k 10 r LONDON MUSIC HALLS. Magnificent Strnctnres and Topical Songs to Catch the Public. A KIGHT WITH KING M'DEKMOTT, Footlight Favorites Who Feel the Pnlse of the People. A PEEE'S BEIDE ON THE STAGE pmirnar roa tei dispatcb. The entrance to most of the theaters in London is as inconspicuous at night as a lighted shop front, the managers seimingly thinking that it pays better to rent the greater part of their front to the proprietors of restaurants and cigar divans who crowd ont the bills of the play with menus ol table d'hote dinners for three and six and colored advertisements of Turkish cigarettes. But the music halls of London want all the room they can get. From the high bronze urns on their, roofs flames of gas lick up the evening fog and signal back to the dignified white lamp on the tower of the House of Commons that their people too are still sitting. Their win dows and half tronts of stained glats blaze out over colored awnings.umlormed nndbe xnedaled servants crowd the steps and side walks in superfluous numbers and velvet carpets lead iuvitinglv up broad stairways to loyer hung with silk curtains. The music halls are at night the real peo ple's palaces, and though the queens who rule in tHem are numerous they hsve but one King. He has reigned now for 20 years and is called the Great McDermott S. H. McDermott is his name. I find that the average stranger's idea of a music nan is a place where one sits at a sloppy table and views a variety perform since dimly through a cloud of tobacco smoke to an accompaniment of clinking beer glasses. He may Cud it hard to con ciliate this idea with the tact that the Shah visited one of these palaces, the Empire Music Hall, with the English royalties, and be can hardlv believe that three of the halls in the 'West End are largerand as handsome as any theater in the States; that one em ploys 600 people, and that if he went into certain parts of these halls in anything but evening dress he would leel very much out of it a stgiit trim m'deksiott. The king of the music halls came down the steps of the hotel at 9 o'clock one night just as bis royal brougham drew up in front of tbem and my democratic hansom tnrned the corner. "We are all in very good time," said His Majesty graciously. He was in evening dress with an Inverness cloak hanging from his shoulders, and in his hand be carried a blonde wig, his onlv article of make-up. "The Pavilion,"" he said to the driver. "X am only doing three turns to-night," he continued as the brougham rolled toward the must hall. "The Pavilion, the Royal and the Charing Cross. But they will give you an idea f the uifferentsorts of halls and the different artists." On the stage the King of the Music Halls looks like a mn ot 25. He is probably abont SO. Twenty years ago be introduced a uew song, which said that "we don't want to fight, but, by Jingo, if we do," etc., etc. The people who felt that way came to join in the chorus, the papers quoted it and when an honorable member ot the Lower House rose and recited it in Parliament it became famous. And so McDermott gave a new word to political nomenclature and a new title to the Conservative party and soou became as famous as the song. Since then almost every good comic song that you have heard ..has had him lor a sponsor. He has hlspick of the best songs just as a good jockey has his choice of the best mounts. The brougham escaped from the circular puzzle or moving vehicles in Piccadilly Circus and drew up at the stage door of the pavilion. As we descended, three men, in the fantastic get-up of a knockabout negro act, hurried out of the stage entrance and jumped into a waiting four wheeler. "How 'r Mac," called one of them in a cockney accent that came verv strangely from a black face. "We've taken all the langh out of that bouse. You're too late." A young girl closely veiled and wrapped in a long dolman got out of a hansom and followed us in. McDermott raised bis hat and the girl nodded. "Late as usual." She said impatiently, "I got blocked on the Surrey side. It seems to me they're always tearing up those streets." As she spoke she whipped off the veil and bonnet and let the dolman drop from her shoulders. Her shoulders vpn iAnnnr1 vprr tpit nwttr and her skirts were short and fashioned after those introduced in the States by the Gaiety Company. Her name is Lottie Con nors, and she dances almost as well as Letty Lind. There is more abandon and less of trace, but she gives one a very good idea of ow very good a music hall dancer is. ELEGANCE AND EASE. Prom the wings I could sec that the house was as richly decorated as a theater could well be. Tliere were no tables, an unob trusive brass ledge on the back of the seat serving to bold the glasses, and the tobacco smoke wis drawn out ol the way through an opening in the root. The seats in the balconies onlv extended a lew rows back, the balcony being given over to a prom enade, where men and women walked on heavy velvet carpet or lounged in arm chairs, or over the railing that separated the lobby from the seats. Iu the boxes that lined the first balcony were many theater parties, the women without bonnets and in evening dress. In the gallery and in the promenade that surrounded the stalls and pit were the ubiquitous 'Arrits from the banks and shops who give most of the liie to that part of a. music hall's perform ance, and it is a very large part, which takes place before the curUiu. One of McDermott's songs gave these young men a chance to express themselves. In it he said that he had asked Mr. Glad stone how he came to lose his place. A somewhat delicate question for even so dis tinguished a monarch as the McDermott to ask. but the Grand Old Man answers graciously: "All for the sake of Ireland, all for the Emer ald Isle. I've seen the world and my friends grow cool, In myOld. old are they call me a Tool; . But I'll live to see Ireland gain home rule, And they'll give me back my place." Not satisfied with this, McDermott asks Xord Salisbury in the next verse how he thinks Gladstone lost his place, and is courteously informed that it was due to his love of power. "What cares he for the Union's rights? The Llb'ral party he disunites; "For what? for the votes of the Parnellltes, That's why be lost his place." These two verses have the effect of stirring up all the Conservatives and Liberals in the house, or at least the very larje part ot them who like to make a noise, and the En glishman, for one who poses as a sell-con- --... . .....- ...... . ... , ,,.,...,, -tained individual, can get more exciu-d and make himself more conspicuous in a public place than any other representative of any other nation. The hooting, howling and hissing having drowned the applause, or vice versa, the song is continued. In a time ot great political excitement in Amer ica it is possible that a well delivered line or song bearing on the political situation might stir up the audience to soqie tem porary degree of applause or disapproval, out in London the music ball audiences on all occasions are ready to explode and will stop the performance until they have said what they think or are through hooting. The singer count on this and stir up the 'house whenever they want to by touching any one or a dozen well-worn subjects. EXPBESSINO PUBLIC OPINION. - Indeed, if a man wants to grt the average Englishman's opinion on public questions he should not go to the Honses of Parlia ment nor rend the papers, but attend the musio halls. There he will learn that Mrs. . Maverick shonld not rune: that foreiirn laborers are not wanted; that tree trade is to BiVtiiooted: that the .Prince and Princes of Wales are to be cheered; that all reference to German marriages will call forth groans; that the Duke oi Wetminster, "Charley" Beres nrd, Buffalo Bill, Boulangerand John L. Sullivan are intensely popular, arid that the one man who is sure to be hooted more than any other is the unfortunate Henry of Battenherg. At the Alhambra Music Hall the introduction of a United States soldier earning the Stars and Stripes among the representatives of all other nations calls forth the loudest and longest cheers. "Good old h'Americal" is what they rather incorrectly yell. Bat in the meanwhile McDermott has finished his song, bowed to a tumultuous chorus of groirns and cheers which follows the Gladstone verse and comes off smiling and looking at his watch. He has ten min utes to spare, and I ask for that length of time to hear the next singer, Miss Bessie Bellwood. "Everybody's Bessie" and "Good old Bessie" is what Miss Bellwood is fondly called bv the young men with briar pipes in the pit promenade. This does not mean, however, that she is old, nor, I regret to add, that she is conspicuously good. Miss Bellwood is one o the most picturesque figures of the London Hall. She is pretty in an impertinent sort of way, has a very good voice and can give a better imitation of the cockney lassie than anynne on the London stace. This may be because the Bow Bells never rung over a greater cockney than her own air, impetuous self. When she gels very angry she has an ab rupt way of using her fists. Once she used them on a well-known 2ew York man in the Gardenia Club and only three weeks ago an unsympathetic livery stable keeper had her at Bow street lor slapping him in the face. The Marquis Mandeville was mixed up in it some way, the cab proprietor having called at Bel I wood's house to collect a debt from the bankrupt lord, who was theie and who shoved him out ol the way. Cabby shoved back and "Everybody's Beioie," who happened to be hanging on "Uncle Kim's" arm, slapped the audacious duu iu the face. THE LADT DTJNLO. We go to Charing Cross next; a small hall with as clever people as one sees in the more swell places for more money. Prom Charing Cross we strike East to the Boyal, in Holborn. This is not a large theater, but its bill is very strong. It includes J. W. Bowley, who sings a very beautitul song called "A Starry Hight" The audi ence always call tor this as soon as he comes on, and he sings it very enectively with the lights turned low. The greater part of the audience join in the second chorus, singing it so tly, and the effect of the 300 or 400 men's voices singing together in the dark ened theater is very striking. The Sisters Bilton lollow McDermott It is a happy conjunction of royal personages, for Belle Bilton, the fairest of the sisters, is the present Lady Dunlo, having married the eldest son of 'the Earl of Clancarty. of the oldest peerage in Ireland, and the only lord who sits in the Upper House as the peer of the three realms. Some say that she was designing and others that young Dunlo is an idiot. In any event he married her a few months ago and the next day his father, the Earl, packed the bridegroom off to Australia in a sailing vessel vith his tutor. It is understood that a special act of Parliament provided as a protection for weak-minded sons of re spected families will annul the marriage be fore Dunlo is of age He is now 19. It is a long drive from the Royal to Har wood's, but McDermott thinks we should see all sorts of music halls, and so, althongh it is late, we start at once for the far East End of London. The driver loses bis way twice in these unmsbionable surroundings, but a bobby sets him right again. Even the stupidest policeman knows Har wood's. A TOUGH EESOET. The dirty, ragged boys who fight to open the brougham doors are so dismayed at the sight or McDermott that thev forget to ask for a copper, and gaze after him in wonder as he hunts up the proprietor. The proprie tor is a young man, and seems much grati fied with the visit ot royalty. "All the boxes are lull to-night," he says, "but I fancy you came to see the place more'n the show. There's some prize-fightin' chaps in the first box. I'll ask 'em to make room for you. Tell vour iriend not to mind if the boys don't like your clothes." We come into the box from the back, and in a second 600 ot the worst faces I have seen during a two years' dilettante experience in crime are turned on us. There are no seats iu Harwood's, only long benches which allow the strongest man to shove his weaker brother off the end into the aisle if he wants room. The place is packed as cloiely as the street in irt'Dt of a newspaper office on a Presi dental election night, and SO per cent of the audience they sre all men have prison clipped hair. They apparently don't like our clothes, but the presence of Tott Wall and Fred Johnson and Harwood himself probably prevents them saying so. As it is the middle-weight champion tells us that we're "as sale as if we was in the Tower of London." It is only 4 pence for a seat fn Harwood's and 6 pence for a box if one withes to be a swell. There are two per formances a night, one beginning at 7 and one at 9. The nudience bring their fried fish and bitter ale with them and munch and drink betweeu the turns. 'One can better afford to miss seeing St. Paul's. Cathedral than Harwood's. This emled my ride with the King, but I took several later with his prime minister, Thomas Holmes, who is to London what Tony Pastor is to New York and William j Gilmore to Philadelphia. Holmes told me, and we a terward verified the statement by examining the list of licenses, that anyone w ho happened to be fond of music halls could visit a different one nightly or one year and three months, Sundavs included, and never revisit the same halt" That gives one an idea of how large London is and how popular are these places of entertainment. P.ICHABD HaKDINQ DAVIS. TDRKLI BILL'S Ml&TAKB. Became He Won Too Greedy He Got Only Onr Itlrd Instead of Twenty. New York bun."i In a discussion as to the northern range of the wild turkey, it is asserted that in the old times they were not met with north of Hampden county in Massachusetts. Against this tbe writer has the testimony of the late General John A. Dix, who was born in Kcw Hampshire, and as a boy recollected seeing many flocks of that bird there. He told a story of a certain man in his town known as Turkey Bill. He was a noted trapper ot wild tnrkeys. These be captured in a small log house, fitted with a door, sprung by the bunter in concealment. On a certain occasion Turkey Bill, having located a fluck ol 20 birds, set his trap. He scattered a trail of corn leading to its entrance. The tnrkeys approached. One entered, then a second, and so on until 19 of them were inside the structure. The twentieth lingered, loth to enter. Turkey Bill pa tiently waited for him to joiu the others. He was snre of 19, but he wanted them nil. Soou the nineteenth bird emerged from the trap, then the eighteenth, and so on until but one remained within. Then Turkey Bill sprang the door. He was at one time sure ol 19, hut in his greed he overreached himself, and in the end secured but one. General Dix was disposed to apply the moral of this story to the methods of certain cotemporaneous statesmen. An Original Entertainment. The Tempest.: Tbe song and dance entertainment by Mr. and Mrs. Anson Phelps Stokes at Lenox last week is said to have been the most charming feature of the brilliant season. Everybody was invited even the farmers from Berkshire Hills rushed to the show without putting on their new boots, and all the villagers crowded around in rural ad miration. Appropriately Named. new York Bun.f, "Pa, what is'a blanket mortgage?" asked Johnny Cumsc- "It is one w fitch keeps a man warm work ing to pay itj'Treplied Cumso. ;--' 'VpEsHBB TSE : A YERI OLD RAILROAD. Tbe Mohawk and Hudson.Bnllt In 1S26, by an Astor Compnny. One of the first railways, if not the first, in this country, was the Mohawk and Hud son, which was chartered by an act ol the New York Legislature on the 17th of April, 1626. The commissioners who were in trusted with tbe duty of orcanizing the company, says the Railway Age, met lor the purpose in the office of John Jacob Astor, in New York Citv, on July 29, 1826. One of their first official acts was to appoint Peter Fleming chief engineer and send him to Enziand to examine as to the feasibility of building a r.iilroid. Mr. Fleming's salary was fixed at $1,500 a year. The road first used horse power and later on adopted steam lor use in day lime, retaining horses however, lor night work. It was not deemed safe to use steam after dark. At first the trains consisted of one car each, which in its construction closely resembled the old-tashioned stage couch. There was no conductor, no bell cord, and in short very few of the innumerable attachments which belong to the railway traiu of to-day. The road connected the two towns of Al bany and Schenectady and was 17 miles in length, bnt that portion which was operated by steam was only 14 miles in length, horses being used on the incline plane division from the top ol one hill to the top of another. In those days the only brake used consisted of a wooden wedge which was dropped in between the wheels and the end of the truck .frame when the train was about to coin, mence the descent of a grade. When it ap proached the station the station agent met it as it neared the platform, placed tbe wed,;e in position, and when the time ar rived for it to start again on its trip he re moved it and the train sped again on its course. The first improvement on this brake con sisted in placing a strip of leather on one side of the wedge. On one side of this wedge was a hole in which a broom handle or other handle was placed lor convenience in operating the contrivance. As business increased and cars were added, it was lound impossible for the engineer to see all the cars of bis train so as to determine if they were moving along iu proper shape, so a guard was placed on top of the first car bark of the engine, who kept his eye on the en tire train, and notified the engineer to stop when he discovered that any particular car bobbed about enough to indicate that it was oft the track. A TALE OF A DASCISG DOG. Thonffb Kicked and Beaten lie Follows His Mnter Even Into Prison. New York World.: This is a story of a Spitz dog. Its owner, Jacob Ebring, is an aged, white-bearded man, who, owing to his peculiarities, was deserted years ago by his wife and grown-up children. Ebring and the dog lived to gether in a single room at No. 9 Spring street. Ehring at first made a living by wearing a placard stating that he was blind, butthedogled him a chase while quarrel ing with another dog, and it was discovered that be was not blind at all. From that time on he gave up soliciting alms and played a Ante for a living, while the dog danced. The dog was working all day last Satur day and bv&evening he let his aged master know, by barking dismally, that he was hungry and tired. The old man kept at work, however, bnt the dog obstinately re fused to do any more work that day. This so exasperated his master that he let fly a kick at the dog, but the latter dodged, and the man tell to the pavement and broke his arm. He then chased the dog and broke bis flute over the animal's hack. A throng gathered and Policeman Median arrested the old man for disorderly conduct. The dog went along of its own volition. At the Eldridge street station it was dis covered that Ehring's arm was broken, and an ambulance was -summoned. On its ar rival the dog jumped into the vehicle after its master, but the Iatter's temper was still ruffled and be threw the dog out. With one bound the animal was back again looking mutely into bis master's face, as if it seemed to regret its share ot what had happened. But the old man didn't care to make iriends, and out went the dog six times' in succes sion. It then trotted beside the ambulance to the Gouverneur Slip Hospital. The dor gained admission to tbe hospital and found its way to its master's room.wncre the two created such a disturbance that.a.ter the man's arm was attended to he was taken back to the station house nnd locked up. The dog followed him to the cell door, and with the grating between tbem they made friends during tbe night. They were the most loving companions at Essex market yesterday. Ehring was nevertheless sen sentenced to the workhouse, for two months, and the dog went with him to prison. WHAT SEW I0KK COST. Manhattan Island Wm Orlstnntly Sold to the Dntcb for Only 824. Youth's Companion, I One of the most successful of land specu lations was the purchase of Manhattan Island from the Indians by the Dutch West India Company in 1626. It has long been known that the astute Dutchmen bought this island very cheap, and there used to be a tradition among New York schoolboys that tbe price was twobotilesof rum. This, however, is now proved to be an error. A few weeks ago General James Grant Wil son, editor of "Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography," discovered at Am sterdam the original deed of sale among the papers ol an old Dutch family. The price paid was about equal to $24 of our present currency. The island contains 11,000 acres of land. In the month o July lust, Mr. William Astor, of New York, boncht a corner lot on this island, 60 leet wide by 200 deep, for $450,000. It is evident, therefore, that the original expenditureof $24 has been justified by events. Bnt, on the other hand, it mav he re marked that it anyone had taken $24 in 1G26 and put it at interest nt 6 per rent, and if he and his successors had each year invested the interest money at the same rate, the cap ital would now amount to about $116,000 000. This is not so much as the landoi New York is worth, but it would have been a very "tidy" investment The Or rim n Postal System. Philadelphia llulletln. Mr. John Field confesses that he has been studying postoffices abroad. After refer ring to other capitals, he said: "Wonderful system they have in Berlin. Everything is strongly organized; but what struck me most was the method adopted for trans porting mail matter between the central office and 37 or more sub-stations. Pneu matic tubes are in use, and the dispatch and promptness enforced are most admir able' And Trt People Like Them. Kew York Ledger. 1 A baby is a specimen of human nature Uncontrolled by principle. It is a being of fierce instincts with no morals. It is the opinion of observant persons who have studied babies Irom a philosophical stand point that if their capacity for misehief were equal to their ferocity, they would soon exterminate the adults of the human family. I Lovr Yon Denrly. I love you dearly. Omy sweat! Altbonsh )nn pass me lightly by. Although you weave my lite awry. And tread my heart beneath your feet. I tremble at yonr touch; I sigh To see you passing down tbe street; I love you dearly, O my sweetl Althongh you pass me lightly by, You say in scorn that love's a cheat, Passion a blander, youtb a lie I know not; only, when m e meet. I long to Ulss yonr band, and cry, "1 love you dearly, O my sweetl Although you pas" roellghtlv by." viuhh az. juciuriiy. IslTOarDISPATOfflSTTNDAYf r:TOPTEMBE&g SCIENTISTS AT PLAY. The International Congress of Orien talists at Stockholm UNITE PLEASURE AND BUSINESS. A Banquet in the Magnificent Ball of a Swedish University. KING 0SCAE AT AN ETENIKG PETE ICOBHESFONDENCI OF TSX DI8PATCII.1 Stockholm, September 12. On Wed nesday alterooon the members ot the Con gress gathered at the Central Railway sta tion in Stockholm, after having spent the morning in listening to communications in the different sections. A long special train was provided withont charge for an excur sion to Upsala, the historical center of the Swedish nation, and the site of its great uni versity. On the train the members, who are beginning to he better acquainted, mingled promiscuously without much national dis tinction. In our carriage, lor instance, there were German, Dutch, American and Portuguese professors, an Italian Count and a Parsee high priest, but the unity of the republic ol letters was shown by the general and lively conversation on philological sub jectswhich, by the way, was mostly' in French. 1 The ride was over a fertile plain, atd the repose and beauty of the lanj scape about Upsala suggested its suitable ness as a place lor a quiet, studious lite, a lew miles beyond the city is the site df Gaml.i-Upsala (Old Upsala) where the fiijt festivities ol the day were to be held. Here was the residence oi the Kings of Sweden iu heathen times; here have been lound ru nclc tie inscriptions and numerous remains of early ages of man in the North: here Christi anity bad its longest and most decisive battle with the old Norse mythology am superstition. Upon tbe plain are ma small buri.il mounds, and three of great si traditionally the graves ol the gods Od Trior and Jfreva. A rndely bunt stode church stands upon the spot once cove by a lamons heathen temple. As tbe train approached we saw upon the top of the b 11 oi Odin the university student corw, closely massed, and making an effective show with their white caps and silk fl.itjs and banners. We got out on a long tempo rary platbrm, decorated with standard, bearing festoons and national flags, aili marched under a green arch to Odh's grave, on whose slopes the whole compaiy lound room. In the valley attendants were placing great drinking horns filled with tie MEAD OF THE RODS, j which, from long time, it has been a custcm to drink nt tbis spot. On the hill opposite were all the military bands from Stockholm, playing stirring Swedish airs. Behind tfe musicians, and on tbe neighboring hill, were clustered masses of people who ia sembled nothing so much as swarms of bed. As soon as our large company bad fouifl place on the side ol the mound, which coil- manded a wide view of the fertile surroun: ing country, the music of the bands cease and uount Hamilton, the uovernoroft province, made a speech of welcome, whi the students followed by a deafening four lold cheer; then Uount liandberg, on beha or the Jung, presented to tbe Congress souvenir of the meeting in Sweden, to I handed down from session to session. Thr, gilt was a drinking-horn, of the antique Norse pattern, made of oxvdized silver, in I laid with enamel and decorated! with gold. It stands upon a pe destal made oi three dragons, with diamond eyes and bears upon its lid a golden owl. Prof. Max Muller, ot Ox ord, then replied in German on behalf of the members of the Congress, in his usual con cise way. The occasion, he said, was one of great interest for its place, its persons and its significance. The gi t was made to representatives of tbe East and West; it was a symbol of their union for common literary effort. He hoped that the King, who had made this session so successful, might continue his protection to future con gresses. While the band played "Hor oss Svea" stadentsclimbed the hill carry inggreatborns of mead, an insipid preparation of honey, from which we all drank, though most oi the uninitiated spilled more than they got. Then the students on the hilltop made an open space in their midst, Irom which Prof. Hedenius, the venerable rector of the uni versity, wearing bis gold chain of office, made u short hut effective speech inviting the guests to a collation in the great hall of the university, and leading the students in CHEERS FOB THE CONGRESS. After wandering about the mounds and visiting the ancient church we were taken to Upsala by the train. There the band and student corps, who bad preceded us, led the way with flying banners over tbe cobble stones of the streets about half a mile up bill to the university. The entire route was decorated with fiat's and bunting, and was lined by large crowds kept back by the po lice. The procession made a detour to pass the great cathedral, the finest in Sweden, a high gothic building of brick which is un dergoing a complete restoration, for which the State, city and private persons have given 1,000,000 crowns. Passing many uni versity buildings, tve came at last to the splendid new Aula, the surprise of the day to most ot us, tor I should not know where to find its equal in American or loreign uni versities. A State which puts more suniptu ousness and embellishment upon its educa tional institutions than upon its theaters and opera houses, testifies iu a very substan tial way to its appreciation of letters. The building has a good site, standing upon the topota hill and fronted by a large open square, lb i- two stories high and 250 leet long, and is built of glazed brick, trimmed with granite and sandstone. Bed granite pillars support the. iriezc, under which are large bronze allegorical figures representing the four faculties: religion, law, mi dicine, theology. Above are the arms of Sweden on enameled shields, and the arms of the 24 provinces, and set in the building are 40 granite tablets bearing in letters oi gold the names ol illustrious men who have been its professors. The univer sity was founded in 1477, and has now 60 professors, as many assistants, and 1,800 stulents, divided into 13 nationes, accord ing to the provinces from which thev come. Duelling is unknown in the university, and a great deal of interest is felt for quartette Biuging, which is cultivated here with more enthusiasm and success, perhaps, than any where else in the world. The student chorus which went to the Paris Exposition ol 1867, took the first prize against many com petetitors, and another picked chorus has just returned from this year's exposition covered with glory. TOO MANY FKOFESSIONAIi MEN. The same complaint is made here which is so general over Europe, that the excessive number of young men who flock to the uni versities is causing great over-crowding of the professions. The tendency toward manual and technical training in the lower schools is looked to as a means of giving relief. We went in by a spacious vestibule sup- fiorted by dark granite columns, and came nto a noble hall, extending the whole length ot the building and taking in both stories. Magnificent marble staircases go up to the right and left, and a broad gallerv containing statues and antique casts ex tends around the second story. The whole effect is very classic and appropriate. Be tween the staiicases is a green marble portico fl inked by bronze caryatides, and over the portico is a tablet with the words: j TANKA FBITT AB STORT j MEN TANKA EATT AB STORRE: ("Free thobght is j strong, but rigR thoucht is stronger." By the time we .reached the university iL was dark, and the rgrea ampitheater wm already. lit up and dazzling'in Its snmptuous decorations of gold and colors. The seats had an been removed, and the crowd surged to and fro, though fonat least an hour it was most con cerned with the collation which was set in the corridors. We had been fasting a long time, and the feeding ol such a multitude involved a good deal of confusion, but the supply was choice and generous, and in time we passed into the great hall between lines of girls dressed in the bright iiid pretty Dalecarlian peasant costume, carry ing baskets of flowers from which they gave a bouquet to each visitor. Here there were more speeches the rector taking tbe lead, and Schrader, of Berlin, High Priest Modi, and others speaking Irom the tribune. No body paid very much attention to the speeches, I regret to say, and Irom the gallery nothing could be beard bnt the confused murmur of the seething throng ol visitorsand white-capped students; introductions and meetings, eating, drink ing, walking about were all going on. The fact is the company was really too tired physically to remain still long enough to hear what was being said. There was in stant silence, though, when the student chorus gathered upon the platform. About 60 students formed a semi-circle about their leader and sang without notes some well known SWEDISH AIRS. ( It was the perfection of male-part slhging; faultless time and harmony and excellent effects iu shading, showed 1 ng and carefil training. The rich, effective bass vas notice able, bnt was well balanced by the fine first tenor voices, so scarce in our own student choruses. We were not too tired to hear them again and again, and then to call them to the front hallway, where they rendered some of Lassen's and Kjerulfs songs. The university authorities showed us one special favor which nas perhaps the most appreciated of all the arrangements for the day, not the less so for having been decided upon during the exercises asasodden happy thought From the library building was brought over the small glass case contain ing that priceless treasure to all students of Teutonic languages, the Codex Argeuteus, or Silver Book, containing Ulfilas' Gothic version of the gospel, made in tbe iourth century. From this unique manuscript has been recovered tbe Gothic language, wfiich lies at the very root of Germanic compara tive philology. It is written on leaves of purple parchment in letters of silver and gold, and is bouud in heavy cOversof silver, whence Its name. We had ample opportu nity to inspect it close'y.as it was putonthe table in the room of the Consistory, a cham ber where the furniture and decoration is even richer than in tbe great hall. It was late at night when we left, marching in a long procession downhill to the station, through crowds which seemed even greater than those which greeted our arrival, and the windows along our way were lighted with clusters o candles. The lete given at the Grand Hotel ou Tuesday night by the Count aud Countess Laudberg was characterized by a lavish display which was meant to be suggestive ot Oriental magnificence. The great ban queting balls and half a dozen other apart ments on the first floor were reserved icr the Eurpose. A small army of servants was on and, lining the way Irom the street to the parlor, all dressed in oriental costumes. There was an immense crowd present, in cluding the notables and court circles of Stockholm in State array. THE KINO AND CKOWN PEINCH arrived at 9 o'clock, and were received with muctrpomp and circumstance. Both wore ordinary evening dress (except that they had ou the blue sash and star of the Sera phiui Order), and this costmne seemed to show their fine figures even better than mil itary uuilorm. The decorations of the rooms were most elaborate. At one end of the banquet hall was a life-sized statue ot King Oscar, modeled for the occasion, and representing him crowned by an Egyptian genius, Then there was an Egyptian drinking ball nrovided with annronriata mnral paintings 7in mock lithographic style. There was a bowery ante-room filled with tropical plants, in which were mingled colored incandescent 1ghtsrand where bunches ot hothouse grapes rere tied to real grape vines. An orchestra played a long musical programme, and there were even Oriental dances in costume, and of course a sumptuous supper with a great profusion of wines. The royal party bad a small room to themselves, where about IS persons sat down to a regular sup per, while the rest of us found supplies at the tables in the other rooms, or were gra ciously, permitted to stand at the door and watch the royal group at their meal. When the tine came fortheEing to be driven away the wlole distance irom the hotel to the palace;was illuminated by red Bengal lights fetnt short distances along the quay and over the bridges, which were prettily re flecteclin the water. I think it will be seen from these accounts that tile Orientalists are being treated to a good leal beside the dry details ot scientific work. It might almast be said that every effort J3 being made that tbe sessions of the Congress shall interfere as little as possible with (lie round of entertainments, which is still at Its height On Thursday and Fri day tfiere were great fetes, the litter being givectby the citizens of Stockholm at tbe suburban villa of Hasselbacken. j James Taft Hatfield. - A TEEI KX0W1XG SQ0IBREL. ! An Old Olan'a Cate Little Pet That Under J stood All Be Said. New Tort Snn.J A Jray-hcaded, homely old man sat on a bene i in a sequestered part of Central Park the other day and fed the squirrels with pea nuts. One plump fellow cocked his tail in air aad actually took the kernels from the old man's hand. "If Jock was here," said the old fellow, "you'd see him on my shoul der. He often jumps from a tree right on top of, my bat It took me a year to tame him. I call 'em all Jock. I tamed tbe first one fire years ago. He got so that he un derstood all that I said to him. One day I gave him a cream nnt, and said: 'I don't know what you will do with that, Jock; snow's too deep for you to bury it' "Well, he just ran up a tree till became to two forked limbs, thrust the nut between them and pushed it down hard with his paws. Then he started down the tree, but I said: 'Why, Jock, the wind'U blow that out' Then what did he do but go back, take hold of that nnt, shake it with bis paws, and look at me as much as to say, Mister, I guess that's all right' "They shot Jotk three years ago, when thev said the quirrels were getting too thick in Ihe park, and destroying the buds. I don't think the squirrels can be too thick; them trees looks as if their bads had been injured, now, don't they?'' BEVIsITED. Here lies the roid; the white-oaks still Spread wide their sheltering arms, Qreen fle'ds and hedperows crown the hill The farms, the pleasant farms! Yet past the bridge my path i keep, To jonder ruined wall 'Whose mint and myrtle, ankle-deep, Are dearer tban them all I The loved, remembered spot is there Where roof and cbimnev rose, Though scarce a trace ot human core The patient greensward shows: Rvt Is sunk in moss and briers. What mirth and household comfort shone Long since, by vanished flres! How the great pear-tree reared aloof Its honeyed cone of flowers, Dropped Its green firstlings on tbe tool And bent Its arms to ours: Where now at noon tbe tranquil cow Stand cool In dappled shade, For us the hemlock's opicy boughs Their Becond midnight made. Here, then, I come, I know not why. As child to mother's knee: Sweet are the thoughts of dayi gone by As once, of days to bel - And when the sunset sklei are clear M v nathwav trllmniAra tt- And mixed with all tbat changes here mge, 4 Is Love, 'but cannot cha Dora Head Uoodale in, Xe VJtOTOJ3K0, aSpffipJH HIMEIf KILLS CDPID. 1 Bessie Bramble Philosophizes on the Evils of Hasty Marriage. THE PLEASURES OP COURTSHIP. Wedded. Life for Many Women is but a Bough and Speedj AWAK1KQ PROM LOVE'S I0MG DREAM rwarrm roa rax pispatch.i When girls allow themselves to be hur ried into a hasty marriage they little know they are giving up the brightest and sweet est time of their lives. The men they love are never so devoted, never so bent upon pleasing them, never so charming in man ners and conversation as during courtship. Then they dunce attendance upon the girls they admire, wait upon their wishes, hang upon their lightest words, and pick up their handkerchiefs with the most devoted gal lantry. Nothing seems a trouble or a bard ship that is done by a man for the woman he loves and desires to marry. It is told of a certain gentleman not a hundred miles away that be used to walk ten miles twice and three times a week to see his beloved while they were engaged, and this, too, in all kinds of weather. No snow so deep or storm so great as to keep him athomewhen his Mary Anne was await ing him, decked out in her best things by the side ol a bright fire, with love beaming in Iter eyes, and a'kiss of welcome on her lips. After a happy evening together, he would sturdily start for home, five long miks away, and think all the way then how happy he was, and to what bliss he should attain when heand Mary Anne were married and had a little home of their own. Now he is a big business man. speuds his even ings mostly at the club, and wouldn't bother bis head to walk across the room for a kiss when he comes home, let alone five miles. MHry Anne, too, has found that while courtship was the sweetest thing in life, and a perfect dream of felicity, yet marriage is a prosaio reality, with the per fect bliss left out THINGS HAVE CHANGED. Another man, well Known, was, as the saying goes, per ectly infatuated with his wife before marriage. He could not en jure that the wind should blow upon her too roughly he could not entertain the notion that her beautiiul hands should be soiled bv drudgery he could not bear the thought that she would ever be subjected to bard ship he could not brook the idea that she should be other than tbe being whom he should surround with the halo ol a saint, and all of the delights and luxuries of life. But alas, it was not many years after mar riage before thlsbeautifnldarling, this cher ished idol, this beloved sweetheart had to take in boarders for a living, while her bus band spends his pittance as a bookkeeper in riotous living, and she drudges as a galley slave to keep tbe wolf from tbe door. Marriage makes an amazing difference in many cases, and if a girl wants to have a bright spot, a lew sweet perfect months in her life she will prolong the period of court ship as long as possible. Not only for the sake of her own immediate happiness, but lor tne purpose oi acquiring knowledge as to the man she has consented to marry. "Marriage is fatal to love," is a common saying that has loads of experience to sup port it; ont while this is by no means always true, there is enough in it that should make women chary ot accepting its responsibilities too soon. They should rather try to preserve their weeks of bliss, their sunny hours and gala days of court ship, their bright, beautiiul, lovely times when love is regnant, clouds seem far away, and trouble enters not into calculation or contemplation. t A OIEL IN" XOTZ , always sees the loved one as a hero. In her eyes he can conquer fate, achieve wealth, ride upoii the topmost wave of success and fame. To find him living upon ber smiles, oblivious to everything except as she wishes, dead to all desire save as she enters in, ready to die if she ceases to smile and love, is to feel the sweetness of power, the touch of a laurel crown, the satisfied aspiration of human nitnre in its longing-'forthebest and highest What sne needs to know is that this glory, this happiness, this bliss is only for a lew short days a sort of interesting and entrancing prelude to commonplace everyday life where sentiment is crowded out by the cares of tbe world and bouse rent Long engagements are held in abhorrence by ninueuvenng mothers nnd foolish and impatient lovers, bet nothing half so sweet in liie should be denied to those whose bard ships follow marriage as effect follows a cause. Before marriage a woman plays first fiddle, she is queen of the domain, she is a star of the first maenitude, she is a saint of the most approved pattern, an angel ater tbe highest orier, bnt after tbe ordinance of holy matrimony has been said over her, alter, with ring, she has been in church be fore witnesses, she becomes, as often hap pens, simply a domestic drudge. She is called qneen of the home in sentiment, but must knuckle down in many cases to the boss of ihe.establishment in reality. MAIiBIAGE MAKES A DIFFEBENCE. No more does he listen to her as to an oracle, bnt rather sets her down as one whose judgment goes for nothing, and whose Words are entitled to little weight or consideration. No more does he pick np her handkerchief or kiss her shadow upon the wall. No more does be wait upon ber wishes or hang his decisions upon her words. No more does he endeavor to shield her Irom all hardships or shelter her Irom the trials of tbe world. No more does be, as representing the average of men, run after her whims or furnish willingly the cash for their enjoyment Before marriage he is so deeply solictious about ber comfort, he is so earnestly devoted to making her life lovely, so' entirely given over to love like subservience, that she crowns him a king, she hails him as a hero, she earnestly feels she would Rather live upon the light of one kind smile from him tban wear tbe crown tbe Bourbons lost. But after the vows have been ypoken, the knot bos been tied, the chain has been forged, the sacrament has been tasted, it does not take the good brother long to assert bis rights, as held under tbe law. It is not a great while before he proclaims himself lord and master and big mogul. It is hardly the common year-aad-a-day beiore he pro mulgates the decree that bis wishes are to be held paramount, that his whims are to be law And gospel that he is to be the su preme ruler ot tbe roost and the monarch within the walls ol the home of the lamily. In this assumption he is upheld by the law. It matters nothing that be should chance to be the wrecker of the family peace, the lam ily fortunes, that he is the breaker of his wife's heart, and the bugbear of bis chil dren's dreams, he is the head of the house under the law and entitled to have bis own way suffer who will, AFTER THS DONETMOOIT. Girls as a rule think nothing of this. Iioving and beloved, they unselfishly trust to tbeir ideals ot chivalrous mannoou oui; to Be rudely awakened from their dreams of felicity by the sad and stern realities of life. lUen who he ore marriage would have resented a wrinkle in a roseleaf as it af fected tbe sottness and smoothness of life for their beloved Juliets, after the honey moon will take Ifttie or no thought of the thorns and briers tbat beset their path. They will look upon tbem not as angels, hut us human beings who have to hoe their end of the row, and more, too. and who should moreover be glad and thankful to toil and suffer under their protecting care. They will look upon them "with a sort of pity u creatures whom they have rescued Irom spinsttnlom, and who should be ever lastingly grateful lor tbeir admittance into the haven of matrimony. Tbe lover sighing like a furnace is a ulemtno- nhlorL nerhaps. for the mis- trees "of his heart to ee&tMplate, bat w fc . t ' tbe same man growling like a how sa Because tils dinner is not ready te Me swrp jnoment is a man whose wife does sot repose upon roses, or flowery beds of e se. Beiore marriage be wonld scorn to be bate ttt, would put up with anything rathertban find fault, would.recognize a thousand ex cuses ' for shortcomings, but alter tbe preacher has pronounced them mis aad wife the whole complexion of thing baa been changed. ''After he has publicly promised to love, honor and cherish satil "death do us part" he feels quite privileged, to rant arounu ana raise uain with an a&aa dnu that would be amazing if it were sot to common. Alter the words have been said that make the twain one he astert himself as "the one" with all of theenergy of which he is capable, and the sovereign power that the law confers upon him. Of course there are multitudes of exceptions, but we are talking of the rule. SA WOMAN'S ELYSIUM. During courtship is usually tbe happiest time of her life for a woman, and to cut short this season of delight by .an early marriage Is a piece of foolishness on ber part that she can never 'all to regret- Long encasements are deprecated by many peo ple, hut a courtship of two or three years is far the best in almost all cases. As a gen eral thing it gives to a woman her one un alloyed taste oi pleasure, her one gala time in li e, her sweetest experience of purest felicity. The letters then written are love letters indeed, to be cherished at long as life lasts the "dreams then indulged are full of ideal hliss tbe future then pictured is V happiness beyond the power of dictionaries to put Into words, tbe loveliness ot me as portrayed by the magnetism of love is divested of all the harsh accompaniments that make existence as Dickens called it, a "demnition grind." Courtship borrows no trouble, it has no difficulty in making both ends meet, it is full of "the light that never was on sea orland." Girls, fust out of school, who rush into matrimony, as if it were the garden of the gods, miss this interval of purest joy, of ricnert oeamune, oi rarest happiness, xney marry in haste and repent at leisure. Mar riage n a success wnen true neans are weu and love welds its fetters, but its troubles and trials are sore tests at times. In court ship love is paramount; in marriage it often goes under. A lucky wooing is olten long a-doing, but there is more pleasure in it than in the rush of a wedding which brooks no delay and which, as result shows, bad better h'ave been delayed forever. A step in life so Important Should never be entered upon unadvisedly and lizhtlv in anv case. xnd young women should make a point of "being engaged long enough to have a good time, and to make sure that their marriage is for better and not for'worse. MATEIMONy'a EESPOUSIBIUTrBS: Matrimony brings heavy responsibilities and emphasizes the seriousness ol life, and none should Better understand its require ments than tfie "women who thoughtlessly take upon them Its vows and assume for themselves Its sacred and momentous duties. What women mi most in marriage is what they most enjoyed in courtship ap preciation and the expression and attentioni of love. Alter they have become man and wife under thelaw of Church and State, the husband is wont to wax careless and Indif ferent He may still love his wile, but ho feels under no obligation to show it by word or deed. If his wife roasts herself in the kitchen to get him up a good dinner he eats it withont a word of praise or appreciation. But Hit is not goodehas no scruples about finding fault "I stood my husband's neglect until I felt I mist break down, or die, or fight it off. I concluded to fight, and yon may know we had a time of it I taught myself to pay no regard to his censure, and, as it never occurred to him to praise, I thought thou sands of times that marriage was undoubt edly a failure, and that I was a fool for hav ing given up freedom and independence for the ser dom of such a life." Many women have a like experience, and yet how easily life could be made happy if men and" women could be made to under stand what bliss is possible, if, instead of changing their manners alter marriage..: they would conduct tbemselves as tbey did In the happy a'ays ofcoartehp? -If a man in his character as husband were still the fond lover, the devoted attendant, the ap preciative and demonstrative sweetheart, love would not dle but blaze and blaze afresh the sweet dreams would become realities, the high ideals of marriage would be materialized. Bessie Bbaublx. MISTAKE? FOR A MOSQUITO. An Immigrant Tfalnba nn Elephant One ot Jersey's Pests. Philadelphia Inqnlrer.l It is truly a cosmopolitan gathering that collects daily at tbe Zoo. Bepresentatives of nearly every nation visit there. Yester day a sturdy daughter o. the Emerald Isle, who had been in tbis country but a few days, was among the visitors. She was ac companied by relatives, one of whom told her of the mosquitoes that infest the low lands near tbe river's edge. He described the Jersey product as having an elongated body with a protruding nib and tail, and told ber thai the insect shoved his nib in one's flesh and sucked the current of lie. After the monarchs of tbe forest and jun gle had been inspected the young woman entered the elephant house, where the tower ine Bolivar and the mild mannered Princess and Jennie are quartered. The young woman, eager to see the sights, was the first of ber party to,enter the buildinsr. Those accompanying her had scarcely passed through the doorway, when their newly arrived relative, breathless with excitement and ber face pallid from fear, rushed by them. She was pursued aud overtaken and an explanation called for. Between her sobs she managed to tay: "The muskety wanted me!" From her relative's description she had mistaken the great beasts for tbe tiny in-, sects, and when Bolivar thrust his trunk through the ban to beg for some toothsome morsel she interpreted it as his desire to Back her blood. She was nervous through out her stay in the garden. SOT TO BK SMOKED OUT. An Old Irfidy Who Hod n Liking- for the Pnmrs of Tobacco Scottish American.) Some Ed inburgh students on a football tour to Glasgow wished to secure a carriage all to themselves. Just as tbe train was about to start, up rnshed an old woman, who sought to push ber way into the carriage. To deter her one of the students exclaimed: "My good woman, this is a smoking com partment, don't you know?" "Weel. weel,'' returned the old women, "never mini, I'll mak' it dae," and in she went "Smoke her out," was the word passed as sooq as the train started. Accordingly all the windows,, wire closed fast, every pipe was taken out, aud soon the carriage was completely filled with a dense 'cloud of tobacco smoke. The effect, however, was not all that could have- ben anticipated. The old woman seemed in the height of en- joyment;hut one of the yonng men began to snow aeciuedsymptomsoi Deiugexceedingly sick. Taking his pipe from his mouth, he leaned back with a dejected air, whereupon the old woman, leauing forward, said in a wheedling tone: "II ye are dune, sir, wi' yer pipe, would yon kindly gie me a bit draw, as I forgot mine in my hurry to catch the tralu7" , Married 78 Years. Daniel Lauisberry, a resident of the northern part ol this country, and, who is 101 years of age, visited Madison I'M Satur day tor the' purpose of having his first pic ture taken, says a Lac Qui Parle corre spondent of the Pioneer Press. The old gen tleman is as chipper as a matt of 65 years or age, and, with' the exception of (dyspepsia, he enjoys good health. His wife, who is only two years his junior, Is living, and is likewise in good health. bela? able to do ber own hoawok.NTley wen married 78 yeats ace. , " -" t - ! i mRrm jjinr- " ' - Tke&cr(ef Eler&al Life u KwnM by tbe SaYwr. WHAT CHRIST CAME -rJlJ. ALmmb Bused Cpea fore aad Mm ??& aaee of Unty. " , fj . i !dPfy IAYff .NOT FOR PHILOSOPIIMAMM: - - ALAW'YEfSfcHJESB ' w ate uu roa raa DtsrATtftl - 14 Z j.t is recurueu la ise gospels how a OenaMKE lawyer asked aad asswered a mon. iaa pert antqnesttea. "What shall Ido,".hesidp. "toinhefMeterMlJile?'' AadChiistaaa4 him answer that himself. JfS, ' Becausethe raau was qaite eapaWe of a- swerlug bis own questia. It w m knowkdge that he .Beeped. He, kaewV . enough. The maa's. need wm sairitauU rather than meets!. .It wm aByrooiasioai., "'" UB lacked, and rejiixtties. We-J's mrv- Tln la fl.-. I , f l. -iX j ..... oerjr umsn sest sswaagiiuiis eternal life. And w-eay be saw tewt ? conditions of that MJ -U ;. sure and so possible oi faleklaseat that ey are withiu tbe reach of the verv kiM14 human creature. lata far 'ftarkeHeviSr that Baphael'a "Stood of Aiheas" lii food nictnri. nf tiaunA tr . , - ... U,C1I, iieayea.w sec re-5,j servea wr tbe philosophers. vA eW many very Ignorant people wltt getfifs here, I hnpe. We may be allet.! tbat with Him, to whom the prolooiidoit wisdom Nor this world U only iWWwess,' learning is not halfso acceptable a love! There will be no school exawiuatiea- evea in theology, at the day of judgment The secret of eternal life is in the heart or every human being. Some people seem to be waitm? for tout.. Burv.lnn. A..t..; . teach them a saving truth whiek tbey have never dreamed of. Some iaagia gate most open in the side of the hill tbrsegh which, a by a path urueea and h a heard .beiore. tbey will enter into the kisgefoa el heaves. u.T r ..tfce lawyer's qaeeti.. "Wbat shall Tdo?" they say. Aad ai! she ttee they know all tbat . fir J THBT 1TBBD TO XXAw: ,-', I 2nd here fa oar-Tawd'. J - Jgfe . Tile? ?nnfvars .! a L a ss the "adequacy of preseot - casM Unities." He 'referred the weJI that sacred book whieh it wasAe? man s professional business to eHy 'st and know" by heart Just as Abrsbaea. Ut the parable, assured the rich mas thai it his careless brothers paid no heed to tbe old revelation ol Moses and the prophets, o i iT "a gnosis, getttug vpoutet ; moldly graves, aad bearing bmsmsjm wiek the ink yet undried from toe eoaaet4 eeHta- ' ber oi heaven, would have asy eHetit at ill. 1 . ' Thry knew all thatithey needed te kae. I How to be saved tverybody ha the m- -swer in his heart "Brother, there Is, a ' light within thee, follow it and the art happy, forsake it or re.use IU gaiaMug as4 tfiuu art miserable." I. it give as lartbec leading tban tlwt, then tarn ahoat to tbe , right aad keep straight oa; lollow that, it-isf enough. Chnst made the lawyer leefciaU aud read his own. answer. And there it t was already written down- la tbe rams' ' mind, waiting only for an honest aad earn- ? est reading. w f What the lawyer needed was to traBstaM " knowledge into action. "Thou hast answered right, " Uarist said. "Do tbis aad then Shalt live." There is a jfeed deal of differ ence hetweea kaowine a truth theologically and knowing it religiously., Weawy-saylfce , creed, bat to live; the ereed is the ewwrtiil """J;. Tk" the daily duties and do them; shoulder the daily- crosses, lollow- tbe beat religious light you havethe beaedietiea of ; God is at the end of that path. Js- " Abe lawyer answered, the attestfea. sA CuristiOet the answer stand iserastfcan V. '"? : V"w g-gretner m rsyj aud lawgiver had stated Jt,M kstesd WrJa."8 wa in tne dooks otJHoses: "Taoa stnttlev' the Lord thy God with all thy heartfaiid,- -with all thy soul, and with all thy strtBg, aud with all thy mind; and thy neighbor' as thyself." Tne-Master made no oofflmeat, nor addit.on. - TAUGHT BT KXASPLJL " ' Because Christ came to make His greatest; revelation to the raer, not by any new word but by a new life. The truths whieh Ha came especially to emphasize and to tcaesl were taught nnd emphasized more by Hi history than by His preaching. Not in what He said, but In what He did,, are to be lound the peculiar aad ami precious truths) of our religion. II yen will think of it yod will recognize this fact, that when we, Wast expression lor our seme o the divine cora passion of our HeaveBly Father, or lor oar certainty of tbe dlvi&e forgiveness of our sins, we go not to the gospels but hack to the elder scriptures. We find words, not in the utterances of Christ, but iu the mes sages whirh the pen 1 mists and the propHeta brought "The Lord is my Sfcapherd." That -was written in a psalm. "Like as a father pitieth his own cbildrea,e.Tea so is the Lord merciiul unto them that fear Hiss. Foe He knoweth whereol. we are made, He remem bereth thatTieareijufdusU" Thatisfrom another psalm. "Though year sias be ' aa scarlet, they shall be as white as seow; though they be red like erwiHm, they shall . be as wool." A,prophetaid that ""., Christ came to teach the essential sprri-" uality or religion; that it la above sIKbb terial expression, forms being' ealyMief symbols of it, and of no good aa betierf than a dead body, without the pirit&ft spiring them. That was not new. Christ came to teach the fatherhood of Ged.'iwd. the universal brotherhood of mas; that GM loves us, anil that we ought to love -Hi and one another. That was not new either. I cannot think of aby statement br'our Lord of either of these truths more impres sive than the old statements of them by tha men ol the old time. " No. Christ eame to pat life Into all ihe truth whieh men had taught and heard be- fore, by His Messed embodiment of it la Himself. One man is worth a thousand libraries, even of sermons. He, who went among Ihe heathen of Decauolis and healed their sick, and looking Up to heaven sighed to think of the miseries of men He has taught us more abont God's fatherhood aad man's brotherhood than all the preachers, though they bought their sermons straight from Gbd, could have taught us in A THOUSAND TEARS OP SUHDAYS. T? who for nnrwtvu UmM.j'Ui in- the bitternessof death upon the cros, needed not to preach in any new words, even of heavenly devising; aboHt the boundless ItiTA n fl-lnd flfarl thsa lniAn!i..r l- , i and Go.l's longing to save the sinner. The cross was sermon eaougn. Rn PhrlitbuV li. I.. t .. . T ,. , "" ""er answering as he put it, and accepted it. making no addi tion What ceuld be added to it? "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thr soul, and with ail thy strength, and with all thy mind; and .... .9.,u, . .uscn. vvnai oesias tbis can auvbodv writs In "ft.. kt. Ant-r of man?" Aud so the word at tha center of religion trio xrnrA 1.c A A . .i .. - ,.... fsv, AHU MIC MfKIS.iC " right who declared that "love is the .nlfiU- t - .U- 1 ft . ... ... ins m uic isw. no ae was rignt, too. who said, "Only love then, do anything. Because he knew that he who genuinely loves can do nothing amiss toward his Mas ter whom he loves, nor toward his neigh bor. Above air eloqnent speech, tboojxb. a man talk with the tongue of an.nngel; above all knowledge and spiritual Miscern raent, and understanding of doctrines and theology; above all strength of laiib, though we should move mountains; above all excel lent generosity and abundant giving to the poor over all is love. Thrtnk God lor that, because we can all love. We may not, be very ttlllinl sr utterance, nor wiw, ut strong even ia mith, aad we mav be poor, instead of being asaoag those whose priril hhi lllalo beD tlw boor, but we eaa all . love- Beeaaee that is born ia us. Aad to leve 04 sad to love our l is ia Iu ' Ufa. UMsHHS M I iTsBJT'msI t ir$iL fP m SkV r .'L