- 1: M - - aa a .ST liififi MIL B. F. BOHWEIEB, THE CONSTITUTION THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Bditer amd Prop VOL. XLIX. MIFFLINTOWIS, JTJNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY. b 1895. NO. 8. CHAPTER IX Continued. Cranny did pot see many old friends Indeed. ihe only reeognbed here ant there a fitee anions' the walkers ant rider, who now I egan to lounge alont on either side ch line, peeping in a: the carriage windows, and making I halt now and a'a n when h;i ltd bi '.heir occupants. Cecil ltavmond had fromised to look up his irran.imotl)nr and cousin, nnc cheer and chat with them during thi weary waiting time but they saM nothing of dim, though Geraldine kepi a look out with an eagerness at whicl she was he:-elf surprised. She had seen Cecil only the eveninj oe'Vn-e, an 1 he was coming to Moun' street after their return from tin palace, so why should she care a o J fneetinjf him ajain in the interval? She did not know that she was ex perienfinj, even in the midst of hei splendor, a touch of that forlornne which only thos - can understand who havinsi been brought up in a confine! and litnitel sphere, where eve' y ob.'eo has been Irom childhood lamil ar. ar sud :enlv transported into avast, eetb Ins. restlesi mass of human beinjrs. The past fo tn'ght had almost mad Geraldine imagine that she had out lived the fee.iujr. The first shock hac been ot ovnr: she had leen uo anc dov.i) lion I street und llejrent street and ha I fancied he.se;f at home insun dry retorts of fa-hion but this pageant go completely and entirely unlike any thiu..r sha inid ever bei'ore been a wit ess it"., threw her bacK a?aiu. siuch endless numoers of line folks jne e :ui.aes. rine everything! Suet wonderiu iy "b 'autiful younj? facea such u o id old patrician ones; suet 'ovely child en! iSomehow or othor, as she jaed another lace and figure, one she ha knon n on .'c, came back upon her s viv dly that she al nost star ed now und utra;n, so sure was she that thi heal or prolile of which she ha caught a Klim;se amotij the crow must have been that of Beilenden This happened more than on.-e. It was, it could bj but most foolish o fancies, and she wa.- annoyed with her self that what, must perforce only lx the cold a.-hes of an old as-ociatiot should hai o ha 1 the power to stir thi bloo 1 in her little tin,'-r; bt she coull not help it. she thought she wouli Dave liiced to see him, and would hav iked him to see her - and that was all .s for Ccc.l. he was watched foi more eagerly than ha had ever beei lfote. and even granny was annoyed by the inatten.ion -since it would hav been n'.eaant to have had their mac Ut talk to as other people had. Th carriage in front an l the carriage be hin l had each a little ijroup surround ing its win .ows, and Cecil, who shouk (lave sa.ud his grandmother from thi rnoiuiny of beinjj altogether unsough' aiid unattended, was nowhere to tx 6een. lie had made a mistake, as wai fully and satisfactorily explainai af terwards when the explanation dii no good to any one , but, in the mean .ime. the ladies bad nobody. 4.(nee inside the palace s;ates. how ver, and ru-hin up the broad stair ca.-e and thro iizh the great vacant rooms, cafiny forgot everything- els in the exhilaration o.' discovering ani pointing out to Geral-iine their gooc ;trtune in bein early enough to so cure chairs in the very front row o' the only room in which chairs at al were to be hud. It was t uickly tilled, anil then gran oy bude her young charge mte the crush, the ht-at, and the discomfort o those who, shut buck by the intlexiblt barrier, now poured faster and fastei into the great saloon behind, till ll looked a mere surging mass of head' nd plumes. Furthermore, granny explained th jfie ante chamber in front, at preaenj enty, who e recesses she and Geral Oina could view at their ease, althougt they ii their turn were debarred froa entering therein, would presently b (all of the happy eople who possessed the roveted entree -the rijfht of en trance by a special door, and of priori ty of presentation and that as the assembled, it would bo-an amusing lit tle pantomime to watch them tripping hither and thither, greeting each oth er, and disp aying their finery "And lookicg at us. my dear, as they would it inferior things." proeedea the old ii,v nodding ber head merrily. "Thej .ir not in reality any very great peo ple at J1-principally oTcials and their wiwe althojgh.of course. ther lire a few noteworthy folks amon them, such as the ambassadors anc foreign princes: but they think a great deal ol themselves on these days. Ms Aunt Catherine, your great aunt, had the entrea: and 1 remember so wel' what a point she made of never order ing her carriage on Court days before 2 o'clock. A little piece of bravado, my dear. She liked the neighbo s W jee. that was all." So the old lad. prattled on. liy-and-by she had another pleasure. As the assembled grouns settled them selves down, and had time to looU around and take note of their surronnc ings, one after another came up fronc behind, pleased to recognize an old friend or axjuaintance in the hand K)me, stately form which tat so erect la uont of all, and with whom th lovely ffirl at her side was so evidently associated. -, - Then it would be all joyful greetings, nd renewal of old ties, and eager in auiries. , . What had she been about all thesa ears? Taking charge of her orphan grandchild. What had brought her back into th fforld? Whereupon the orphan grand child would be presented with an ait ; '.mmistakably meant. ' Here if : sufficient ir everything. ' nbaps granny d never oeeu oocp-.er m ner lite tnan aurlng that hour. She was quick enough to note the effect in everv instance, ana to have, moreover, a shrewd suspicion aa to the cause of the various difference In the reception of her intelligence. If it chanced, for instance, that tha recipient were the luckless chape on of half a rio en p ain and portionless damsels, could he forbear to look upon Geraldine. b.-aut if.il, wealthy, fortu Ba:e, without a momentary enyy'.. . again, a troublesome boy, "son, nephew, or thriftless young cousin had to be provided for, would not envy be ex changed for covetness Ana it was only if the stranger were abo e all such considerations, and freed fro n all such encumbering rememb.-ances, that there would follow the impartial and dispassionate avowal, 'She is a great beauty. Do let me congratulate you!' whereat the old lady would bean igain. The time of waiting did not see n to her long at all; while even Ceraldine had so much to see and notice and mark for her own reflection afterwards, that he was quite taken by surprise at last when the stir began within the ante chamber, and ere many minutes had passed it had thinned so fast that their jwn barrier was withdrawn, and she round herself being greatly but irre istib y urged forward. "Keep by me, love; keep by me,'' whispered her grandmother with su per tl nous caution, for the two could hardly have parted company if they would: and in tne excitement of the moment Geraldine had no time to feel t ashful or nervous ere she found her ?elf moving on in single file close be hind granny, and aware that some one else was equally close behind her. Beneath an arched doorway in front, t seemed to her that within every few seconds a halt was made, causing a series of jerks to the fair procession, and the first idea that occurred to her inexperienced mind was that at this point the g eat event of the day took place: but drawing nearer, the notion was dispolled. No; trie gorgeous, peacock-like trains were only being spread beneath that doorway, anu a sea of neads all at once became visible be yon I, while a monotonous voce rose ever and again, as one and another passed in and was lost to view. But what was it, then, that attracted every sye, and turned every head, as 'each air creature sai'.el along over the polished iloor towards that goal be j ond' Alack-adayl it was but a mir ror and the merry-hearted little Jerry of old all at once sprang to life again within the bosom of the elegant de butnate, and she had enough ado no; to laugh o-tright at the canning little trait oi human nature. The laugh, however, had to be post ( oned to a more convenient season, for now granny was making her grand, old-fashioned curtesy, and takiug her lull time over it, ere she was hurried along by the unsympathuing offlcials, who would scarce permit her to make i reverent exit in what she con-idered i seemly manner - and next it was 1 ieraldine's own turn. it was said that the Queen smiled upon her. i'erhaps IlerGracious Maj esty had heard something of the young girl's story and remembered it. for it is well known how conscientiously the presentation lists are scanned and in quired into in tne highest quarter; but, at any rate, many others looked, and noticed, and whispered, to one another that day. Jerry might very well have had hei- young head turned, had she given heed to it all. She did not. She was full of the fun ot the thing whsn she gotho:ne at five o clock, very full of how this one had looked, and how she couid have wished for another view of her Sovereign, and had been so confused and anxious at the supreme moment that, indeed, she could scarcely say she had had a dis tinct view at all: but with the sprightly chatter there was no word that was not CI easant to hearken to -natural, lova le. innocent. The Kaymond girls, the. Ethel and Alicia of old, were in the drawing room, waiting, all impatience to hear how Geraldine had tared, to see how she looked, and next, to tell of their own presentation davs, to compare ex periences, or note alterations. They bad not a word to say against their cousin afterwards. sne naa oeea neither elated nor self-important, nor self-conscious - she had been just her own self, and even her Aunt Charlotte owned that Geraldine was wonderfully little spoilt, all things considered. What Cecil had thought he kept tf himself. He had also been in waiting, full ol explanations and apologies, which, as we have sa'd, fell now somewhat flat. It bad been the new liveries which had upset his calculations. His grand mother had omitted to tell him either about them, or her smartnewcarrlage. and never having seen the full dress livery of the Campbells before, he had forgotten that it would be ture to be ir use on the present occasion. But I heard you had been there ah right," he concluded. 'I met a man who had seen you. Your old friend, Beilen en, Geraldine. Oddly enough. I rtumbled across bim to-day. though we had not met for ages." 'Indeed!" said his grandmother, somewhat coldly. "We did not see him. nor any one we knew while out side, did we, Geraldine?" "Ke saw you, however," replied Ce cil. intercepting his covsin's reply "lie was on horseback, and could not get near enough to catch yoi.r eye; but he had a good look at you, and said be should have known Geraldine any where." "She is a good deal changed, never theless," said Geraldine's grand mother, still reserved ani stately, and the tone in which the remark was made conveyed this: "If any person now thinks to find in my granddaugh ter an unsophisticated, impulsive child, to be safely talked nonsense to and played with, that person is very much mistaken." Meanwhile the subject of discourse had affected in the prettiest manner possible to hear nothing of it. To Cecil s opening sentence she had, indeed, accorded the proper tribute of attention, since he had directly ap pealed to her: but presently she had found herself obliged to turn aside, and found a seat for her Aunt Char lotte and answer her inquiries, and show her the lace upon her train and on her bodice, and neither Cecil nor his grandmother had supposed she bar caugnt a word of their collojuy. Of course she bad, and it bad been nusic in her ears. She now just cared enough about ,he meiory of Beilenden, on e so ieeplv, pasuonately beloved, to re oico that he had witne sed her hour of tri linph. and had not shared it. She wanted no more of him. He had seen her, and seen her as she .ould not help knowing, at her radiant lest, and had been compelled to be lold only fro-n afar, unable even to :1a im recognition. What booted it to reason out the natter? She would not stop to beth nk jerse'.fthat this view of it was scarcely t plain and matter-of-fact one, that there had in reality been no possible reason why Beilenden should not have made his way to her side had he taken the pains to do so. No, no, no: it had been the omen of the fut re in store tor both. She should be seated aloft on hei ;hrone of youth and beauty, with all the world at her feet and he - he whe bad despised and deserted her should 'e the outcast who could not even draw near to bask in the sunlight ol her presence. It was a prc:ty little vista, was it not? CHAPTER X. CERALD1XE BEGINS TO PAT BACK. In London how esy we visit, and meet, ay pleasure's the theme, and sweet smiles are our treat; )ur morning's a round of good-humored de light. knd we rattle. In comfort, to pleasure al niulit.' The presentation day bad been a Thursday. Cecil ltavmond declined to lunch ic Mount street on the following Sunday is he hai done on the two previous ones, alleging an engagement; and it presently transpired that the engage ment was to breakfast with Sir Fred erick at his club, alter which he pro posed bringing Beilenden to call or bis grandmother and cousin. From the speaker's manner it wai jvident that a few civil words from a man with whom it was creditable to be tm good terms, had undone all the past: and the way in which he Referred to Beilenden and quoted Beilenden dur ing the next five mi nates recalled the Did time when no one had stood on a higher pinnacle in his good graces. Tne very air with which he made his lurther proposition showed that he felt tecure of its being accepted. Now, poor old granny did not alto gether like this: and for two reasons would fain that nothing ot the kind bad been suggested. She wished to aave nothing further to do with the fue.-t who she could but feel had been mgrateful and neglectful, and she Had old-fashioned views on tbe eub ect of Sunday afternoon calls. Cecil was himself of course welcome; jut she would have preferred his not beginning to bring friends with him. As for Geraldine. the word "bring ing" was enough for her. A man that required to be "brought." A man, who, even after knowing that his former friends and hostesses were pvithin a few streets of him, could not f himself step across the way, as it rere, but required to be "brought!" An indignant sense of this was on ;he verge of escaping, when she, how jver, recollected herself: and recol lecled as Cecil's face told her, only just n time. Ves, her cousin was certainly on the ratch actually looking out to see whether any traces of the old Same remained, t'o lish, absurd boy. tiid he not know her better than that? Did he imagine that because he could be won over by the first soft sentence the was to be equally poor-spirited? She burned with eharao for him How easily he had pardoned every thing: how pleased he now looked to lit and chatter there about bis friend, ind his friend's club, at 4 his Sunday breakfast! Granny was gently demur ring to the Sunday breakfast, well knowing what it meant; and Cecil, ever ready to conciliate, wss expl":nint' ind excuainjr, and, aorauver, aosurMr ibe old lady that it was net bis halt 10 accept such Invitations, that he did K, in fact, very seldom indeed, but ihat he had not liked to refr.se on the present occasion, in case it might have looked as if - she would understani as i some resentment were still harbored irhich should be alike beneath a Ray nond and a Campbell. "We must take the world as we End It," the young man was philosophically Brguing. "we should simply make our selves ridiculous if we appeared to have thought so much of a trifle. Bei lenden is a careless fellow, and after be had left us he had so much to do ana to think ol that we passed out of his memory, tfut he meant no harm, and he was' as friendly as possible to 11 e to-day. You would not have me bppear uncharitable as well as unso phisticated?" he wound up. TO BE CONTINUED. American Stories. Robert Barr, the "Luke Sharp" oi Th Detroit Free Press, and the digni tie 1 associate editor of a London maga zine, says that Americans have all the Ideas, but Englishmen have all the Clnista. He says that the Americac vho goes to London must guard hit ttories, if he ever expects to use them, as they will be taken out of his mouth and made into copy before he knows it Over here a literary man tries all of lis ideas upon his friends before he thinks of printing them on paper. They are polished by being knocked about. Hopkinson Smith made up "Col Carter of Cartersville" out of stories hi had been telling for ten years. At American would as soon have thought of stealing his spoons as his stories tc make money out of. But in England Uiey are not so squeamish. Mr. Barr says that an American au thor came to him one day and said Well, Barr, I've told you that yarn'ol mine that I meant to work into a novel once too often. One of the men you introduced me to has just brought it out In a magazine." Philadelphia Press. Perfectly Fresb. Milk frozen solid in cans is now solo m France. It has been discovered that milk can be kept perfectly fresh in a frozen condition for more than a month. It is frozen by means of an ordinary ice-making machine, and dis patched by road, rail, or steamer to its destination. The customer who pur chases the frozen milk has simply to thaw it when it is required lor um. Some men are born grjat, some achieve greatness an i som ) stand well with both ft-ot ions. There are plenty of people who are very pleasant while they can have their own way. A Christian is in a dangerous place when be does not feel that he needs the help of God. This is the age when women are making everj effort to do what men bave done. One of the snprising things of this world is the respect a worthless man has for timself. A business seldom amounts to enongh to give all the employes the credit they claim. The people who have the soft?tt carpet to kneel on often do the least praying. Kind words can never die, but Uey get very tired when thay are not ap preciated. A lie ia like a brush heap on fire; it is easier to let it burn ont than try to extinguish it The man who strikes it rich nowadays generally strikes it early and strikes all day long. Immm sermon. -jiCaV'SSERMOS IX THIS SKW VOHK ACADEMY OF MUSIC. BabJeoU "Points of Compass. Texts "Tbry shall eoms from the East ad from th Watt, an 1 from th North, an boat tbm Sooth, aal shall sit down." Lu Th naa who wrote this was at one time a praetlola physlalan. at another Um a talj ated painter, at another Um m power fa preacher, at anothnr time a reporter on In spired reporter. God bless and help aa l im spire all it porter 1 From their pens Aropi the Health or poison of Nations. The nam of ths rrporTT was laneanna. For short Im wm elled Lake, and ia my text, altbouet tniognphy had not yet been born, be re pons verbatim a sermon ot Christ whJoh il one rnragrapa bowls the round world lat lb lis ot tnamillrnniaai. Theyshal ran, irom the Xxt. and from tbe Wart, ui from tee Korth, and from tne Sooth, ani hall ett derra." Xotbiruc man tntemtel mo la my raosa jtmraty around Iho world than to aea thi hip eaptavn artont noon, whether on th Paeina or ths Indian or Bxngal or Mdi Ittrmnesn or Sad Sea, looking throojrh. nantioal Instrument to Ond juet where w were saitinjr, and It ia well to know that thoozh tbacaptnln tells yoa that there an thirty -two polnle of division ot the Compaq card in the mariner's ooipis tsare are on y four cardinal point, and my text hailt them the North, tbe South, the Bast, tbe West. Bo I spread ont belore ns the map o'. the world to ene the ezteut of tha gnsrH anvipalsn. The hardest part of the fl ;.il i betaken is tha Nana, benant nr gospel k an -motional gospel, an 1th. N-Uiona of the far Nonh are a ro d-' ojjed raoa. Tbe dwell amid ioeber- iuid t-rnal enow and Tcrlaifllnr winter. Greealanders, Ip landers, Iceland-, Siberians their Tenlsie la the aiedire drawn by reindeer, their ap. parrl the thle-eet fnra at all smaon. theit exiorraoe a lifetime battle with the cold. The winter charges npon them with awori of icicle and strikes Ibem wJhtmUets of hail and pounds them with battlinx rams of gla cier. but already tha hots of the aretlo bear (ha bodr of drrlne worship. Already tha snows fail on open New Testaments. Al. ready tbe want! a of tbe sun ot right eon -nvsa le?ina to lie fi-'.t tbronsh tbe bodip and minds and aorjls ot tbe Hyperboreans. Down irom SoTa Zambia, down from Bptlc-bart.-on ana, down from ibe lanl of tha mld nlRht ran. down from the palaera of crystal, down orer realms of ice and orer domin ion of snow and through horrleanea ol sleet Christ's disciple are romlns from tha Korth. The lohaMtantiof Hu Joa By nra KtthTiiicto the cross. The Cnuroa Mis sionary Society in tboe polar climbs run beun grnndiy .ucitsrul In i-eta'di bin-! tw nty-Ioar gosp-l etntion, and over 12.01? rintivo haTe believed and been baptrx-Ml. Tbe liorrvinng have kindied the light of tbt gospel all up and down I.Vjrador. The U ninh mitalon has Rat here 1 ilci;lt Iron among the ehiT-riug inhabitants ot Green land. William Duncan preaches the pes pot up In the chill latttu lea of Coluai'H!!. d-l:T, ri one aerm.;n iitne tims In tbe aim J day to na many diffi-r nt tri who LsteoJ and then go forth to bu Id school hou au,' Churches. Aluska. c.illel at ll anm-xatinn "Witllara IL Beward'a folly, turns out 10 be Tv'llliaii H. Sewar l's triumph, nod It ia bearini; th4 voice of Oo 1 through tbe American ml&slooi nrh-s, men and women s deflect of M""tlj narda'-dfis a the old b ollisl j:-.--r'.i when camping out In a winter's nitrha knocked from under hi sou's bead a piliota of unow. saying that such indultreuc lj luxury would weaken an t dlsr.tce the elnn. The Jeennette went don in latitude seven ty a-ren. while lLouif nnl bta fr? -e nq and dying men stool wawhinit it iro n th crutnb.injrand crackling pol:tr pack, btv tbt old snip of the gospel Bills aa unhurt In Jti lude seventy-aeveu as In our own forty de grees, and the one starred fl i? float abort tha topgallant tn biffln'a liar and Ilalsm'l Strait and Melville Sound. Tba betoUm ol polar expedition, which his made tbe narnea or Sebastian Cabot nud Hforeaby nn I Bmwatka and Henry Hudson immortal. Is to be eclipsed by the prowess of tbe ma an.l women who amid tbe froat of highest lall-j to dee ore tbls moment taking theappes shore of Europe, Asia and America for Go 1.1 Bctentiot bave never been able to agree aa, to what is tbe aurora borealla, or northern lights. I ran tejl tbem. It Is tbe baner of victory tor Christ spread oat in ths nolbera night heavens. Pirt1nlly fulflllel ala-ady I he prophecy of my text, to bo couplet el j fulfilled in tbenear future, 'TheyahjJl eomi from tba North.' But my text takea in tbe oppoilte p!nt ot me compass. Tbe far South baa, through hik'h temperature, temptation to lethargy and indolence and hot blood which tent toward multiform evil. We have through my text got the North in, nol wit liV.an ling Its frosts, and the asm text brln-3 in thi Bomb, notwithstanding ita torridity. The Delia of camus, th orange (rove and the tbicketa of magnolia axe to be eurrenderej to the Lor t Almighty. Tbe South 1 Tnut means Mexk-o and all the regtoue that Will lam H. Preacott and Lord Kingtiorouga made familiar la literature; Hexleo, in trange dialect of tbe Aatecs; 11-xioa coa-.at-red by Hernan Cortes, to be mora glor iously conquered t Mexico, with lut capital Bore than 7U0O leet above tha aea Iter el loob Ing down upon the entr.incemest of lake aad raUey and plain ; Mexico, tha borne of na tions ret to be liorn all for Cpiriat. Tb South! That means Africa, which David UvingstoneconseoratedtoGodwhea be diet en his knees in bis tent of exploration. Al ready about 750.000 conv iris to Cbf awianitr In Africa. Tna South 1 That means all tb lalanda atrewa by omnipotent haal through tropical aea Malayan, Polynesia, t-4arje. ia. Micronesia and other Island mor numerous than you ean lmataa ualeau roil Save voynged around the world. Tha South I That mean Java for God. Sumatra for Godj Vorneo lor God, 8U0 for God. A ship was wrecked near oae of these 11. mda. and two lifeboat put out forabore, but Lboee who amred lathe first boat wen Slabbed to death If tha amnnibala. and tb' ptber boat put back and was somehow saved. Keen paeand on, and oae of that T -ry area was wracked again with others on tha aam soeka. Crawling up 00 the above, they pro. posed to bide from tbe cannibals in one o IbaeaTerna, but mounting tba rooks the; saw a church and ariad ont I "Wo ar saved I A church, a church ! Tbe South That raeaoa Tanexuela. New Oraaada Ecuador and Bolivia. Tba South I Tha mean lb torrid cone, with all Its bloom and all Its fruitage, aad all ita exuberance the redolence ot Illimitable gardens, th music of boundless groves, tha binds, the sana, that nigbt by night look up tothi Mouthern Cross, wblcb, in stars, tranatlgi ares tbe midnight heaven as you look up al it all the way from the Sandwich Islands t Australia. "They shall oomo from, tbi South." 15 ut I must not forget that my text takei In another cardinal point of the com piss, It takes In the East. I have to report that in a journey around the world there is noth ing so much impresses one as the fact that the missionaries divinely blessed are taking the world for God. The horrible war beJ Iween Japan and Chins will leave ths lost, wall of opposition flat in tha dust. War ij barbarism always and everywhere. We hold up our hands in amazement at tbe massacra, at Port Arthur, as though Christian Nations could never go Into such diabolism. W forget Fort Pillow 1 We forget tbe fact that during our war both North and South re joiced when there were 10,000 mort wounded and slain on tbe opposite side. War, whether in China or tbe United Btates, la hell let loosa. Eut one good result will corns from tha Japanese-Obioese con flict. These regions will be mora open to e.vllisatlon and Christianity than ever be fore. When Missionary Carey put before an assembly of ministers at Kortuaniption hii ! project for tbe evangelization of India, tne taugaea mm one 01 tna nouso. a torn uat eatta on the east of India to Bombay on tna trest there Is not a neighborhood but directly pr indirectly feels the gosp jl power. Tbt Juggernaut, which did its awful work for centuries, a few weeks ago was brought ont from the place where it has for years bees rant under abed as a cnrlositv. and then was no one reverentially to greet tt. About 8.000,000 of Christian souls In India are th advance guar 1 that will lead on the 250,, 000,0 0. The Christians of Amoy and Pek. Ing ana Uauton are tna aavanco guaru inai iWjiUeai tba U,rm r.na fiina Thas shall come fWhn tuuw 'inoBui majBiai of Mohammedanism will be turned into Christian church. The last Buddhist temphj will become a fortress ot light. Tha last idol of Hindooiam will be pitched into th Ore. Tha Christ who came from the Bast will H bring all tha last with Him. Of eoorst there are high obataalea to be overcome, aad great ordnala must be sisnd through be tor ha aoaaummatloB, as wil n the Armenian under tha butahary of tha Turks. May t bat throne on the banks of tha Boaphorus sooq erumhle 1 Tha time has already eome whe tha United States Government and Grmt Britain aal Germany ought to lntome th Indignation of all civilised Nations. Whil It la not requisite that arms be sent there te avenge tba wholesale massacre of Arm en. iana, tt Is requisite that by cable under th aeaa,and by protest that shall thrill tb wires from Washington and T.nn.lin mnA Berlin to Constantinople, tba Nit ions an. athamathsa tha diabolism for which tha Sal. tan Of Turkey at roapooaibie. al iharamadau, lam a a .rare jrhthag. im Tstkn or a York. -Tany shall eome from tbe East. And they will corns at the eail oi tha love lieaa and grandest and heat men and uome of all ti ne. I mean the missionaries. Dis. solute Americans and Englishmen who havi Rons to Calcutta and Bombay and Canton tt make their fortunes defame tha mlasionarlej t)eau ths holy lives and the pure houei bold of those missionaries area oonitantrei hake to the American and English libertines stopping there, but the men and women ol God there stationed go on gloriously witt their work. People Just as good and ael: dVmylng as was Missionary Moffat, who, when asked to writs in an album, wrob Sitae wor 'a 1 My album la la savage breasts, W-re passion reign and darkness rests Without one ray of right. Ti writs the name 01 Juaos Lucre, To potnt to worlds both bright and fair. And see tha pagan bow In prayer, : 1 all my soul's delight. ' In all those region are men an 1 woraea with tha eonsenrallon of Melrllla B. Cox, who. amharking for the missionary work 1 Africa, said to a fellow student, "If I die l Africa, come aad write my ep-taDh." "Whal hall I write for your epitaph?'' sail th tu teat. "Write," said he, "these words 1 "Let a thousand fall b-jfore Arrioa bo given up." There a another point of the eompts that my t-xt lnclu W. "They sliall coma Iroi the West." T-iat means Amertoa redeemed, Everything between Atlantic anl P-icifl Ocnans to ba broujit within ths circle of holin-vu anl rapture. Will it be done bj wordly n-forra or evangelism? Will It b law or gospel? I an glad that a wive of reronn has swept arrow tbls lanl, and al the cities are feeling the alvontage of thi mighty movem-nt. Let tha good work g on until taa laat municipal evil la ex tirpated. About fifteen years ago tha dla tingulshed editor of a New York daill newspaper said to me In his editorial room t 'Too. ministers talk about evils of which you kaiw nothing. Why don't yoo l?o with the offleera of the law anl explon for yourself, ao that when you preach against sin you can apeak from what you have seen with yonr own eyee?" I said, "I will," aad in company with a commissioner ot pollot and a captain of police and two elders of my church I explore 1 ths dens an 1 hiding place of all style ot erlme In New Tor and preached a series o sermons warning young men and setting forth tbe work that must bi done lest the judgment of God whlm thlt city with more awtul ubntergemeat than th vofcanlc delude that burled Hereulaneuoi nd Pompeii. I received, as nearly as I can r member, several hundred columns of new, paper a I for undertaking that explora tion. E UtoriUs of denunciation, aoubla U.i. J und fikMi. .ia arrear prtmet type, enutie 1 "fa F-ill of Talmaga,'' or "Talmaga Hakes the Mistake of His Life," or "Down With Talmage," but I still liva aad am In full sympathy with all movements for municipal purtflajtion. But a moTunwnt which ends with erimt xposei and law executed atops half way, Kay, it stop long befoM It get half way. The law novsr yet saved anybody, never yet hanged anybody. Break up all tie housoi BftnUjolty la this city, and you only en4 the occupant to other cities. Break dowl all tha policemen ia N-w York, aad while It thange their worldly fortune It does not ti nature their h-rt or life. Ths greateal want in lew York to-day Is the transform, tog power of the gospel of Jesus Christ tl ehange tha heart anl the Hie and uplift thi tone of moral sentiment and make men d right not because they are afraid ot Lullo Street Jail or Sing Sing, but because the lore God aad bate unrighteousness. I havi aerer heard, nor have you heard, of any thing exoept the gospel that proposes to ra generate the heart, and by tha lnfla'noe a that regenarared heart rectify the life. Ex ecute tha law most certain ly. but preach th gospel by all means in churohea, in theatres la homes, la Brtsons, oa ths land and on thi ex. Tha gospel Is the only power that cat revoratloulsa society aad save the worl I. Al Bias la half aad halt work and will not last tn Kew York tt has allowed men who got b poUea bribery their thousanils and tens a thousands aad perhaps hundreds ot thorn sands of dollars to go scot free, while so ml Who ware merely the oat's paw and agents o bribery are atruak with the lightnings of thi law. It reminds tne of a Man in Phlladnl pais when I waa living there. A poor wo) man had been arrest ad and tried and im prlaoixed for sailing molasses candy on Sun day. Other lawbreakers had been allowed to go undisturbed, and ths grogahops wnr open on tba Lord Dar, and the law, with ha haaia behlad'lta back, walks 1 up nnd down tha streets declining to molest many of the off -n lera, but we all rose up in our righteous indignation, and oalllng upon all powers, v-aitile nnd Invisible, to help us, we declared that t!ioj;h the heavens fell no wo man ahould be allowed to sell molasser saa 1y on Sunday. A few weeks ago, after I havi preached In ana of tha ebnrenea in this city, a man ataggered up on the pulpit stairs, maudlin drunk, saying, "I am one of the reformers that were elected to high offl ie at tho last lection." I got rid of that '-great reformer" as aoon as I could, but I did not get rid of the impression that a man like that would cure the abominations ot New York about a soon as smallpox would cure typhoid fuver or a buzzsnw render Haydn's "Creation." Politics in all our cities ha become ao cor rupt that the only difference between th Republican and Demooratio parties is thai each Is worse than the other. But whal nothing else In the universe can do tha gos pel can and will accomplish. "They shall come from tho West," and for that purpose the evangelistio batteries are planted all along the Pacific eoast, ns they are planted all along the Atlantio const. AU the prai ries, all tbe mountains, all the valleys, all the cities are under more or less gospel in fluence, and when we get enough faith and1, consecration for the work this whole Ameri can continent will cry out for God. "The; shall come from tho West." The work is not so difficulty as many sap pose. Yousny, "Tbereare the foreign pop ulations." Yes, but many of them arc Hol landers, and they were brought up to love and worship God, and it will take but littl to persuade the Hollanders to adopt the r ligion ot their forefathers. Then there an among those foreigners so many of thi Scotch. They or their ancestors heart iThomas Chalmers thunder and Hobert Mc jCheyne pray. The breath of God so olton pwept through the heather of the highlands, nnd the voice of God has so often sonnded through the Trossachs, anl they all knoa how to sing Dundee, so that they will not have often to be invite! to aosept tha God v lohn Knox and Bothwell Bridge. - Tnen there are among tbesa foreigners so many of the English. They inherited ths lams language as we inherited the English In which Shakespeare dramatized, and Mil ton chimed bis enntos, an l Henry Melville gospelized, and Oliver Cromwell prorogued parliament, and Wellington commanded his eager hosts. Among thesa foreigners are tbe Swiss, and they wars rocked In a cradle under the shadow of ths Alps, that cathedral of tha Almighty In which all the elements, snow and hall anl tempest and burrioane, worship. Among these foreigners are a vast host of Germans, and ther feel centuries afterward ths power of that unparalleled tplrtt who shook the earth when he trol It, sod the heavens when he prayed Martin Luther ! Froai all Nations oar foreign pop ulations have eome. and they are homesick, far away from the plae of their childhood and the gmvea ot their ancestors, aad our glorious religion presented to them aright will meet their needs and fill their sonls and kindle their enthusiasm. They shall eome from amid the wheat sheaves of Dakota, an 1 from the ore beds of Wyoming, and from Umtc mines of .JIuvaiL- aad irom xha golden griHaf VXilOflUUJknd'-frrTB the vsau 01 tna jriaire, ana rao tsragou, ana m Sacramento, and tba Colombia. "They thai I eome from the West." kBut what will tbey do after they come ere is something gloriously consolatory that you hare never notload, "They shall eome from ths East, and tha west, and the North, and tha South, and ahall sit down." Oh, thla la a tired world 1 Tha most of peo ple are kept on the run all their lifetime. Business keeps tbem on the run. Trouble keeps tbem on the run. Rivalries of Ufa keep them on tha run. They are running from disaster. They are running for re ward. And those who run tba fastest and run the longest seen bast to succeed. Bat my text suggests a restful poaturs for all God children, for all thos who for a life time bave been oa tha run. "They eball sit down I" Why run any longer ! When a man gets heaven, what mora ean he get? "Tbey shall sit down." Hot alone, but picked com panionship of tha universe t not embar rssaad. though a aeranh ahould ait down on an aide of you and an archangel on th There la that mother who, through all the rara of Infancy and childhood, was kept tunning amid slok trundle bade, now to Phake up the pil ow for that flaxen head, and now to give a drink to thow parched I ps. and aow to hush tbe frightened dream Df a little ore, and when thera waa one less of the children, because the great lover of Children had Uttei one out of the croup into Ibe easy breathing of celestial atmosphere, the mother putting all the more anxious oare on those who were loft, so weary of arm anl foot nnd back and head, so often crying ont : "I am so tired 1 1 am so tired 1" Her work Jane, sae snail sit down, anl that business man lor thirty, forty, titty years has kept on tne ran. not urge! by selfish ness, but for the purpose of achieving a livelihood for tha- household. On tbe run from tor to store, or from factory to fac tory, mntttfng this loss an 1 discovering that Inaccuracy and suffering betrayal or disap pointment, n-V(?rmor to be oneatel or per plexe 1 or exasperated, he shall sit down, not In a great armchair of heaven, for the rockers of such a oaair would Imply one Deed of soothing, ot changing to 6asy pos ture or seml-lnvali-lism, but stnrone, solid as eternity and ra il tnt as the morning after a night of storm. " l'hey shall sit down " I notice that the mo-t ot the styles of toll require an erect attitu te. There are tbe Ihousaals of girls bolilnl counters, many inch persons through tbe inhumanity of employers 00m pel led to stand, even when beoaose a lack of customers thera is no ned that they stand. Then there are all the car penters, anl ths stonemasons, and the blacksmiths, an 1 the farmers, and tbe engi neers, anl the tioket agents, ani the con ductors. In most trades, In most occupa tions, ther must stand. But aheal ot all those who love and sarva tbe Lord is a rest ing place, a oomplme relaxation of fatigued muscle, something cushioned anl uphols tered and emhroiderwl, with the very ease tf heaven. "They shall sit down." Best from toll, rest from pain, rest from para ecu lion, r t from uncertainty. Baautifujby. 0O, transporting, everlasting rest ! Oa, men anl women of the frozin North, ml tbe blooming South, anl from ths realms of the rising or setting son, through Christ get your sins forgiven ani start lor the place where you may at last sit dowa la blissful recovery from the fatigues ot earth. While there roll over you tbe raptures ot beivsn. Many of yoa have hal saca a rough lassie In this world that If your faculties were not perfect in heaven yoa would some time forgot yourself aad say, "It I time for me to start on that Journey, or "It must be time for me to ooont out the drop) of that medlaine," or "I wonder what new attack there is on m through the newspapers?" or u D J VOU thlnlr f w.ll nphlnj tlmu -w . -MMhnn-. r ' - - 1 .vM t fhe'atudifMtr st "i woawv Hd"mieo have lost in that last bargain?" or "I mast hurry lest I miss ths train." No, no 1 Tne last volume of direful, earthly experiences will be finished. Yea, the last chapter, ths laat paragraph, the last asntenoa, the lost von. jmts 1 Freleriak the Great, nota-ithstanllng the mighty dominion over which he relgnel, ts so depressed at times he aould not speak without crying, anl carried a small bottle ot alok poison with which to end his misery when be ooali stanl It no longer. But 1 five you this small vial of gospel anodyne, sne drop of which, not hurting either body raoul, ought to soothe ail unrest and put your pulses Into an eternal calm. " Tbey hall 00 tne from th East, an I from the West, snl from tbe north, and the Booth, andshau ut down." How Time Tables Are Distributed. Many people most have noticed a big wagon, built after the fashion of a Doited States mail wagon, onlj the front and rear being wide open, the outside covered with time tables and the inside fall of pigeonholes contain ing the same character of literature. This outfit is seen going from one hotel and railroad station and ferry house to another daily. One of the agile young men jumped out and dis appeared within the place. He darts to the rack containing time tables, and tnakes a hasty investigation. Having ascertained just what cases ar ex hausted, he returns and gets a fresh supply from the wagon and dis tributes them in the rack. The wagon then goes on to the next place. This work nsed to be done by spe iial men of the companies interested, and kept upward of sixty men con stantly busy. Now the thing is so systematized that three men cover over one hundred railway and steam ship lines. There are a good many Dlaces where these time tables are to Ee found, though possibly few people know of this scheme of distribution. It is the enterprise of a Pittsburg man. He also has foreign railways on his list. 2fow York Herald. The total mileage of electrical roads in operation in Europe at the end of 1893 was 18S, of which a third was in Germany. There were about 105 miles under construction. Twenty leven ont of the forty-four roads arr operated by the trolley system, The rhinoceros has a perfect passion for wallowing in the mud, and it is usually covered with a thick coat of it. Church members who never smile will same day find out how mnch harm they have doue. The world is sadly in need of an in vention that will warn people when they have talked enongh. When yon and 1 cease to dream dreams it will Tie timo for us to give up being municipal reformers. How much better it would be if phi losophers conld tell us the world were "square" instead of round. The man who can live on good terms with hini?elf from one year's end to another is not causing the devil any trouble. Tho wotld owes ns all a livinrr, jet no man can celled the debt nnless he pull's off his coat and takes It from the world s hide. Nothing occupies one like a conversa tion in which one has failed to say what one ought to have said. It haunts you like a melody of which yoa cannot fine the end. Loving kindness is greater than laws; and the charities of life are greater than all ceremonies. We have long been accustomed to set oar expectations very low respect ing the result of reform efforts. How poor are they who have not patience? What wound would ever heal bat by degrees? A CITY OP INTEREST. QUEBEC, ITS HISTORY AND AS SOCIATIONS. inco tne Bulwark of French Power, It Paaaed After Memorable Siegea Under Enajliahi Domination Some of Its Scenery. The City To-day. There are few cities In North Amer ica the history of which is more Inter esting than that of Quebec, and per haps none which are provided by na ture with such a line and spacious har bor. Originally intended and still maintained as a fortress, it has played an Important part In the military an nals of North America. For more tnan a century It was the bulwark of French power on the continent, and then it passed Into English hands to become the Gibraltar of Great Brit ain's ascendancy. It has stood many memorable sieges, nnd against Its walls have broken tho tides of French, Eng lish, Indian and American invasion. Before it, in 1750, the victorious Wolfe and the defeated Montcalam fell, and before It, too, the brave Montgomery, leading his scanty band of Americans, was instantly killed. The scars of war still remain, but tbe flourishing city of the St Lawrence Is unmindful of them In Its busy and extensive commercial nd industrial life. Quebec was founded In 1G0S by Sam jel de Champlaln, tho celebrated French geographer and navigator, and ho gnve to the beautiful sheet of wa- 5 -v m5- " FALLS OP StOXTMOHEXCr. ter Lake Champlaln the name it still bears. The early htatory of the settle ment Is tho struggle waged for exis tence. In a new and unsettled land, against the Inrontls of the savaso Iro quois, the Indian allies of the English colonists In what Is now tho United States, and the hereditary enemies of the Algonqulns, the friends and allies Df tho French. In those long nnd dis astrous wars England and France exchanged many cruel blows, the scars from which may never be wholly healed. In 1C29 Quebec fell Into the hands of the English, but three years later it was restored to the French by the treaty of St Gerniaiu-en-Laye, to Kether with the Ill-fated Acadian Te ainsula and Cape Breton. In 1000 It stood a memorable siege by Sir William Phlps, royal Governor of Massachu setts. Fhips was one of a family of 28 children and in JSS4. while In Eng land, was enabled to fit out an expedi tion in quest of a Spanish plate vessel, which was wrecked off the Bahamas. He succeeded in obtaining the treas ure in 10S7 and on his delivery of It $3,000,000 worth to the English treas ury he was knighted and made Gover nor of Massachusetts. Soon afterward he raptured Tort Itoyal, N. S., and em boldened by success attacked Quebec, lie was defeated, however, and after displaying himself, with Cotton Ma ther, lu the witchcraft trials was sum moned to England, where he died in lffito. Again In 1711 Quebec had nn almost providential deliverance from the fleet of Sir Horenden Walker, an English admiral. He set sail from Bos ton with a powerful force to capture Quebec nnd bring the providence into subjection to England. But eight transports, containing nearly l.otio men, were wrecked and lost on Eg; UOXUSIEST ERECTED TO WOLFE AND MONTCALM. Island In the lower St Lawrence, and Quebec continued under tho rule of France. In 1705 the colony of Quebec, deserted bv France and left to strucr- , gic against all the powers of England, succumbed to the Inevitable and the same day that saw Wolfe die in the arms of victory on the Plains of Abra ham also saw his adversary In arms, Montcalm, receive his fatal wound. The following day the gallant French general died, rejoicing that he should not live to see the surrender of Que bec. Again in 1775 Quebec waa men aced by the Americana. After the cap ture of Fort Chambly, St Johns and Montreal by the Americana the forces bt Gen. Montgomery and Arnold united i nnd marched on Quebec. Too weak ' ko attempt a siege they decided on a ' coup de main, but a battery discharge Instantly killed Montgomery and his disheartened troops fell back In con fusion. Quebec was saved to the Brit ish. I Although Quebec has ceased to be a garrison town Its strategic position has been greatly strengthened by the English, to whom are due Its modern citadel and surrounding walla, its case mated forts and Its armament of ri lled artillery. It Is one of the few , walled cities on tho continent end Is : believed to be the strongest fortress In North America. Both Inside and wlth ' out the city are many landmarks of Its i warlike past There Is much picrur ' esque scenery, also, and many objects KOjrrCALM'B HZ ADO, BARTERS, BE ATTTORT, of Interest to the "traveler. Perhaps the Montmorency Falls, In the Mont morency River, which falls Into the St Lawrence, eight miles below Quebec, Is the greatest natural attraction around Quebec. Near Its mouth the river takes a perpendicular fall ot 250 feet, with a width of 50 feet and forms one of the most beautiful cateracta in the world. A cone of Ice Is formed every winter below the falls and some times attains a height of 200 feet Quebec is yearly adding to the di versity of her Industries, but her chief business from the beginning of the century has been shipbuilding. As many as 20 or 30 vessels, of from 600 to 2,000 tons burden, are built during one winter. MAKING HIM USEFUL. The Indoor Cycllet Ia No Longer Sim' ply an Ornament. An ancient proverb very wisely rec ommends us to combine the useful with tho agreeable. The Invention of Indoor training machines for cyclists permits of putting this proposition In practice In tho happiest manner. For some time the question has been put whether In-door bicycle training can be made of benefit to anybody? This Is evidently what was asked by the au thor of the device shown in our engrav ing, and who, with much intelligence. and very oppositely, has discovered a practical process of preventing a very appreciable source of energy from remaining unemployed. In I1I3 system, the driving wheel, In stead of revolving Idly, is connected by an endless cord with the flywheel of a sewing machine or any other UTTIXO the bicycle to puactical use. small apparatus that requires a mod erate force to set It In motion. Owing to this arrangement each kick of the pedal Is utilized, ond the cyclist experiences the sweet satisfac tion of knowing that wbJo training himself In view of a coming race, he is also doing something useful. As may be seen, nothing could be better. But who would ever have expected to see the bicycle thus converted Into an np-j paratus of domestic and practical util ity? Scientific American. A FingerlPKS Family. In a Lincolnshire family in England, lives a family who suffer under the cu rious deformity of being lingeries. This peculiarity does not appear to be one of those freaks of nature wUlcii may appear In one individual, and not bo transmitted to the next generation. From what can be learned, the singu larity has existed in the family so fat as history or tradition extends, and there seems at present no signs of Its lying out. as the grandchildren are as devoid of fingers as their grandslre. The hands of this remarkable famllj present the appearance of having had the fingers amputated, or chopped oft roughly and unevenly below the second Joint, leaving a short stump. There Is no nnll or hard substnnce, and were tt not for the absents- of anything like a cicatrice a ciisual observer would con clude that the defect was due to an ac cident; but, as though nature had at tempted to compensate for the absence of fingers, the thumbs are abnormally large and strong. 1 ne family are lu other respects f ullj. endowed by nature, and do not appeal to suffer tbe disadvantages the absencd of ringers might be expected to entail One of thedaughters,aged20,can write sew, knit and is in every way ns dex terous and accomplished as other glrK of her age and station. When asked il she "did not find It awkward to be fin. gerless," she replied: "No! If you had never had fingers you would not know you tieede' them." The only drawback that seems to hi occasioned Is the curiosity the absene of fingers evokes from strangers. Good Horses Still Valuable. Horses by the million, but of smat) value, are to be found in the United States. Many believe that the days of equine usefulness are about numbered, except in a limited way, owing to tho wide use of electricity as a motivo power, and to the bicycle as a "road ster." As a result of present conditions, horseflesh In most parts of tbe country Is very cheap, and many farmers and breeders take a gloomy view of the situation. It Is possible, however, thai the horse market like the fruit market is overburdened with common stuffj and that really good stock will stiil bring a fair price. Apropos of this view of the case, the Horseman, a Jour nal able to speak with some authority says: "Dealers In fine carriage and draft horses report a great scarcity of really desirable Individuals; in fact many complain that they experience much difficulty In filling orders. At the great marts a superabundant supply of com mon stock may be found any day of the year, but good carriage or coach horses, fine gentlemen's roadsters or heavy draft teams are scarce and briny fairly remunerative prices." - -m Bow tbe Fnss Started, Banks By the way, Rivers, how do 1 you spell "dilemna?" Rivers With I two ni's. Why? Banks ifothing, J only I use four or five letters as well. ' Rivers, if you throw that inkstand at me I'll knock yoa dowa with this pa- per-weightl 1; I-' I ii t ,