In her Tsthmaian games, nnd the beauty of all lands sat in her theatres, walked lu?r porticoes and threw Itself on the nltar of her stupendous dissipations. Column and statue and temple bewilder ed the beholder. There were white innrble fountains Into which, from aper tares at the side, there rushed waters everywhere known for heal giving qual ities. Around these basins. twisted info wreaths of stone, there \fVre all the beauties of sculpture and architecture, while, standing, as If to guard the cost Iv display, was a statue of Hercules of burnished Corinthian brass. Vases of terra cotta adorned the cemeteries of the ?lend ? vases so costly that Julius Caesar was not satisfied ? until he had captured them from Home. Armed officials, the "Corlnthlarll. paced up and down to see that no statue was defaced, no pedestal overthrown, no bas-relief touched. From the edge of the City a hill arose, with Its magnificent burden of columns nnd towers and temples ? 1,000 slaves awaiting at one shrine ? nnd a citadel so thoroughly impregnable thnt Oihraltnr i? a heap of wand coinpnred with it. Amid all thnt strength nnd magnificence Corinth stood and defied the world. Pit ii I'* Text. Oil. It was not to rustics who linil never ?een anything grand that St. Paul uttered litis text. They had heard the best music thnt had come from the best instruments in all the world, they had heard songs floating fram tnornine porticoes and meltlnir in evening groves, tliev had passed their whole lives away among pictures and sculpture and arcM lecture and Corinthian brass, which had been molded nftd Shaped, until there was no chariot wheel in which it had not sped, and no tower in which it bad not flittered, and no gateway that if bad not ndorned. Ah. it waj? a bold thing for 1 riTt*Uj < > stand there nmld all that nnd say: ".Ok fids is nothing. These sounds that come 'nun the temple of Neptune are not *inslc compared with the harmony of which T Hp^'1- These waters rushing In tln> bnsln of Pyretic lire not pure. These statues of Hacchuw and Mercury are not exquisite. Yon cltidel of \cro eorinthns is not strong coui|iared with what 1 offer to the poorest slaw that puts down his bin d up tit thai lira /.en gate. You. Corinthians, think this is n ?plendid city: you think yon have heard .all sweet sounds nnd seen :ill henut'fiil things: but 1 tell 'on *cye hath n<>f seen, nor ear beard, neither have i nter ed into the bent of man the things that which ft od hath prepared for them th:if love him ' " Von see my text ?-cts forth the idea that, however exalted our idens may he ? ?f ben ven. they conic fa r short of the t'ejilit y. Some wise men have been i -m I ? iilating how many furlongs long :m?l wide heaven Is, nnd they hive cjih-uhitcd how many inhabitants there nre < n ihv. .arth, how lone the earth will prob:ihlv ' stand, and then the> conn* t<> ibis ,sti mate that after nil the nations had ? gathered to hen veil, there will l?e :i room for eneh soul, a room l<I feet lung ,111.1 1 r. fee t wide. It would li..| lie huge enough for me. I tun gln.l to Knew that no human estimate is ^ufli i. i?t i,, take dimensions, "I've h;uh not Keen, nor ear heiird." nor nrithmetie enl nila ted. llonltti In Hen vrn I first remark thnt we <>nn In ?h|?> world get no of ttie health of | heaven. When you were n child," nnd you went out In the morning. how vmi bounded along tin- roiol or street ynu had never f- it sorrow Or slcknoaa! ivr ha ps later perhaps In ih?ve very sum* ~ mer days you felt n glow In your I cheek, and a spring hi your step, and an exuberance of spirits, nn.l n clone ness of eye. that tnnde you thank Ooil you wore permitted to live. The&>hor vrs were hifrp strings, nnd the m^nllght waa a doxology. and the rustling leaves] were the rustling of the robes of n , gren.t crowd rising up to praise tho] Lord. You thought that you knew what it was to be well, but there !s no perfect health on earth. The diseases of pant generations como down to us. The airs that float now on the earth nre unlike those which floated abovr*^jfcLra d I se . They are charged with ImputlN^and distempers. The most elastic anWro bust health of earth, compared that which those experience befofy whom the Rates have been opened. Is nothing buth sickness and emaciation Look at that- soul standing before the throns. On earth ifk was a. .lifelong invalid. Bee her sffp^^wreT and hear her voles now. Catch If you csji one % breath of thst celestial sir. Health In att the pulses? Health of vision: health of spirits: immortal health. No racking^* cough, no sharp pleurisies, no daj^ium.ng f< vci . in. \iuuM.ng pains rtnlhiHj.ltulH of wounded inah. Health swinging ?n th? air; health flowing In nil the streams; health blooming on the hanks. No headaches, no sidem-he* no backaoheM. That child that died In (ho agonies of croup, "hear hivr voice, now ringing in the an them . Thnt old man that went bowed down with the Infirmities of hkc, hoc hint walk now with the Htep of an Immortal athlete forever young Again! That night whw? the needlewoman fainted away Jn thl? garret a wave of tho Heavenly nlr re suacltatcd her forever f??r everlasting ycaivi to have neither ache nor pain nor weakness nor fatigue. "Kye linth not Hi'Oii It; ear hath not heard It." Splendora of Iteuvcn. I remlh'k further that w?> ou.ii In this world get no Just Idea of the splendor of heaven. Ht. John trie* to d?Hcr Un it. . He says. "The 12 gates are 12 pea rla," and tlfgt "the foundations of the wall are ga)\|ahed with all man ner of precious s(oneaK" a? wc stand looking through the tcffcscopo of Ht. we 8i'e a blaze of Amethyst and peiftj and emerald and sardonyx and ohrysoprattUH and snpphliV a niour tain of 1 Ik ti t . n cataract of cHior, a wen of Klawa and a city like the sity. Ht. John bids um look again, and we nee throne* ? throne* of the prophet#, thronca of the patriarchs, thrones of the angels, thrones of the appMttex. thrones of the martyrH, .throne ofUJeaus] throne of God, And we turn rolled to rfeo the glory, and It la throne*! Thrones! Thrones! Ht. John hldH uh look again, and we see the great piVfuug&ion of the redeem ed pawing, Jijhum, on a white horse, leads the march, and' all the armies of salvation following on wlhte horse*. Infinite cavalcade passing, passing; einplrea pressing Into line, agea follow Iiik agea. Dispensation tramping on after dispensation, Glory In the track of glory. fCurope. Aula, Africa and North and South America preaalng Into lliMv<. islands of (h?- aea shoulder to Hhoulder. Generations before the flood following generations after the flood, and iih Jesus rises at the head of that grtat hoat and waves li Ik sword In i/slgnal of victory all crowns lire lifted, and all ensign* flung out, and nil chimes -rung, and all hnlcluiahs chanted and wiino cry, "Glory to God most iiigh," and Home, "llosanna to the Hon of David," and some, "Worthy, Is tho liiirnh that was slain"? til all exclama tions of endearment and homage in the vocabulary of heaven are exhausted and there come up surge after surge of "Amen! Allien' Amen!" "Kye hath Uui se n Wir hath liot heard It " .Skim from the summer wa ters the brightest sparkles, and you will Ket no idea of tiny' sheen of the everlasting nea. I'tte ul> the H|>lendors of /earthly ellles, and they would not make a stepping stone I ?y which you might mount to the city of (Jod. Kvery house Is a palace. Kvery step a triumph. Kvery covering of the head a coronation Kvery mct(f lniu'Tian <1 net . Kvery. stroke from tne tower Is a wedding bell. Kvery day is il Jubilee, every hour a ? rapture, and every moim*nt tin ecstasy. "Kye tin t h not seen It; ear hath imi heard it." Ilt'll II lo II M III I|CI1V?*II. I remark further we can got no Idea on earth of the reunion of heaven. If you have ever been across the sea nnd met a friend or nvoiwan acquain tance In aoine strange eltj^ you re member how your blood thrilled, and how g\ad you were to see him. What then, will be our Joy, after we have passed the scan of death, to meet in the bright city of the sun those from whom |ve have long boon separated! A ftoj' we have boon away from our frflepds 10 or 15 years, a|td we come upon them, we sec hpw differently they look The hnlr luvs turned, and wrinkles have come lo their fncea, nnd we say, "How you h'ttve changed 1" Rut. oh. when you stnnVH before the throne, all cares gone from the face, all marks of sorrow disappeared, and feeling the Joy of thnt blessed land, methlnks we will sav to each other, with an exultation we cannot now Imagine. "How you haVc changed!" ^ln this world we only ' meet to part. It Is good-bye, goodbye, farewells floating In the air We hear it at the rail car window, and at the steam boat wharf- good-bye. Children lisp i i . now old P.ge nnswers it. Sometimes we say It in a light way ? "god-bye" ? anil sometimes wlt^i anguish In which the soul breaks down Good-bye? Ah' That is the/ word thnt ends the thanks giving banquet; that Is the word that comes'ln to close the Christmas chant. Good-bye! good-bye? Ttnt not so In heaven. Welcomes In the nlr. wel comes nt the gates, welcomes at the house of many mansions but no good bye. That group Is constantly being j augmented. They nre todng up from our circles of earth to Join It little voices t<> loin the anthem, little hands t.i take hold of It In the great homu circle, llllle feet to dance In the eter nal glee, little crowns to be cast down before the feel of Jesus. Our friends are in two groups? a group tl\ls side of the rlveK^nnd a group on j the other side of thenWver. Now there goes one from this to that, and an- i other from this to that, and soon we will all be gone over. How many of ? ? lei \ .? : i I ? 1 1 ? I V en I el'eil ? upon that blessed plnco! Tf T should take paper nnd pencil, do you think 1 . could put them all down? Ah. my I friends, the waves of Jordan ronr so hoarsely we cannot hear the Joy on the other side where their group Is augment*: 1 Tt Is graves h^re nnd cofllns and benrses there. \ I>)Ii?k S'Krn Hoy. A little child's mother bad died, and they comforted her They said; "Your mother has gone to heaven. Don't cry." And the next day they went to L the graveyard, and they laid the body of the mother down Into the ground, and the little gtrl came ijp to the verge j of the grave. and*TfioKlng down at > the body of her mother said. "Is this heaven?" Oh, we have no Idea what heaven Is! It Is the grave here. It is darkness here, but there Is merry making yonder. Methlnks when a ' | soul arrives some angel taken it | ! around to show It the wonders of ; that blessed place. The usher 'angel says to the newly arrived; "These are the mnrtyrs that perished at Pied mont. These were torn to pieces at j Inquisition. This Is the throne of th? great Jehovah. This Is Jesus!" I am j going to see .Traits." said a dying ne- I gro boy. "I nm going to see .Temis." j And the missionary said. "Ton are Impure you will see him?" "Oh, yesi f that's what I want to go to heaven for." "But," said the missionary, "suppose that. Jesus should go away from heaven ? what then?" "I should follow him." said the dying negro boy. "But If Jeyiw went down to hell ? what then?" Jfh* dying boy thought for m moment and then he satd, Mam. Whereyoeaua is there can be no hell!" Oh, t(? stand In hie prescncel That win be heaven I Oh, to put our hand lit that hand which wan wounded for us f><? the cross, to go around anilfl all the group* of the redeemed ami Bhake hands with prophets and apos tlen and martyr* and with our oyvn dear, beloved one# -?that will 1>? the great reunion. We cannot Imagine It now, our lovcd4 ones neent so fae away. When we are In trouble anil lomborwe. they don't seem to come We go on the bank* of the Jordan and call across to thorn, bm ' ,y. don't seem to hear. We b^y* * well with the child, Is It well with the loved ones?" And we llstm to hp?r 11 any voice cbitU back over tne None! None! Unbelief says. 1 hey ar dead nnd extl.f t graver. but. blessed be Ood, we have a Olble that telle uh different. We open It and find that they are neither dead nor extinct) that they never were no much all aa now; that they are only J for our coming, and that we jha J them on the other side of the river. Oh glorious reunion! we cannot grasp It now. "Kye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered Into the heart of man the thing- which Ood hath prepared for them that love him." i Jf The Hong of 1 remark again. we can in th)^wori(if J no Idea of the eong of hea* en. You . know there 1h nothing more than music. In the battle of > the highlandera were giving way. and Wellington found out that the bands ? music h?<? ceased playing. He sent a quick dispatch, telling them to play with utmost *plrlt a battle march, 1 he mus ?started. the hlglanders were rallied ami they dashed on till the day wa* won. We appreciate the po*?r ?< ,lir music, but do we appreciate the pow of sacred gong? There iH1\oth^ mon. Inspiring to me than a whole c ?? gregatlon lifted up on the ware of h o?> melody. When we ?ln;< some of those old psahns and tunes, they rous* all ihe memories of the pant. Why, | some of them were cradle songs lr father's house. Thev are all with the morning dew of a thousand Christian Sabbaths. They were sung b, brothers and slaters gone now by voices that were aged and broken lft the music? voices none the less because they did tremble and break. When I hear these "Id songs " as if all the old country ^Ing houses joined in the chorus, and Scotch kirk and sailors' bethel and Western cabins, until the whole continent 1 fts ?u. doxology, and the scepters of eter nity bt?ai time to the hutslc. A^ay. then with your starveling tunes that chill t ? devotions of the sanctuary and make k I .it silent when Jesus Is com | i tlr~ lng to hoauniia. * . , Hut, in v friends. If music on earth Is J ii eet" what will it ?>e ?> heav?" ' Thev all know the tunc there. Methlnk" L. tune or heaven will be made up pa. tlv from the songs of earth, the best I'll r ts* of all our hymns and tu>,es golng I., add to the Bt.HK of Moses and tht t auib. All the best singer* of all the Jges will join it- choirs of white robed children, choirs of patriarchs, choirs of ?mvltnlH, <hclr .....hrm- of Hod roll on. roll on. . rtiron. ? nr.' f"? of It ">'? nV'?" ?ll saved. Anthem shall touch nnthetn, Z.nL join dwrws ?? ?W?J noflwli. "f .n.th.nn<l hoavon l? Jionrrd i.?o the ear of Christ. David of the hiirn will be there^Jabrlel of the Jrum Ill lu- lh.rA>n?W. Will pour UK der|?*Wass voice Into the song, nnd Africa will add? to t.he music ivitli her matchless voices. I Wish we could anticipate that son*. I wlnh in the dosing hymns of the ,l:nivhes today we might ?^h'inecho slips from the Kates. Who. knows I hi t)ult when tlft* heavenly door opens let some may come forth tip* at rum of the jubl Innt voices until ^ e???h It Oh, that is the song drops down from heaven It meet half ???,? . song coming up from earth! KBNTUOKT OAJpiPAIO*. The Dfinoorati Ar* OoHMiielaa to Vckr the OatMi?*r H.v Southern Associated Ptees. Mayfleld, Ky.. Aug. ~i. ? The *?*voad ilebate between t!em?ral Hardin aud Hon. W. O. Hriulley took place here I his afternoon. To the disappointment ? f it II DeiuocraU who heard him General llardin strenuously avoided the currency liiestioii until ten mlnut?s of the time in which he was to '.iose. Then, In le spouse to Mr. Bradley's question, he xaid ho would appoint to succeed either if the t wo United States senatora, should rither of them <lle, a man who would he in f?\or ??f coinage of both and gold snd silver upon exactly equal terms. "1 hope to be able to appoint one good ('hough/' lie ad<led, "and >ne who will In- abb- to preserve' a perfect parity in nil the money we have." General llard.i touched much less upon the money question than he did at the opening debate at Txtuijvllle. al though h?*v|akes practically the |s>sition that he *1 i ? 1 there. General Hrndley i-aine out boldly for t''e single gold stnn ilard ami answered and derided General Hardin for his failure t?? take a hold . stand for his si?le of the question. There' were many prominent Democrats present ' f'om all over the State and there is a stionp sentiment that there should be a new Hemoeratic standard bearer <?r else the whole ticket will be defeated. TICK M WKHE TI'lt.\KI> Ot.IT. Ilul They Will Oontlnno to Tf*ch In Johnatown, I**. Hy Southern Associated I'ress. Johnstown, IV, Aug. 2T?. ? The nuns who were turned out of the Gallitsin schools will now teach In a church, liven after the legislature parsed the < inrb bill the s<?hool dlrectora insisted u|>on employing the sisters to teach in the public school building regardless of ?*oii sequences, but the nuns refnsed, say ing that since the Garb bill wm a law they would obey it, however unjust. The school directors have since made arrangements with the nuns to teach In t hf, old church building at that place, all the Catholic citir.ens of the town agr?>? Inc to send their children to tha Slaters and not to the public schoola. As the imputation of Gallaisin is ftftnost entirely Catholic, the handsome new school buildings there will be practically de serted. Atlanta, Ga.. Aug. 21. ? A special to. the Restitution from Caftfelia, Oa.. ?ay?#TV H. Derby, proprietor of s ho tel there was killed by a Blue Ridge cml Atlantic train today. ??it . I1YVYKU WAN WOT Ii? 1 1 in vshkIUH Ilseln* Ksperlence lit- found 1-ltlls Kstr PUf, Mli-hacl F. l>wyer, the t^fumn, set f<K>t on American soil yeiterdiy for tin* rti*t time since he went a way last March to have a why at the Hriti"h horsemen on Ihvlr own grouud. H? came home on the ste*liu?hlp Fuhla, aud hnt for the announcement in Uutt ouu day morning's World hl? home-coming would have ??J?U rely unexpected ID- h*tl intended coming on oue of tn? ?hi|m of the American line, hilt chang ed hjljf mind at the last moment. . The moat iinportaut piece of informa tion Unit Mr. Dwyer brought with him wan that hi* racing partnef, Klcn ard t'fokcr, has made every incut <o return to Alhcrlca, and will be here within the next thirty daya? that In. If noUiiu'g occurs to make hlui change his mind. Mr. Oroker has been kept fully advised of the political ??? tin t ion in thiH city and, although Mr. Dwyer wouhl not admit it directly, he believe* that the time ban about for him to return. If not to take the Tammany rein* into his own hands, at least to help those of his friends who now 11 nd themselves in a quandary. Of his own experiences abroad, Mr. Dwyer, with hi* customary diffidence, /vas inclined to say but little when ht w a s aeon by a World reporter. The great plunger was neveur a very good "talker. That he had had a good time and had thoroughly eujoyed himself #ah quite apparent. Hi* trip abroad has done him an immense lot of good iu a physical way, eveu If ho did have Home misfortune with hW horses. He looks to l?e much heartier and strong er than ho was when lie >vent.e,.^y: With all that, however, he admitted that he wan glad to get back to Ameri ca once more. He qualified this souie what, though, by aaylug that he may return to ?nfcUnd at norae time iu the future and have another go at the name over there. Thin Arm trip of his haw been some what in the nature of an -ex*>erlm<>*t. aud when he goes again he will be pre pared to make use of all that he ha* learned In Ids kindergarten experience In Iiritlah racing. One of Mr. Dwyer a most marked traits is hla yengefuluass. He feels that b? was uot fairly treated across the water and it will be strauge if he doe* not go back ready to get even in every respect. "The only lioMe that I liave.lwt in my stable." said Mr. Dwyer, "I* Harry Heed. The others that I took over have gone Into Rnglish stable* and 1 hope that their new owners will get n whole lot of 'good out of them. Per haps they will and perhaps they wont. "Htlll l do not waut to complain too much about the treatment I have re (jeived. I knew just what I would have to expect when 1 went abroad and If everything did not come my way I "have n/ily myself to blame. They do things in a different way in England what they do here, and tiie man that goes there expecting to have every thing his own wayy will come back with a very different Idea. I must ad mit that I was not altogether pleased with my treatment on Bnglteh race tracks. Not once did they ever give u, the be*t of U in a handicap. In fact. It was almost invariably the oth er way. My horses and tho*e of Mr. Croker had to pack up the we g t wherever It was possible for them to idle it on us. ? > "From the very first my horses were handicapped far above their real wortlL The Bng:iah haudlcappers seem .to have had an idea that we had ^thing but worhM?eaters in our afcring, and thu* it was all odds agalust Our eJer^ ^f nble to win a race. Banquet was an old horse when I took him there and the weight* they put on him were elm ,? to afchor Mm horse, he was scarcely ffiven a fair chance to rfiow what was In him. "When J found that they were not Koiaix to let me win a handicap, I had fo put my horses Into selling races, where 1 could fix the weight to suit myself and make it ?om?;thhig within Ihv powers of my ho?-. KnKlla?men took advantage of rig-ht that was allowed them, by the n,. oh of this kind of races. When 1 won they would bid my home up, and! cither had to pay a round sum to i? tain him or else lose him. If I was beaten, some one of the other owners in the rare would claim my horse, and 1 would have to let him go. lti that way thev got a!l that I had, except Harry eed and I Kuess they would have had ill ni, too, if the starter h*d not left him at the po*t in the last race .. which he started. He had an excal i . ? ? win jtnd I am sure that U. It's a hard thing to Buy that your horse has been left at the ,.o*t intentionally, but^I must adm t that 1 felt a g<?od deal that way in this Instance. Anyway, I was very much disgusted, and it wasp^s much that as anything else that hkjifrned my inten tion to return to America. 8o, I Just quit tliein. and liweJ am. Harry Heed la coming home, too." "How did you make out in the way of betting. Mr. l>wyt?r?" "I understand that there have l?een many reiM.rln of our large winnings and our lnr/p losimis, too, while we were in Kngland. Well, you know how that Ih. They can get up those reports very easily and without nnich foundation. Ab a matter of fact we did have some bad days, but then that does not siffnl fv anything, for 1 have had Just suefi days here and never felt very bad ii I h .u t it. 1 did lose considerable money on my own horses, but I .yianaged to pick out a few good things In the sta ble< of other owners, and I had mnlfey on them to cover what I had y?t on my own. 'It is an easy to pick out a good horse there as it is here, tvs easy. too. to get your money down in large I unidw if you want It.' Jockey "Willie Sims did not accoin pnuv Mr. Dwyer on his return. He Starts for home today, so as to t>e here in tliiio to ride Handspring for FhiL Dwyer in the FnturUy. No A?srrkr Kmms OoMman, ths anareUlst woman, tri^d^o mak, a speech to th# striking #^ljor girl* Tuesday evsntng. : but they wouldn't 11-ten to her and mmdled her out of tuetr hall la a hurry y Wa ara honest working girls." satd 4 heir presi dent, Mather Fr?sman. 'and you are not a working woman. We are abls to take ..r(l 0f oursalves and wa want no anarOhy L^r*, Wa toavs lots of girls who can talk . .a. well as you ?an and who will glv# ui baTtsr ad v lee/ Vlaase get out."-N*? York World. Osart sf latalry. By AotiUiam Associated Vress. Washington. D. C? Aug. Acttng Sscretary NfeAdoo has ordered a court of Inquiry to determine who Is responsible for the careless docking of ths orulser Columbia at Southampton, Bn gland, by wtitch ahe was Injursd and narrowly es eaped serious damage. The detail for ths court con ai eta of Rear Admiral Walker. Captain Kana, Captain Rodgara, with lieutenant Draper, at Marine Corps, as Judgs Advocate. ? ? Paris baa given up wa mm or imiw tag Its aafcool ohtldraa to mUltary drill. Ths Municipal Council has IMfttM tie battalioaa and srdersd ike guas and eqfip >?Tti at aactka. IlKIMUM WHO 1.1VIC ON MAltM. They Cnu 1?? Murr Work MuoU More Mn?ll> 'I'll mi M?-ti oil Kwrlh. To talk of Martian beings is not to Hint u Martian men. .Tust hh the proba bill tics point to the one. ho do they point away from the other. Kven on thin earth man Is of the nature of n? accident. lie In the survival of hy no means the highest physical orgnnlsqv ? He In not even ? high form of idninipa). Mlr$4 hjt* bomi UIm ttmkiuii. l4V?r aught we can see, some lizard or batraehian might Just as well have ponied Into hi? place in the rwc^j and bet?ft no?> the j dominant creature of this ear Hi. Under different physical circumstances he would have been certain to do bo. Amid the phyHical surroundings that exist on Mara, ,we may la* practically , mire other organisms have been evolved \yhlcti would striko us as exquisitely grostea que. What ma liner of beings they may he wo have no da*a to conceive. ' J IIow diverse, however, they doubtless are from ua will appear from such deft- j nlle deduction as we are able to make from the physical ^fferences bet w eon Mars and our c?rfh . For example, the inere difference of gravity on the ajtr f a<v of the two planet? Is rnuej) more ar reaching in Itn effects than might at drat he thought. Gravity on the surface of Mars Is only a lit t le more than one third what It is on the surface of the earth. This would work In t*o ways to very different conditions of existence from those to which we are accustomed . To begin with, three times as mirwU.1 work, as, for example, In digging n* canal, could be done by the same ex penditure of muscular force. If we were transported to Mara, we should be pleas antly surprised to find all our manual labor auddenly lightened threefold . Jtuj. Indirectly, there might result a ye\ greater gain to our capabilities: for. Ii Nature chose, she could afford there to build her Inhabitants on. three times the scale she does on "earth, without thvlr ever finding it out exeept by Interplane tary comparison . As we all know, a very large man Is much more unwleldly than a very sinjUt^j oqe. An elephant refuses to hop llkfe a flea; not because he considers It Undig nified to do bo. but simply because lie cannot take the stop. If we could we should all jump across the street, in stead of painfully paddling through the mud. Our Inability to do depends partly on the size of the earth, and partly on the si?e of our ow<n bodies, but not at all on what It at first seems entirely to depend on, the al?e of the street. To see this, let ns consider the very simplest case-that of standing erect To this every-day feat opposes itself the weight of the body simply, a thing ol throe dimensions, height, breath and thickness, while the ability to accom plish It resides in the cross-section of the iuUoOlcsi, of .the knee, a thing of only two dimensions. Consequently, a jK-rBon half as large again as another has about twice the supporting capacity of that other, but about three times as much to support. Standing, therefore, tires him out more quickly, li his siz> were to sib on Increasing, he would at last reach a stature at which he would no longer be ahle to stand at all. but would have to lie down. You shall see the same effect In quite inanimate ob jects. Take two cylinders of parallinfc wax. one nrtt.de1 into an ordinary candle, the other irtWnf gigantic fac simile of one, and then stnnd both U|h?^ their bases. To the small one nothing hap-'1 liens. The big one. however, begins to settle; the base Actually nmclo viscous hy the pressure of the wkdght above. Now apply this principle to a possible Inhabitant of Mars, and suppose him to be constructed three times as largo as a human being in every dimension . If he were o^ earth he would weigh twenty-seven times as miwh as the human helug; but on tfie surface ol Mars, since gravity there is only ibout one-third of what it is here, he would weigh but vjyie times as much. The cross section of iris muscles would be nine thn^a-* ns great. Therefore, the ratio of his supporting power to the weight he must support^would be th<<}| same as ours. (Jonsequeimy. he would | be able to stand with no mqre fatigue, than we experience. Now. consider tilt work he might be able to do. ills mus cles, having length, breadth, and thick ness, would all be twenty-seven times as effective as ours, lie -Would prove twenty -seven times as- stiom: as we, and could accomplish twenty-seven times as much. Hut he would ^further work HjK?n what required, owing to diu-reased gravity, but ono-uiiru ihe e* fort to ''overcome. His effective force, therefore, would be eighty-one times as great as man's whether in digging canals or In other bodily occupation. As gravity on the surface of Mars is really a little more than one-third that at the su *ace of the earth, the trfie ratio Is not eighty-one, but about fifty I'ereival lx>well in the Atlantic Monthly. Tlie Curse of Mold. Ttirel' significant facta were told In the cablegrams from Europe published In tbe Sunday papers: First? Ttie condition of tho worklngmen In England, and especially In London, la constantly growing worse. Wages, already barely sufficient to support life, are Mine reduced still lower and many faotorie* are closed entirely. ?i.econd ? The Merlin Chamber of Com merce tin* Issued Its report for 18SH. general state of business Is described as unfavorable, except In certain branches. It aaye the public show a marked ten dency to buy. cheap and Inferior goods, which result JLn a depression of prices. Third? The g$ld and silver reserves of the ^Hank of Krnnc** na>- reacneii iv.viun in excees of 1660,000,000, of whloh amount about $2aO.OOO,OUO ih In Hlver. lulu is not only the largeet-Tbseirve In the world, but ir lis* never been paralleled In the his. tory of finance. Great Britain and Germany are under the single gold standard. France has a blmetallto currency and maintains tbe parity of gold and silver by redeeming the notes of the llank of France In silver whenever gold Is demand ed for export. It la true that alnoe U7S tile mints of Krance have not been open to the froe coinage of sliver, but <lie full leg.il ten der fire-franc pieces have been kept In , circulation and their debt-paying quality has not been impaired, nor bar* they ever been spoken of as fifty oent doHars. If a French . newspaper should denounce the Irt-Mbu pteoe a* dtshooeat the editor would be immediately arrested and pun. tahed for his crime by a long term of Im prisonment. , It la scarcely neoeeaary to say that la France a Minister of Flnanoe would be uuiia?Hr?d an laabeofle U be should pro pose to Issue bonds to Wy gold when lie had 000.000 of full legal tender stiver on hand. Antf If It should become necessary far France to lane bonds at any time they would bo flrat offered to her own .people, and not glean away to a syndicate at H per cent, leoa than tbey were worth la open martMt. England and Qw luaify are under the curae of foU. France la blessed with genuine bimetal If yea are tired of looklag at Maxtor, you look at France.? New Tork OII<'* MANV V#?*. ,, |. I .rd for K??d Hruducl. ???? ??* MnUloa ArttacUl ; I ;r I Sr." i. V:?'W..w taikjjoj ii^sASiSSar-ssS ' '""111 "r '""1i>''ir'rn'" ? '<'a*,ou why ?' r? mU*Lo? | ?h for u paint oil. aWMflTTr ra* !V~ 1 ti-rirt! for v&rnllh and rubber. I stsM of the KlyoerWoH of WffA* Jo. ? .mil paUnltlnlo acids. ewees congeals at a temperature of egreee v.. while the olln an<l llmollu on^ ooj* Ml below tl?e free/Jug point ?f w?t? r. Itascd on this f?ct, to the u>anuf^ture Uf so called refined lard.' T*? Hfcll In cooled to the progjr ?nd the congealed mJ?M' ?gJlXJa on a tllter pros*. It to then bleached and refined and formi/tb? ba*' is of al refined lard compounds. It to UJ^"J mixed with Inferior )"* ?****> **>"*? out from the entralli and other i^fujj , from pork packing. /In order to pardon th'w Koft mass. tallow a* well as beef and pork boues are added in many lUAUhou" h there fc nothing. In refined wholesome, the whole [a jjjjjjj' nu? oll, of the worst food ?JWg* tiuiiH in existence. It la ,(]\JfI oau?" l oth In odor and taate, and la the cause of numberless case* of dyspepsia and ?dl?' "deprived of Its I^?1*}?'^ liVwii In commerce as summer < >11, a torNjt has heen refined and T%e are several methods or Tlie ,snal method to to m the oT^ with n weak caustic ?oda lye. result jug in partial sapnlfleatlon . Is formed settles around the ?? *uZ of coloring matter wWch ?MJ i-i.-d to the bottom, and the bleacned ",'iu ."?r?t?l "? "d I oulv needs filtering to roUent and pure food Pr?a^l"eV-J respect superior to the ^ eo-callpd re tlned lard . ?, tr nv another process the summer oil \* ,,,1'xed with a small percentage of cop iicras or spirtte of turpentine end to {hen exposed in shallow vases to the rays iCthf simr" rnis process is slow. bdf the loss of oil In refiplug i? mucWess. There is smoother method of J nninp-^mwrT' one per cent of *Ulp lmric acid and w^ter are mixed j o ! lleat as well as violent agitation ?ro then applied. Thequantltyofsnl phttric acid employe., .s not sufficient uHook tho oil. ?!>?<? ? ' & nMiities. This process Is both qulcfc mul cheap, but it is very d\fflcu" J?> move the tvaces ^ sulphuric acid fr?m the oil. which cannot he used with im punity as u food. A plant to refine oil Is not very ex pensive . Ten thusand dollars would be :i 1.,,'ih- for a start. It requires, how ov? r, a competent chemist, with a spe cial technical training In this branch. The profits derived from refining are large. The palmitln, as well as the Hummer oil. ?.n he wl<l quantities. The summer oil to.UBed " siu'h for culinary purpose?: ? *? awo | ascd-as a. table oU. for packing sardines I us a lubricant and for a great numbe* of other technical purposes. To manufacture cotton seed oil into a varnish or a paint oil. the crude oil to treated in a very slmplo epparatus that, <.,iu?es a h^Vnir blot to be driv^1 through thoA,ll. According to Ae ^^tem perature of the heated^ lenKth of time employed, boiled oil, va , nish or rubber are profneed. 1 The profit In this biMiness i to veir i large*, and ? large bulk of oil can be bandied at little expense. >Phe gr?i4ep ?M?rt*on ?f~the of commerce Is often nothing hutCOUen s(>t?d oil more or less adultepeted with cheap rosin oil. * An establishment that would prepare cotton seed oil for the paint trade, and that would honestly sell boiled cotton * oil oil as such on Itrf own merits wouhi pay handsomely in Savannah, as boiled cotton seed oil is. reaUy aa meri torious and as good an article as boiled linseed oil. It Is bound to be appre ciated sooner or later. Wherever a cheap pahi^rtl can be ?'itr.ir.cil ir. !arjc qusr.ti^Pt"f factu're of paint become not atone pos nible. but also practicable and profit aide, if there is a market for the ftnlati i'd nroduct. . , . ResideH the oil a pigment is required which can be had in Savannah, aa the sulphuric acid chambers consuming py rales, as a source of sulphur, waate large irmownts of iperoxide of Iron, w hich is the very beat pigment for me tallic palt^s, which are used in taor inous quantities by the great railway Httitciiis and their immense properties. This metallic paint Is also, largely qsefl ;,s a roof pain?, for which It is well adapted . The South has' also a number or paint pigment mine*. There are ?fverft' ochre, whiting and eavllne mines both iu C.eorgia and in Florida, there are Mls?, neveral baryta mines. Baryta I" extensively used as a substitute of white lead and when ground In oW xs ill) some whiting it forms a very cheap and serviceable white paint. Cotton seed oil. pale rosins and spirits of turpentine are all the raw material? nee. ssai'v for the manufacture of com i,i, ,n varnish, which ?rertalnly can be manufactured cheap .In Savannah a* the raw material Is found to be cheap, ?,s Savannah Is the largest naval store marked in lltf; world. I.arge sums of mono are sent off from the South to i.av for paint, which can ??e mapufac lured here to excellent advantage and hi * lesser cost. Nlskt. 1 Sy Anna Mcintosh Heville. Mystic In her stlv'ry whiteiiMu. .\iKhi comes on <Tpaee, With tho eresoeat moon In her waving hair Aiul the llKht of a woman's face. Hegal In her queenly splondor, With n star upon her bream, Shu 1* comlnft through the sll?>nce - ^ Thftt^'lrertm of perfect re?t. DO0US, SASH, blind's, Lumber. MM* ^ I wlth thorough <xvtti'UH Jttd 1 w? . *^in' 1 workmen ?<"> m??u(^tuiU?g ^ j t^e qu?<?i"'?=?- wtW*,#na' * . ?odVc?.UicUyhlgb *?d. good. 7tZ^^"^wa With *ny V.c.ory "V*" . van v?tu writ? to U. *? * AUOV?TA^n?BftCOM *UOI/tT*? ?*' WAS Tfan OANOBR HYrNOVIlKO. Til* K^raar*! D??gkt?r M1VM4 Ho> ^ ?i*tr Folk at RiokfeM. Klchfleld Springs, Aug, 18. ? At the first grand ball of the season in ' the K?r|ington Hotel hero tonight Mlba Abigail Spates, the daughter of a wealthy farmer of ?2ast Springfield ' Township, had an experience which Illustrates tho' folly of the bypnotlo orase. Since Miss Jennie Louise Howard, daughter of Vloe President Howard, of the Fourth^enUa Street Bank of New York City,* was acci dentally hypnotized In/ an amateur performance of "Trilby," the young people ot the- entire oountryslde and -the hMel- have talked "of }ittto else. Tonight the Theee Hundred of Rloh fleld assembled at a ball In the Barl lngton Hotel, the Argt general enter- j tain meat of the season. Only guests T of the hotels and well-known cottaf- v era were Invited. CA Nobody reoognlwd tlV exceedingly _ beautiful girl who walked Ihto the "ij ballroom, soon after the muslo began* ? on the arm of Stfirr Keller, a hand- * some young Rlohflelder. James Oas-" /' colne, president of the People's Bank of Brooklyn; P. J. Kennedy, a. New York publisher, George W. Smith, adopted son of Georfre F. Oilman, 'the mllionalro tea importer of " New York; ex-Judge A. B. Woodward, Charles Morris Smith and Vice Presi dent L. Beer. of. tho People's Bank, who were members of the floor com mittee, asked tho Identity of this lady who entered the main dining room, and promenaded slowly around through the arcades of >smllax and roses. no satisfaction, ^l^e .wealth and fashion ^>of half a dozen great American ^tttoa ware represented, -btft matrons and debutantes were all ^bciipsed by the unknown guest, whose deep blue eyes wore a strange look of abstract tori as she walked without speaking or turning to the right or left. Mr. Keller, who was smiling when he brought his beautiful companion Into the hall, looked worried fits tWy passed the orchestra. As they turn- ; ed the band struck up 'Ben BoH." set to waltz time, and in the dance, In which 200 couples Joined, the fair unknown was . conspicuous for her grace and abandon. The merriment was at its height, when, a* the mualc fell into a mlnor\key the strains of "Au Claire da Ja-/I*?ne" echoed plaintively down the hall, the Up*'"" known guest uttered _a. piercing shriek grid fell at full length on the boll* I room floor. In An Instant all. wag . confusion. Her lifeless body -^Wigs borne speedily out of the crowd. Dr. , Borland, the postmaster, who Is also a physician, was hurledly called ln,~ and diagnosed the case as catalepsy. Tho girl's form was rigid and her pupils set. Inquiry developed the YtyJt that the you/ig gi**l was the victim of kynotlo suggestion, that she had nevejr.-rfigd "Trilby," had never boaiT t?> a 'Mil ; before and actually had never wwttaed before in her life; that her father, Joshua Spates, te one of the rlehest ? farmers of Bast Springfield* and that she had been persuaded to come (a the Karllngton ball, although khe had not been out in evening dress In her life, . by a'vman who went off on" a ? Ashing excursion in that vicinity re cently and whose name is not now' given because criminal proceedings are to be begui^ against- him. It wa? |ie who Introduced the farmer's daugh ter. who turned out to be the belle of the Barllngton ball, to Starr* Keller,, . her escort, and who, having hypaotlg* ed the glri enrly In ?v*nlnf Am?k her to the hotel' Tn a closed carrfgflsi and borrowed the finery in whioh she was dressed. Special Sale. Special Prices. Special Terms great (Clearing sale. Three Hundred See1; Mil (I Churoti Organ*. from nolril in?k?r>, Kt Prime Cost to red no ntock. Mnat b? a. dil. Floor* hrmklk down. Can't rnrry tlwm tbrnuj;* dull miminrr. (tot too mitiiy, Price no object. 1'rotlt not ?*???? Midercil. Munt onload. KMwIcnt poftnibln term* for pm ment. Onlv ? l.?M?, #I.AO, HI. #:?. monthly. Ooe-hwlf ?kti<iI by buy ing now. ItarKitln fffi?et? K*?dy. Write for (hem. Mention thl? ftdvAjif luemtnt *n<l Paper, pDDENA-WfiS, Savannah, Ga Experiments in Qeorj show that the best cotton fertilizer should contain not le 8 3 to 4*/' Actual Potash1. Any failures to this crop can 4e traced to a deficiency of Potash in the fcrtiliiers used. We will gladly send you our pamphlets on the Use of Potash. Tj?7 m wm fcw. Jt.wffl ?m* fH ?>**?! ?? mi flMa.aaS l?f ?? mm <T?Omv * ' UBIUM.IAU.fMKlvlliMaSiMSSwTMh.