S. F. BOHWEIEB. THE CONSTITUTION THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. VOL. XLVJX MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 2, 1895. NO. 3. IIITEIC IV- Continued. i-'or the f rt time in her lif she taal been solii itious to look hot- very be?t. 11 r limpid cvi'3 had tra cd with deep ami n -.ious inteie-t in o the old mirror on the wall, for many a year passe 1 i- nobly 1 y . us unworthy even a ' tissing gliiuve for on e without a murmur she. had "luiitteil the fsirjrle.l n asses ol her lock-". Samson-liUe. I tuny fate that awaited the ti: :uii lor once tell it rol mrain. oh. ent!e reader: for 'r.ce nad the little hrown. n oi t hands been not on y passed in and ovt o the ho- water in the hain. hut ha 1 tctiia ly. labor ioiisi .-. i n;l thoroughly been cleansed to her finer-tirs. ne of these was now olTercd to Hel lenden with ail t ho frrace of a little boness. "I saw you i onin j up."tdi-i whisper ed. "I raw you eitt mr toyetherin tint dosr-cart. so then 1 knew it 'was a I riirht. Until I really mhv you, you know, I hardly 1 oped - I mean I really did not think yoj 'ci.uM I mean I did not know whel'ier you had been in tin.e or not.'' I vi-.s only just in time." .Vere yoa really':' Should you have Icoa too late in another minute?" -Vis. J think so." n y fan -v. ' said Jerry, with lare ov . -i ti ir I supposing you nou bt.-t.-u. j ou wou.u .o. indeed." never have come?'' ' )n,'y fancy; 0. Tie -'' -.-top; ed she '1 luiV huicv: What would yo.i have e T was." And never come up r .'o. never." sa d BeUendcn, at o'.emnly as s'.ie. Then there was a j m !', on her part of satisfaction and relief, on his " wonder wtiat was to ecnie next, lie wan eonspicious of le inir loth flattered and a'nused by Jerry. Did yoa teil Cecil about me?" was her next. And ho fancied that even there, in that vast s-aloon. with space on every side, he-- oiee sank. 'I told him that we had met." "I 'id vou say how?" No. .Urry. I did rot say - bow." "'or n- r where?" " o nor -nor whore." "You are Ir.u-hinj: at me. but you UU dot know t ceil. If lie had beard all about - Hi out it, yon know to-day. you kn.iw -1 mean your startling me and '' "And you cryiiu'." "An 1 your mistaking- me -" 'An ! jour snubbing me.'' "'.And - an I ail 4iAnd - and all." assenteil Eellendet ' our making up the ouarrel. and be-roni'-y the let f friends, and fishing together, and walicinir home toe-ether, ni i.onsoiriiiij together to make thil verv i e il do the tiling we both wished i "lie had known of all this, now tell cc what would t 'ecil have said to it?': I . on t know: but' -an 1 there was a as'i from a pair o: unmistakably in-.elli-'ent orbs "I know this, I would rather rot tell him." ilellenden nodded, "We won't tell 'lim.'' "I!ut I told prauny. of ourse." ( h. o." course But how is it.' continued the speaker, "how is it thai Master C'e:-il commands such un amount of respect from hi little cousin? Let me into the s-oret, Jerry, won't you " h. I don't know. I don t knowthat there is :;nythin. Granny makes s fuss abut Cecil. And he is very nice vou know. And h s sisters think such a great, big. immense deal of him. They think H ere never was such f Cecil before. He is theironly brother. I'erhaps that's it. Sisters always UO think that of brothers, don't ihey?" T wish I had a sister to think that of mel" f favo you not one - not just a little one.? ' She was i.uite disappointed. "'ot even a little one. ".Not even f Jerry " "Well, 1 have none either, and no brothers, no:- anybody. However. I don t mind." re overin. "I don't cai-e BUicil aUiUt j; iris anyway, ar.d iflto.ld a I have i oys. I d as soon only have tjranny." You do not c: re much for your Ray mond co.:siu.-. then''" jh. y s. But they aiways clo prive t:ie:iise.os such airs' to ino: and they talk i reiicli. : ml cabbie about their coverno.-ses and music mistresses, and i' that none cse. They are well : . -iii. 1 tut t lory can't ride.'" eagerly. Tiicy ti.iiik ihcv can- ant there is such a fuss ai)o;it their horses and their tadMies and their riding habits but cn c they ;.re on. they go 'ot'ying up i.ml own. not a bit e.oso to 1ho horse: unci Kthel is in such a iritrht if hcri ony does but sin- ever so little, that she it in misery half the time and they think they have do! e wonders if th-y canter for half a miie t a time. I don't . are for such rid in-.' as that." Jerry wound up with superlative scorn. "You liKo 'forty minutes on tje grasf wit ho t a check' eh.-" I like itist as ln i' li as ever I can pet - that's what 1 like. And to go -to go like til - win.l. ; uui nevt r tired. Klliel has to ivs' when she cones in. to lie down on a 1 aeklioard, and not ao Out two davs i tinning-.' "And what do they s?.y to your style T formanec '' i)i. t don't know. Jim that's the rrt'i sv he vvonid like to come and "be'm'j i( :"ooin here. Aid t shall have hii. too - some day. Ti. says lie would like io take me to r'.is in tlie I Cow in Loudon: and we'd she. V 'em how to da it. That was what J '" (fctid, rather conscious of r.nmintr A too fast. "I am only repeating vj .t he said, yor know."' r'rorn which it w.'.ll appear that Jerrj n-as an artless .it! K woman after all, wiih a very native and transparent vanity, easily satis e 1. '( 'apt. liei"!en-:ei;.'' she began 1.10 presently. "Wow r.o you know i urn a captain?' ne inierruprei. "t only told yon trj nnme was L-cl!enden.:' "Well. 1 saw it c" your poi rmtinteau." owned the little gii i trut.i.'ully; but al though she ttuek t." the trutli, he saw her bite her lip. a. d was sorry bo had sked the rjUestic.L. "Oh, that was it' And what were you goinjr to ay.-' You wore goinf to ay something. ' 'I Was Coins' to St'.'- oh I Astra uir 1 ought not to ttav it.' Oh, yes. I'm surd vou ou-rht to sat It." ' "It was only " "Only what?" 'Onlv "Weil, what?" "About bisters,' en 1 Jerry, rs if she had said about sho.-.s. or some suck contraband a tides. "S stois h.J Well, but what ahou- sisters ' Ho couli nit imagine nv I thiny very terriblo to be said X)ut I sisters. "It was just w both r - you :ou!d Ulte to nave any.-"' "I shou.d like it very lauch,"' sail he promptly. "Would you.' Would yo: reallyr" w:th eagerness. "Heuliy and truly." lid - and aunil ho v o!d " do munded his little companion, with iu tressed anxiety; "about how old.' "Let me soe,' said he. j relenuinu: U reflect. "Let me see Well, I tmnk, perhaps about tifteen. Ves. I thiuli Hbo.it tifteen." "t iftecn." That's my at'e! Did you know.' o. o course yoa did not. LJat it is. I am just liUeen."' " ndeed-'' "Ani- and-well" "Aliout tifteen, and able to ride, and f sh, and clamhor up and down rock banks, and make friends with castaway it; angers, and have enchanted cast let til ready to invite them uu to, an I kngT yellow, curls for them to j ull when they ome," and he was in the act of pu lin; the yellow eurlj before him. when the 1 or openeJ. n 1 eeil Hay u ond entered. ii.pt:u v. TELl. TUB 'can vou MK.iNiN'U OK 'Ho gave ni. 1 roo. Aod he Haiti. 'Can yij real The alp tab., dewy-, ej 1-lori io. ... (So f.aintilf liu:el, and -b.rinint;ly a-cnteL To write ovtr Tmlev- and lueaa?" It was gust as well that Cecil did not see. 1 o was a grave young man, with lomcwhat po:;ipoas not ons on niot sub eets, and in particular very exact views with regard to j rojiriety and U rum. Although he was foun.l o" his o.vn iste s. he ne-er rom ed with them. n-r made fun with them, nor trigled with them behind baess His .e-ts, when he made any. were solemn af fairs, to be duly appreciated ani re 1 orded Dutthev were no Ireeinasonry with him. And, in onse utcce. how ever kind, and attentive, and tousid erate the elder brother tnd io:r might be. he was in their ho irts. per haps, more respected than bo loved, ant. wild little Jerry drew away, as by in stinet. from Be'lenden's touch when the door opened. l or her. elf, she was not in tht lecst offended it needed a good deal tc put Jerry on her dignity as t-ho ha3 been put that afternoon: b t she felt Intuitively that Cecil would have looked askance upon the little byeplay. According y she now stepped up to him with the best imitation of her grandmother's reception manner which she could assume, and, more over, with her small round face so cie mun'lyirade up. that be must have been a roue indeed who would have ventured to asso-ialo it w.t 1 p illing of curls, or the like. Bellenden's gay words were ringing in b,er ears neverthe'esj, and she was f.:in to have so e more o them, and to get away from young ltayinond as soon as she could: although, up to the pres ent time, the annual visit of her cousin had been something to be looked for ward to, and counted upon, and he b mself had bee-n uite the personage of the hour. Now, and all at once, he was cast from his pedestal. He was no longer the first and. from being the first he had not e; c n descended to a secondary place, but was hurled to the depths, a nobody, an in -umbus a 1 that the little lady by his side wanted, being to cut short his opening sen ten os, and slip back to the scat in tiio w'ndow, wherein sat her new 'riend. ciuiet enough now, looking down upon the flower-beds below, and think'ngol nothing less than of making an i:n 1 ression upon a susceptible, child sb heart. .lerry thought he looked beautiful sitting tnere, his handsome proli e distinctly cut against the sky outside, and his tine easy figure half in, half out of the open asement. as his chin rested on his arm ou side. the did not know how b-.it she felt for she was a perceptive little creature-that there was a difference even between the suit of mo !est blacK worn alike by Cecil and bv this stranger. Ce il was par tieu ar to a degree alout his clothes: but, somehow, the tout ensemble of the other was just missed by him. ond Jerry knew ;t. Poor little innocent thin her heart gave its first throb of a new .and unknown nature as she watched that shaply-outlined, strongly made, graceful fo: m sitting so quietly there in the twilight All In a mo ment, as we have said, Cecil became a burden intolerable "Well, Jerry, and what have you been about lately?" began he, as un- I conscious as a babe, ani in the usual comprehensive style wiierewltn re lations and intimates are fond of ac costing each other after absence. Hiding much eh? How's the Fly ing 1 utchman? Or h.-.ve you got new pony by this time?" "Macalister is looking out for one. He savs it will be best to wait for the l alkifk Trvst." replied . ei-ry, hoping that the sub ect was now aisposed of. "The Falkirk Tryst? Ch, 1 lemem ber. A sort of market - eh?" and Cecil settled down u: on it comfortably in uite of her concluding tone. "And so you are to get one, then?" "Mac Ulster says tho best bred ani ma's a:-e to be had there.'' "The 'best bred animals!' That smacks of the stable. Miss Jerry Joe-n t it. eh?" ' He said so," said Jerry, coloring more deeply than was her wont, and v; disposed to ;ooh-pooh the correct tfon. but rather to oTer .-n excuse. ".'.Iiieal.s er Ki.il 10. I only n pei. what he said. that on mlht kr.ow." "1 Heo. "' replied h'-r -o sin kinlly. or he bad not meent to ves. "Ami this ! atnirk Tryst let me sco truer loes it come oil".-" ' In October." s.i'd .Tcrrv shortly, f What could the 1 a k'rk Tryst or any- i 11.: ..i . 1. .. ... r V. . . should worry her a! o.it it just then? j C3 .je, but in vain. 1 "VVell, the Dutchman has carried I ou gallantly tor many a day," pur nei . her tormentor, he .viiy conversational, so you will have to be co . pas.sio.iata , to war.! s him now. What ara you ro ing to 1 o with him? .Is he to be the 1 woo -. pony, or for the thoor? Or will rou sell bioi?" Here Mrs. Campbell entered, and Bade her way to Captain Belleuden'e de. 'What is to become of him?" pur ine 1 Cecil. How tiresome' Xow he will begis talking to gran 1 a iiina, and I sha n't ba-e another uord from him. What a ihame ' i-.n.lered the child to herself, lit. ie Uitomed to he thwarted, e en :n a n-i e. "How Ce.il does prose 'iow provoking and stupid he is "l What is 10 bo ome of him?" de ll nded Cecil, for tho thir . time. But he never knew, for dinner wac iik;o;iii -o at the moment, and cerry A-as storming inwardly with lia Uc-d in iigniit 0.1 and lighteous wrath. x here, now. 1 knew how it would ' e. 1 know that if grandmamma was landing awa there with him when dinner was announ ed, she would tell him to lake her in. tho gh 1 know she aught to have ha 1 Cecil. She eight to have had Ceo 1. of coarse She ihould have left (..'apt. Lo louden for me. and then he would have cone up Io me. and o "ercd mo his arm -oh. do lhtf 1 ') She ha 1 never taken anybody's arm in her life. Truth to tel , she had been ra-ting about in her min i, ever since he had seen Bellenden's portman eau ja e in the hall, the chances Oi this great event happening to her now. Hitherto she had 1 een glad enough to avoid the formal late dinner when her gran .'mother had had guests at Inch mare w. she bad either made her ap pearance with the Oisert. or had 1 ore i ommonly chosen to run about till ho 1 timo, ani then have some sun er brouerht up to her old nursery, by these means escaping oth the company an t thee ening frock. She had, however, 01 the pient - asiou carefully inti mate 1 her intention of ining late in future, and Mrs. Camp oil, in coin on with the rest ot the household, had been toi gla to see in the . hunge the dawn of luivuu. ingwo i anhood to make t.uy sort of de nr. tro neb arranged, one toul-al-sorlv ing anxiety h:d occupied the little rin's min , an.lth .t was in reference to her being hanuo to the uining roo 11 t y f ellenden. The more she had thought about it, the more t ag' r and an - ions she had I ecome. as was Jerry's w y whenevei any desire once took possession of her Ut- le excitable breast. To take his arm To stop grandly along ite'ore everybody :iko a real crown-up young lady how enchant ing. .--lie did not stop to remember that il had never si ruck her as enchanting, b it rathe. in a reverse light hitherto. It would, at any into, be simply heav en v now. And of course it was her right tc lead the way, and do ho-or to the fctranger guest in her own castle, (jranny hud often told ho: that she ought to repare to take her pla;'e, as mistress and head oi all. ere long so perhaps, indeed most certainly, granny would think this a good opportunity for her to l.-eirin. It would a so instruct I 'apt. Bellenden in her position and hei rights, an 1 make his blunder of the af ternoon all the more astonishing and riui u'ous to his re ollection. He mitrht 1 erform his part of the ceremony wnn a twinkle in his eve. r.n.l Jerry would not have freed hint rom a sly reminiscence us he and she marched thrcugh the long gallery to gether, but. carry it o I as he might, he could not tail to feel a little fool sh and might he trusted to be as discreet as herself lefore spectators. All of this had been carefully thoughi cut during the putting on of the whitt froelc an 1 ro e-co ored sasn, ana mere had been just enough uncerta ntj at o -it the .'e ired fog. am being car ried out to make ( e.-il"s detention no ib'v irkson-e and iii-timed sinee e a t oi ner eing bes'dtj him and awsv i:-on: me 01 ner was, sue eouiu noi hel;. .e .ring, sale to tell against her. jt might, or it might not. have done so. The probability is mat .Mrs. l amp hell gave the subject no thought at all. an 1 as a matter of course, went in. at he had always done before, witb hei principal get; but it wasCec'l'sdoing in Jerry's eyes: and, as the naughty tittle girl had never yet learned to control or conceal her feelings, a very sulky and unrest ons ve companion thu Oor fellow had, ana one who womu have gladly gi. en tho arm sne ft c t 2ood hard pinch, instead o' salic-jjiely touching it with the tips of her fingers is she knew she had ought to do. TO HE CC1NT1NL KD. Snrciam. . .ii llaussman was a fellow-pupil wild liecior Bjrlio.'.at the l'aris Con cryatory. then und-T the direction if Cherubini. Berlioz was an unruly zeniii-, and wrote music tphen be should have Ixen st .dying tounter oi ut. Cons ijucntly he was not in favor with bi teachers and cs-.ecial-Iv with the precise and 'classical' Cncruhitii. 11 examination day, as Ilaussmar relates in his Memo res," Cherubini was running over a piece which I'er iio. had submitted, when he tame : onac inpleie rest of two meas ures "What is that?" he asked, in his 1 ual ill-natured tone. ".Mr. l.irector," said the pupil, "1 wished to produce an effect which I thought cou d be-t le produced by ulence " "Ah, you thought it would product 1 good eMectupoti the audience it you up; res c I two measures;" Yes s r." . . cry good. Supptcss the rest; the effect will be better stilL" Mrs : igg Tommy, have you been it the sugar howl again Tommy Maw, the sugar uucstion is entirely loo (Icliyt't in be approached in such a sudden u-auner. I hiladelphia In iuiftr. The trnly generois is the truly wise; and he who loves not others live no blest . . A craving for sympathy is the comi mon boundary line uemceu joj nun sorrow. He who puts a bad constrnction on a good act reveals his own wickedness of heart. Truth should be the first lesson of the chi'd, and the last aspiration of manhood. The manner of giving shows the character of the giver more than does the gift itself. Lancrnago cannot express to any one much beyond what he hat lived or experienced. The sins that pay their rent prompt ly are the bent ones we want to give up. Man learns by tuition, woman by intuition. The man who would have dore so and eo if he had been there never gets there. - ' ". No two men are exactly alike. They e nerally agree to disagree. REV. PR TALMAGE. VBB BROOKLYN DIVHfK'3 SUN DAY SBB3ION. Subject: "The City of Blood.' Tmi "Oar bon aro scattered tt the grave's month, as when one eattoth And eleavelh wood npoa the earth. Bat irttns ye ar onto Thee, O, God, the Lord V i-Himi exc, Thouich you may read this text from the Bible, I reed It as cat by chisel Into the pe leetnl ot a crots beneath whlolt lie many ot h ma-nan-nd at Cawnpnr, India. To show r"u what Hin looif-m and Mohammedanls-a really -, where they have fall swin?, and not - an they reprnt themselves in a "parliament cf reliilon", and to demon trnie to what extent of cruelty ai abom Inntion hum-in nature may ro when fully let loose, and to Illustrate th hardenlntr pro- rm of in. and to remind yoa how our- rlnrlous ChrUttanity may utter Its triumph ovfr death an t the erava, I preach thie my eoond sermon in the round the worM serins, and I nhall sp'-ak of "The City of Blood, or Cawnpnr, In IIh. Two honrn ami ten mlnntes after Its xwurmnffe Joseph Lee. of the Shropshire Regiment ot foot, rode iu noon the Ciwn pur massacre. He was the first man I met at Cawnpur. I wantol to hear the story from some one who had been herein isr7 nn-t with Ills own eyes gaze I npoa the lau-rhtered henna of humanity. I could hnritly wait until the horss wer put to the tfarriaire. and Sir. Lee. seated with n, Marted for the scane. the xtory of whi-i makea tame in contrast all Mo loo uud Choc-taw bntcherles. Itneema that all the worst pusions of tha jentury wre to be l-n-t-isouated by One man, and he Nun 1 S i no, and our escort at Cavnpur, Jostpn Lee, knew the man per- sona'.lv. Unfortunately there is no cor rect pictnn-ot Nnn i S ihih in existence. The plctnree of him puljliahei in the books of Europe an t America and familiar to us all are an amusing mistake. Tlii i the fact ta resnrl to them : A lawyer of Enlan i was called to Inill.i for the purpose of deremlin; the cae of a native who ha.i been har:ed with fraud. The attorney cime and 60 skillfully ra-mawd thec-asn of hw client that the clteut paid him normonIy for his wrT:MH, and he w-nt back to Emrland, tak In; Willi him a pictnroothls la lian client, after awhile the mutiny In Inlia broke out, ind N.ina 8:ihib w:v mentionil as the ohamp.on yillnin of the whole affair, anil the newspaora ot Enirlan 1 wanted a picture of him an i to intt-rviw some one on Indian aiTaira woo had reoently been in India. Amors; others the journalists called upon hi-, lawyer, lately returned. The only pic ture be bad brought from India was a pic ture of h:s client, the mail char-red with frauil. Th. attorney jjava thlsp'ctureto the jourua'9 as a specimen of the w iv the Hin iloos dress, an 1 forthwith that picture wm us- I, eitht r by m:a:ake or Intent! mally, fof Nan 1 Sahib. The Ea-;lisli 1-iwy-r said he lived in ilren l that his client wo ild some ilay see the use made of his pii-ture, an i it wr.s rot until the death of his Hind'-o client that the lawyer ilivulifl the facts. Pjrhaps It was never Intended that the iac.i of sui'li a demon s lou'd be pri-S'-rve 1 ami'I human recor 8. I s li I to our eseorr, "Mr. L -e, was there nny p-culiarit In Nina Sahib's ppe.ar.mc" The reply was: "Nothin? very peuliar. H was a dull, lazy, coward ly, ensual man. brought up to do nothin:; and wante t to continue on the same scale to do nothing. From waat Mr. Lee told me and from all f coul'l learn in inlia. Nana Sahib ordered the massacre in thntcityfrom shoerr iveno. His father abdicated the throa", ani the Encash pabl him annually a pension of 400,001. Wnen the fattier died, the Enl ist) (iov-ramant declined to pay tho same pension to the son. Nana Sahib, but the poor fellow was not in any sufTerinir fio-n laoK of fun I. H i lather le t him S1,0OJ in e-ol 1 ornaments, 500.000 in jewels, $S00,003 in bonds nn-1 mh-r r-sourc-a amountint; to at lea-t $1,303.1X10. But the poor youtii tr.au w:is not saiisfirtil, aii.i the Cawnour massa 3tt w is his revonee. General Wneeler, tile Enslisamnn wuo had command of this city, illiiou-h o.ten warned, could not see that :he sepoys were planning for his destruc tion, and that ot all bis return-Ms and all the Europeans in Cawnpur. Mr. Lee explained all this to me by the Tad that General Wheeler had married a na live, and he naturally tcok her story and thought thero was no peril. But the time for the proe nmation from Nana Sahib had come, and such a document went forth as never before bad seen the light ot day. I give only nn extract : "As by the kindness of Go l, and the poo fortune of the emperor, all the Christians who were nt- Delhi, Poonah. S.attara and Mherplaees, and even those 5000 Europ-nn loldiers who went in disguise into the for mer city an I dlS'overed, are destroyed and sent to hell by the pions an 1 sagacious troops who are Arm to their reliijiou, an 1 a they have all been couqu-re 1 by the present (government, and as no trace of them is left In these places. It is the duty of nil the su' jects anil gorvants of tho RovL'rnm"nt to re joice at the doliuhttul intelli jenoe and carry on their respective work with comfort an 1 Mse. As by the bounty of the glorious Al mighty and the enemy destroying fortune of the emperor, the yellow face I and n irrow minded people have be -n sent to hell, nn 1 Cawnpur has been conquered, it it neces sary that all the suiijecis ani landowncn nd government servants s'lould bo as obedient to the present ifovernnv-nt as thy have been to the lormer one; that it is the ncumbent duty of nil the peasants ani landed proprietors of every (lUtrii-t to re joice at the thought that the Christians have been s-nt to hell, an I both the Uindo3 aul Mohammedan religions navn been conftmel. and that they should, as uu il, be obedient to the authorities ot the ttov.-rnmi-nt and never suffer any complaint against them selves to reach to the ears of tue higher au thority." 'Mr. Lee, what Is this?" T said to our es jort as the carriage battel by an embank ment. "Here," he said, "is the iutrenoh tnent where the Christians of Cawnpur took refutre." It is the rema ns of a wall which it the time of the mutiny was only four feet hlRh, behin 1 whlcii, with no thelter from the sun, the beat at 13) Ue-r.'ees, 11) men, 66 J women and children dwelt nearly a month. A handful ot Iloiir and split p jas Was the dally ration, an I onlytwo wllsnear by, the oue ia wlicn they buried their dead, because tn.-y had no timo to bury them in the earth, aul the other well the focus on wiiich th.i anillery ofthe enemy played, so that it was a c. io.ee betw.wu death by thirst and death by bullet or shell. Ten thousand yelling Hin loos outside this tr lit wall and 1003 bufferinit. dying people inside. In ad lit ion to tiio army' of the ilia loos ani Moslems, au l invisible amy of sickness dwoopi down upon the n. Some went rav ing ma I under exposure. Othurs dropped under iipolexy. A st irvini;, mutilate 1, levored, suastruck, ghasny roup waiting to die! Why did not the Heathen uash dow-i those ir.u I walls n I tie 10.0)) annihilate Ihe now less than 10)0? Ir was In-cause they ieeme t huperualur til y dufen le X Nana Sauib resolved to eele'iratm an an alv.irsary. Tae 23 i of Jun-, 1.S37, would ba 100 years since the battle of Piassy, when, nnJer Lord Clive, India surrendered to England. That day the last EuroDean In Cawnpur w is to be slau Thtered. Other an niversaries havi been c Ve nited with wine. This was to be celeur iled w ta bloo.L Other anniversaries have Oeeu a. lorn id with gar lands. This win drawa s.vords. O1I1 -rs have bean kept with souc-rs. This with exe erat.ons. Ota.-rj wd.i ua dance of tho g ty. This w:th tnu dance of detth. The inlautry ind cavalry and artillery of Nana Sahib made on that day oue gran 1 assault, but the few cuns of the English and Scotch tnt to Oight thefe Hindoo iftep. The counice ol the fiends broke against that mud walls us tu1 uaves of the sea aeainvt a liclitlniu.-e. The cavalry horses rcturne.1 full run without their riders. The Lord looked out from the eavens, and on that anniversary &? Rave the w'lCtory to His peop'e. 1 Therefore Nana S ihi mnit try some Jrther plan. Stan Hng in a (1-1 1 not far from ne intreno'unent of th- E-i-jlis-i ws a tatlva Christian woman, J icojo-t byname, bolding high up In her hani a b-tter. It wis evidently a romtruaication from the tnsmy, nn 1 Ge ieril '.Viie-l-r or (ere I the troman t.ran-;ht in. S':e han 'e i him a pro- f-jse.ltr.iv. I? itfu-ril iV ienpr ani hi ien won! i g vnuo th'dr w::pts, Nini flihib wind conluct theaa into Ba'ety. rhef (paid marah out a unolesteU. th man, ivomen and children. They conlT go down to-morrow to tho Crin(es, where they vou Id fin I boats to take them In peace to dlshabad. There was soma opposition to signing his treaty, hot General WheHlers wife told il n he could trust the natives, and so he ifgned the treaty. There was great joy In he intrenchment that night. Without nol estation they went out and got plenty ot Titer to drin'i ani water for a goo I wash. Hie hung r an 1 thirst and exposure from bo consumtn? sin, with the thermometer ro-n 120 to HI, would cease. Mothers re-o-.vd at the prosp'ct of saving their chil-!r-n. The yount ladles ot the intrench nent would escape the wild beasts in human or n. Oa the morrow, true to the promise, tarts wira ready to transport thoss who r -r too much exhausted to walk. "V-t Into the carriage," sail Mr. Lee, '.in l iti wdl rl le to the han'n of the l.an ;es, for walc'i the li'ier itel cotabatants n 1 non- om'atants started !" n this place." )aourwiy Mr. Lee polntelout a monu n nt ovr the burial p'aee whic'i w is opened or O-mer.il Waeeler's intren-!h:nent, the well i..-. which every ninat the dead had teen ftropt-i. Aronal it is a curious' '-(morial. ''fun are live cross-s, one at .iel eotai'T ol t-ie irirl'T and on nt the in;re. Iron w aie'i ins riptioa I to-lay real ny text. Hi lm ; on w 1 cme to the Momor al ;;mrc't buiit to t;ie m nor-y of those alien in Caw-ipur. Tae walis areeoverel vith 1 1'ileis aa 1 erjitap'is. I nop! I twuor hreo or the insi-r.ptioas : P'lese ar they rho come out of greit tribulations ;" h!s , The deal s'lall lie raise! iueorruptible ;" ilso, "In the world yes 1 ill hav 1 tri'mhition. en iv of go- 1 i' h.t. I have overeo n- th ror! I ;" nls , 'T.ie L r I g iv . Tm Lor 1 lath tu'-en awiy ;' also, "Co ne unto M?, all k t lat la'ior an I are h-iivy la lea." "(iet into the cirr i?-." sai I Mr. L"e. nn 1 re ro la ou to the Gui.- aul tot out ut a 3in loo temple standla-j on the ban'ts. Xow," sai I Mr. L'' .iTrf is the p'atM to r.iifti Gen Til w.ieel .rani his p -opie cam n lert ii) is:ort of Xmi Si lib." I wmit iown the steps to t ie mir'ao- the r.vr. !) ).va tlu-sa steps went G -n Til W i-"lr an I he men. woaien ani caildi-eti u'il-r bis :.ar-. T iey stoo I on one si 'e of Hie stens, in I X.i'ia S i:iib an I his st -.fT s os I ou tiie ui-r si 1 . As th wo ne.-i w re getting into he ooats N m 1 Sahib o j-cte I that only th-i r'llan intlrai women an I children s'loaM ;o on bj ir 1 i.i- u a:s. Tn- yo-an - an 1 at t ie:ive women nfri kpt O.K. Ten:y ih: :t boats wt j lllle I wita m--u, women .ani 1 ii! Ireti an I floateljut into the r;y ?r. Ech o-it contained teu arme 1 nttivs. TheD lire boats t:ust"n -d together were tron'it . p. an 1 iii.'n-ral W'-ieder an I his stall got in. Vtiiouh orb-rs w.'r g'v-n to start, ths :nree boats w r so n mo .y d -iaine I. At this luiieture a boy of lw--lv-5 y.arsof aa hoKte I )jt the top of the Hindoo temple oa the sui ts two digs, a H n loo ani a Moham--ne Ian tla, tit which signal the bo itmea an t irm : natives juaipe 1 from the boats and .win tor the saore, an 1 from inmiaier ili!a 111s tae natives ou the ban fire 1 ou tba :'oats, an I masked batteries ti'iove ail I belo.v reare I with de-tru -tion, an 1 the bo i's sank AT-tu tlie.r pr-.-ioas c iro, an 1 all w mr !owu i ive three Mron ; swimmers, w 10 cot to the ppi-ite siior-. Tnose w 10 straggle 1 out 3n :r .y wore dashed to death. Nana S ilii 1 ind bis stall with their ,v .-'s siashel to Di'''--i-s G -ner.il Wheeler an I his stnrT, who a i l not got well away from thes'-ore. I said tuat the young an I attractive wo iten wtra not iillow.'d to get into the boats. I In as ui ;ro marelie 1 aw iy uu ler the guar 1 31 the s.-poys. "V'i:c"i way?" I inquired. "I will s'ioh oa," vii I Mr. L?e. Agiiu w tooi seats in th t eiirnT'i .a a I st-ir..-l lor th) climax of rtesper ittoa an I di iho.is n. Xj'-v w j are ou th-iwtyioa bu nmer hons--, caile 1 the as e.nh.y roo ns, waicli ha I bteu built tor revj- reatma ani p easiir. It na I twi. rooms, ac'i tw-snty-n ni by tea, an 1 som- win low :ess c os ts aa 1 here wer lm-)risoae I 20t5 -iei-'ess p'.p'e. It w is t 'i-.'.m i th pri loa of tu-rsi -oTiea an I ehl lrLu. S-jme of :111s 1 s.'p-vs g t p 'r.niss on of .Vim Sahi 1 :o t-iie o i-i or more of th -si ladies to their wii pi ice ou tae pro nis they should be -irou-rnt balc to th si n ner gar i-m next -ourmng. A daughter of General 'Vh -elet as so taken an I did n : r nura. S 10 a'ter ir.ird marri -I the M i i-n ne t in wao ha I taken her to his tenr. Soul 1 a-po-.-s amuse I :httn "lyes by tiir.n: in,- ehildro- through wit It bavoniis ant hoi ling lh- n up before their mothi rs in tae su n n-T h-a-i A'l the ioors e'oied au l the sepoys stan ling guard, the crow led wonen ani ehii lr-a waitel their doom for eig.it-j.ia d.iyi an I nig its ini 1 socu'sj ani lli.'S nnl steajaaal Itarvation. The lai chcrs came out ex'rmstel. think ing tiicy ha I done their vror.-, an 1 tue dojrs wen clos )d. but waea ta - war4 again opened three wo ncn an 1 three boys were Bull alive. All th'-ss wre S03U dispitched, an 1 not n Cnristuin or European was left in Cawnpur. The murderers w 're paid fifty cents lor eacti lady slam. Ihe Mo iamme dan aisass. ns Iragge 1 by the hair the dead bo lies out 01 the su nmer house ant threw t iemmto a well, by which I stoat with such fe -liugs as you cauaot imagine. But alter the run. Hated 00 lies ha I b wn thro.vn into well tue rceor 1 of the scaue retuainel in hieroglih: s of crimson ou the floor an 1 wall ot 1 :e slaughter house. An eyewitness days that as he walked in the blood w is shoe deep, and on this blood were tufts ot bair, pieces of muslin, broken combs, fragments of pinafores, children's straw hats, a card c ise containing a curl, with the inscription, 'Ned's hair, with love ;" a few leaves of an Episcopal prayer book ; also a book, entitled "I'rcp aratioa lor Death ;" a Bible on the fly leaf on wuK-a was written, "For darling mamma, fro n her affectionate daughter. Isabeda Biu.r," both the one wdo presented It au l the one to whom it was presented de parted forever. Tuen Nana Sahlh heard that Ilayelook Wis coming, aul his name wis a terror to he sepoys. L-st the women an I children Imprisoned iu tne summer house, or assem bly rooms, should be lirieratel, he ordere I (hat their throats should be cut, Theolfl eors were commanded to do the work and attempted it, but failo beoause the law of iste wouiu not allow tne uin.100 to nou lie victims while they wero being slain. hen 100 men were ordered to tire tarongu tie windows, but they fired over tho beads Bf tho imprisoned ones, and ouly a few were tilled. Then Nana Saoib was in a rage and Orders I pro;essional butchers from amont; the loivest or tiie gypsies to go at the work, five of them, with hatc'.iets and swords an 1 knives, began tiie work, but throa of thetn collapsed nn 1 fainted under the ghastliaess, ft tul it was left lu Iwu buivtieia to complatu the slang iter. The struggle, the sharp cut, Ihe blinding blow, the cleaving through calp nn t skull, the begging for life, the death agony of hour after hour, the tangled limbs of tne oorpses, the pile I up dead only Gol and those who were inside the lummer house can ever know. I said : "Mr. Lee, I have hear 1 thai in delijnte things were found written oa the walls." lie answered : "No, but these poor creatures wrote in charcoal ani scratched on the wall the story of tue brutalities they had suffered." When the English and Scotch troops came apon the scene, their wrath was so (treat that General Neiil had the butchers arrested, and before being shot compelled them to wipe up part of the floor of this place ol massacre, this being the worst of their pan Isliment, for there is nothing that a Hindoo 10 hates as to touoh blood. When Havolock came npon the scene, hi dad this or lor annnlle I. The well was now Hot only mil of huaria l-o d:-s. but corps-s piled fut'"' ottl-i ! -. '?ii J sol ;b'rs w -r 1 for dim) " l oit.- ' :i -w- r'.r.z if leai. It 'v.as nSout 3 oVlo?'-:In fit ev-raln-; whoa ca' ia iiooa tills p'.ace in Cawnpur. The lu;l ling in, wliic't the massacre tools place J . i....-n tora ilown. an I a pr lcn .of pj 1 i if mi 1 :rr.rf.-iUt .iA-ers stirronnls the c-n. Mr- Leo po'ute 1 out to us some ipyentv mounds coniaining bodies or por ions of ho lies of those not tnrown Into the re '. A so:rlier stan 's on eutr 1 to kap the o ia-re on I flawen from being ruthlessly mile.1. I asiel a sol lier If I might takea ose rs a momen'o. an I he hrtnded me a I ;!nster or roses, re I nnd white, both colors j ingetive to me the red typical of the car- - . .... . .. .1 n , . . . I . A fnm . t. f .hn frn-n thr nol .seen ted. I l!nt of course the most a' sorhlne Interest oHc.Mitr.tte 1 at the well, into which hun t' So' vru-aiul call. Iron were flung or owral. A circular wall rf white marble nclos s this w !1. T ie wall is aiout twenty eit high. Inslie this wall there is a marble ave-nenf. I paced it and tound It flrty f'VP'n psc-s around. In tho center of this nelosure an i ltnrae (lately above the well of he dea l Is a sculptured angel of reiurroc ion, with illumined face, and two palm waachetv meaning Tiatocr. This alrnl Is ooking down toward the slumberers be leath, but the two wings suggest the rising f the last day. Mighty consolation in mar le I They went down under the hatchets of he sepoys. T ley shall come up under the ran pot that shall wake the dead. I felt reac and all a-tremble as I stoo 1 reading hi-se words on the stone that covers the relit "8 icred to the pirp-tuil memory ot t great company of Christian people, chiefly romen and ehildren, cruelly massacred tear this spot by the rehel, Nana Sahib, and hrown, the dying with the dead, into the roll beneath on the 15th day of Jaly, 1957." n the arch ol the mausoleum were cut the -ords, "These are they who- came out of Teat tribulation. " The sun was sinking beneath the horizon s I came down the seven or eight steps of bat place ot sepnlcher, and I bethought oyseif : "No emperor, unless It was Napol eon, eyer had more (dories aroun I his pit ow ot dust, and no queen, unless it were he one of Taj Mahal, bad rearel for ber trander cenotaph than crowns the resting laees ot the martyrs of Cawnpnr. But where rest the bons of the Herod of the linsteentn century. Nana Sahib? Two men lent out to tin t the whereabouts of the laughter of General Wn-wler tracked Nana lahib during a week's ride into the wil ter lets, and they wre told that for awhile ifterthe mutiny Nana Sahib set up a little o-np iu the jungles. Among a few thousad Iin loos and Alo la nmelaus ae took for him elt the ouly two tents the neiga lors had, rhile they lived in the rain aal ruu I. Nana lahl, with one servant carrying an ura irella, would go ev-rv day to bathe, and icople woull go and stare. For some ea-ion, after awhile ho forsoot even hat small attention, an I riisap eared among the r.tvlues of the dimalayan Mountains. He twi with ilm in his flight that waich he aiwiys tno'f with him a ruoy of vast v.ilu ". He wore it is so ne wear an amulet. H wore it as wne wear a life pres tv ir. He wore R. on lis boso n. Tae Hm loo priest to'd him as ongas he wore thatru'iv hiafor.u les would o good, but both the ruby and the prince wjo wore it have vanishe I. Not a treasure m the outside of t ie bosam, but a trasnre nside the Heart, js th be. protection, iio'o nou, who had rubles in the hilt of swords, ind ru ii -s in the lip of the tankards, and rubies in his crown, declared that which Sana Sahib did not tlnd out In time, "Wis lotn is better than ra'ues." Wnen the 'orests ot India are cleared by the axes of an ther civilization, the lost rubyof this Cawn pur monster may be' picked up and be roaght bac'x again to blaze among the world's jewels, li lt who shall reclaim for lament sepulture the remains of Nana Sahib? kk the vultures I Ask the reptiles! Ask the jackals I Ask the midnight Himalayas! Sluoh criticism has been made of Sir Henry Havelock and Sir Colin Campbell be cause of the exterminating work they did with these sepoys. Indeed it was aw.'ul. My escort, Mr. Lee, has told me that he saw the !ovs fastened to the mouths of cannon, and then the guns would fir-, and for a few i-conds there would be nothing but smoke, in 1 as the smoke began to lilt fragments of 3-s'.i would be found flying through the air. I'ou may do your own criticism. I here ex press no opinion. There can be no doubt, however, that that mode of finally treating the sepoys broke the hack of the mutiny. The Hindoos found thut the Europeans jould play at the same game which the Asiatics bad Btartei. The plot ras organized for tne murder of til the Europeans and Americans in n lia. Under its knives and bludgeons American Presbyterianism lost its glorious missionaries. Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Campbell, Key. Mr. ani Mrs. MncMuliln. RiV. Mr. and Mrs. J oanson. ttvw. Air. and .Mrs. Ert-euua The work of slaughter had been b?cun it all directions on an appalling scale, and the commanders of the English army made up their minds that this was the best way. The Black Hole prison has bo-n torn iown, but a stoan pivetnent tw mty feet by twenty indicates the groun I covt-red by the prison. The building had two small win lows, ani was iuten led for two or three prisoners. These natives of II lia crowded Into tn.-it on ro m of twenty feet feet by twenty feet 146 Europeans. The midsummer beat, the suffocation, the trampling of one apon another, the groaning nud ahriekin ' snd begging an 1 praying of all. are matte-, of history. The sepoys that night hel I Ugh s to the small windows and mocked the sufT -r-rs. Then all the sounds cease 1. That night of Juno 2), 1756, p.assod, and 123 corpses were taken out. Ouly twenty-three fieople of the 116 were alive, an 1 they bad o be pulled out from under the corpses. Mrs. Carey, who survived, was taken by the Indian nabob Into his harem and k"pt a prisoner six years. Lucknow in 1957 was only an echo of Calcutta In 17j6. During the mutiny ot which I have been speaking na tives who had been in the service of Euro peans and well treated by thetn, an I with no sause of offense, would, at the call ofthe mutineers, and without any compunction, tab to death the lathers and mothers of the household and dash out tne brains ofthe children. Tnesa natives are at peace now, but give them a chance, and they will r -enact the scenes of 1756 and 1357. They look npon the English as conquerors and them lelves as conquers 1. The mutiny of 1S57 occurred because the British Government was too lenient an 1 put in places of trust nd in command of forts too many of tb nativ-s. I call upon England to stop the present nt empt to palliate the natives by allowing them to hold positions ot trust. I am no alarmist, but the only way these Asiatiescan e kept from another mutiny is to put thetn tut of power, and I say beware, or the Luoi low nn l uawnpur an t Delhi martyrdoms, iver which the homisr'ieres hnvo wept, will e eclipsed by the Lacitnow ani Cawnpur ind DjIIiI martrydoms yet to be en-icte 1. I ipeak of what I have seeu and heard. I give ihe opinion o' every intellig.-nt Englishman ind Scotchman an 1 Irishman and American who n t met in India. Prevention is better than cure. I do not Say it is better that England rule in India. I say nothingagainst Ihe right ol Iu Jia to rula hers df, but I do laythat the moment the native population of India think tnere is a possibility ot driving Daok Europeans from Indiathey will makethe attempt, and that they have enough cruel ties for the time suppressed, which, if let loose, would submerge with carnage every thing from Calcutta to Bombay ani from the limalayas to Corotnandel. Now, my friends, go horn?, after what I lave said, to see the beauties of the Mo hammedanism and Hindoolsm waic 1 many think it will be well to have Introduced into America, and to dwell upon want natural evolution will do where it bus had its un hindered way for thousands ot years, and to think upon the wonders of martyr lorn for Christ's sake, and to pray more earnest prayers for the missionaries, and to con tribute more largely for the world's evange lization, and to be more assured than ever that the overthrow of the idolatries of Na tions is such a stupendous work that noth Ing I n: an omnipotent God threat -a 1:1 ccisp of Jjius Curist cui ever uuu,-uve r ICitM? Keep thy friend. Many a man never reaches the turn ing point of his life till he gets his nose down to the grindstone. A lie is often told withont saying a word, by patting the iotten applesj in the bottom of the basket. The crank is great when it comes io winding people tip. Be not afraid of enthusiasm; yon need it; yoa can do nothing effectually without it. Everybody wants to be 83 somebody, and there is many a somebody who wants to boss everybody. Let the motive ba in the deed, and not in the event. Be not one whose motive for action is the hope of reward. The more we study human nature, the more we shall be pleased anddisgus ted with it. It is the man with a narrow mind who is generally most anxious to give away a piece of it. Bay what thou hast no neoJ of, and re loog thou shalt sell thy necessa ries. Every time a bad man throws mud at a good man he hits himself in the face. UUlt SUNDAY SEliMOiNS A FEW SUBJECTS FOR ALL TO PONDER OVEn. foetry's Highest Function the Handmaid of K-llgloa Convincing Losrle of the Now Testament Back Pews at the Lec- ate and at Church. V hat la It Doing for You? FEW striking in cidents have re cently como to our &pH knowledge from 1 I simple reading 01 the . ew Testament without a word of comment has been blessed to the con version of individ uals' of (Jod's an cieut people, '' the Jews. A young Israelite in the Crimea, a highly cultivated man thor oughly instructed in his own faith, be came acquainted with several Christian families, and conceived the idea of writing a novel, in which the families of the Jews and Christian should be contrasted. The better to understand the latter, he bought a Xew Testament, and had not long studied it before he became convinced that Jesus was the promised Messiah of his people. In Berlin a Hebrew artist, desiring to lind new subjects for pictures, be ban to search for them ia the Xew Testament. As he read, the moral beauty of the Saviour made a deep im pression upon him. The more he read the deeper was the impression, until he came to the profound conviction that Jesus, was the Son of God. Such, when once they begin to studj it, is the influence of the Xew Testa ment upon those who have never known it. And yet how many of us Christians, who fancy we know it well, fail to find any decided evidence in our lives that we are gaining anything from it. AVe read it, but we do not grow by it. Is the reason that we are looking in it rather for doctrines for truth, perhaps we may call it than for Jesus Christ, who is the Truth? To know Him, this s life eternal. American Messenger Poetry and ltellslon. Toetry l'ullills its highest function when it becomes the handmaid of re ligion, awakening noble emotions in our hearts,, stirring holy impulses in us, setting in motion divine echoes that roll from soul to soul, that touch the cord of nature's lyre which makes the whole world akin, and reveal our com mon brotherhood before God. It is plain that the spiritual side of our nature is improved by whatever refines and exalts, and that the grosser appe tites of man are held in check by those gentler and subtler influences which spring from a mind that spurns the earth and lifts its gaze beyond the mountain tops. It is no less true of the poet than of the prophet that his lips have been touched by coals of living fire, that his glance shoots from heaven to earth, and from earth o heaven, and that the mighty thoughts of Homer descended from the same source only through the channels of the natural order as did the gorgeous conceptions of Isaiah. The sublime utteranceg of the great bards of the ages have santi fied the world, and turned men's pas sions from the roads to ruin and revolt against order, into pathways that led to the building of great cities, to the growth of civilization and the rearing of those mighty monuments that have immortalized the past. Home lives to day a portion of its Iifu instinct with the sj irit which Virgil breathed into it, and its Christianity is no less holy and pure because 1,900 years ago it glowed with the light of the Muses. But it is in the individual especially that we should look for the healthful influ ences of poetry and learn its general rivalry with religion inj dissipating doubt and shedding on the soul the radiance of a new birth. To turn from the beautiful page of Kempi3 to the harmonious line of Dante is like pass ing from the valley where the lily blooms into the garden where the rose blushes, for in both the fragrance ia equally delightful and the color and life of a grand epoch aro revealed to us. The ages of faith are reflected alike from the sententious utterances of the pious recluse as rom the pas sionate verses of the Florentine. Light shines in upon the one equally from both, and doubt and dishonor lly alike from the unctuous touch of the ascetic as from the impassioned lines of the mystic bard. And so in every age of the world religion and poetry stand linked together and good men have found it easy to pass from the portals of the sanctuary to the the temple of he muses. Trials and Temptations. Our trials seem hard, our tempta tions chafe and fret, and the daily rou tine of duties look tiresome and like a burden, because our selfish inclinations are pulling us in another way, and we are not inclined to stop and consider the use and helpfulness of these expe riences. But if we could accustom ourselves to finding some element of usefulness in every day's experience, the trials would be more easily borne, the temptations would fret us less, and the duties of life would never appear heavy and wearisome. The Lost Heart. I knew a man who lost his neart. His wife had not got it, and he did not seem as if he had got himself. "That is odd, ' say you. WeJL he used to starve himself. He had scarcely enough to eat. His clothes were threadbare. He starved all who were around bim. He did not seem to have a heart. A poor woman owed him a little rent. Out she went into the street. He had no heart. A person had fallen back a little in the payment of money he had lent him. Tha debtor's children were crying for bread. The man did not eare who cried for hunger, or what be came of the children. He would have his money. He had lost his heart. I never could make out where it was till I went to his house one day, and saw an iron safe; it stood behind the door of an inner room, and when he un loeked it with a heavy key, and the bolts were shot and the inside was opened, therturaa a mustv. fusty thing 1 Mm, 1 ' llllg; 1" T wTithin "itT as dry as a kernel of a walnut seven years old. It was his heart. li you have locked up your nean; in an iron safe, get it out. Get it out as quickly as ever you can. Spurgeoa. A Good Creed. Do not keep your love and tende? ness sealed until your friends are dead. Fill their lives with sweetness. Speak approving, cheering words while their ears can hear them, and while there hearts can be thrilled and made hap pier by them. The kind things you mean to say when they are gone, say before they go. The flowers you mean to send for their coffins, send to bright en and sweeten their homes before they leave them. If my friends have alabaster boxes laid away full of fra grant perfumes of sympathy and affec tion, which they intend to break over my dead body, I .would rather have a plain coffin without a flower, a funeral without an eulogy, than a life without the sweetness of love and sympathy. Let us learn to anoint our friends be forehand for their burial. Fost-niortem kindness does not .cheer the burdened spirit. Flowers on the coffin cast no fragrance backward over the weary wav. It Make a Difference. A. clergyman' in Maine propounds a query that is peculiar, pertinent and perplexing: "At a paid lecture people go away from the sale disgusted be cause 'all the seats but those miserable pews at the rear end are taken,' and the following Sunday night at the preaching service or prayer meeting those six or eight back pews, which were so undesirable on a week day, are all filled, and those very desirable front seat3 are empty, notwithstanding the polite request of pastor and of usher ta the people to come and occupy them. Why is it that folks are so bashful on Sunday and afraid to attract attention, but lo.ie their reticence at a concert or paid lecture?" Congregationalist. Motes and Comments. A negro preacher in the South, who iecured the eloquent Bishop Simpson to preach in his colored congregation, thus grandiloquently introduced him: "Breddern, you are to hab de privilege dis mornin' of hearin' de great Bishop Simpson from de Xoff, a man whose repootation is all over dis land like a soundin' brass and a tinkliu' cymbal." TiiEit were 900 baptized in the Xew York Baptist churches hist year. In all the churches but three the large congregations are in the evening. The average Baptist congregation of the city is about 200. Only three churches have assistant pastors and fourteen have women missionaries. About 52 per cent, of the baptisms are from thf jun day-school. After Miss Jones had told the storj of the Floating Society of Christian Endeavor, at a recent Endeavorer con vention, it was suggested that there should be a tramp steamer, mantled by Christian Fndeavorers, from captain to mess-boy, and that this steamer should go about from ship to ship, carrying Christian Endeavorer literature to th world's navies. On the occasion of his jubilee Car d inal Gibbons said: "For my own part I do not desire to see tho relations be tween church and State any closer than they are at present. I do not wish to see the day when the civil authorities may be called upon to build our churches and to subsidize our clergy, for then they might dictate to us what ioctriues we ought to teach." "Brother Fodbeurv," suddenly remarked Parson 'VVilgers in the midst of his discourse, "as you seem to be the only member of the congregation who is awake, it might be just as well for you to come up here iu the pulpit, where I can repeat the rest of iny ser mon to you in a conversational tone. It will save my voice and also be lesa snnoying to the light sleepers." The lit. Rev. Dr. Saumarez Smith the 1'rimate of Australia, in his address to the Sydney Synod, in treating the question of evening communion, which has caused much discussion, reminded the Ritualists that the first communion took place in the evening, and he shocked them by asserting that it was uot a question of ritual or of doctrine but of simple convenience. TnE Presbyterian Synod of Xew Jersey approved the minutes of tho Presbytery of Elizabeth, which or dained Ira B. Wheeler an elder in the Presbyterian Church notwithstanding his declaration that he did not agree with the doctrinal statement of the church respecting preterition, infant salvation and the condition of the heathen, and added that in so doing it assumed "that the difficulties experienced by the elder-elect had roference to certain forms of statement, rather than to the system itself." A Kudo Awakening. Mr. Alma-Tadema, who is uncom monly fastidious in his personal ap pearance, had for his guest on one oc casion Mr. Elihu Vedder, the well known American. On the morning after his arrival at the house .Mrs. Alma-Tadema was awakened by a rudo knocking at her chamber door; much alarmed, she aroused her husband who demanded, in fierce tones, what was wanted. It was Mr. Vedder who wa3 at the door, and he answered: "I say, Tadema, old chap, where do you keep the scissors that you trim your cull vith:" Chinese Boats nave "Eyes. Chinese Junks and boats have eye carved orpainted on the bows, which are usually supposed to be a mere fan ciful form of ornamentation. But they have a real meaning, as a recent travel ler found. In going up one of the riven from Nlngpo he was startled one day by seeing a boatman seize his broad hat and clap It over one of tho "eyes" of the boat, while other boats on the stream were similarly blinded. Look ing about for an explanation, he saw a dead body floating past, and ho was told by the boatman that If the boat had been allowed to "see" It, some disaster would surely have happened either to passengers or crew before the voyap, ended. When a boy is in lo?e. ba treats hh, nother better- G