I X 10 always formed the greater part of her lan guage to him. "I'll he true to you," he said, looking ardently into the girl's eyes. "I swear I'll be true to you forever." And at that moment he meant to be. CHAPTER IL Summer had gone aud New York was starting upon its hibernal excitements with its accustomed zeal. The French actress, Clarice Binauld, arrived in New York. One day tne managing editor of the journal for which Deniing wrote, entered his office. "You could make a great Btory out of a talk with her," he said, looking out of the corner of his eye at Deming. The latter did not reply. Interviewing was not a part of his work, and he had that permissible professional egotism of believ ing that his time was too valuable to use in writing picturesque accounts of French actresses. But alter a good deal of delicate insinuation the managing editor obtained Deming's promise of an interview for the next Sunday's paper. He went up to "Weft's apartment that afternoon. "If you dare laugh at me I'll slay you," he said to his friend. "I've come to ask you to take me up to the hotel where Binauld is stopping and present me to her." "West lighted a cigar with his usual tan talizing dehberateness. "So soon?" he said between the puffs. "Oh, bosh 1" said Deming, "he sensible, Jack, do for heaven's sake. Castor has pre vailed upon me to make a story about the creature for next Sunday, and I want to have a decent introduction to her, so I've come to you. "Will you take me to her?" "I'll do it, Jerome," replied West, "but, mark mv words, it's the end of you." He went to his wardrobe and got his hat and stick. Deming looked out of the high -window down on to the avenue. He was nervous and irritable, he could not say why. He had been at the office all day, and felt grimy and pulled down. He was not in a humor to talk to a woman. He helped him self to some whisky from a decanter that sat on "West's table, and shuddered after swal lowing it. When he glanced at himself in the mirror he noticed that he was very pale. He swept his hand up through his damp hair, and told West he was feeling tired. "But, come along," he shouted with a reckless toss of the head. "I've got myself in a fine mood for seeing your wonderfnl French devil. I'll promise you to dominate the scene every moment we are with her.'" West saw clearly enough that his Iriend was exhausted by close confinement and overwork. Deming had been up all the night before worrying over a manuscript that he was getting ready for a magazine. His eyes were dilated, his mouth set un naturally tight, his face as white as marble. "But handsomer than ever," said West to himself as they went out into the avenue and walked uptown together. On reaching the hotel West took one of his visiting cards from his pocket and wrote something under his name. In a few mo ments the bell boy who took this card up stairs, returned with directions to come to Miss Binauld's parlors. There were several people in the rooms when the two were ushered in by a quiet looking woman, who was evidently the actress' maid. Deming was conscious of a number of voices as he penetrated the nar row private hall behind West, and then he found himself in a large, conventional hotel parlor. There were figures of men sitting about. A woman rose from the opposite side of the room and advanced toward the newcomers. Her hand was outstretched, ler quick moving limbs stirred her heavy dress noisily, her voice broke the sudden stillness with a firm, musical, beautiful vibration. "You, Monsieur West? Ah! but I am glad to see you once again. No one in America could be more welcome." There was an accent, Jar to) faint to repro duce in print. It was a beauty added to the XngKsh language. Deming heard the sound of West's reply to the actress's greet ing, but did not make out what he said. His eyes were fixed on Binauld. With one comprehensive glance he measured her. She was glorious. Her hair drooped in a cloud the color of burnished copper over her brows and down over one ear. Her face was pale, but pure in its pallor, and her wonderful eyes glowed like coals against it. Her mouth Deming actually trembled when he sawthe curl of those blod red lips. There was an expression on them which was either the sneer of a devil or the smile of an angel, he could not have said which. Be side these details of the woman's over whelming loveliness Deming was conscious that she was tall, square-shouldered, and held her perfect head thrust forward somewhat like a defiant animal. Suddenly he became conscious of West's Toice repeating his name, and then he felt those burning eyes turn themselves upon him. They gazed, and gazed, and gazed. The head was raised to to its full height and the actress drew in her breath. Then she extended her hand. "Monsieur!" That is all she said Deming took her warm fingers, and the touch of them brought him to bis senses. He said something about the honor of meeting so famous a woman, and then offered his hostess a chair, taking one for himself by her side. He stated the professional import of his visit, throwing in the information that he only consented to interview the actress because he knew the duty would provide so much pleasure for himself. The actress had not noticed any one beside the young critic since she had first looked at him. Even West found himself instantly ignored. She had fast ened her dreamy and fairly glaucous eyes npon Deming's face as though she wonld devour him. Deming had recovered his composure, and was soon, as he had prom iced West he should be, master of the situ ation. It was an excitement for him to sit face to face with this magnificent creature nnd feel that he was proot against her wiles. He had been overcome for a moment by her exceeding beautv, but now he was easy and indifferent, and he knewthat she realized it. But suddenly her manner changed, and she turned her attention to a tall man witb a sandy beard who had been sitting very stiffly and gloomily on a sofa over against the wall. "Oh, Count," she said gayly; "I am afraid we shall miss onr drive should we not start at once." "The Russian lover," whispered West into Deming's ear. There was no reason why a spasm of jeal ousy should have shot through Deming's breast at that instant, but there did. He rose quickly and asked his hostess' pardon for detaining her. Again those wonderful eves turned themselves upon him, and now (J ,- f ,. ? 1 !11 i -- . I ne leu nimsei. once more in at case, w est crossed the floor to speak to the Count. The other occupants of the room it ere busily conversing. The actress gazed without speaking at Deming, and he grew hot and cold as he stood there waiting for her to bid him good afternoon. Belore he was aware of what he was saying he asked if he might call again. "Why would you care to?" asked the actress. "Well, to know you better," replied Dem ing, mechanically. She seemed to become provoked after this, and said quickly, "No, Monsieur, it is unnecessary to call again." Deming was made angry by these words, and flushed up to his hair, stepping quickly as though he had received a blow that he was unable to return. He was about to leave the room without further farewell, when he felt his hand taken by this strange woman, felt her warm, sleepy "gaze in his eyes once more, and heard her say in a voice as soft as the tone of a bell: "Yon must come again, Monsieur. To morrow at this hour. Shall I expect you?" He looked down at her, and the light in her eyes flooded him till he seemed in a fire. He clutched her hand in both of his, bent down till he was within an inch of that rad iant mouth, and then he heard her whisper: "Careful, Monsieur Deming." Her eves looked langnishingly into his. He could feel her breath squarely on his mouth. "You will come to-morrow?" she whis pered. "Yes," he replied. And then lifting her hand he made as though to kiss the tips of the fingers, but turned it quickly and pressed his lips on the center of its moist palm. As West bade the actress good afternoon, she said to him; ' "Monsieur Deming is audacious and handsome. I like him." ' As the two friends walked down the ave nue together Deming was silent and moody. West did not ask him what he thought of the Frenchwoman. They said goodby to each other at the corner of Deming's street, "Caught, by George!" exclaimed West when he was alone. Deming sent a note to Madge Maynard that night, saying he shonld be so busy writing that he would be unable to call; and the poor girl cried herself to sleep with that note clasped against her neck. CHAPTEB III. Deming did not go to seo Binauld the next day, as he had promised. He longed to do so despising himself as he realized how much he longed to do so hut the spirit eyes or Madge conquered the devilish ones of the French woman, and he stayed away. The next Monday night he and Madge attended the first appearance of a yonng American actress, who came in at the Mur ray Hill theater for two weeks previous to the debut of Binauld. Deming noticed the manager of the bouse, Sulzenheim, sitting with his wife in the lower proscenium box on the right They were both directing their conversation to some one who sat be hind the draperies of the box, entirely ob scured from the audience. After the first act Sulzenheim caught Deming's eye and Bowed graciously toward him. In another minute an usher came down the aisle and, touching the critic on the arm, said that the manager would like to see him in the lobby. Deming excused himself from Madge and joined Sulzenheim. "My dear young friend," said the latter, in a caressing voice, taking Deming's arm; "I have a strong desire that you shall meet my wife. She is a great admirer of your writing, and I want her to see what a good fellow you really are." And'he pushed Deming around the curve of the lobby toward the box. The journal ist) was thoroughly annoyed, but he saw no way out of the situation without deliber ately 'snubbing the manager, and this he could not bring himself to do. So be per mitted himself to be led, a most unwilling captive, into the presence of Mrs. Sulzen heim. As the door of the box swung open he heard a voice from within that thrilled him, and he started back as though he had seen a ghost. Sulzenheim still held his arm, and when he felt this sudden spasm agitate Deming, he clutched him tighter, not understanding the cause of it "Why, what ails you, my boy?" said he, drawing him quickly into the box. There was no escape then, for both the women were looking at him. "Oh nothing," said Deming in answer to Snlzenheim's question. "I only stumbled, that was all." And then he turned toward Mrs; Sulzenheim, awaiting a presentation. This over, he recognized the introductory words that the manager passed between him and the other occupants of the box, with: "I have had the honor of meeting Miss Binanld on a former occasion." "Yes," responded Clarice, raising her warm, dreamy eyes to his face, "Monsieur Deming and I have met on one former occa sion. She took no further notice of him then. pretending to read her progamme, as though it was to be supposed that the young man was there only to talk to Snlzenheim's wife. The latter was a sweet-faced, motherly-looking Jewess, and she told Deming in quiet, sincere words how glad she was to meet one whom she had long regarded as the most en, tertaining writer on the daily press. Deming thanked her somewhat impatiently, while Snlzenheim sat to one side seconding his wife's opinions and scoffing at the modest deprecation that the young man made to her compliments. Deming did not doubt the motive of the lady's praises, but he had strong suspicions of the manager. When the latter attracted his wife's attention a moment later, and engaged herin alow-toned conversation, Deming believed that he saw the entire driit of the old man's plans. He could not now escape the necessity of talk ing to Binauld. He hesitated a moment whether or not to get up and make his adieus, but decided to the contrary, and then took a chair by the side of Clarice. She did not raise her eyes from her pro gramme, and there was not a suggestion of consciousness of him or herself in her atti tude or the expression of her face. He again recognized the infinite beauty of this woman. It made his pulse beat faster, and his heart fairly fluttered against his throat Her hair "in the dim light of the box looked nearly black. The cheek, brow and neck were like marble beneath it The corners of her eyes had the very slightest upward slant, like a woman in an Egyptian portrait, and the long velvety lashes, as they lay heavily against her cheeks produced the illusion ot sleep, almost of death. "Miss Binauld." No movement whatever. "Miss Binauld." "I heard you, monsieur. Why do you not say what you wish?" Deming remembered at that moment, strangely enough, that such an answer as this lroui Madge would have angered him. He wondered why from this woman the words should not have a similar effect. "I only wanted to tell you," he said, "that I am very glad to meet you again." The long lashes swept upward, nnd Dem ing could think of nothing but night giving place to day; Her lips were wreathed into a maddening sneer, and there was a heavy, stormy light in her eyes. She looked long and hard at Deming an effulgent,hsughty, offended queen. "Those words of yours are commonplace, Monsieur Deming. They never meant any thing from anyone, and from you they are a lie." "They are the trnth," he said, "and you have no right to say they are not" And he leaned forward toward her, determined to meet her in her own angry mood. The fire of both their eyes met and mingled. And the sparks fell into their hearts. "You humiliated me,"said Binauld, gaz ing steadily at him. "How?" he asked. "You did not come as vou said, and von spoiled ray drive." "Your drive? Oh!. With the Eussian?" "Monsieur!" Deming thought she hissed like a cat Her eyes dilated and then con tracted again, and her teeth were tight set "Monsieur le Comte does not enjoy being put aside in that way?" went on Deming in a hard, sarcastic tone. "He was angry with you?" "Monsieur Deming, I do not know that I ever gave you cause to insult me." "You were blaming me for what you con sidered a brutality. And you ought to know my reason for not coming to see yon. I am never second. Miss Binauld." Deming was fully aware of the fearful implication of these words as he uttered them. They were not the result of youthful indiscretion, but of very mature delibera tion. He felt by this time the danger of this woman's influence over him, and a strange, awful desire to say what she could not forgive, so that he should be ordered , never to speak to her again, came over him. I Their Flrtt Quarrel. wmmEiEMmm OTHE? He would not admit to her how be, had struggled against the temptation of seeing her again. He was angry, aggressive and nervous and yet he wanted to sit there aud look on her face forever. She did not reply to his last words, as he expected she would. She cast her lashes down and her lips quivered, pathetically. Deming could not bear this. He leaned close to her and whispered: "Forgive mel I was a brute, a cad. Why should 1 expect to be first! Why should 1 expect to be anything to you. the most beau tiful woman alive? Only let me be near you, so that I may look into your face and be blessed. That is all I ask." Again she looked at him with her splendid eyes, and in his face read the confession of her triumph. "You are very changeable, Monsieur," she said. "A moment ago you were scold ing me, insult" "Ah, don't," broke in Deming, impetu ously. "A jealous man is a beast, and his words should not be weighed and charged against him by the woman he " "Stop, Monsieur!" "You refuse to let me say it?" "Yes. Why should you 'want to when, vou can only be second?" "Clarice!" "Don't forget, Monsieur le Comte." "Clarice!" "He drives with me each day." "And he" "Dines with me each night" "And he" "The curtain is going np. Monsieur." "May I come to see you to-morrow?" asked Deming, still looking intently at her averted lace. "Oh! I have a little supper at my hotel after the play. That will be earlier than to-morrow. "Will vou come?" "Who is to be th"ere?" "Three friends beside yourself. Shall you come?" "Yes." Deming went back to Madge feeling like a cur. She welcomed him with her sweet smile, and asked if he had a pleasant talk with the manager. He was very silent, and as he nnd Madge drove home in a cab after the play she took bis hand in hers and asked if anything had gone wrong. He put i.is face down against her shoulder aud said nothing was the matter, but, as he spoke, it almost seemed as though he had difficulty to suppress a sob. ' After leaving Madge at her house he was driven to a neighboring hotel, where he wrote his review of the play he had seen and sent it by messenger to the newspaper office. Ten minutes later he was ushered into Clarice's parlors. The brilliantly lighted drawingroom was empty. In the center a table was set, and four chairs were drawn up to it Deming regretted that he should be the first arrival. Presently, in such bewildering splendor of costume that the journalist was fairly stunned as he gazed upon her, Clarice en tered from an adjoining room, and swung forward to meet her guest, with her hand held out to him and bcr head drooping, in the way he had before noticed. Her arms and neck were bare and supremely beauti ful. Her flesh was the whitest and bright est this young man had ever seen, and the remarkable tinting of her hair, eyes and mouth was brought out vividly by contrast In her small ears, which were half concealed by her hair, were diamonds, around her throat were diamonds, around her arms, her fingers and on her breast gleamed starry gems without numoer. .ueming would have thought any other woman over dressed. But diamonds could not exist for him where this glorious creature's eyes were shining. .The supper passed spiritedly, and at the end of its two hours' duration, all the guests de parted save one, who lingered as though under a spell. "Imustgo,"saidDeming,springingtohis feet "Yes," she replied, "it is getting verv late." And as she spoke she rose from the table and erossed the floor to the mantle. She placed one elbow on the shelf and leaned her head against her hand. The diamonds seemed to fall in a shower of sharp lights over her shoulders. Arose flush was on her cheeks, and a mellow light gleamed from under her lowered lashes, as she looked toward Deming, waiting for him to bid her good night He would not look directly at her, for he was afraid to, but he was nevertheless aware of the grand picture that she made as she stood there. He was awkward in his movements and speech, as he edged toward the door with his hat and stick. He tried to call up a vision of Madge tried to think of her asleep at that moment and dreaming of him. He believed he had said the last necessary good night, and was about to pass out of the door, when his eye caught sight of a photograph of the Russian Count which stood in a frame on the mantel, al most touched by Clarice's arm as she leaned there. Impulsivelyr and without Knowing why or how he did it, he crossed the room like a shot, clutched the picture from its place and dashed it on the hearthstone at the actress' feet. Then he stood with lowered head, glaring at Clarice, but trem bling like a frightened animal. "Do you love him?" he asked her delib erately and with a terrible intensity. "No," she replied, and she fell back, away from Deming, as though she feared his excitement, and yet she still bathed him in the fire of her gaze. He came nearer and nearer to her, and she leaned back against the mantel to keep her 'face from being met by his. He took both her hands, followed her arms up to her shoulders, and pressed steadily nearer to her until his mind reeled in an odor like rose leaves; and as be gath ered her to him, he felt that he had clutched a great armful of flowers, and was burying his face in their sweetness. He was aware beyond this of nothing but her eyes gazing on him without anger. "Clarice," he trasped, trying to extricate himself. "I must go. I must; I must" She clung to him, weeping, and between her sobs repeated over and over her words: "I love you." And Madge, off in her quiet room, had awakened, and uttered a prayer for the hap piness of the man whose wife she was to become. CHAPTEB IV. The night ot the debut of Clarence Bin auld at Murray Hill Theater was at hand, and such an audience as only widely adver tised foreign stars can call together had gathered to see the woman whose beauty and art had been a theme for the newspapers dnring months. The boxes hold clusters of richly attired women, and men who were leaders in various professions and in society. The house fluttered with gay colors and ex pectant faces. In the seats along the confer aisle were all the best critics, assembled like a jury to condemn or vindicate the women on trial. The ushers were rushing about trying to getall the people into their places, and the air was filled with the rustle of gowns and programmes and the hum of conversation Madge had not accompanied her lover to the performance, because it was necessary for him to go directly from the theater to the newspaper office after the play, as he wished to write an unusually elaborate review. Besides, be wanted to be alone. In those two weeks since that fatal supper he had been tortured night and day by the conflict between his insane, irresistible pas sion for Clarice and his honest love for Madge. The curtain rose, and the play of "Camille" began. Presently the audience became aware of the approach of Marguerite Oauthier, the heroine, and a quiver of ex citement went over the house like a breeze ver a lake. There was the sound of musi cal laughter from behind the, scenes, and then Clarice appeared in the entrance at the back of the stage. With perfect com posure, her lashes dreemily lowered, her head drooping, just as Deming had seen her so often in her own rooms, she rwung down the stage as though she meaut to triumph from the start For an instant there was a rumor of astonishment at the picture that the actress made, some man in the back part of the house actually -breaking out with a prolonged "O-h-h!" And then the applause burst from hands to throats, and the air was filled with a roar of admiration. In his suppressed excitement Deming bit bis lip till the blood came into his month, and PITTSBURG ISPATCB, clutched his ehair with both hands. He felt that all this acclamation was for what belonged to him. He knew that as she stood there she was thinking only of how she appeared in his eyes. Had she not told him how she should feel how she only wanted him'to be proud of her? And there she was eclipsing even his fairest memories of her, looking divine, and the world aflame at her splendor. The applause died gradually away, and the play went on. Within five minutes the audience began to doubt the actress. She did not seem to he well enough acquainted with her lines, and her acting consisted of very little beyond the merely graceful walk with which she had entered and the pleasant music of her voice. At the end of tjhe first act the house remained silent Deming stayed in his seat and studied the manner of the audience. He heard a man behind him say that the actress had cer tainly not done anything very remarkable yet An unpleasant dread took possession of him, and he remembered the words that Jack West had said to him four months ago. Suppose she would indeed fail? What coula he say of her? At the end of the second act a hum of disapproval was distinctly audible in the house. Clarice had displayed a most noticeable weakness. As she worked tow ard the climax she became awkward and at last lost control of herself entirely. Her voice grew hard, her gestures stiff and crude, and she ruined the scene by such unnatural and amateurish action that the audience groaned when the curtain fell. She had already made an irretrievable failure. She was a bad "actress. Demincr went into the lobby. .Everyone who spoke to him emphasized the disap pointment that they felt in the French star. Sulzenheim came up to him, has face cov ered with perspiration, and grasped his hand. "Is there any hope for her, Deming?" he asked in an almost tearful voice. Deming could not reply. "Ah, save her, save her for my sake," said Sulzenheim. "She's in for a month, and I'll lose a fortune on her. Let her down easy, myvboy, if you love.me." And the manager went bustling off to in terview the other critics. The verdict was general. On every side Deming heard words of disappointment, often ot disgust The only mitigation was the constant ejaculation: "But isn't she beautiful!" He went back to his seat wondering it she could be made a success of on the score of this beauty alone. But as the play went on he was forced to believe that nothing conld save her. He marvelled at the possibility of a woman of her intense feeling and phys ical oharm being so utterly incompetent She ruined every familiar scene by her weakness or her absurd over-acting, and during the death scene her struggles with the part were pitiful to behold. Had the audience been less refined, and considerate there would have been hisses when the last curtain fell; but. as it was, the people filed silentlv out of the theater, half sympathiz ing with the poor woman for having made such an exhibition of her shortcomings. Deming was dazed with anger and despair. He rushed up to a little fellow named Van Erckstein, a hack writer whom he knew, told him be was taken suddenly ill, and asked him to review the actress and send down his copy to the office. He could not bring himself to blast the woman he loved, as his duty demanded. But Van Erckstein had an engagement within 15 minutes which couldn't be broken. Deming gazed wildly about for some war to escape the task that confronted him, but to no purpose. The audience faded away, and he soon found himself standing alone on the steps of the theater. He rushed into a barroom near by and drank a glass near! v filled with whisky. Then he hailed a cab, and ordered the driver to take him to the news paper office." Over the rough pave ment be was jolted for some 20 minutes, the lights dancing in bis half-closed eyes, the liquor he had drank creeping hotly into his blood. He ran up the stairs of the newspaper building and closed the door behind him when ne reached his private office. He could hear the steady rumble ot the presses in the basement of the build ing. The cry for "copy" came down through the tubes from upstairs. He dashed into his work as though he was mad to free himself of it. For a half hour his pen scratched over the paper with scarcely anv cessation. At last he threw it down. started to his feet, and pressed his hands over his forehead, swaying to and fro, as though he were in pain, Then he gathered the sheets nf paper from his desk, opened his office door, and called, "Willie!" A small boy in his shirt sleeves came running toward him. "Cony, Mr. Deming?" he inquired, with a bright smile. "Yes, Willie, in a hurry," replied Dem ing. And then, as he went back to the room: "I'm even anxious now that it shouldn't miss getting in." He went down to the cab and ordered the driver to go to Clarice's hotel. As he en tered her parlor she flew across the floor and flung her arms about his neck, crying, and telling him that she had made a failure, and now he would not love her any more. He sat down with her beside him, and at tempted to quiet her by saying that she had not failed, because the "whole town had gone mad over her loveliness. On the table was an empty champagne bottle. - "I had it with my maid," she said, as Deming's eyes lingered on it. "I was so nervous I could not keep up. Ah, Jerome, I wanted you to be proud of me. I wanted to succeed only to make you love me more." "I couldn't "do that," he replied, fondly. "I dropped in only to say goodnight," and with a kiss he left her. At 10 o'clock the next morning the cur tains were unavailing in their efforts to keep the broad light ot the sun out of Clarice's rooms. As the clock on the mantle tinkled softly Deming appeared in one of the door ways, and glanced anxiously about him. At the table in the middle of the room sat Clarice with her head bowed on her arms. He advanced noiselessly toward her and looked over her shoulder. His eye caught the heading of the review he had written the night before. She had surely read it, and knew now what a traitor he had been. He stood motionless for a long time, and' then put his hand on Clarice's shoulder. 'Dearest!" he said softly. A scream rang through the rooms, and Clarice stood before him with blazing eves. her teeth set like a . vice. Her face wasj nvio anu iter long, wiiuiy-iosseu nair gave her the appearance of a fury. She glared at her lover like a tigress, her breast heav ing violently, and fearful little cries, like a dog in tho leash will utter, escaped from her as she stood panting there. Then she threw herself headlong at Deming, and, with frightful curses, tried to tear his face with her bands. He threw his arms about her, pinning hers against her body. She writhed and cursed, and then, finding her self unable to rend him with her nails, she sought to bite him. He spoke to her, called her tender names, but she fought on and on, until nnaiiy she leil oaclc exhausted, and lie laid her on the lounge, overcome by hysterics. He sat in a chair beside her, and, ai she wept, he thought of what his vile in fatuation had brought him to, and how de based he would seem in the eyes of all de cent people if they could know what sacri fices he had committed for a woman who had a heart like a wild beast's. He went to the table and read what he had written, and then what the other critics said. His review was the harshest of all. It did not even mention her beauty. It only said, in such terms as no writer but Deming was capable of, that Clarice Binauld did not command the slightest dramatic ability, and that the promises made concerning her were lies o the most groundless character. Clarice stopped her wild lamentations after a time, and fixed her insane eyes on her lover as he sat reading. He looked up, and returned her gaze for a long while with out speakiug. "Would you have liked to kill me?" he asked finally. "Yes," replied Clarice. "Kill you, kill you. as you have killed me." "Was I not bound to tell the truth' for my paper?" "I do not know. Monsieur, what you felt yourself bound to do. You have acted like a villain. How did you dare come to me after writing a death warrant like that?" V SIItmfTOTTST. Deming could not answer, and Claries kept her eyes .fastened on him. She stag gered to her feet after awhile, and, leaning against the table, she began speaking delib erately and haughtily. "Monsieur Deming, you have treated me as basely as man ever treated a woman, and now you shall-feel what revenge I can have on you. You are to be married to a young lady who thinks you are an honest gentle man. ' Not only she, but the whole world, shall know that Monsieur Jerome Deming has been unjust to Clarice Binauld because Clarice refused Monsieur Deming's proffers of love." Deming sprang to her side, and grasped her by the wrist "You will never do that," he said, look ing menacingly atSier. She shrugged her shoulders, and returned his threatening look without fear. "But I will," she replied, sneeringly. "You have no proof of such a charge." "I have 60 ot your letters. I can select enough to prove what I want" "You are a -friend," he said, throwing her from him. "And you are a coward. Monsieur," she replied, folding her arms. He took up his hat and started for the door. While his back was turned Clarice's face grew tender, and she took a step toward him with her arms outstretched. But when he faced her she had recovered herself and was as unapproachable as before. "Clarice, he said, in a softer voice than he had previouslv used, "when you are quieter and have tfiought this over I think you will act like a woman about it. We have had a dream, a beautiful dream together, but you and I both knew it had to eud, and it looks as though it had ended now. I shall rely upon you not to take the course you threatened. If you will permit it we will still be friends, and I shall do all I can to help you and make you happy while you are here. But you know my po sition, and knew it when we began our friendship. I have been unjust and untrue to the girl who trusts in all I do, and you I believe Clarice, you will not find it possi ble to break her heart Can I come here again as a friend? "No, Monsieur!" gssped Alice, her breast heaving and her eyes filling. "Will you say goodby?" "No. You will hear from me again you and your trusting sweetheart" He bowed and went awav, leaving her standing there, with wrath blazing from her moist eves and her face as white and fearful as death. When his footsteps died away down 'the hall she fell prone on the floor, and cried as only a strong woman with a broken heart can cry. CHAPTEB v. In his heart Jerome Deming forgave Clarice at once for her insane outburst of passion, and he felt that if she should carry out the revenge which she threatened it would be no more than he deserved. He considered generously enough the pitiful- ncss or her position as a dramatic failure, and of her humiliation in being attacked so harshly by himself, when he had pretended to love her so that her faults were beauties in his eyes. He was filled with sadness and sympathy as he thought of her sorrow, but that fierce scene with her had brought him to his senses so far as love was concerned, and he at last understood what an insult it was to the girl he was about to marry to yield so weakly to an infatuation that could end only in demoralization and shame. Clarice continued her season at the Murray Hill Theatre on the strength of the fame that her beauty achieved, and played the usual repertoire of ihe French star actress. Deming was com pelled to attend several of her performances. Even the critics who had no such reason as he to detect a change in her observed that her appearance and her methods underwent a decided transformation after the con demnation by the newspapers. In her ac tion there was no longer anything irritat ing. She was subdued, modest, seemingly broken in spirit The radiance of her face gave place to a deep sadness, a pensiveness which was immensely pathetic, and which did not detract in theleast from the intrinsic lpveliness of her features. As they watched her in "Ffou-Frou," one night Madge said to Deming that it did not seem possible that he could care for her when such splendid creatures as Clarice were living in the world. The remark chilled him, it struck so squarely against his conscience. But he did not doubt, iu fact he never had doubted, bis love for Madge. Through all his wild experience of the past month he was sure that she was the one girl tor him to marry. She was his ideal of gentle, re fined and faithful womanhood. And as the day for their marriage drew near Deming was satisfied and happy. The sunny December morning came when these two were to start on their life's journey together. The few friends who were to be present had not yet arrived, when the servant brought In a card to eming,ag he sat smoking with Mr. Maynard ont in the conservatory. As he read the name on the card he crushed it in his band, and muttered an imprecation on the one who sent it "I'll be there in one moment" be said to the servant, after a moment of deliberation. Throwing away his cigar, and excusing himself from Mr. Maynard, he passed through the house to the drawing room. Near the window was the figure ot a heavily-veiled woman in an attitude of dejection. "Clarice." said Deming, roughly, "what have you come here for? You don't mean to say you intend to do what you threatened me with? She did not answer. She had risen from her chair, and was standing before him with her hands clasped in front of her. Finally she spoke, in a very low and trembling voice. "You are to bo married, Monsieur, toayf" "Yes." "You you love your Intended wife?" "Most certainly." "As well as you once loved met" Deming only shifted nervously about at last breaking put with: "Clarice, why have you come here? Answer me." To ask you," she replied In a voice whose tones were full nf immeasurable despair, "to ask yon to marry me instead ot this girl." Ho looted at her as though ho thonght she bad lost her mind. Clarice," he said, "are you crazyT In an other hour I shall be the husband of Madge Maynard. Now, I beg of yon. by all that we have been to each other, by the deep, sincere friendship that I have for you at this moment to go away, and so let my wife be kept in igno rance of our mistakes and our regrets." The fire or a terrible rage sprang into her eyes for one instant but it died as snddenly. Drawing from her pecket a small package she held it out to Deming. "Your letters." she said, and her voice broke pathetically. He took them from her. Then she stood there, hesitating in an embarrassed way, as tbongh she wanted to ask something of him, but haan't the courage. He took her band tenderly in bis. "What isit Clarice?" he asked. She was twisting a hoop of rubles and dia monds abont her linger. It was one that Dem ing had given her the day after their snpper together. She raised her tearful eyes to his. May I keep that?" she asked. "Of course, Clarice, keep it And I hope, I do hope, my girl, that you'll be happy In the fnturo. You know I shall always be your friend." "She cringed at the word "friend." and began moving rapidly toward the door. He followed her. in order to shuw her out "Good-bye, Clarice." She turned, and taking his band, she covered it with kisses. He could feel her hot tears falling upon it Then she was gone. A moment later, as Deming stood just where she had left bim, his heart still choking him. and the sound of ber last sobs ringing in his ears, Madge stole up behind him and wound ber arms abont his neck. And while Clarice Binauld wept in her bedroom at the hotel these two young lovers wero made man and wife. One year of thorough happiness, of perfact understanding and hope and trust between them, and then Madge and the tiny life which had been so eagerly anticipated, faded like two flowers, and Deming was alone. For months he lost courage, and his friends believed he was going to pieces. But the best of them, and particularly Jack West tried most delicately to draw him away from bis miserable thoughts, and after another year bad gone he could oc casionally smile, and managed to throw some of tho old energy and brilliancy into his liter ary work. The next summer he and Jack West started on a tnn abroad. During June tbey were in London. One night they went to the Somerset a music hall which bad its entrance In a narrow street off the Strand. By chance they secured seats at a table close to the stage, and, over brandy and soda, proceeded to enjoy the peculiarities of the audience the Coldstream guardsmen with their funny little hats, the gay women sparkling with diamonds in the bores, the little group of bard drinkers encircling tbe Chairman, the immaculate "chappies." and. putside the rail, under tbe eaves of1 the galleries, the rough element of picturesque people from the astnd. with their funny caps and plaid neck scarfs all this iMfnri lirt wjjWWWBBWWBjftiiHBjffiyMPBiBt'MBBBB AwSSS5ifc;ir TyHffigJit, .. irSS. wjffiF IffpfOP-Up tT "YPrBHraMfrB. .M 18;,, 1889. ivr" , . a-T s - 5C- -flW ia ,ms r - ''-: j VTBSHBtl mixture enjoying to tbe utmost a very queer stage performance, and roaring the choruses of the songs with a zest that almost split the walls and rafters. A young man in a blonde wig had just sung for the fifth time a song which had for its refrain: " 'E's a jolly good chap ven you know '1m, But you got to know 'ira fast." The Chairman nniwd for the annlanse to cease, then rising to bis feet he proclaimed in a husky voire the next act on tbe programme. "Mam'selle Clarice, with song." Deming glanced up quickly. Tbe name Clar ice sounded strange to nlm. He had not heard it since he used to speak It himself three years before. The band played its prelude, and while the audience applauded the approaching artist Deming and west both uttered exclamations of surprise. In tbe center of.the stage, whiter, more slender, mare beautiful even than before because a light of divine resignation beamed like 3 star on ber face, stood Clarice Rlnauld. She was attired in a eimple black dress with a broad white linen collar turned away from the neck. Her hands were clasped before ber. a half-sad smile played fitfully over her month, her thick hair drooped, as of old, down over het brows. She sang a lovely English ballad in a soft sweet voice. She did not move in the least, keeping her eyes lifted, and seeming to feel as sad as the fair melody indicated. A flood of tenderness and anguish overwhelmed Deming as lie watched her. As Clarice finished her song she lowered her eyes, and they stopped with those of Deming gazing back into them. The andience bad urst out with its applause, and she should have left the stage, but there she stood, trem bling like a reed, her breast fluttering, her hands tearing at her throat, her eyes fixed. The audience began to change its cheers to mur murs of astonishment Clarice was wavering, and it was easy to see that she was abont to faint Tbe Chairman bad risen and was rap ping for order. At that very moment a broad tongue of flame leaped out from the wings of the stage and crept ronnd the prosoenium arch along the soft draperies of the boxes. There was a scream from the women, and then a great roar from the men. "Fire!" Clarice bad not seen or heard anything since her eyes found Deming. She fell face forward on the stage just as the fearful cry of the aud ience went up, and lay there as motionless as though she were dead. Like demons the crowd was fighting Its way toward the doors; a few cool headed men were beseeching the mad ones to move out quietly and so save their lives more surely. Deming and West had both moved toward the stage and tbe fire by one impulse. "We must save her. Jack," said Deming reso lutely. "With the aid of heaven, Jerome, we'll do it" replied West And they both leaped over the footlights, Deming in the lead, with his teeth set and his handsome face white with de termination and dread for this beautiful, help less woman. West had caught up his glass of brandy when be left tbe table, and now he pressed it to tbe lips of Clarice as Deming lifted her in his arms.-and her fluttering eye lids showed a return to consciousness. As "he came to she glanced in terror about her. Her eyes caught tbe sight of tbe flames, of the raging crowd on the floor beneath, tbe smoke bean choking her, and. with her arms clinging about Deming, she realized the position they were in. "Oh, poor Jerome," she cried, "save your self. Go. Leave met Leave toef "Now do not talk, Clarice, but lead us as directly as you can to the stage entrance. If there Is any work to do on the way we are going to carry you through it Now, show us where the doors are." ' "There; there," she said. "Bight through the flames. There is no other way." Deminir looked In the direction nhnlmHentnil The tire was coming fairly out of tbe exit. Be yond the flame and smoke he caught glimpses of moving figures. He knew there was only tho choice of remaining where they were and being burned t death, or else making a dash through the Are. When bo turned to Clarice again he found that she bad taken the skirt of her dress off. "Here," she said gasping for breath In the smoke, and holding out tbe garment toward him; "wrap this over your bead, Jerome, aud run through. It is your only chance." He took the dress and began winding it over her own head. Then he took off his coat, cry ing to West to do the same. Holding his coat up before bis face be throw his arm about Clarice's waist and told her to go ahead just as he led her. Then the three sprung into the fire. For an instant they almost breathed the flame, and then they were beyond it with only the smoke choking tbem. Deming beard West who was jnst behind him and Clarice, shout to him, and then he saw a heavy beam, charred and smoldennir. seDarate itself from the floor iust above them. He dashed forward, dragging Ilarice after him, but before she could pass beyond the beam It was down upon her, and she fell, without a cry. Deming stooped and gath ered her into his arms. With West he born her along through the smoky passageway and aiijcu uio tuccb. iuo viuhu gauiQB cneereu them as they appeared. Deming took the skirt from Clarice's head and laid her on tbe ground, bending over her ana gazing into her face, She was unconscious. "Why, it's Mam'selle Clarice," said a young man wuo stood by. and who was evidently a stage hand. "Yes," said Deming. "And now tell me, my good tellow,where she lives." Thirty-five Holworthy road." was the an swer. Within five minutes a cab was got through the Are lines, Clarice had regained conscious ness, and supported by Deming and West was being driven to Holworthy road. Two hours later Deming was kneeling by the side of tbe bed in Clarice's room, his arms about her, his lips close to her ear, whispering words of tenderness and regiet. In the next room were Jack West a physician and a priest. Near the window stood Clarice's maid, crying softly, aud glancing up every now and again from her handkerchief to see if her mistress wanted anything. Deming talked with Clarice, trentlv and soothingly; and when he spoke of Madge's death she stroked bis cheek and said: "Poor Jerome, poor Jerome," It was Deming who wept Her beautiful eves were dry. The calmness was unmistakable. She was dying. "I have never doubted that you loved me," she said. "If I hare deceived myself, do not now correct mo. I have lived away from you, but devoted in my heart to you. I have be lieved that you would have married me if 1 had not been an actress if you had had confidence in my integrity. O, do no not set me right 11 1 am wrong. Let me die mistaken, for in that mistake I have lned worthy of you since we parted on your wedding day." Deming told ber in a broken voice that she was a good and noble woman, and she had done everything that such a woman could. How could he help believing her when Clarice was dying there? How conld be help trusting in her honesty when he knew of her working as she had, and living as she did, witb a beauty that men would go mad over. And Jack West skeptical, calm, Deming's friend, now hers grasped Jerome's hand, with tears in his eyes. "My boy," he had said, "you owe bcr all that sho now can desire." So all that could be done before she died to atone for tbe mistakes of three years ago was done by tbe request of Deming. As she lay there Clarice was his wife, for the clergyman performed over them tho marriage rites of tbe church. A half hour passed, and Deming still knelt by the bed holding Clarice in bis arms. Sud denly she started up. Her whole figure trem bled. Her arms tightened, convulsively about him and then loosened. She gave one look of boundless love as Deming kissed her, and then fell back, as softly and as white as snow. The Ehd.J Copyrighted, 1SS9. All rights reserved. CHINESE FLOATLNG GARDENS. Knits on Which Rice and Vegetables Are Successfully Cultivated. China Bevlcw.l In the month of April a bamboo raft, 10 to 12 feet long and about half as broad, is prepared. The poles are lashed together with interstices of an Inch between each. Over this a layer of straw an inch thick is spread, and then a coating, two inches thick, ot adhesive mud, taken from the bottom of a canal or pond,' which receives tbe seed. The raft is moored to the bank in still water, and requires no further atten tion. The straw soon gives way and the soil also, the roots drawing support from the water alone. In- about 20 days the raft be comes covered with the creeper (Ipomtea reptans) and its stem and roots are gathered for cooking. In autumn its small white petals and yellow stamens, nestling among the round leaves, present a very pretty ap pearance. In some places marshy land is profitably cultivated in this manner. Besides these Heating vegetable gardens there are also floating rice fields. Upon rafts constructed as above, weeds and ad herent mud were placed as a flooring, and when the rice shoots were ready for trans planting they were placed in the floating soil, which, being adhesive, and held in place by weed roots, the plants were main tained in position throughout the season. The rice thus planted ripened in from sixty to seventy, in place of a hundred, days. The rafts are cabled to the shore, floating on lakes, pools or sluggish streams. These floating fields served to avert famines, whether by drought or flood. When other fields were submerged and their crops sod den or rotten, these floated and flourished, and when a drought prevailed they subsided with the falling water, and while the soil around was arid advanced to maturity. Agricultural treatises contain plates repre senting rows of extensive rice fields moored to sturdy tries on the banks of rivers or lakes which existed formerly in the lacustrine regions of the lower Yangtae and Yellow river. BIMJCALDECEPTIONS The Danger of Careless Interpretation ' of the Hook of Books. HOW TO BEAD THE SOEIPTDEES. Religious Controversy Caused by Empha sizing Single Texts. DISTORTING BIBLE QUOTATIONS. rWJUTTEX rOB TUB DISPATCH. 1 ' Even the devil can quote Scripture. There are great volumes, and a great num ber of them, which are filled with comments npon the Bible. And there is also, partly written, but for the most part unwritten, a devil's commentary upon the Bible. It is the Holy Scripture, in King Satan's ver sion, with the devil's explanations. Beside there is also onr own commentary upon the Bible that is, our own silent thoughts as we read. , And this commentary of our own is collected, like all the com mentaries, from all sorts of sources. It is recorded of one industrious commentator that he studied upon a very long and wide table whereon were spread, open at the text on which he was writing, the books of all the writers on that part ot the Bible which he had been able to col lect together, and there he with a pen in one hand and a spy glass in the other looked at each in turn over the immense table and noted down whatever pleased him in his own book. Our own private commentary is made up after somewhat that same fashion. It is the patchwork of what we have read; what we have heard; what we have seen; what we have thought; what we have ex perienced, in our own lives. From year to year, if you read the Bible, and do not merely pretend to read it, from year to year, especial chapters take on different and richer meanings. At the Divinity School the professor of preaching used to advise the students to reserve some subjects and not write sermons upon them till they had been in active work for a number of years. I remember that prayer was one ot the sub jects; and "Come unto me, all ye that are weary and heavy laden," was one of the texts. No very young man, he said, could possibly know'what it was to be "weary and heavy laded," and nothing but years of deep COMMTJNIOir -WITH GOD, and growth in grace, aud experience of spiritual needs, could fit one to speak in the right way about prayer. The older we grow the more entries we are making in our own individual commentary upon tbe Bible. But it seems there is a devil's commen tary. And, accordingly, as we construct our own, we must be careinl not to put in any of tbe devil's interpretations. This takes mere care than we may at first sight think. The devil's interpretations of Scripture are not in his autograph, haven't his evil name signed to them by any means. He takes pains to disprove" their authorship. He quietly and gently insinuates them into our minds. They are in books. They are iu the lives of saints; at various times iu the his tory of religion they have been the doctrines of the wise and good. The devil's com mentary has been pronounced orthodox, and all who dissented from it have been branded as heretics. Not, as I said, under his name, by any means. No man will accept the devil's open commentary, known to be in fernal, false and of the pit but in his spirit, all the same. Orthodoxy has many times been of the devil. Take! as an illus tration, the religions world ot Christ's day. There were the Pharisees, the professional ly good, the rigidly orthodox they acconnted .none righteous save them selves. In their eyes tne Son of God Himself was a daugerous heretic who must be perse cuted, xney naa simpiy oeen studying in the devil's commentary upon the third book of Moses called Leviticus. The devil had f quoted Scripture alter his fashion and the Pharisee hatl listened. It was Scripture, there was no doubt about that, but Scrip ture with the devil's interpretation, which makes all the difference in the world. Thus they had come to believe that tithes ot mint.anise and cummin were on an equality of obligation with mercy, judgment and truth, that ritual stood in some measure in the stead of righteousness, and that robbing widows' homes was not so had if the robber only made long prayers. We make a mis take it we think that the Pharisees were either unusually dull or unusually imagin ative persons, easily deluded. Not so. They were the wisest and shrewdest nien of their time. They had just as large a fund of native common sense, and of native goodness and sincerity as men have now. And yet they were led astray by the DEVIL'S QUOTATION OF S8IUPTTJEE. This illustration of the delusion of the Pharisee suggests the first point of danger to which I will direct your attention. The devil tries to deceive us by quoting the Bible with a wrong emphasis. "That is, with the emphasis put in the wrong place. Take again that matter of the Pharisees. Ortho doxy ran astray in their time because em phasis was laid on things outward, rather than on things spiritual. The chief endeavor of- religious people was to perform an intricate conglomeration of never-ending ceremonies correctly. The accuserof Our Master could not go in where Pilate sat in bis bouse. The very atmosphere of a Gentile hall or porch could not be breathed without ecclesiastic pollution. If they bad set foot upon these Gentile pavements they would have so made themselves unclean that God would not ac cept the Passover sacrifice at their hands. So they thought, yet tbey could offer that sacrifice with hearts full of envy, malice, hatred and all uncharitableness, and with the stain of innocent blood upon their souls. That was nothing. So, too, in the old time before them. The prophets had to keep probing and warring and threatening all the time to counteract the devil's em phasis, to turu the minds of people irom the visible to the spiritual. Listen to Amos: "I hate, I despise your feast days. Though ye offer, me burnt ofTerings, and your meat offerings, I will not accept them, neither will I regard the peace offeringsofyourfat beasts. But let judg ment run down as water, and righteousness as a mighty stream." Said Micah.: "Shall I come before the Lord with burnt offering:, with calves of a year old? Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams or with ten thousands of rivers of oil? He hath showed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord require of thee but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk numblywiththvGod." Said Isaiah: "Your new moons and your appointed feasts my soul hateth. They are a trouble to me; I am weary to bear them. Wash you; make you clean: cease to do evil; learn to, do well." The mission of the prophets was to put the emphasis ' Jjr THE BIGHT PLACE. And the work tbey did requires constantly to be done over again. It is much easier to pnt the emphasis in the devil's place, to lay the stress upon things outward. It is much easier to make tbe sign of the cross than to pray yourself; much easier to write- words of petition than to meet uoa witn our whole soul; much easier to be baptized, con firmed, to receive holy commnuion and to attend services regularly than to be pure, brave, righteous aud Christian in life and in spirit. ' If you will think over the history of re ligious controversy, past and present, you will see howmuch'of it has been begun and maintained by simply putting the emphasis in the wrong place. The devil has quoted Scripture, and Scripture itself so quoted, so employed has acted as a charm to arouse all that is worst in men. Take the various sects into which Christendom is most un happily divided to-day. What brought tbem into this? In large part, merely a difference about emphasis. One party puts emphasis upon- tills; another upon that. Each insists that everybody else shall put the emphasis just where he does. So has the devil nartedJ w -a- -. tjFi. itutihe fronVauotherbyT different ways of emphasizing 'the Bible, nn those matters which should alone be em phasizedthe essential faith, the elements of practical goodness on these we all agree. Christian umtv will begin to dawn when we erase the devil's emphasis out of our denom inational commentaries. Akin to this matter of emphasis is the second danger of which I will speak. The devil tries to deceive us by quoting the Bible in single texts, without the context. It is plain that you can make any book teach almost anything, and any author con tradict himself, 'by quoting mere scraps, by taking sentences out of their connection. Unfortunately we have a habit of reading the Bible after this fashion. The Bible is a library of religious books of all kind's, written at quite different times, by quite different men, and for tne nfost diverse pur poses; and we treat it as no library in tho world is treated. It is as if vou should go daily to your bookshelves and take down some book whereon your hand chanced to fall, open that wherever it happened to open itself, read two paragraphs, and put it back again. And the next day choose after the same fashion another book to-day, his tory, to-morrow poetry and the next day someone's life and letters. What kind of intelligent idea would vou nossibly get of any one book, or of the" library. That is HOVr WE EEAD THE BIBLE, taking awaj nearly all its charm, much of its interest and not a little of iu helpfulness. We do it simply because it is the easiest way much easier than to read each book steadi ly through by itself, as we read any other book. Now the devil almost invariably tempts us to do easy things, because then he knows that he. will have on part of our nature on his side as an enemy besieging' a city tries to ally himself with one part of the besieged, and .gets them to open tha gates for him. The devil easily persuades us to read the Bible by fragments. Our natural idleness throws open the gates and our better reason gets the worst of it. Then by this fragmentary reading of the Bible the devil, quoting Scripture, deceives us. The list of heretical sects from St. Paul's day to the present would fill a large volume merely their names. And not one of these sects but was able to quote Scripture some kind of Scripture to prove their position. Everyone had some verseout of the Bible. In old pictures of the nativity, of the. creation or of the resurrection," tha ancient prophets were. represented in tha margin of the painting, each one holding a scroll on which was written the words in which he had foretold the second event. How interesting would be a great picture of tue heretics and schismatics of all time, gathered in a great council, each with a scroll in his hand inscribed with his own particular "proof" text. There would not be one left unscrolled. And what texts would come to light! and in what remark able uses! Even Joseph Smith, the founder of Mormonism, would be there with his text. The Mormons say that they are the onlv true followers ot the Bible! And when these. texts came to be looked over it would certainly be found that an astonishing ma jority of them had been torn from their con texts. As it stood in the Bible it meant something quite different. Why, it would be possible and who shall say, among tho prodigies of sectarianism, that such a sect shall never arise? it would be possible to start a sect upon THE CABDIXAL DOCTBX5E of lying in bed in the morning, having this text: "Woe unto them that rise up early." The rest of the sentence is "To fol low after strong drink," but that could eas ily be forgotten. This is a very homely il lustration of a most important way of read ing the Bible, about which perhaps tha most important feature is its connection. In various degrees we are all doing that, the devil helping us to our great loss. No doctrine is the doctrine of Holy Scripture, simply because you can find it in one text. Look at the chapter in which that text is written, inquire into the author's purpose, and argument. Above all compare it with, other texts in other chapters and other books' of Scripture. Remember that truth has many sides, and that what is true in one case may not be true in another. It was at' one time thought necessary by the English, doctrine of the atonement in every half- AiiauMitai -Lfocfrucicky iu fuie me wuoie y penny leaflet. Such is not the way oi' benpture. iou must compare things spir itual with spiritual, text with text, book with book. I will point out only one more danger of which we must beware in reading the Bible. The devil tries to deceive us by persuading us that the Bible does not mean quite so much as it says. If these various Scriptural pitfalls had been arranged in the orderof time, this must have come first. For after this fashion it was that Satan made his first recorded assault upon our race. "Yea, hath God said thus'and thus?" he asked. Well, now, let me explain to you just what that means. What are the words? "In the day that ye eat thereof ye shall surely die.' Now the word "die," there, doesn't mean die. It means live in this way. God knows that when you taste that fruit you will be come as gods, knowing good and evil, that Is when you have eaten you will enter upon a new lite, so much richer and happier than, this dull commonplace life you are living now, that this life compared with what awaits you can only be called death. That is the sense in which you will die so eat ana die and live. And eat they did, as wa know, and with what result we'know. And from that time on the devil has never stopped persuading men that God does not mean what he says. EXAMINE THE CONTEXT. I think it is Coleridge who declares that there is not a page in the whole of English literature, not even a paragraph in all the text books upon mathematics, nor a leaf in all tbe ledgers, but what there can be found in it some logical flaw, some way can be de vised of rendering the meaning uncertain, and of allowing a choice of signification. This interpretation of language the devil makes abundant use of. . He quotes Scripture so as to give it the easiest ot all possible mean ings. It is a principle in the deciphering of ancient manuscripts, and in determining tha true text among various readings, that tha most difficult reading is most likely to bo the original and correct one. A copyist will readily change the hard into the easy un consciously in making out some bad writing see an obvious thought rather than an ab truse one and so the hardest to understand is most likely to be the right reading. That holds true of the interpretation of God's wilL It is better anyway to err by thinking that God requires more than He really does than less. You are surer to be right. The solemn and unqualified injunc tion, for instance, that we are absolutely to love our enemies, which goes so directly against our strongest human instinct tha very difficulty of it may show that it is vxuuavnu mv... .mww. ..... SJ, vf no; it doesn't mean quite that; it means be civil to your enemies, if you can; don't .avenge yourself by physical injury but forgive them, love them. No man can do that. But God says just that not one whit less. Love your enemies. When we try to content ourselves with any easy keeping of that or any other commandment of God, the devil is" quoting Scripture to us; we are reading in his commentary. Now in these three way, among manv others, the devil tries to make that hurtful to us wbicb is meant to be our great help; he tries to translate the doctrine of heaven into the doctrine of earth and of the pit; he tries to turns our very prayer into sin. He puts the eniphasW in the wrong place. He tears the text from the context. He robs the truth of half its meaning. He who is warned is armed. Geobge Hodoes. Saluting the Bride. lanxiatawney Spirit. I One of the rural justices married a couple the other day, and as soon as he had con cluded the ceremony the happy groom tamed to the bride and said: 'There, now I Didn't I tell y I'd marry you? Dangyer pictures, yon thought I's only fbolin? Didn't you, old gal. Eh?" The bride smiled a sickly sort of smile, aud her lord looked and felt like a man who hid beea vindicated. k B i Amj. - y t axij, ji Mta. -a, "i-i jtx MxJ lyMtf&ySjTJftiifiiTfiiiMli'fifri l :k&j2B3Ml