"DRY OH ROGUE, e Maa Without a Becord Who .Made Himself a National Character. S WHOLE LIFE A LIE. the Prestige of Bank Invented a Birthplace for Himselfi ICK WITH THE BRIGADIERS Became the Medium for Their Dealings With General Hayes. DNIFORH CAUSED MS DOWNFALL iiWEinrs ron the dispatch.) is story of a rogue has never been told. rogue was never discovered to the iral public. Skilled in the art of de ion, he made a great place for himself at one time was a historical figure at national capital. He had much gination, a fair address and a good aory. He .was not satisfied with his tion in life nor his own history. By force of will and his powers of gination he crca ted for himself a new tion, based entirely upon ialsehood, through his adroitness he reached a idential position under the Government was accredited abroad with letters of highest officials, so that the most ex ie circles of Europe were open to him. he other day I saw him, broken, gray worn, on one of the back streets of shington. He is now in the last stages ivalidism and has been under treatment The End of the Rogue. some time iu the Government insane pitaL As he is now harmless and beyond ability to deceive any one, it will not necessary to give his full name. It will enough to call him "the Colonel" He always known as the Colonel, even in most brilliaut days although he had er served in any army and had never snielled gunpowder. le Bamboozled the War Department. "hrougb. mere force of assumption he le the grave and dienified War Depart- ntcrant bim the honors due to a full lone! of the regular army, and it was ough the Adjutant General of the United ites Army that the Colonel was intro ccd in England to Lord Wolseley as an cer of rank and consideration in the ticeofthe War Department. 'This suc .stul adventurer plaved a great part in r liistorv during the eventful winter of 'C and lbi, the jear of the Tilden-Hayes ipute. At one time the Colonel was ab utely the arbiter ot the situation, and hi iii his hand all the threads of those licate negotiations which were carried on ween the managers of the Republican rtv in the iforth and the political leaders the South. t aw the Colonel at short range during a ruber of years and was an eyewitness some of the principal phases of ' caieer. I sat at the same table with him the hotel where he stopped when he first lie to Washington and received at various nes enough of his confidence to keep me 11 informed concerning his career. After trd, when he became so successful, I he me sufficiently interested to make an in stigation and" learn the exact truth of his il hidturv. He came to Washington early in the nter 01187G as a newspaper correspondent nreenting a daily newspaper in the city 'ew Orleans. The Colonel was then in e neighborhood of 43 years of age. There is nothing particularly striking about his pearance; there was nothing to suggest e military character that he afterward so Il played. He was a small, undersized in with a slight stoop and a rheumatic up. A Distinguished Looking Face. His face, however, was rather disingnished oking. His head was large, his foretiead is very tun aua broad; his iron gray hair is cut verv short; his color was good; his es nere very dark brown and most per- asive in their expression; his nose was a lall aquiline: a slight gray mustache aded his mouth. In front of each ear as a small dab of English whiskers. The iloncl came to Washington unknown and iheralded. He seemed chiefly remarka- e in the early days forhis ability to adapt meelf to every situation. He had not en in Washington more than a month hen he adopted the most careful and pre- se dress ot what he called 'le haut onde." He discarded the soft black hat the South lor the stiff high hat of the orth and East. He attached himself very on to the Louisiana Lottery Company, id s-o had a larger income to'gratify his .stcs, which were extremely social. 2fo one eier saw the Colonel drunk. He as very careful and abstemious in hishab- s. He devoted almost his entire attention Washington sooiety. He made as many ills as the wife of a cabinet officer. In the isy-goiug society of Washington any one ho is well dressed and deports himself ith decorum and dignity can go very near- ,- where he likes. The Colonel had evi- ently never found so inviting a field. He ttached himself to the diplomats by telling icra remarkable stories of his power and lfluence in the South. He made many -lends cmong the Southern men because he 'presented a Southern paper, and when ith them he was the most unreconstructed bel living. The wife of the Spanish Jlin- ;tcr was please! with his formal politeness ml attention, and honored him at nearly very entertainment with her special favor. ll.Uaia Brilliant Imitator. It was during this winter that the Colonel lecided the role he was to play. He saw lie attention given to officers in society at .Vnshinzton and decided at once that he hould become an officer. As he was then laving the role of being an extreme South rn gentleman, he could begin by being othlng less than an ex-Confederate officer. o ape was ever more imitative. He studied he wavs of the Southern Brigadier and the notation was so perfect that I never heard SoJth;rn gentlemen at that time dispute lie ventv of bis assumption of being an ex onledcrate. The Colonel had a fine liter rv mind and such powers of imagination 'ist if he had applied his talents in the irection of literature alone he certainly ould have made a name for himself. He I read ut all of the histories of the war, de j tails of each noted battle, and there was no real veteran who could anord to dispute with him concerning these same details. Ills descriptions of engagements in which he participated were so much more dramatic and so much more true to life that the real veterans blushed and sat back when the Colonel had the floor. It must be remembered that this artist never was in the South in his life till after the War of the Rebellion. He' had never had a real uniform on his back, not eyen that of a militia company, up to the day he set up in Washington the role of an ex-Confederate, which he played with such skill and such address that noted"ex-Confederate Generals referred to him in disputes concern ing strategic points involved in the South ern campaigns. The Colonel, instead of coming from a military family, was the son of a Presbyterian divine and was born and brought up in Peru, Ind. He received at the hands ofihis father a good education and afterward studied law. His father was too poor, however, to do more than launch him in the world, and the Colonel after vainlv seeking to make a place for himself in the legal profession in the village of Harrods burg, Ky., drifted South after the war as an adventurer eager to seize upon the first opportunity to better his fortunes. Invented a Pedigree for HImielf. The Colonel was at first content to play the role sloiply of an ex-Confederate, but he was so often asked about his family that he saw It would be necessary to invent another chapter in his history. In the South everybody is known, and a fictitious family would be only too soon discovered. The Colonel by a bold stroke transferred his birthplace from this countrv to Paris. He built up in that country a thoroughly consistent story, which was accepted by all of his Confederate friends as tier would the gospel. In this beautiful story, which he carefully compiled, the Colonel was formerly a petted officer at the Imperial court, where his mother was a maid of honor to the Empress Eugenie, The Colonel himself was a Graduate of the great military school of St. Cyr. The Coionel also served as a military" attache in the Austrian German campaign of '66, and was slightly wounded in his right leg. This accounted for his l'mp. The Colonel could not speak over a halt dozen words of French, and this would have instantly stamped him as an impostor, but in the easy going society of Washington no one cared very much whether the Colonel was what he said he was or not The Colonel might have mar ried almost anyone of the great matches of the day in Washington if he had been free, but earlier in his career in New Orleans he had married. There he had a wife and two children which he never mentioned, but some of his friends living iu that town knew her and made known to their Southern associates iu Washington that the Colonel was married. During his second winter the Colonel set up as a mentor to various sons of high officials who came to Washington from what the Colonel called the provinces. This polished graduate of the society of Peru, Ind., instructed all these youug peo ple as to the ins and outs of high society, lleei en purchased the clothes lor a small army of youngsters who looked up to the Colonel as the glass of fashion. He was also a great authority on duels. He had fought at least six, and had left his man on the cround twice. In the last four cases he had grown weary of blood, and gave back the lives of the men who met him on the field of honor. Tho Cause or One Woman's Dpatb. There was something so artistic about the Colonel, such an absence ot swagger and such an apparent reluctance to talk about himself that lew ever dreamed of disput ing anything he said. He told his stories modestly and with such a minutenssa of de tail that it was inconceivable to the aver age mind that his inventions were mere fantastic lies. He became a final authority on social matters as well as military. Iu his posing as a hero he captured the heart of the wife ot a ery distinguished official. Her devotion to this little insignificant man was one ot the most inexplicable and no torious facts in Washington society at that time. Her death soon alterwards can be directly traced to ber unfortunate attach ment for this colossal humbug. The Colonel reached the pinnacle in his success in the early period of the Hayes ad ministration. His great stroke was made when the, deal was made with Mr. Hayes whereby the Southern people were given their State governments in the three dis puted States in the South in return for their yielding their claims on the Presidental count This alone made the Electoral Com mission compromise possible. The Colonel had by this time so allied himself to the strongest men in the South and had to such an extent even the confi dence of Mr. Lamar, now Justice of the Supreme Court, that he was able to go to Mr. Murat Halstead in Cincinnati, who was then a spokesman lor Mr. Hayc, as the fully accredited representative ot the South ern Brigadiers. Then he went to Mr. Hayes at Columbus. He Took In Sir. Hares Completely. To what extent Mr. Hayes gave him his confidence can be judged "only by the fact that the Colonel went'back to the Southern Brigadiers the accredited representative of Mr. Haves. Of course he had no docu mentary credentials, but from the conver sation had with him then he was able to prove that he was in active communication with the future President. Everything now was easy. He would return to Mr. Hayes as the representative of the South ern people, and then in the shortest possi ble time would return to them again as the agent of Mr. Hayes. In this way he played a most important part Neither side dis credited him, and when the agreement was actually made in Wormley's Hotel by Mr. Foster with the Southern leaders to de liver to them their State Governments, un doubtedly the Colonel is to be credited with the preliminary work which led up to this meeting and agreement .Up to this time his deceptions had harmed no one. I do not think underneath the Colonel was a man of bad propensities. Within a very short time after Mr. Hayes' inauguration the Colonel was appointed to one of the best civilian appointments in the War Department Here, it he had been quiet and content with the good fortune thus far secured, he might have remained undisturbed until the end of his life. But his actually being in the service of the War Department revived all of his military fic tions and he sought at once the right to "wear the uniform ot an officer of the United States army. He now went to the Governor of Louisiana and through his newspaper connections obtained a staff appointment The Colonel then went to work and had a uniform devised, copied after one of the most brilliant in the Austrian army. He appeared in it upon manv public occasions and in so doing'excited the attention of an army officer, Colonel Bacon, then a member of the slafl of General Sherman, but the Colonel captured lolly the regard and es teem of Townsend, the Adjutant General of the army. The Favored Onest of Lord Ttolseley. It was about this time that the Colonel had the happiest period of his romantic ca reer. He had obtained a leave ot absence of two months from the War Department, and, armed with a letter of introduction frdhi the Adjutant General of the United t Tlie Rogue in Conference With Hayeu THE States, went to Europe, taking with him in his trunk this special uniform which he had made, and whioh was covered with more gold lace and braid than any uniform ever made before or since. He found noth ing in his pathway in Europe; he was accredited to Lord Wolseley, the actual Commander in Chief of the British army, and was his guest at the annual maneuvers at Wimbledon. A personal friend of mine saw him one day in full militarv rig, seated at the right hand of Lord Wolseley, his most honored guest, and heard afterward compliment alter compliment from English officers who admired the correct knowledge, the modesty of this officer of the United States. It was a great pity that he ever returned. Fortified as he was lie might have remained in Europe for years, but he oame back to his fate, which was, of course, disoovery and exposure. Colonel Bacon had nothing poetic in his nature. He could not appreci ate the. ideal character which the Colonel had built up for himself, and so with coarse rudeness he took upon himself, through very proper military channels, to find out just who the Colonel" was. A friend of his, a distinguished ex-Coufederate officer, then in charge of the Bureau ot Bebellion Rec ords, was then engaged in making up the roster of the Confederate army. Colonel Bacon's attack upon the Colonel was very indirect. The Rogan's Great Bunder. He asked the chief of this bureau to call upon the Colonel to give his regiment aod the rank occupied by him in the Confed erate service, as he wag then sending out to every available ex-Coufederate officer for information necessary to complete the roster. The Colonel made the mistake of giving a definite and explicit answer. It was found after examination that there were five men of his name in the Confederate service, and if he had been a little more careful in building he might have taken the rank of one of these gentlemen without so great a chance of discovery, as three of them were then dead. But not knowing this, he gave his lormerranK and position as tha't ot Lieutenant Colonel of the Fourth Arkansas Cavalry. I am at a loss to account for this great blunder on the part ot the Colonel. He had been so artistic up to date that he should have been better prepared. He made the tremendous blunder of giving the former rank and position of a gentleman then liv- The Guest of WoUelry. ing. The bureau had in its possession the correct roster of the Fourth Arkansas Regi ment Even then this cruel fact might not hae been pushed too sharply against the Colonel if it had not been for an incident which occurred the following day after the roster was examined. The occasion was a fashionable wedding in St. John's Church, in Washington. It was at the wedding of an officer of the army. General Sherman, out of compliment to the bridegroom, was present, with his staff, among the invited guests. They all came in full uniform. The Colonel also came in his uniform and marched to the part of the church where General Sherman and his staff" were placed and took his position so near them as to carry the idea that he was a member of General Sherman's military family. BoiroTrrct S80O From an Editor. This was too much for Colonel Bacon. He even spoke to the Colonel about it at the wedding and said: "Where the douce did you get that uniform, and by what authority are you rigged out as a toy sol dier?" The Colonel to this made no an swer and, of course, there was no occasion for any extended conversation on the sub ject. The facts were laid before the President with such a strong recommendation by Gen eral Sherman that the President could not do less than approve his dismissal. The Colonel's career from then- on was down ward; for some time, upon the credit of his former position, be Mas able to borrow money, although he could not ob tain any regular position anywhere. I heard of him in New York several weeks after. He performed the unparalleled feat then of borrowing ?S00 of the editor of agreatNewYork news paper. This perhaps was a greater triumph and shows more clearly his powers of per suasion than anything he did at Washing ton. He was a short tinjp afterward the guest of the editor of a great Boston newspaper, and he gave a garden party in his honor at his country home. A notice of this was printed in Boston, and this brought out a dispatch from a Washington correspondent which put an end to his New England career. T. C. CRAWrOKD. Cats In Their Dreams. A lady in Portland, Me., relates a curious experience in regard to dreams that both she and her father had dreamed several times. She would wake in the morning with the memory of hideous, snarling cats. This happened occasionally for some time, and the same was true of her father. Finally, when traveling a long way from home, she entered a picture gallery and there were the cats of her dream. She recognized the pic ture immediately, though she had never seen it before and did not know that it existed. Soon after her father saw it and exclaimed: "There are the cats ot my dream!" HOTV THET GO ON. IWKITTIV TOR THE PISrATCH.l Did ye ever take note uv the difieientway That men nn' wimmln go on when thev Wake up an' diskiver that lnv Is gone t Sa, hov ye ever took note how they go on? This here's what's struck me a right good bit, She tries tor remember, be tries ter ferglt: An' the things she reineinoers they make him cuss, An' say, "Gieat ScotI what a fool I wuzl" She keeps all his fiicters an' letters an' slch, An' hides 'em away in sum safe-like niche, An' brings 'em all out fer a quiet cry Sum time when she kalkerlates no one is by. Then she ties 'em with ribands and puts 'em away Ter retch a good cry sum lonesnm-llke day, An' sez she, lieavin' sighs ez blgez she cun, "Law mc! how I did useter luv that there man." i An' he, when bo's tossin thru collar and cuff An' necktie and kei chief an sock an' slch stuff. If he finds sum ol' cnrl er ol' riband er glur That wuz glv by tire woman he once usetor luv, Scz he, ez he glvs It a keerle ss-like fling, "Why where on earth did I git that there thing?" f An' snigg'rin', fool-like, terhlsself, sez he, "My land! how that woman did useter lur me!" Now that's 'bout the way that they both go on When they wake and olsklvcr that tar Is nnnp.. .An' this here's the main pint of difference, ye see, Sez she, "I luved him!" sez he, "she lnved mel" AlfJTE VlBOrSU. COXBEBTSOlT. Note The dialect will be 'recognized as that ot Southeastern Ohio. ) PJTTSBURG- DISPATCH, PURPOSE AND METHOD A Sermon Upon Christianity From These Two Points of View. QUESTIONS THE APOSTLES ASKED. Sometimes the Progress Feems Discourag ing to the Worker. THE INSPIRATION OF AX EXAMPLE fWBITTKX FOR 1HI PISrATCIt.l The apostles asked the Master on the day of his ascension into heaven a question about the coming of the kingdom: Dost Thou at this time restore the kingdom of Israel? It is not likely that they were still think ing their old ambitious thoughts. They had grown wiser than that. The time had been when tpey lobked forward to a day of temporal authority. Christ, they thought, was to reign as a king in Jerusalem, and all the rnlers of the earth were todo Him rev erence and to pay Him tribute. He was to sit upon a splendid throne, and there were to be six thrones only less splendid upon each side of Him, and upon them the 12 fishermen and peasants of Galilee. The whole nation had that idea about the Mes sianic Kingdom, and the apostles naturally shared in it. But little by little hrist bad led them out of that, above that. They had learned at last that the greatest of all king doms is the kingdom of the truth, and that the most exalted rule of all is that which holds not the allegiance of the lips only, but of the will and of the heart. When would that kingdom como? When would the Lord Christ be the accepted ruler of the race? The Coming ot the Kingdom. We, too, ask that question! The king dom seems a long time coming. We pray daily that it may come; that the rebellious devil may be driven out and the victorious Christ come in, and the reign of universal righteousness begin. No more disobedience to the law of God, no more turning away from the divine invitation, no more lying, stealing, impurity, injustice, unbrotherli ness when will "it come, the triumph of the truth and of the right? Whenever we look hack over a year of Christian work, and then lookout, as e must, into the world about us, the kingdom of God seems to bo coming very slowly. The kingdom is like leaven, the Master said, which a woman took and hid in three measures of meal until the whole was leav ened. But the leaven seems to make very little impression on the lumps. The veast does not seem to cet a good hold upon the dough. The church is the yeast, and all the irreligious community is the dough. Is the dough rising at all? Is this city better to-day than it was a year ago, is it any more the city of Christ than it was, after all the Christian ministry of the twelve-month? Is the neighborhood better for the existence of the church in the midst of it? What have we really accomplished? The Record Seems Discouraging. It is discouraging to think of all the ser vices and all the sermons, and ail the Christian ministrv of the parsons and the people, and to ask ourselves what it has actually effected. Is the kingdom of God any farther along in the great fight which it is waging with the kingdom of the devil? At first, we are inclined to answer "no." The truth is, however, that God sees a great deal clearer than we do. In the midst of any battle, the soldiers who are in the thick of it beneath the cloud of blinding smoke can only guess at the fortunes of. the day. They may be beaten back, but on the Other wing their comrades may be wiuning victories. The General on the top of the hill, who sees the whole long line, knows how the day is going. Elijah beat an ignominipus retreat once, and accounted the battle utterly lost; but God showed him that he had won tue victory. The battle, too, is longer than we realize. A year is bnt'a momentary incident in it We share in the impatience ot the apostles. We want the kingdom of God to come to day. But the great conflict of the church and the world goes slowly. Heating the Kin? Too Badly. In the Puritan Revolution, Cromwell ac cused the parliamentary generals of an un willingness to beat the king too badly. Again and again they forbore to reap the full harvest of their virtory. That is true in God's fight against the devil. God is not willing to beat even the devil too badly. Ppr the devil is the personification of the sin of the world, and that sin abides in the hearts of human beings and these human beings God loves. He is their Father, and they" are His children. He feels as David did'when his army was waring against re bellious Absolom. He wants to put down the rebellion,. but he wants to spare the rebel. God wants to drive sin out of the world, but He wants to save the sinners. And that is a long and difficult process. There is a great difference between extirpa tion and conversion. Nevertheless, looking back not a year but longer than that, we can see that' God is really gaining his blessed purpose. The world is unspeakably better for the presence of the Church in it. And the Church is stronger to-day, more ready and competent to help God in the conquest of sin, in the individual heart and in the whole life ot the community, than ever before- in all her his tory. The kingdom ot God has more sub jects, the army of God has more soldiers, and the forces ot the devil are fewer and weaker, than has been ever known before. Our part is first to thank God and take courage, and then to go on with braver hearts to do the will of God. Tho Work or tho Witnesses. "Ye shall be my witnesses." That is the message. Jesus Christ standing with the apostles upon the Ascension Hill, said that,and lifted up His hands in benediction, and was taken away out of their sight He had given them their work. They were to go now and do it And the work was summed up in that sentence: Ye shall be witnesses unto Me. The great purpose of Christianity is to make men better, and one of the chief ways in which men are made better is by the pe'r suasion and the inspiration of other men's example. That is what Christ meant by his charge to the apostles to be witnesses to Him; they were to follow His example and so, little by little, as the leaven works into the meal, the whole world might become the kingdom of the Lord and of Christ So that the words suggest both the purpose and the method of Christianity. We ought to understand what all our work is for, and why it has been done. And if we are to estimate it rightly, we ought to nave an ideal to measure it oy. it will be well for us to consider a little, and get clearly into our minds, the ideal purpose and the ideal method ot Christianity. . TUb Gospel With the Greeks. Christianity is a religion. It is not primarily either a philosophy or a fraternity. When the gospel was carried to the speculating Greeks, it not only cave them something, but it received something from tbem. There was brought into' it by their influence the notion that the most important part of Christianity is the answer that can be' de duced from it to certain philosophical ques tions. Men have always been interested and will always be interested, in three great problems: The problem ot God, the prob lem of sin, and the problem of pain. Among the Hebrews these great problems were con sidered practically, that is, religiously: The thought of the men of the Bible was to find out God that they might draw near to Him, snd to get rid of sin, and to translate pain out of malediction into blessing. But to the Greek these profound ques tions appealed not on the side of religion but of-philosophy. They were interested in them not so mnoh morally as intellectu ally. They were not so anxious to find out God tor the satisfaction ot their souls as for the satisfaction of their minds. They busied SUNDAY,- JULY 17. ' themselves with definitions of God. They were not so much concerned with getting rid of sin as with discovering how sin could be forgiven, how an -atonement for sin was philosophically possible. They cared less for making spiritual use' of pain than tor pondering the origin of pain, and how a good God could rightly reign over a suffer ing world. The result of the Greek influ ence upon Christianity was the emphasis that was laid upon the creed, that is, upon the philosophical statement of religion. The Gospel With the Bomans. When the gospel was carried farther, to the Bomans, here again it not only gave but took. There was brought into it by their influence the notion that the most import ant part of Christianity is the regulation of the details of ritual and of government The Bomans had a genius for administra tion. They were practical They cared little for speculation, but a great deal tor authority, for obedience, for" order. Thev delighted in arranging things, in prescrib ing exactly what men should do, and how they should believe and dress, even how they should think, and were especially de sirous to secure uniformity. The result of the Boman influence upon Christianity was the emphasis that was laid upon the church, that is, npon the organization of the relig ious society. Accordingly, as was natural, during the Greek supremacy, while Christianity was a religion of the East, the great purpose that was reached after was the settlement of the doctrine. The first era of church- history was the era of the great councils which met to date the creeds. Then, during the Unman supremacy, when the West became the center of the streneth of 'Christianity. the great aim of the leaders of the Christians was the settlement of discipline. The second era of church history was the era of the great popes who ruled over the church. Thn Two Eras of tlie Church. That is, lor five hundred years, a Christian was accounted a good Christian in propor tion to the accuracv with which he was able to recite certain philosophical definitions. The characteristic word of that era is the word "creed." Then, for a thousand yearn, a Christian was accounted a good Christian in proportion to his allegiance to the estab lished system of government The char acteristic word of that era is the word 'church. " But to Christ, the Christian religion cen tered not, in a creed, not in a churoh, but in a character. The purpose of it was to teach men not so much to think right as to do right. Christianity, as Christ taught it, is profoundly ethical. It is not of the least value, in his sight, to hold the Catholic faith whole aud undented unless we live the life of which true faith is the seed. It is not of the least value to belong to the Apos- ioiic imurcn, and to obey the ecclesiastical authorities, unless we also and before all else give our loving obedience to Christ "Not every one that saith unto me Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven, but he that doeth the will ot My Father which is in heaven." The real voice of the age in which we live is "Back to Christ!" Th- Heart or the Church. Thank God for the Church, and all that it has done for the preservation and the strengthening of religion; and thank God for the creed, aud all that it has done tor the emphasizing of the chief truths of re ligion; but thank God, chief of all, for Christ, who is the heart of the Church and of the creed. Accordingly, fpr now these several hundred years, we have been get ting closer to the simplicity of Christ; we have been putting the emphasis where He put it, upon Christian character; we have been learning to account all people as in the best sense Christians who are bearing witness in their lives to Him. We are still remote from the ideal. There are still those who think that the most im portant part of our religion is its philo sophical part; they put the creed In tffe fore front There are still those who think that the most important part of our reli gion is its ecclesiastical part; they set the Church in the foreground. -But the num ber is all the time increasing who hold that the chief part of our religion is to bear witness in our own lives to the influence of Jesus Christ, and to make men better. The religion of the future, like the religion .ot the .New Testament, will be .profoundly oiuicai. i win lay stress on conduce Ihe Method or Christianity. But how is it that men are to be made "Setter? The great purpose of Christianity we have seen, but what is the ideal Chris tian method? The secret of it is in this word "witness." Men are to be made bet ter by the influence of other men who are better than they are." The source of amend ment is in the inspiration ot example. Reformation is accomplished by great meas ures personified in great men. It is the man who stirs the hearts of the multitude. Let the great truth be taught by lesser men, and it will nass unheeded. But when the saint or the hero preaches it all our hearts take fire. History, it has been said, is but a collection of the biographies of eminent men. And that is true. The world is moved by men. . Thus God, desiring to move the world, not by compulsion but by inspiration, not from without by force but from within by per suading the free will of man, was mani fested here among us as a man. He might have let down a great book out of the sky, halt of it occupied with answers to our in tellectual questions and the other half with the details of ecclesiastical polity, half of it a creed-book and the other half a drill book. But how would that have helped us in the hard task of living right? Instead Of that, God clothed himself with visible and audible personality, and so appealed to men. Allegiance to a Person. Christianity is an allegiance to a person. It is a following oi the Lord Jesus Christ That is the beginning, and the middle, and the end of it And then Jesus Christ sends us out to be Christs. Not only to be Chris tians, contenting ourselves with our own growth in love and knowledge, but to be Christs; that is, to live, as well as we can, the kind of life he lived, and to do, as well as we can, the kind of work he did. He was a witness to the Father, and we are to be, in our turn, witnesses to Him. The Christian religion, then, has for its great purpose the bettering of men, and for its method the inspiration of a good ex ample. Accordingly, the purpose of every thing that is done iu a parish, ought to be the upbuilding of Christian character. The ideal aim is to approach the lite of Christ Everything which looks in any other direc tion than that is an impertinence. We ought to take that as the test of all the services. We ought to measure all the ser mons by it, and all the singing. It ought to be our guide in estimating the value of our work. Ihe Crucial Qn.stinn Statrd. Will this help? It ought to be the crucial question. There ought not to be anything tolerated in any parish which can not answer "yes" to that question. Nor ought anything to be objectionable to any ot us that does not answer "no." Not that everything will help evybody. We are not all alike. That which does not help one may help another. Any way to help anybody is a good motto for a Christian parish. And we help by being helpers. We bear witness t6 Christ not onlv by trying not to say anything that we would not like to have Him bear us say, and by trying not to do anything that we would not like to have Him seo us do, not only bv trying to bo good Christians in the lamily, iu business and in society, but by laying especial stress Upon our Christian ministry to the needs of others. No parish bears witness to Christ which is not a working parish. The test of Christianity is not only the looks ot the church on Sundays, but the looks ot the parish house between Sundays. Ihe con gregation met for worship and the congrega tion met lor work, together make up the real life of the parish. Any way to help anybody and everybody helping 1 is a description of the purpose and the method and the spirit of the ideal parish. Geoege Hodges. i , An Immense U Harry Williamson, of Liverpool, Feny connty, O., recently caught an' eel in the Juniata' river which measured 4f feet and weighs between 12 and 13 pounds. It has been kept alive in a watering trough ever since. 1892. HOOKED 1 WILD CAT. Adventure of a Trout Fisherman in the Pennsylvania.Henilock Belt. HE MADE AN UNLUCKY CAST, And It Cost Him a 'ierriflc Struj-Rle in six Feet of Cold Water. IT WAS A MATTEB OP ,LDXG P0V7EB. WKITTEJI FOB TIIE DISPATCH. J F you should ever go trout fishing on the "dead water" of Alder run, in the Pennsylvania hem lock belt, be careful, as you make your casts, and don't hook a wild cat, for It you do you may be put to ft good deal of annoyance, Jn Dead Water. and as like as not have your day's fishing spoiled. That is, if your wildcat should happen to have a disposition like the one my friend Harry Cavanaugh hooked the time he was fishing in those dead waters. He was at the time in charge of a gang of men who were at work constructing one of the tram roads that the big lumber operators of the hem lock belt had then just begun to build in the isolated and mountainous forest tracts. "I had heard," says he, "a good deal about the dead water of Alder run and the big trout that had .their home there, and which were likely to always have their home there, because of the difficulties that lay in the way of anyone who sought to fish those waters. The dead waters extendi for nearly a mile over a level stretch ot the stream's bed, and were nowhere less than four feet deep. One ot Nature's Wildest Spots. 'They were bordered on each side bv an almost impenetrable thicket of alders grow. Critical Moment, ing close to the edge, and in some places, where the stream was narrow, closing over it and hiding it from view. There were many narrow openings in this thicket where deer sought the creek to drink and stamp, and among the alders many hemlocks and other trees grew along the stream. In some places the dead waters were 50 feet wide, but most of the stretch was narrow. "In those days I enjoyed nothing so much as trout fishing. I had found excellent sport in the many wild streams in that lo cality, but I felt'that I could never go away from" those woods entirely satisfied without trying what the dead waters ot Alder run were capable of. and as the season grew my determination to get into those waters grew with ic At last I had one of my men make me a small, flaUbottoni boat out of hemlock boards, had It carried to the head of the dead waters, two miles distant, and one humid, overcast June dav I started, in the rather unsteady and not entirely water tight craft, to fish through the virgin trout ground. The capacity ot the dead waters was even greater than I had anticipated, and before I had finished a quarter of the way through the dark stretch of stream I had landed a score ot more of the biggest trout I had ever seen come from any brorfk all ot them of a dark color, witn the crim son spots almost as brilliant as sparks of fire. He Hooked Dangerous Game. "My boat had drifted, aided by an occa sional movement of the paddle, into a part of the creek where the alders were at least SO feet apart This big pool grew very nar row at its lower end, a hundred ice; irom its head, and there the thick alders inter locked their branches over and in the water, and the creek disappeared from view as completely as if it had been swallowed np by .the earth. un the right side oi tms broad extent of water was one of the deer openings in the thicket, and the soft dirt on the edge of the creek showed by the myriad tracks that the deer were frequent visitors there. Just above that opening a hemlock tree reared its big stem. Some of the lower branches on the upper side ex tended several feet out over the water. "I drifted along beneath these branches, and 20 feet below the tree. There I stood up to make a cast at tlie edge of a bunch of alders, some of whose limbs were stretched ont upon the surface of the water. 'As I threw my rod forward, my book stopped suddenly in the air behind me, and my reel hummed at the resistance. Simultaneously with the .stopping of the hook a blood curd ling screech rent the air. I turned quickly about I was just in time to see to see a big wildcat leap from the lower limb of the hemlock, aud he was pointed straight for me, although there was a watery space be tween us, and woodsmen have always held that an intervening stretrfh of water is a snre barrier against the attacks of all fierce animals of the cat kind. My hook had caught somewhere in a tender spot on the wildoat, which had been crouching on the limb unknown to me, and the pain of the puncture had worked him instantly into an uncontrollable fury. A Dnel Begun In a Boat. "I was standing near the bow of the boat, but moved quicklv to the other end, and none too quickly, for the wildcat pounced into the boat on the spot where I had stood before I'd time to steady myself in my new position. Then I saw that the hook was fast in one of the animal's ears, and a cat's ears are the most sensitive part of its body. The book had gone clear through the tender membrane, and the blood was trickling down in quite a stream. Fortunately the paddle was in the stern of the boat. As the big'cat struck the boat it almost upset the clumsy craft, The enraged beast came for me again without an instant's delay. I met him with a blow from the paddle. The paddle flew into a dozen pieces. The dis turbance in the boat was too much for the boat's equilibrium, and over it went, 'tumb ling the wildcat and me into the water. We floundered there close together, and instead of the bath cooling down the wildcat's tem per it seemed .to make it hotter, and the ugly beast renewed the fight in the water. "The boat when it upset was within a few feet of the foot of the pool, where the water disappeared behind the tangle of al ders. I had nothing to defend myself with against the wildcat bnt .my. fisti. and I pounded it with them with very little ef fect except to their own damage. The wildcat could swim like a duck, kept its head well out of water, and struck at me $. i5tt ymUgm A with such quickness and ability that my sleeves were torn in strips in a very short time, and the blood began to flow from deep gashes in my bauds and arms. I saw that lrt the struggle the hook had torn loose from.the wildcat's ear, leaving a long and bleeding slit. The persistent animal kept up an unearthly yelling as it fought ' Another Cat to the Eesca'e. "We soon worked our way down azainst the wall of alders, and the struggle went on for a moment against it I heard another screech, and presentlr another wildcat came tearing through the thicket to the edge of the pool. As this second uzlr customer crouched as if to leap upon me to the aid of its mate, the alders gave way, and my eat and I floundered through the maze. Behind it the creek was ten feet wide between the alders, which cloied above it iu a regular canopv of netted branches nowhere more than three feet high. It was almost as dark as night in that low-vaulted water tunnel. The channel was straight, and far below I cdnld sec a small circle of light, where the creek emerged again into open water. "As we disappeared through the dense alders, the other wildcat bounded into the thicket and made toward the spot, I could hear him crashing through, screeching as he came, and finally saw the tall bushes swaying before him as he drew nearer. I had changed my tactics in my struggle with my wildcat, and wa trying to force it The Male Appeared in the Aiders. beneath the surface and hold it there long enough'to drown it, but the cat was too active and supple, and about all I succeeded in doing was to lessen the quantity of my clothing and add to the slashings in my flesh. I had not been strnggling with the wildcat a mjnute, perhaps, in that close, dark passage, where the water was fully six leet deep, when I saw the two fiery eyes of its mate appear in the alders, where he had thrust his head through, on the opposite side. Resolved on. Desperate Tactics. "Tiat wildcat, though, hesitated to take to the water, even to help his mate, but I didn't know how long he would be of that mind, and consequently saw the importance of getting the best of one fierce contestant before another joined in the fight I re solved on a desperate move, but one that would be decisive if successfuL Watching my opportunity, I seized the wildcat with both hands by the throat, and, holding it at arm's length, dove for the bottom, taking the wildcat witb me. My breath was short owing to the long and hard struggle in the water, but I had good lungs. I put all my strength in that clutch on the wildcat's throat. The cat struggled desperately, but at about the time I found I must return to the surface, it gave one tremendous kick, and hung heavy and motionless in my hands. I knew it was dead, and I dropped the carcass and rose to the surface, with just about strength enough left to grab an aider ousu aud hold myself up. "If that wildcat's mate had tackled me then he would have- found an easy victim, for I could have made no defense. He was plunging and yelling about in the thicket, evidently puzzled over the disappearance of his mate and mvself. Pretty soon I heard him tearing back toward the spot where he had thrust his hea 1 through the alders and glared at me, and could feel my blood turn cold. It was all I conld do to bold fast to the alder. He reached the spot, pushed his head and half his body beyond the edge of the bushes, and his eves almost lit up the place, they blazed so when they fell on me. I shut my eyes, for I be lieved the beast would be at my throat the next second. X could feel those flaming eyes fixed on me, and the suspense was ter rible. Suddenly the 'wildcat raised a yell that would have been frightful enough heard m the open woods, but which in the close confines of that water tunnel was simply indescribably terrible; and if, while the yell was still ringing in my ears, I hadn t heard the wildcat turn and go crash ing away through the thicket, 1 would surely have'dropped limp and lifeless, and gone down without a struggle. Better Lack the Jfext Tlmr. "But with the retreat of the wildcat my strength gradually returned, and after a while I was able to make my way back through the alders at the head of the dark narrow channel and out into the open pooh My upturned boat was lodged against the alders. I pushed it to the deer opening, righted it, aud with a long pole, poled it baok to the starting place and started for home. My fish and tackle were lost Al though the gashes and scratches on my hands and arms w ere numerous, they were not as serious as they seemed, and in a week or so I was able to repeat my fishing trip, much to my great enjoyment "I also spent an evening with a jack and a rifle at that deer opening, and got a fat and juicy buck and a doe. I believe, also, that the big wildcat I tumbled from that hemlock branch just at dnsk that same evening was the mate of the wildcat I drowned in the alder tunnel, and the one that came within a secod of scaring me to death. He was lurking there, as his mate had been I have no doubt, with the hope of springing on a fawn that might come down to the creek at that watering place." Ed. Mora. A DEVOTEE OF MOBPHETJi The Dale of Devonshire Begnlarly Sleeps ' In the House ol lordi. San Francisco Call. It is said the Duke of Devonshire goes to sleep in the House of Lords. What else is he to do should that august House sit late, as it does three or four times a year? Be sides, it is the custom to go to sleep in Par liament when you have a mind to. The rules forbid the perusal of a newspaper, a magazine or a book. If a peer or a member ot tbe Commons desires to read he must go to the reading room or the library. There fore, when a bore is on his legs about 10 or 11 o'clock, and his diffuse and uninteresting commonplaces are running out in turgid verbosity) what better thing can a states man do than go to sleep? When in the Lower House as Lord Hart ington the Duke was a confirmed sleeper, with his legs against the clerk's table, his hat tilted down over his eyes, his mouth open and arms folded, of balancing his body upon the seat At times His Lordship was guilty of an approach to snoting. People who go to oed about a or 4 in tue morning must take their sleep somewhere. Hints on Care of the Bye. Dr. L. Webster Pox closed his late im portant lecture on the eyesight, which has already been referred to in this column, by some injunctions which should be carefully proserved. These golden rules numbet half ascoie, andare as follows: Avoid sudden changes from darkness to brilliant light; avoid tho uso'of stimulants and drugs which affect tho nervous system; avoid reading nhen lying down or when mentally and physically exhausted; when the eyes feel tired rest them by looking at objects at a longdistance; pay special attention to the hygiene or tbe body, tor that u hlch tends to promote tho general health acts beneficially upon the eye; up to 40 years of age bathe the eyes twice daily witH cold water; do not de pond upon your own judgment iu selecting spectacles: old persons should avoid read ing much by artificial light; be guarded as to diet and avoid sittinu tin late atf-hf 'after 50 bathe the eyes morning and evening wita water so not mat yoa wonuer now you stand it: follow this with cold water, that n ill make them glow with warmth: do not give up in despair when Informed that a cataract is developing; remember that la these days of advanced surgery it can be re moved with little or no danger to vision. 'v'sPri? JSSStPf-v CREMATION FIGURES. Stroii? Arguments Presented by Ad vocates of Incineration. THE BEST FOOD TO GIVE HORSES A Enggestion That Ducks Ee Tsed Instead of Carrier. Pigeons. DRINKING AIR IN ITS IJQOID FOEH IW3UTTXW TOR TIIB DISPATCH.! The advocates of cremation have in their favor some strong arguments. They say the mandate that "dust shall return to dust" is irrevocable, and its fulfillment ia inevitable; that we can in no way prevent it; we may obstruct or we may assist, and reason dictates the latter course. Since tho longer the process is delayed the greater is the danger to the health of the living, cre mation is a beneficent institution. Its growth in Europe has been surprising, and ic Italy there are large numbers of crema tories, and in this country the prejudice against the movement is decreasing-. It is only 11 years since the formation of the New York Cremation Society, the first institution of the kind in the United States, and not until the year 1885 was the first operative creamatory established, yet there are now in various parts of the States nearly a score of these incinerators in more or less continuous service. The number of cremations which have been conducted each year in one of these temples in Buffalo frives a fair idea of the progress which tlia sentiment in favor of this method is mak ing. Durlrur 13SC eisht bodies were inciner ated, and in each successive year to the end of 1891 the numbers were, respectively, 17, 16. 23, 30 and 37. In this tomplo everything possible has been done to mitigate the sad ness of the last ritual. The temple is built of dark, brown sandstone, and Us square) tower and deep slanting roof are covered with Ivy and surrounded by sloping lawns. Tho chancel and. nave are artistically carved, and decorated and the windows are of rich stained class. The Incineration takes placs privately after the funeral service, and ths ashes aie delivered to the undertaker to be disposed of as the family may direct, or they may be left at the crematory. A society formed after the organization of tho pioneer societv has reduced to ashes Mhee the year 1SS5 upward of 730 bodies. The process as carried out at one of their principal temples is as follows: The fur nace Is of firebrick throughout and sepa rated into two distinct Dut similar compart ments. The body is placed in a chamber di rectly above that in which the luel is con sumed. The bottoms of the. retorts are solid, but the sides and ends are pierced with holes, thronsh which the heated air of the farnace has direct access to the body, while the flames are not permitted to ap proach ic The heat or the retort soon lib erates everything; volatile in the body, and these emanations are conducted through another highly heated chamber, and thus rendered odorless and absolutely innocuous before they pass to the chimney whioh. forms their means or egress to the air. The time taken up in reducing a body to ashes depends somewhat npon tho size and condi tion ot the person when alive. In this fur nace it is about two hours; In many others it is a little over an hour. The fuel usedis coal, and in five or six hoars from the start ing or the tires a temperature of from 2,000 to 2,5003 Fahrenheit can be obtained. Horse Feedin; Experiments All horsemen wUl be interested in the re ports of a feeding trial with horses, which, has oeen carried out bft Professor J. W. Sanborn. Horsemen have generally been la the habit of believing that when grain, especially meal and more especially such, meal as cornmeal, is fed the horses alone or minced with bay, it tends to form a compact! mass in tbe stomach and produce indiges tion. In o lots of horses we. ro fed for nearly three months, one with bay and grata mixed, the other with bay' and grain sepa rately. At the end of tlyia period the food, rwas reversed, and the horses were fed soma two months more. The (division of the bay and grain into separate feeds gave, better results than the mixed iiay and grain feeds, an which tbe horses dlq not maintain their weight so welL Prof. Sanborn accounted for this by the lact that the timothy hay when cnt fine with its sharp solid ena'S'lrri- '' tated and made sore the months of tha horses, and possibly induced too rapid eating, and when the hay and craln wera moist, the animals would be likely to eat more rapidly than when fed dry. Ia another trial, whioh covered feeding cut agalpse whole hay to horses, tbe result was de cislvaly in favor of the cut hay. The differ ence In weight of the horses was US pounds In favor of cut clover for the four months and a half of the test. Clover hay and lucern, unlike timothy hay, do not present onsrp, soiiu culling euges. A Variation In Metf enger Service. Major Allatt, who is an authority on tba subject of carrier pigeons, warns the publlo against prevalent stories of long flights by trained pigeons; notably that in which a pfcreon is recorded as having flown 1,500 miles In America. Major Allatt believes tbe greatest distance pizeons have flown of which an accurate record has been made Is in the races which have taken place two or three times from Rome to Belgium, a dis tance of between SCO and 900 miles. He also suggests that If the present intention of tbe Navy Departments of the different nations is to be carried out, and a regular marina carrier pigeon service is to be established, ducks would be better for the service than pigeons, because when a duck gets tired ha drops and sits in the water until he is rested and then L'oes on again. Ducks, moreover, can fly by night, while pigeons cannot Major Allatt thinks that sea gulls might with advantage be trained for message bear ing purposes. A Baggage Saving Invention. A now way of obviating the necessity for the carrying around by commercial travel ers in the boot and shoe business of the cumbersome samples of their wares has re cently been patented. The inventor claims that by his invention all tbe samples that any traveler is likely to require can Da carried In a small case, and that by Its means be will be able to convoy 200 or 300 different designs, showing shapes of toes, designs of toe caps, welts, colors of uppers, etc. It is also claimed that a saving to tbe manufacturer of 20 to CO per cent is effected in clearing off his samples at tha end of the season. Another Improvement lately adopted in the shoe industry is s web for Increasing the ease of putting on and taking off tbe shoe. This web is msda rouoh on the same principle as satin cloth, and has a ?eryflne and close texture, and much more elasticity than the web ordi narily used. A Glass of X,!qafltd Air. Prof. Dewar, in lecturing before the Boyal Institution, London, handed around to tbe audience an entirely new thing in tba way of tipples, in the shape of claret glasses filled with liquefied air. The bollinz point of liquid air is 194 centigrade, or 10 lower than that of oxygen. After liquefying oxy gen. Prof. Dewar said that It is not true, as has been supposed, that tho oxygen in tha air liquifies before tbe other elements in the air; on the contrary, the air liquefies as air, and is not resolved into its elements before liquerving. If this globe were cooled down to 200"below zero of centir"-de it would ba covered witb a sea of liqueneu gas 35 teet deep, orwnicn aooui seven. leec would Do liquid oxygen. A Possible BUsslng in Disguise. The average Londonerla fairly case hard ened in the matter of fogs and accepts tbem as .matter of course. They are.ln fact,regarded as a necessary evU. It is now asserted, bow ever, nnd by no less an authority than the President of the Institute of Ciyil Engineers, that log Is the chief cau-e of the low death rate in London. He says the fog is caused by sulphur emanating from combustion of soft coal: that In London about 350 tons are tlirowu in the air on one winter's day, and that it Is this large qnantlty of sulphur which counteracts the effects or the deadly germs discharged from refuse heaps and sewers, by its deodorizing andantiseptio properties. A New Qolclc Tiring Can. The new Kordenfeldt qnlck firing gun has giyen good results of testing in France. By a special zueohanlsm tbe recoil has been almost entirely obviated. Tbe breach is simple and easily worked, and rounds a. minute can be fired. The stability and pre cision of the piece are said to be to great that several shots can be fired In succession through the hole made by the first shot la the target wittrout repolntlng the gun. Tha trajectory curve Is very slight, the Initial velocity being 2,132 feet per second.