DR. TALMAGE'S SERMON: ‘Ihe Literature of the Dust, “Jesus stooped down and . . . . wrote on the ground.” John §: 6, A MOHAMMEDAN mosque standsnow where once stood Herod's temple, the scene of my text. Solomon's temple had stood there, but Nebuchadnezzar thundered it down. Zerubbabel’s tem- pla had stood there, but that hud been prostrated, Now we take our places in a temple that Herod built, because he was fond of great architecture, and he wanted the preceding tempies to seem insignificant, I’ut eight or ten modern cathedrals together and they would not equal that structure. It sovered nineteen acres, There were warble pillars supporting roofs of cedar, and silver tables on which stood golden sups, and there were caryings exquisite and inscriptions resplendent, glittering balustrades and ornamented gateways. The building of this temple kept ten thousand workmen busy forty-six years. In that stupendous pile of pomp and magnificence sat Chist, and a listening throng stood about Him, when A WILD DISTURBANCE took place, A group of men are pull- ing and pushing along a woman who had committed the worst crime against society. When they have brouglit her in front of Christ, they ask that He sentence her to death by stoning. They are a critical, merciless, disingenuous crowd. They want to get Christ into controversy and public reprebension. If He say “Let her die,’ they will sharge Him with cruelty. If lle let her go, they will charge Him with be- ing in complicity with wickedness. Whichever way He does, they would how! at Him, Then occurs a scene which has not been sufficiently regard. ad. He leaves the lounge or bench on which He was sitting and goes down on one knee, or both knees, and with the forefinger of His right hand He begins TO WRITE IN TLE DUST of the floor, word after word. But they were rot to be diverted or hinder- ed. They kept on demauding that He settle this case of transgression, until He looked up and told them that they might themselves begin the woman's assassination, if the complainant who had never done anything wrong him- self would open the fire, “Go aGead, but be sure that the man who flings the first missile is immaculate.” Then He resumed writing with his finger in the dust of the floor, word after word. Ine stead of looking over his shoulder to see what He had written the scoundrels skulked away. Finally, the whole place is clear of pursuers, antagonists and when Christ has finished this strange chirography in the dust. Xe looks up and finds the woman all alone, The prisoner is the only one of the court room left, the judges, the police, the prosecuting attorneys having cleared out, Chnst is victor, and He says to the woman: **Where are the prosecu- tors in this case? Are they all gone? Then I discharge you; zo, and sin no more,” I have wondered WHAT CHRIST WROTE on the ground. For do you realize that is the only time that He ever wrote at all? I know that Eusebius says that Christ once wrote a letter to Abgarus, the king of Edessa, but there is no good evidence of such a correspondence, The wisest being the world ever saw, and the one who had more to say than any one who ever lived, never writing a book or a chapter or a page or a para- graph or a word on parchment. Noth- ing but the literature of the dust, and one sweep of a brush or one breath of a wind obliterated that forever. Among all the rolls of the volumes of the first library founded at Thebes there was not one scroll of Christ, Among the seven hundred thousand books of the famous decree of Caliph Omar were used as fuel to heat the four thousand baths of the city, not one sentence had Christ petned, Among all the intini- tude of volumes now standing in the libraries of Edinburgh, the British Museum, or Berlin or Vienna, or the learned repositories of all nations, not one word written directly by the finger of Christ, All that He ever wrote He wrote in dust, uncertain, shifting dust, My text says He stooped down and wrote on the ground, Standing straight up a man might wrile on the ground with a staff, but if with his fingers he would write in the dust, he must bend clear over. Aye, he must get at least on one knee or he cannot write on the ground, Be not surprised that IE STOOPED DOWN His whole life was a stooping down, Stooping down from castle to barn, Stooping down {rom celestial homage to mobocratic jeer, From residence above the stars to where a star had to fall ‘to designate his landing-place, From heaven's Yront door to the world's back gate. From writing in round and silvered letters of constellation and galaxy on the blue scroll of heaven, to writing on the ground in the dust, which the feet of the crowd had left in Herod's temple. If in January you have ever stepped out of a prince’s con- servatory that had Mexican cactus and magnolias mm full bloom, into the out~ side air ten degices below wero, you may get some idea of Christ’s change of atwosphere fiom celestial to terres. trial. How muauy heavens there are I know not, but there are at least three, tor Paul was “caught up into, the third heaven,” Christ came DOWN FROM HIGHEST HEAVEN «0 the second heaven, and down from second heaven to first heaven, down Switler than meteors ever fell, down amidst stellar splendors that ‘himself th through gs y was no er = 40 w h' Ll thie waily hu, usb ITé had to come down before with His lip he could kiss it into quiet, Bethle- hem a stooping down. Nazareth a stooping down, Death between two burglirs a stooping down, Yes, it was in consonance with humiliations that had gone before, and with self abnega- tions that came after, when on that memorable day in Herod’s temple ie stooped down and wrote on the ground, Whether the words He was writing were In Greek or Latin or Hebrew, 1 :annot say, for He knew all those lan- guages, Dut HE IS STILL STOOFPING DOWN, and with His finger writing on the ground; In the winter in letters of crys. tals, in the spring in letters of flowers, in summer in golden letters of harvest, in autumn in letters of fire on fallen leaves. How it would sweeten up and enrich and emblazon this world, could we see Christ's caligraphy all over it This world was not flung out into space thousands of years ago, ani then left to look cut for itself. It is still under the divine care. Christ never for a half second takes Ilis hand off of it, or it would soon be a shipwrecked world, a defunct world, an obsolel? world, an abandoped world, a deal | world. “Let there be light,” was said at the beginning. And Christ stands under the wintry skies and says, Let there be snowflakes to enrich the earth; and under the clouds of spring and gays, Come ye blossoms and make re- dolent the orchards; and in September, dips the branches in the vat of beautiful colors, and swings them into the hazy alr,’ No whim of mine is this, *“With- out Him was not anything made that was made,” Christ’ writing on the ground, It we could see His hand in all the passing seasons, how it would illumine the world! All verdure and foliage would beallegorie, and again we would tear Him say as of old, “Consider the lilies of the field, bow they grow;" and we would not hear the whistle of a quail or the cawing of a raven or the roundelay of a brown-thresher, with- out saying, ‘‘Behold the fowls of the | air, they gather not into barns, yet | your heavenly Father feedeth them; | and a Dominic hen of the barnyard could not cl for her brood, yet we would hear Cuiist saying as of old, “How often wou d I have gathered thy | children together, even asa hen gathered her chickens under her wings,” and through the redolent hedges we would | hear Christ saying, **I am the rose of | Sharon; we could not dip the season- | ing from the salt-cellar without think. | ing of the divine suggestion, **Ya are the salt of the earth, but if the salt have lost its savor, it is fit for nothing but to be cast out and trodden under | foot of men.” Let us wake up from our stupidity and take THE i AS A PARABLE, | WHOLE WORLD Then, if with gun and pack of hounds we start off before dawn, and see the morning coming down off the hills to meet ns, we would cry out with the | evangelist, **The day spring from on high hath visited us; or, caught in a while struggling home, | covered with the whirling flakes, we would cry out with David, *Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.” In a picture-gallery of Europe there is on the ceiling an exquisite fresco, but peo- ple having to look straight up, It weari- ed and dizzied them, an] bent thelr | great looking-gluss was put near the floor, and now visitors only need to look easily down into this mirror, and they see the fresco at their feet, And so, much of all the heaven of God's truth is reflected in this world asina mirror, and the things that are above | are copied by things around us, What right have we to throw away He ever gave the race? We talk about the Old Testament and the New Testa- | ment, but the oldest Testament con- | the lessons of the natural world, Some people like the New Testament go well they discard the Old Testa ment, Shall we like the New Tela mel and the Old Testament so well as to vooreciate the oldest; namely, that which was written before Modes was put afloat on the boat of leaves which was calked with asphaltum; or reject the Genesis and the Revelation that were written centuries before Adam lost a rib and gained a wife? No, no; when Deity stoops down and writes on the ground, le* ts read it. I would have no leas appreciation of the Bible on paper that comes out of the paper- mill, but 1 would urge appreciation of TIE BIBLE IN THE GEASS, the Bible in the sand hill, the Bible in the geranium, the Bible in the aspho- del, the Bible in the dust. Some one asked an ancient king whether he had seen the eclipse of the sun. ‘*No,”’ said he, *‘1 have so much to do on earth, I have no time to look at heaven.” And if our faculties were all awake In the study of God, we would not have time to go much further than the first grass blade. I have no fear that natural religion will ever contra- dict what we call revealed religion. 1 have no sympathy with the followers of Aristotle, who, after the telescope was invented, would not look through it, Jest it contradict some of the theories of their gréat master, 1 shall be glad to put against one lid of the Bible the microscope, and against the other lid of the Bible the telescope, But when Christ stooped down and wrote on the ground, what did He write? The Pharisees did not stdp to examine. Ths cowards, whipped of their own consciences, fled psil-mell, Nothing will flay a man like an aroused consclence, Dr. Stevens, in his * His. tory of Methodism,” says ha when Rev, Benjamin AbUbott of olden times was preaching, he exclaimed: *“*For aught I know there may be a murderer In this house,” and a man rose in the assetb and started for the door, and bawled aloud, confessing to a mur. det he had committed fifteen years be- fore. And no wonder these Pharisees, reminded of their sins, took to their heels. Bat what did Christ. write on the ground? The Bible does not state, Yet, as Christ never wrote an except that once, you cannot blame us for wanting to know what He really did write. Int I am certain ale wrote ant. ‘And will yon allow me to say that I think I KNOW WHAT IIE WROTE on the ground? I judge from the cir- cumstances, He might have written other things, but kneeling there in the temple, surrounded by a pack of hypo- crites, who were a self-appointed con- stabulary, and having in His presence a persecuted woman, who evidently was very penitent for her sins, I am sure He wrote two words, both of them graphic and tremendous and reverber. ating. And the one word was Hypro- erisy, and the other word was Forgive HERS, From the way these Pharisees and scribes vacated the premises and got out into the fresh air, as Christ, with just one ironical sentence, unmasked them, I know they were first-class hypo- erites. It was then asit is now, The more faults and Inconsistencies people have of their own, the more severe and censorious are they about the fauls of others, Here they are-—twenty stout men arresting and arraigning one weak woman! Magnificent business to be engaged in! They wanted the fun of seeing her faint away under a heavy judieial sentence from Christ, and then after she had been taken outside the city and fastened at the foot or a pre- vipice, the Scribes and Pharisees want- vd the satisfaction of each coming and dropping a big stone on her head, for that was the style of capital punish ment that they asked for, Bome people have taken the responsibility of saying never laughed. But 1! think as he saw those men drop every- | thing, chagrined, mortified, exposed, | and go out quicker than they came in, HE MUST HAVE LAUGHED, of it. All of these libertines, drama- indignation against impurity! | Blind bats lecturing on optics! A flock of crows on their way up [roto a carcass, denouncing carrion! Yes, I think that | one word written on the ground that day by the finger of Christ was the | awful word Hypocr'sy. But I am sure there was another word in that dust, From her entire manner [ am sure that arraigned woman was repentent. She made no apology, and Christ in no wise belittled her sin. But her supplicatory behavior and her tears moved Him, aud when He stooped down to write on the perial word Forgiveness, When on Sinai God wrote the law, on chisel into the hard granite surface, | He writes 1b in dust so that it! He was nercifal Christ! I was reading of A LEGEND that is told in the far east about IHim, He was walking through the streets of | a dead dog. And one man said: “What | said another, **his ears are mauled and | bleeding.” *‘Yesa.” sald another, “even the tanner.” “Yes” said another, | ‘the odor of his carcass is dreadful,” | Then Christ, standing there, said :| “But pearls cannot equal the whiteness | of his teeth.” Then the people, moved by the idea that any one could find any- thing pleasant coacerning a dead dog, | “Why, this must be Jesus of Nazareth!” Reproved and convicted, they went away. Surely this legend of Christ is good enough to be true, Kind- ness in all His words and ways and Forgiveness! Word of eleven Jelter | names that one word, though He write it in to have our name cut into | monumental granite with the letters that the storms of a thousand years can- | Jishop Habinglon had a book of only three leaves, The first | leaf was black, the second leaf red, the The black leaf sag- gested sin; the red leal atonement; the white leaf purification, That is the | whole story, Gud will abundantly par- don, SYMPATHY WITH THE PENITENT, 1 must not forget to say that as Christ, | stooping down, with His finger wrote | on the ground, it is evident that His | sympathies are with this penitent woman, and that He has no sympathy | with her hypocritical pursuers, Just! opposite to that is the world’s habit. | Why didn’t these unclean Pharisees | bring one of their own number to | Christ for excoriation and capital pun. | ishment? No, no; they overlook that in a man which they damnate in a woman, And so the world has had for offending women scourges and objurgation, and for just one offence she bec ymes an out- cast, while for men whose lives have been sodomic for twenly vears, the world swings open its doors of brilliant welcome; and they may sit in legisla. tures and senates and parliaments, or on thrones, Unlike the Christ of my text, the world writes a man’s misdemeanor in dust, but chisels a woman's offence with great capitals upon ineffaceable marble, For foreign lords and princes, whose names cannot even be mentioned in re. spectable circles abroad because they are walking lazaretios of abomination, our American princess of fortune wait, and at the first beck sail out with them into the blackness and darkness forever. And in what are called higher circles of society there is now not ouly the imita- tion of foreign dress and foreign mane ners, but an imitation of foreign disso. luteness, I like an Englishman, and 1 like an American, but the sickest crea ture on _eartt is an American playing the Englishman, Society needs to be reconstructed on this subject, Treat them alike, masculine crime and femin- ine crime. If you cut the one hur faa. ite, cut them both. in granite, you write the one in dust, write them both in dust, No, no, says the world: let woman go down let man go up. What is that I bear plashing into the East River at midnight? and then there isa of and nothing trivial, of Dothing uOWPrE Ra £ ¥ a. 4 Fees Be of the dust. Tyis the MOST TREMENDOUS OF ALL TURE. It is the greatest of all libraries, When Layard exhumed Nineveh he was only opening the door of its mighty dust, The excavations of Pompell have only been the unclasping of the lids of a vol. ume of a nation’s dust, When Admiral Farragut and his friends, a few years ago, visited that resurrected elly, the house of Balbo, who had been cue of its chief citizens in its prosperous days, was opened, and a table was el in that house which eighteen hundred and ten years had been buried by voleaniec eruption, and Farragut and his guests walked over the exquisite mosaics and under the beautiful fresco, and it almost seemed like being entertained by those who eighteen centuries ago had turned to dust, Oh this mighty literature of the dust! Where are the remains of Senpacherib and Attila and Epaminon- das and Tamerlane and Trojan and Philip of Macedon and Julius Cmsar? Dust! Where are the heroes who fought on both sides at Ch®ronea, at Hastings, at Marathon, at Cressy, of the 110,000 men who fought at Agin- court, of the 230,000 men who faced death at Jeua, of the 400,000 whose armor zlittered in the sun at Wagram, of the 1,000,000 men under Darius at arbella, of the 2,641,000 men under Xerxes at Thermopyle? Dust! Where are the guests who danced the floors of the Alhambra or the Persian palaces of Ahasuerus? Dust! Where are the musicians who played, and the orators who spoke, and the sculptors who chiseled, and the architects who bulit, in all the centuries except our own? Dust] The greatest library of the world, that which has the widest LITER A~ most multitudinous volumes and the vastest wealth, 18 THE UNDERGROUND LIBRARY, It is the royal library, the continental library, the hemispheric livrary, the planetary library, the library of the opened, and all these scrolls unrolled, and all these volumes unclasped; and as easily as in our library or mine we take ord of the Resurrection pick up out of this Hbrary of dust every volume of the King’s palace, or in the prison Oh this mis bhty literature of the dust! It is not so wonderful, after all, that Christ chose, instead of an inkstand, the im- pressionable sand on the floor of an and wrote the awful plete forgiveness for repentant sinners, even Lhe worst, And now 1 can believe that which 1 A CANDLE IN THE WINDOW tered. The aged woman said to her, sald, “Why do you keep that light in the window?" The aged woman said: “That is to light my wayward daughter ten years ago, my hair has turued white, Folks blame me for worrying about her, but you see 1 am her mother, and sometimes, hall a dozen times your own, Why, how cold and sick you seem! Oh, my! can it be? Yes, you are Lizzie, my own lost child! Thauk again!” And what a time of rejoicing there was in that house that night! And Christ again stooped down, and in the ashes of that bearth, now lighted up, not more by the great biazing logs than by the joy of wrote the sams He bad written liberating words that high enough to let pass through it all on white horses, nostril to nosin to flank, A ———— , Hank English and American "hrases, The poorest Englishman has the lux- ury of burning soft coal, and his parlor or kitchen open-grate fire, with its playing flames, is in cheerfulness far beyond our glowing but flameless masses, They say over there ‘coals on sale,’ and not ‘coals for sale.” There is, in some respects, quite a difference between the “King's English” and the “President’s English.” For our *‘liv- ery stable,” they hang oul “‘cars on hire.”’ A pilcuer over there isa “jug.” the word “tumbler” for a glass Is Greek to them: baggage is “luggage; a roasting piece of beef Is a “joint,” and a streetcar isa “tram.” 1 asked a London “bus” driver once if he was going to the river, meaning the Thames, I do not think he had ever heard the word before as applicable to anything at or near London. The Thames in London is “Westminster,” ‘“‘Waler- loo,” “‘Blackfriars,”’ “London,” or some other bridge. They have forgot. ten there thal It ever was a river. Heo Put a Stop to It Ladies = i LL tl SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON, Buspar Marcu 10, 1859, The Ohild-Lake Spirit. LESSON TEXT. Mark 9: 3542. Memory verses, 30-37) LESSON PLAN. Moric OF THE QUARTER Muylty Worker, GoLpeN TEXT For THE QUARTEL: Belwve me that I am in the Father, ail the Futher in me: or else believe me joy the very works’ sake.—John 14 : 11. Jesus the ily. { 1. Advancement, va 23.35, %. Acknowledgm nt. vs, 85.40, 4 Reward, va. 26, 87, 41, 42. GoLpex Text: Whosoever shall not receive the kingdom of God as a little child. he shall not enter therein, —Mark 10 : 15. Dany Home READINGS: M.—Mark 9 ; 35-42. humility, T.—Matt, 18 :1 of the lowly, W.—Luke 9 : 46-50, est? T.—John 13: lowlinge 58, F.— Luke lowliness, Matt. 25 : the lowly. R-1 Jolin 1 3 with God. Lesson Outline: i The gain of €od’s care : }4, Who is great- in 1-17. A Yesson 18 9.14. Pride and S, 31-40. Rewarding 1-10. Fellow ship a a ~ LESSOR ANALYSIS I. ADVANCEMENT. L The Aspiring Disciples : They had disputed one with another «++» WHO Was greatest Who then is greatest in heaven? (Matt, 18: 1). There arose a reasoning. .... ald be 0:40 Lovding it over you i Pel. 5:3). Who loveth to have the among them (3 John 9). Il. The Effective Teacher: He sat down. and called oil. the ki BI Fel greatest (1a . { J the charge allotted to +} iid pre-eminence Lhe twelve: om life 443K {John § : 68). Never man so spake (Joh { 111. The Novel Lesson: If any man wou | 1ast of all (33), | He ths {4 Ix ; § oval IS grea servant [) i 23 : 11). SSE : 1 g Luke 0: 4 also oug to wash one i John 13 : 14). Ie YOurseives,. .. you (Jas, 4:10 “When he od them. | He that | same | Ye | feet | Hu is great of ‘ rhit not 1s Aik was in the | {1} The abode; (2) The company; (3) The conversation. -— {1} Privacy Ww “ But Cons th Jesus, they held their peace.” (1 that Jesus Knew: (2) Convinced that they had erred; (3) Ashamed at their detection, “Ie sat down, and called twelve; and be saith unto them.” The model teacher; (1) Seated in serenity: (2) Surrounded by p (3) Expounding the truth, II. ACKNOWLEDGMENT. . An Unknown Worker: We saw one casting out devils in name {38 .. Many which them (Luke 8 : 8). Others have laboured, and ye tered into their labour (John 4 : 38), us upils; by oLhers, ministered unto with me in the gospel (Phil. 4: 3). do minister (Heb, 6 : 10). LIL An Unwarranted Bebake: We forebade him, because he %ollow- od not us (33). My lord Moses, 11 : 281. Peter took him, and began to rebuke him (Matt, 16 : 22 Master, rebuke thy 19 : 30) Rebuke not an elder {1 Tim, 5: 1). HHL An Unmistakable Eadorsement, He that 18 nol against us is for us (40). 1 have pot found so great faith, no, not in Israel (Matt. B : 10). O woman, great is thy faith 15 : 28). Well done, good and faithful servant (Matt. 256 : 2). Come, ve blessed of my 25 : 34). wr} forbid them (Num. disciples (Luke { Matt, er; (2) A noble work; (3) A divine helper. 2. “We forbade him, because he fol lowed not us,” (Religious intoler- ance: (1) Quick to detect; (2) Ready to condemn; (3) Shallow in jusiifi- sation, 3. “He that is not against us is for us.’ (1) For, or against, in decds, (2) For, or against, in destiny, 111 REWARD, 1. Fellowship with the Son: Whosoever shall receive one of such, J+ «sTeceiveth me (35%). He that receiveth you Matt, 10 : 40), Whuso shall receive one such little child «++ «TOCEiveth me (Matt, 18 : 5). As ye did it unto one of these. ...ye did it unto me (Matt, 25 : 40), Our fellowship is with... . his Son Jesus Christ (1 John 1: 8). 11. Fellowship with the Father: Whosoever receiveth me, receiveth «++ «him that sent me (87), He that receiveth me receiveth him that receiveth me 3:5 sent me (Matt, 10 : 40), He that believeth on believeth. ... on bim that sent me (John 12 : 44). Ae, will cote inte hitn, and. Jugke our with him (John 14 : 23), Our fellowship is with the Father (1 John 1:3). 1H. Superadded Honors: He shall in no wise lose his reward (Matt, 6:6). » Your reward is great in heaven (Luke 6:23). If any man serve me, him will the Father honor (John 12 : 26) My reward is with me, to render to each man (Rev. 22 : 12). 1. “Whosoever shall receive one of such receiveth me,” (1) Recelv- ing Christ's little ones; (2) Receives jng Christ bimself.—{1) Little deeds of kindness; (2) Great doers of blessing. 2. “A cup of waler to drink.” (1) An unpretentious gift; (2) A high mo- tive; (3) A limitless result, 3. “It were better for him,”’ (1; The deed supposed; (2) The fate prefer- i red.—(1) The offense; (2) The of- fender; (3) The penalty. — iim LESSON BIBLE READING, THE GAIN OF THE LOWLY. They shall be honored (Prov. 18 : 20 128; Mark 9 : 35). The shall inherit the earth (Matt, 5:5). They shall possess the kingdom (Matt, God respects 08 : 2). God hears them (Psa, 9 : 12:34 : 6). God lifts them up (Jas, 4:10 ; 1 Pew, 5 +0) The Jus, 4 xod dwells with them Isa 15}. i ———— 12, | . hi. them (Psa 108 : Wy receive more grace (Prov, 3 : 34; 1 6). oo wi LESSON SURROU A week afler the eon Caesarea Philippi the Tran occurred (Mark 9 : 2.8) recorded intervening, and therefore probable that the time spent in comparative retirement, { indeed, as some would bave 1, Mou | Tabor was the scen bras oral tion, the week must have been mai occupled with the comparatively lo: journey thither, But Mount Hermon is the probable locality, being near to Caesarea Philipp | Gay after that event the lunat { was healed, the miracle being | fully narated by Mark (Mark 9 : 14 i After this there was a journey t} Galilee, during which there was j other prediction of the Passion 19: 30-3 Immediately apernaum, Matthew which the paytwent of 8 as Le e of the nore al- Mark ar risers gd: SU-G21, aller the { rival at « | the miracle Ly he * half-shekel” temple tax was pro- vided for (Matt, 17 : 24-27). The les- { son follows at once (*‘in that hour,” Matthew), The place was Capernaum; the time | probably about two weeks after the last lesson, in the late summer, or early | autumn, of the year of Rome 782 (A, | DD. 20), shortly before the feast of taber- { nacles (John 7). Parallel passage: Matthew 18: 1.6 that evangelist giving, however, a much longer report of the discourse o; i that occasion). i 4 Assen— II A ———— Kleptomania Is Increasing. A wave of kieptomania is passing over New York city. Every day the | advertisements cry aloud for the “lady and gentleman who took a geld headed | umbrella’ from one of the theaires, or for *‘the lady who borrowed a cauary, i blind in one eve, from a bind shop. | The dry goods stores wre the scene of | most of these pillerings. “Few of them become public,” | the manager of a leading house, | we suffer few losses in the end.” “How do you avoid them?” “To begin with, almost every reai | kleptomaniac in the city is known to us, | Many of them move in the best society. | We instruct our girls to keep a strict i watch on them, and if they take any- thing from the counters, we send a | bill for it to their friends.” “Why should pot their friends return the articles?” “Someiunes they however, they pay about it.” “Do you | cases?" “1 know a lady who in church is liable to putloin even the ornaments of | the altar, and another who, at table, if | she can find nothing more attractive, | has been seen to fill ber pockets with { bread crumbs,” | “What do Kkleplomaniacs | steal?’’ { *“*Anything that glitters. A shining | object is always the (rst to draw their said “and As say do. and a rule, nothing with meet any serious usually attention. Photographs, toe, have | much the same influence, We have | sometimes missed an entire stock of | some actor or actress, for whom there { was no particular demand, and have | found it long afterwards in the posses. sion of a kleplomaniac.” | “Is kleptomania more common av | one season than another?” | “We generally look fur it in the fall. it is like any other form of lunacy.” “Yes,” said a physician, “it isa kind | of lunacy, and a much abused kind of lunacy 10, Epileptics are subject to (it. Persons with abnormally shaped bands are subject to it. Some maniacs who are beyond reproach in their lucid moments have the impulse 0 secrete their food or to steal small oljects in the asylum, I have read of a man who would not eat unless his food was stol- en; of a docwor who could not help stealing from his patients; of a clergy- man who delighted in purloining bits of candle, and of a mau who, at the int of death, stole the snuff box of 1s confessor.’ “Can there be an epidemic of klept- omania?”’ “Certainly. If you go to an asylum you will find that one year is neted for religious madness, another for criminal madness,