F. BGHWEIEB, THB OONBTITDTION-THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS, YOL. L. MIFFUNTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 14 1596. NO. 44 CHAPTER XXII. The Schwarzweiss Pass, leading from the aooiheaat of Switzerland to Italy, is on. well known to mountaineers, because of the rapid manner In which they can cross from one country to another, and also because of the magnificent views that it present to the traveler. MoreoTer, It offers to them a cholc either of making a passage over the snow clad mountains that rise above it, and across the great Schwarxweiss glacier, or - of keeping to the path that, while rising to the height at some places of 10,000 feet. Is, except at the summit, perfectly passa ble hi good weather. It Is true that he who, eTen while on tni path, should turn giddy, or walk careless ly, would risk his life, for though above him only are the rant white "horns" and Tix," below him there are still the ra Tlnea through which run the boiling tor rants known respectively as the "Schwarx" and the "Weiss" rivers rlv ers that carry with them huge boulder tones and pine trees wrenched from their roots; dry slopes that tall hundreds of feet down into the valley below; and alco the Klein (or little) Schwarsweiss glacier, name ao given it, not because of its mallness for it is two miles long, and la one place, half a mile across but to dis tinguish it from the Gross-Schwariweisa glacier that hangs above on the other aids of the pass. It is a lonely and grim road, a road It, which no bird is heard or seen from the time the Tillage of St Christoph la left behind on the Swiss side until the village of Santa Madre la reached on the Italian aide; a road that winds at first, and at last, through fir-woods and pine trees, but that in the middle is nothing but a path, cut in some parts and blasted In others, along the granite aides of the rocks, and hanging in many places above the valley far below. Patcbea of snow and piecea of rock that have fallen from above, alone re lieve the view on the side of the path; on the opposite side of the ravine is nothing but a huge wall of granite that holds no now, so slippery is it; but above which hangs, white and gray, like the face of a corpse, the glacier from which the pass derives Its name. A lonely and grim road even In thi daytime, when a few rays of sunshine manage to penetrate It at midday, when occasionally a party of tourists nmy be met with, and when sometimes the voice of a goatherd calling his flocks rises from the valley below; bat lonelier and more grim, and more black and Impenetrable at night, and rarely or ever then trod by human foot. For he who should attempt the passage of the Schwa rzweiss Pass at night, un less there were a brilliant moon to light him through Its most dangerous parts, would take his life In his own hand. Vet, on an August night of the year It. which this tale is told, ami when there was a moon that, being near its full, con sequently rose late ami shone till nearly daylight, a man was making his way cross this pass to Italy. . Midnight was close at hand as, with weary stops, he descended a rough-hewn path in the rock a path which, for safe ty, had a rude handrail of iron attached to the side from which it was cut and reached a small plateau, the size, per haps, of an ordinary room, and from which agaiu the path went on. From this plateau shelved down, for a hundred feet or more, an almost perpen dicular moraine, or glacier bed, and at the foot of this lay the Klein-Schwarz-weiss, with Its crevasses glistening in the moonlight; for the moon had topped even the great mountains above by now, and lighted up the pass. It was evidently considered a danger ona part of the route, since, between the edge of the plateau and the aide of the moraine a wooden railing had been erect ed, consisting of two short, upright posts and a long cross one. As the man reached this plateau, hold ing to the rail with on. hand, while with the other he used his alpenstock aa a walking stick, he perceived a stone It may have been placed there for the pur pose large enough for a seat; and taking off bis knapsack wearily, he sat down upon it. "Time presses," he muttered to himself, "yet I must rest. Otherwise I shall not be at Santa Madre by eight o'clock to morrow. I can go no farther without a rest." There is an indefinite feeling of awful ness in being aione at night amongst the mountains, in knowing and feeling that for miles around there is no other creature In these vast, cold solitudes bnt ourselves; and this man had that feeling now. "How still how awful this pass isl" he said to himself, "with no sound bnt the creaking of that glacier below with no human being here but me. Yet, I should be glad I am alone." At this moment a few stones In the mor aine slipped and fell Into the glacier, and the man started at the distinct sound they made in that wilderness of silence. Then, as he sat there gazing up at the moon and the snow above him, he con tinued his meditations. "It is best," he thought, "that the pool old mother did not know when I said 'good-bye' to her this afternoon, and she bade me come bock soon, that I should ever come back, that 1 bad a farther destination than Italy before me; best that my father did not know that we should never meet again. Never, never' Ah, it Is a long word." "Yet it must be .done," he went on. "l I want to drag this miserable life out, 1 must do it elsewhere than in England. That sleuth-hound will surely find me there; it is possible that he will even track r me to the antipodes. Yet, if I were sure that he is lying about having seeu my face before, 1 would go back and brave him. Where did he ever see it V where? where? To my knowledge I have never seen him.".. He rose and walked to the railing above the moraine, and looked down at the gla cier, and listened to the cracking mad by the seracs. "I might make an end of it now," he thought. "If I threw myself down there. It would le looked upon as an ordinary Alpine accident. But not tbat Is the cow ard's resource. I Have blasted my We for ever by one foul deed; let me endure it M reparation for my crime, Bnt what to my future to be? Am I to live mis erable existence for years in some distant country, frightened at every trange face, dreading to read every newspaper that - reaches me for fear that I shall see mysell denounced in It, and never knowing moment's peace or tranquility? Ah, Ger vasel I wonder what yon would say If yon knew that, for your sake, I hara sao riflced every hope of happiness la this world and all my chances of salvation la Ike next." I &t Wtsk teJhfbjf ftQBiftar a (eriug these thoughts and sat down wear ily upon it. "if I could know that that Spaniard baffled at last and had lost all track of me, 1 could make my arrangements more calmly for leaving Europe, might even look forwnrd to returning to Enf land some duy, and spending my life there while expinting my crime. But, while 1 know nothing. I must to on and on till at j last I reach some place where I may feel snre. Iie looked at his watch as he spoke tc hiitttwlf, and saw that the night was pass Inc. "Another five minutes' rest," he said, "and I will atart again across the passu" As he sat there, taking those last Ave minutes of rest, it seemed to him that there was some other sllcht sound break- ing the stillness of the night, something else ur?nles the occasional cracking noise made by the glacier below and the sub daed ronr of the torrents In the valley. A light, regnlar sound, that nowhere else but in a solitude like this would, per haps, be heard, but that here was perfect ly diKtinct. It came nearer and nearer, and once, as it approached, some small atone were dislodged and rattled down from above, and fell with a plunge on to the gladei below; and then, aa It came closer, he knew that it was made by the footstep if n man. And, looking np, be saw human figure lesL-ending the path to the plateau by which ne had come, and atanding out clearly defined against the moonlight. "It is some guide going home," he said to himself, "or starting out upon an early asrent. How firmly be descends th path.' 'i'Ue man advanced, and he watched li:m curiously, noticing the easy way lr which he came down the rough-hewa steps, scarcely touching the band-rail oi using the heavy pointed stick he carried iu place of the usual alpen-atock. And he noticed that, besides his knap nek, he carried the heavy coll of rope that guides use in their ascents. At last the newcomer reached the pla teau, huJ, as he took the last two or three steps that led ou to It. he saw that there as another man upon It, and stopped. Stopped to gaze for one moment at the previous occupant, and then to advance toward lii in uud to stand towering abovs him its he sat upon the boulder atone. "You are I hilip Suierdon," be said In a voice tliut sounded deep and hollow In thl oilier' ear. CHAPTER XXIII. I'tt.-rly astonished, and with anothei feeling that was not all astonishment, Suierdon rose and stood before him and M.iid : "1 do not know of what Importance my name can lie to you." "Your mime is of no importance, bnt you are of the greatest to me. When I tell you my name you will understand v. Ly. It is Miguel ISuffanta." "Cuftauta!" Suierdon exclaimed. "Gut f.uita!" "Yes! the friend of Walter Cuodall." "Wliftt do you want with me?" tht i. Hut listed, but as he asked he knew the :i;iser that would come from the man before him. "lint one thing now, though ten min iites ago I wanted more. I wanted to see, then, if the man whom I sought for in London and at Oceleve Chase, whom 1 have followed from place to place till 1 bare found him here, was the same man I saw stab my friend to death In" "Yon saw ii'r" "Yes, I saw it; And you are the man who did it!" "It is false!" "It is truel Do you dare to tell me 1 lie, you, a Bah, why should I cross words with a murderer a thief I" "I am no thief!" Smerdon said, his an ger risins at this opprobrious term, even as lie felt his guilt proclaimed. "You are! You stole his watch and money Lecauae you thought to make hii murder appear a common one. And SC it was! You slew him because yon feared lie would dispossess your master of what he unrighteously held, because yot thought that yon would lose your place." "Again 1 say it is false! I bad ne thought of self! 1 killed him yes, I! be cause I loved my friend, my master at you term him, because he threatened tc eome between him and the woman ht loved. Had I known of Walter Cundall'i noble nature, as I knew it afterwards, n power on earth could have induced me tc ilo such a deed." "It is iufamy for such as you to apeak of his nobility bnt enough! Are you armed to-night, as you were on that night?" "I have no arms about me. Why do you ask?" "To tell you that no arms can avail yru now. You must come with me." "To where?" "To the village prison at St. Chriatoph. There I will leave you until you can be taken to England." For the first time since he had seen tht avenger of Walter Cunddll standing be fore him,.Smerdon smiled bitterly. "Senor Guffanta." he said, "you an very big and strong it may well be stronger than 1 am. But yon overrate your strength strangely if you think thai :iny power you posses can make me gc with you. I am u murderer heaven hell ind pardon me! It is probable I shuli .c a double one before this night is over." "You threaten me you! You defy me!" llufT.iiita exclaimed, while his dark eyes gleamed ominously. "Yes, 1 defy yon! If my sin is to bi .iiiiiisliod, it Khali not be by you. at least Here; in this lonely place where for milet 10 other human creuture is near, I defj -,-n:i to do your worst. We are wan u .. .i: di von think I fear ouT" In a moment Unsanta bad sprung at kirn, had seized him by the throat, and with the other arm had encircled his body. "3e be it," he hissed In Smerdon'a ear, "it suits me better than prolonged pua chment of yonr crime would do." For a moment they struggled locked to (ether, and In that moment Smerdon Knew that he was doomed; that he was shout to expiate his crime. The king, sinewy hand .f the Spaniard that waa round his throat was choking him; his own blows fell upon the other's body harmlessly. And he was being dragged towards the edge of the moraine, already his back was (gainst the wooden railing that alone stood between the plateau and destruc tion. He could, even at this moment, hear It creaking with his weight; it would break in another instant! "Will you yield, assassin, villain r Guffanta muttered. "Neverl Do your worst!" He felt one hand tighten round his throat more strongly, he felt the other inn at the Spaniard 4trjaf hjaack; in that moment of supreme agony be beard the breaking of the railing and felt it give under him, and then Guffanta' ha uda had loosed hint, and, striking the moraine with his bead, he fell down and down, till be lay a senseless mass upon the white bosom of the glacier. And Gnffanra, standing above, with hi head bared to the stars and to the wan ing moon, exclaimed, as he lifted hi hand to the heavena: "Walter, you are avenged !" (To be continued.) ASLEEP UNDER WATER. Bossv2i vera Sometimes Loaf and Sol d:.r Away Their Tisae. In an article on "Divers and Their Work," Kratnley Steeknoft declares that It la not a very uncommon thing for an expert direr, now that diving ap paratus baa been perfected to the point of enure reliability, to take a quiet lit tle nap nnder water In those soundless region where no disturbances, unless possibly that made by a too Inqnlsltlr hark, la likely to occur. Be telle of one man who waa at the bottom of the water in a harbor clean ing a ahlp'a bull when be Iteeame tirtl, and made up his mind to knock off work and take a refreshing; little suooxe, where nobody would be the wiser, ana there would be uolhlng to prevent the time so sK-nt from being paid for among his hours of work when he re ceived lils wages. I'nfortunately for his plan, he forgot, when he drowsed off, to secure to his wrist as must be done when it Is not lu use oue of his Implements, a couch grass brush. As bis hold upon the light brush relaxed It rose to the surface and floated conspicuously near the slds of the vessel, where It was noticed by his comrades on board. The officer on duty promptly opened communications with his submerged sulKirdlnate by telephone (a telephonic attachment being one of the recent Im provements), and the startled man, after having hopelessly committed him self by blundering answers and halt ing explanations, was sternly ordered to the surface of the water, and dis charged a 8 be emerged. Another and a lazier diver, engaged to work upon a wreck, once went down with the deliberate Intention of sleeping for an hour or more. As soon a he touched lRittom he lashed his alr-ptpc and life-line to a spar, and settled him self comfortably on a rock and went to sleep. But after a time his attendant at the surface noticed that the life-line showed no movement, and gave the two quick, inquiring tugs which form the signal, "Are you ull right?" No answer was received, and it was found Impossible to olitaiu one, or to J raw the diver to the surface. At length, after an interval of Intense anx iety in which the slnuiberer'a life was despaired of by his mates, a secoud diver was sent down and bis wrath when he found the supposed victim sweetly sleeping, and the scene that en sued when be awoke him, was funny and bordered ou the tragical. - A quarrel lu diving suits at the bot tom of the sea has not yet found plac-s even In the ingenious pages of M. Jules Verne's submarine literature. Foiled. MorlU Buscb, iu his "Life of Prim- Bismarck," gives a humorous sketch of the scientist, Humboldt, and his dis appointment when he was not allowed to have the talk all to himself. Per haps the beet of the anecdote Is the mode of narration. Humboldt had been giving one of his famous readings at the royal palace of Prussia. Somebody took up the conversation, and said so many Interesting things that everybody began to listen. Hum boldt waa beside himself. Growling, he tilled his plate wkii a pile of goose liver pie, fat eels, lobster tails and otb r indigestible substances a real niouu taiu. When he could positively eat no more, he could no longer keep quiet, and so he made an attempt to get the conversation into bis own hands. "Upon the peak of Popocatapetl " he began. But it was no use. The narratoi would not be cut short in his story. "Upon the peak of Popocatapetl, 7,0fc) yards above " he resumed, after coughing violently to attract attention. Again be failed to obtain a hearing, aud the narrator calmly went on. "L"iku the peak of Popocatapetl. 7,mhj yards above the level of the Fat-ide Ocean " he exclaimed, in a loud, agi tated voice, shaken by grief and Indig nation. Bnt to no purpose. The other man talked on steadily, and the com pany listened to him. and him only. Humboldt sat down la a fury, and plunged Into meditation ou the ingrati tude of courtiers. Clothe. Hooka. A practical Innovation has been In troduced in a Berlin restaurant, where the clothes-hooks are arranged in such a way that, after hanging a coat on them, they can be locked by means of a snap lock In the upper hook or hat rack. Regular guests receive a key, while transient guests have to ask the waiter to return them their overcoats. Since the Introduction of this patent hook, not an overcoat has been stolen In the place, while previous to-that time considerable trouble arose both to the proprietor and guests because of sneak thieves. The new book Is very almple; the lower part of It Is on a hinge, and the lock Is attached to the npper arm, being out of harm's way. More to the Pnrpoae. Salvation Army Apostle If yon swear at those horses, my good man, you'll never go to heaven. Teamster (humbly) I knows It, mum; but If I don't I'll never get to Tonawanda.-Bnffalo Times. The Show. "What would you take to see that performance again?" asked one man of another as they filed out of a place of amusement. "I'd take opium!" was the qnlck re sponse. New Terk Recorder It never hurts truth any to be lied about. Charily is a blessed privilege. It lifts poor human nature up to the level of the angels, and sheds the light of Heaven around our pathway. I have always fonnd the less we peak of our intentions the more banco there is of our realizing them. THIS SIMPLE STORY Seal acta Cradft cm A merle a Coarse aad Coaiaciaaco. There Is a good story told of Jobs Hays Hammond, the American, who waa Implicated In the famous Trans vaal conspiracy, writes Richard Hard ing Da via Hammond was very 111 dur ing his Imprisonment, and In conse quence waa permitted to go to the Cape for his health nnder a heavy ball. He waa at that time nnder sentence ef fifteen years' Imprisonment, and the ball waa not ao heavy as the fine he had Oil to pay, which amounts to $175,000. He did not give his parole to return to Jail, and his falling to have done se would have meant nothing more than the forfeiture of his ball, the amount of which he could very well have af forded to have paid. And when he had once crossed the border of ths Transvaal every man he met waa hi friend. He could on reaching the Cap. have stepped upon the first outbound steamer and shaken the dust of the Transvaal from him forever. "That la the last you will see of Jack Hammond,", some one said to Kroger. "I think not," the President answered, "and even If Mr. Hammond would Wish to escape, I know Mrs. Hammond, and she Is too fine a woman to let him think of It" Two days before his leave had expired Hammond cam back to Pretoria and knocked at mid night at the door of the Jail for admit tance to what, for all he then knew, meant fifteen years of his life In pris on, and the Jailers were so amazed to ee his face through the wicket that when he threw his valise, which he had carefully packed with whisky and JOB HATS AMMOlfD. cigars for his three fellow prisoners, at one of them, the Boer picked it up without examining it and carried it Into the cell which Hammond, Rhodes, Phillips and Farrar shared in com mon. Hammond bad gained his tem porary liberty because he was lil, and he did not take advantage of that act of kindness on the part of the Boers to fly the country, and so leave his fellow conspirators to suffer a punishment which, if deserved by ona. waa deserv ed by alL It was a case of conscience and of moral aa well as physical cour age. HERE'S A SPRING SHOE. ft Actually Lift, the Feet and Save. the Wearer from Fatigue. A apring heel attachment for shoes to aid In walking la one of the latest devices for the comfort of pedestrians. With this attachment the effort of lift ing one's foot Is practically reduced to a minimum. The spring actually lifts the foot, and the pedestrian does the rest. This curious device Is nothing but a stiff atrip of steel about an Inch in width and some three inches long. It is first bent double and one end turned upward over the other end, so as to fit It closely to the edge of the heel of the shoe. The spring Is screwed to the heel of any ordinary ahoe, and once In place It gives a "spring" to the step, which Is of great assistance In walking or run ning. The Idea Is taken from the nat ural action of the muscles of the foot, which are familiar to everybody who has ever tried to run without touching the heel to the ground. The weight of the body forces the spring close to the heel, and as the step la taken and the foot partially raised from the ground, the spring gives an BOKS THAT LIFT THB FKET. Impetus to the step, and practically forces the body forward. It Is claimed by the Inventor that the use of this ap parently elmply device reduces the fatigue of walking one-third. It Is practically adapted for use by those who take walking tours during their vacations, and persons whose business necessitates much walking. WOMAN ON POLICE FORCE. Begalarlr Appointed Special Officer by Mayor of St. PanU The first woman to "be made a mem ber of a police force, and the only one In the world authorized to wear a po lice star, Uvea In St Paul, Minn. Her name Is Mrs. Edwin T. Root and she has just been created a full-fledged offi cer of the law by the mayor of St PauL Mrs. Root may not walk a beat hut no representatives of the law in the city has any more authority to arrest people than she. Hers Is not a "spe cial" appointment but the same as that of the man who wears blue and brass se1 swings a club. The cause of Mrs. Root's ambition la not a desire for no toriety, but to enable her to better aid young girls who have fallen Into evil ways. She has long been engaged In,' this work, bnt fonnd herself seriously handicapped by lack of authority to Investigate. So ahe applied to the mayor for the appointment ahe has re ceived. Mrs. Root la president of the Ham- tnTttmttaV Christian' Tefflptrrance; Union, which nnder her management has doublet im membership since 18M Ik toswaat mmtamvmjft SIRS. BOOT. Its kind In the country. She made per sistent war on a saloon where young girl were In the habit of assembling, and after a great deal of trouble se cured the proprietor's conviction. It was in connection with her rescue work that she needed the police star. She Is a slight, delicate-looking woman, of medium height and graceful demeanor. Park brown eyes look out from be neath delicately penciled eyebrows. She wears glasses, but they add to rather than detract from her appear ance. Her hair is a golden brown and her age la 40. QUEEN VICTORIA'S COACHMAN. Bslil Mmm of lam porta nca Aboat the Boyal Bonechold. Queen Victoria's personal coachman, who drives her at Windsor? Balmoral and Osborne, and who likewise accom panies her during her annual visits to the continent la an elderly man of the name of Thomas Sands, and is a great favorite of her majesty. In whose serv ice he haa been very long indeed. The queen Is exceedingly kind and consid erate to him and greets bim always with a friendly "Good day." Frequent ly when the drives are long the queen causes the carriage to be stopped and the tea equipage, which she generally carries about with her, to be extracted from the rumble. Tea Is thereupon brewed by means of a spirit lamp, and In partaking of this gentle stimulant with her ladies in attendance, the queen does not forget her coachman. THOMAS SASDS. but invariably makes a point of pour ing out a cup for him, too. On one occasion, when her daughter, the widowed empress of Germany, waa with her and attempted to pour out the tea for the coachman, the queen took the cup away from her under the pretext that ahe did not know "bow Thomas liked to have hla tea sugared and creamed," and fixed It for him herself. Thomas Is very fond of re lating this story as an Illustration of his mistress kindness and considera tion for her old servants. Both he and the state coachman are decorated with the sllverjmedal conferred upon them by the queen on the occasion of her Jubilee, and they wear it on ths left breaat on the coat of livery. Early Honrs. As we grow older we learn wisdom In this matter. The gray-haired par ent whose dancing days are over, and whose limbs are not elastic, is glad to hasten bed-time, and to leave his daughters to their foolish Joy In the late hours. He would lengthen his nights In spite of his difficulty In sleep ing. Very few persons over 60 years old care to sit np after 11 o'clock In the evening, and would rather be in visible at an earlier hour. Old age may not need more sleep than youth, bnt It Is more covetous of sleep, and sooner disgusted with the day's excite ment "Go to bed early" Is the ad vice which the elders give to the young er race, ail the more emphatic as they remember their own elns In this kind in the former years, and wonder that they could have taken such needless risks in those night frolics. That is the advice, too, of the medical Journals and men. Was there ever a wise phy sician who would counsel his patient to sit op until midnight as a rule, or even as a frequent exception? The wisdom In this matter, nevertheless, Is of the kind that comes by experi ence, and the sage warning ef tht elders la oftenest unheeded. The Old Saint'. Mlataka. St Peter "I suppose you smoked ani drank and swore a good deal durinf your life?" " Shade "Sir!" St Peter "Blew me. If I didn't thlnl It waa a man, and It's only one of thoat new bloomer girls." Brooklyn Eagle' Instead of Going to Bee. "Well," aaid the first baseball crank to the other baseball crank, "are yot going to root to-day?" "No," said the other baseball crank feeling vaguely in his vest pocke's, "1 guess I am going to seed." Indl iiapo lie Journal. It Dapeada. Wheeler (who has just bought a Mke) "Do you think the bicycle has com to stay?" Sprocket "Well, a good deal depend on Whether yon paid outright for R oi got It on the Installment plan," Teak ere Statesman, REV. DR. TALMAGE. The Eminent Divine's Sunday Discourse. 8ul ject: ''Gate of Carbuncle.' Tcxt: "And I will make thy windows ol gates, and thy gates of carbuncle." Isa. Mv., IS. Perhaps bee use a human disenss of most painful suit oftttmes fatal diameter in nimed after it, the ehuroh and the world have never done justice to that intense and all-suggrattvi) precious stone, ths oarhunole. Ton pearl that Christ picked np to illustrate His ser mon, and the jasper and the sapphire and the amethyst which the apooalyptie vision masoned into the wall of heaven have bad roper recognition, bat this, In all the ages, i the first sermon on Iheearbuoc n. This preeious stone Is found lu the East Indie, In eolor la aa intense scarlet, and held up between yonr eye and the sun it is a burning ooaL The poet puts it into rhythm as he writes: Like to the burning coal whence comes Its name; Among the Greeks as Anthrax known to fame. God sets It high up in Bible crystallography. He outs it with a divine chisel, sharpens it with-precise geometry, and kinales its lire Into an almost snoernatural flame of hnmitv Its law of symmetry, its law of zones, its Irw of parallelism, somothlng to excite ths amazement of the scientist, chime the cantos of the poet and aronse the adoration of the Christian. No one but the inftulte God could fashion a earbunole as large a) your thumb nail, and as It to make all ages appreciate this precious stone He ordered it to be set in the first row ot the high priest's breast-plate in olden time and higher up than the onyx and the emerald and the diamond, and in Eaekiel's prophecies concerning the splendors' oi me xynan court, me oarouncie is men tioned, the brllllanoies of the walls and of the tessellated floors suggested by the Bible UntMlM! Thnil hlrf V.llrA.1 n. n,t Armwt In the midst ot the stones of Are!" But in my text it is not a solitary specimen thst I hand you, as the keeper ot a museum might take dowa from the shelf a preeious stone and allow you to examine It Nor is it In the panel of a door that you might stand and study for its unique carvingB or DronztKl traceries, but there is a whole gate of ic lifted before our admiring and astounded vision, aye! two gates of it, aye! many gates of it: "I will make thy gates of carcuncles." What gates? Gates of the Church. Gates ot anything worth possessing. Gates of successful en terprise. Gates of salvation. Gates of Na tional achievement. Isaiah, who wrote this text, wrote olso all that about Christ "as the lamb of the slaughter," and spoke of Christ as saying, "I have trod the wine press alone," and wrote, "Who Is this that comet h from Edom. with dyed garments from Bozrah?" And do you think that Isaiah in my text merely happened to r 'present the gates aa red gates, a carmine gates, as gates of car buncle? No. He means that is through atonement, through blood-red struggle, through agonies we get into anything worth getting Into. Heaven's gates may well be made of pearl, a bright, pellucid, obeer.nl cryslsliratlon, because all the struggles are over and there is beyond those gates nothing but raptures and cantata and triumphal pro cession and everlasting holiday and kiss of reunion, and so the twelve gates are twelve pearls, and eonld be nothing less than pearls. But Christ hoisted the gates of pardon In Hla own blood, and the marks of eight Angers and two thumbs are on each gate, and as He lifted the gate it leaned against His foreheal and took from it a crimson impress, and all those gates are deeply dyed, and Isaiah was right when he spoke f these gates as gates of carbanoltk What an odd thing it Is, think some, this Idea of vioarious suffering or suffering for others! Not at ail. The world hid seen vi carious suffering millions of times before Christ came and demonstrated it on a scale that eclipsed all that went before and all that shall come after. Raphael lived onlv lone enough after the birth of her son to give him a name. In faint whisper she said, "Call bim Ben-onl," which means "son ot my J lain." and all modern travelers on the road rom Jerusalem to Bethel uncover their heads and stand reverently at the tomb of Rachel who died for her boy. Bat in all ages how many mothers die for their children, and in many oases grown up ohildren, who by re oreancy stab clear through the mother's heart! Buffering tor others? Why, the world is full of it "Jump!" said the engineer to the fireman on the locomotive. "One ol us Is enough to die. Jump!" And so the engineer died at hla post, trying to save the train. Whea this summer the two trains crashed into eaoh other near Atlantio City, among the forty-seven who lost their lives, the engineer was found dead with one hand on the throttle ot the locomotive and the other on the brake. Aye! there ere hun dreds here to-day suffering for others. You know and God knows it is vicarious sacri fice. But on one limestone hill about twice the height ot this ehuroh, Ave minutes' walk from the galea of Jerusalem, was the sub limeat case of suffering for others that the world ever saw or ever will see. Christ the victim, human and satauie malevolence the exeoutiooer, the whole human race having an overwhelming Interest in the spectacle. To open a way for us sinful men and sinful women Into glorious pardon and high hope and eternal exultation, Christ, with hand dripping with the rush of opened art art aa. swung bank the gate, and behold! It is a red gate, a gate oi deepest hue, a gate of car buncle. What is true In spirituals is true la tem porals. There are young men and older men who hope, throturh the settlement ot this acrid controversy between silver and goia, or tne oimetuilo quarrel, that it will become easy to make a living. That time will never eome. It never haa been easy to make a living. The men who have it very easy now, went through hardships and self denials to which most young men would never consent Unless they got it by Inheri tance, vou cannot mention twenty-flve men who have eome to honorable fortune tnat did not fight their way, inch by inch, and against fearful odds that again and again al most destroyed them. For some gooa rea son God has arranged it for all the oenturies that the only way for most people to get a livelihood for themselves and their families Is with both bands and all the allied forces of body, mind and soul to push back and push open the red gate, the gate ot earbun ole. For the benefit ot all young men. If I had the time, I would call the roll of those who overcame obstacle. How many of the mighty men who went one way on Pennsyl vania avenue and reached the United States Senate, or walked the other way on Pennsyl vania avenue and reached the White Honse, did not have to climb over political obloquy? Not one. How much scorn and scoff, and brutal attack did Horace Mann endure be tween the time when he Ant began to fight for a better common school system In Massa chusetts, and the day whea a statue in honor of him was placed on the steps of the State House overlooking "The Commons?" Bead the biography of Bobart Hall, the Baptist preacher, who, though he had been pronoun oed a dunoe a school, lived to thrill the world with his Christian eloquence; and ot George Pea body, who never owned a car riage and denied himself sfH luxuries that be might while living and after death, through last will and testament, de vote his uncounted millions to ths education ot the poor people of Eng- j ana ana America; ana .r uisnop janes, who la hia boyhood worked bis passage from Ireland to America, and became the joy of Methodism and a blessing to the race. Go the biographical alcove in city. State, ol National library, and find at least every other book aa illustration of overcome ob stacle, and of carmine gate that bad to tx forced open. What Is true of Individuals Is true of Na tions. Was it a mild spring morning when the Pilgrim Fathers landed on Plymouth mock, ana ata tner eome in a guaea yacht. rav streamers fiviuir? No. It was in a cold December, and froai a ship In which one would not want to crosthe Hudson or the Potomac Kiver. Scalping knives all ro.iily to receive them, they landed, their nuly wel come the Iudian war-whoop. Ke 1 men on the beach. Red men In the foresr. Red im-o 3n the mountains. Red men in the valleys. Living gates ot red men. G.tie ot car buncle! Aboriginal hostility pnshel b.iik, surely ' - forefathenwili have nothing to do but to' take easy possession ot the fairest soutinent under the sun. The skies sc geuial, the soil so fertile, the rivers so pop ulous with fliinr-kte. the acreage so im mense, there will be nothing to do but eat, drink and be merry. No. The most power ful Nation, by army and navy, sounded its protest across inren tnousann miles ol water. Then came Lexington, an 1 Buukor Hill, an I .Monmouth, and Long Island battles, an I Valley Forge, and Yorktown, and starve, lion, and wldow.ioo I. and orphanaw. and the thirteen colonies went through suffering wmou ine nistortan has attempted to put upon paper, ana tne anise to put upon oan vas, but all in vain. Eagraver'a kalfe, aa! reporter's skill, and telegraphic wire, and dat!y press, which have made us acquainted with the horrors ot modern battlefield, had not yet begun their vigilance, and the story of the American Revolution has never been told, and never will o tnlri. It did not take much ink to sign the IVwIaration of Inde. pendence, but it took a terrific amount o osooa to maintain it. it was au awful gate of opposition that the men and wo neo and the woman as much as the men EU8hed back. It waa a gate of sot t-saori floe. t was a gate ot bloo i. It v a gate ol earnu.iole. " We are not indebted ti history for on cnowieag ot rne greatest ot National crises. Many of us remember It, and father; and mothers now living had better iceep tell ing that story to their ehlldren, so that in stead of -their beiu dependent upon oold type and obliged to say, ' Ou such a ptge ot such a book you can rea l tbat," will thev rather be able to say, "lly fat her told nrt so!" "My mother tol l me so." Men and women who vividly remember 1861. and 1863. an.i 1863. and 18J4. be yourselves the historians, teiliog it, uot with pen, but with living tongue aud voice and gesture. That is the great use of Memorial Decoration Day, for the ealla lilies on the grave tops soon he come breathless of periu:ne, nn 1 in a week turn to dust unto t Jilt willed liei benenth it. But the story of courage nn 1 st-if sacrifice and patriotism told on platforms and la households and by the roadside and iu churches and in ceme eries bv that annunl recital will be kept fresh in the memory ol generations as loug as our American institu tions are worthy of preservation. Long after you are dead your children will be able to say, with the Psalmist: "We have heard with our ears, O God, our fathers have told us, what work Thou didst in their days, In the times or old." But what a time it was! Fonr years of home sickness! Four years of brotherly ana sisterly estrangement! Four years ol martyrdom! Fonr years of massacre! Put them in a long line, the coufligration ol oities, and see them light up a whole conti nent! Put them in long rows, the hospitals, making a vast metropolis of pain and paroxyism! Gather them in one vast assem blage, the millions of In-reft from the H. Lawrence to the Gulf, aud from the Atlantic to the Pad Ho beaches! Put the tears into lakes, and the blood Into rivets, and the shrieks into whirlwinds! During those four years many good and wis men at the North and South s-tw nothing ahead but annihila tion. With such a Natioual debt we could never m-et onr obligations! With such moral antipathb-s Northern anil South ern men could never eome Into amity! Rep resentatives of Louisiana and Georgia, and the Carolinas eonld never again sit side by side with the Representatives of Maine, Massachusetts and New York at the Na tional capital. Lord John Russell hal de clared that we were "a bublile-bursiing Na tionality." and It had come true. The Na tions of F.urope had gathered "vlth very re signed spirit at the funeral ot our Atn'iricnn Republic. They had tolled I he beils on Parliaments and Reiubstags a d lowered their flairs at half mast, and even the lion on the other side of the sea bat whined for the dead eagle on this side. The deep grave had been dbg. and beside Babylon, aud Thebes, and Tyre, an l other dead Nations of the post onr dead Republic was to be buried. The epitaph was all ready: '-Here lies the American Republic. Born at Phila delphia, 4th of July, 1770. Killel at Bull Run, Jtt'.y 21, 1861. Aved eightv-flve years Baa seventeen Ultra, feaea to lr Mane. But before the obsequies bad quite closed there was an interruption of the ceremon ies, and our dead Nation rose from its mortuary surroundings. God ha I made for It a special Resurrection Day. aud cried. "Come forth, thou Republic of Washing ton, and John Adams, and Thomas Jeffer son, aud Patrick Heury, and John Hancock, and Daniel Webster, aud d. S. Prentiss, and Henry Clay. Come forth!" And she came forth, to be stronger than she bad ever been-! nor migutiesr prosperities Dave come since that time. Who would want to Mis back this country to what it was In 186) or 1150? But, oh, what a high gate, what a strong gate she had to push back before she could make one step in alvance! Gate of flame! See Norfolk Navy Yard, anl Columbia, aud Chambersburg, and Charleston o-i lire! Gate of barouets! 8-e glittering rifles and carbines flash from the Susquehanna, a id the James, to the Mississippi, and the Ar kansas! Gate of heavy artillery, malting the mountains ot Tennessee and Keutuoky and Virginia tremble as though the earth itself were struggling In its last agony. The gate was so Aery and so red that I can think of nothing more appropriate than to take the suggestion of Isaiah la the text and call It a gate of carbuncles. This eountry has beea for the most part ot Ms history passing through crises, and after eacn crisis was better off than before It entered it, and now we are at another crisis, W. are told on one band that if gold is kept as a standard and sliver is not ele vated, confidence will be restored and this Nation will rise triumphant from all the financial misfortunes that have been afflict ing us. On the other band we are told that it the free coinage ot silver is allowed, all the wheels of busioess will revolve, the poor man will have a better chance, and all our Industries will begin to hum and roar. During the last six Presidential nleotlou I bave been urged to enter the polltk-al arena, but I never hare and never will turn the pulpit in which I preach Into a political stump. Every minister must do as he feels called to do, and I will not criticise him lor doing what he considers his duty; but all the political hara;ues from pulpits from now until the 3 1 of November will not in all the United States chauge one vote, but wi-l leave msny ears stopped against anything that suah clergymen may utter the rest of their Uvea. As a general rule tbe laymen of churches understand politics better than the clergy, because they (the lavmen) stud) politics more than the elergy, and have bet ter opportunity of being Intelligent on Ihi s subjects. But good morals, honesty, loyal ty, Christian patriotism and the Ten Com mnndments these we must preach. Goc says distinctly in the Bible, '-The stiver anc the gold are Mine," and He will settle th controversy between those two metals. I ever this country needed the divine rescue il needs it now. Never within my roemorj have so many people literally staivel tc death as in the past few months. Have yon noticed in the newspapers how many men and women here and there bave been foun i dead, tbe post-mortem examination statlno that the cause of death was hunger? Then is not a day that we do not bear the crash o! some great commercial establishment, and. as a consequence, many peop'e art thrown out of employment. Among what we considered comfortable homes have oome'prlvat Ion and closecalcnlation an ' an economy that kills. Millions ol people who say nothing about It are nl this moment at their wits' ond. There aiv millions of people who do not want ebarlt) but want work. The cry has gone up to the ears of the "Lord of Sabaoth," and the prayei will be heard and relief will come. If we bave nothing better to depend on tbau Ameri can politics, relief will never come. Who ever is elected to the Presidonoy, the wheels of Government turnn slnwlv. and a caucus in yonder white bunding on the hill may tie tbe hands ot any President. Now, though we who live in the District ot Colum bia cannot vote, we can pray, and my prayer day and night ahall be, "Oh God, hear the cry of the souls from nnder the altar! Thou WuD bast brought the wheat and corn of this season to such magni tude of lor'ply, give rood to man and beast. Thou who liadst not where to lay Tby head, pity the shelterless. Thou who hast brought to perfection the cotton ot the South and the flax of the North, clothe th. naked. Tbou who hat filled tbe mine with coal, give fuel to the shivering. Bring bread to the body. Intelligence to ths mind, and salva tion to the soul ot all the paopM God save the Nation!" But we must admit It Is a hard gate to oush back. Millions of thin hands have E tubed at It without making It swing on it ard hinges. It is a gate mad oat of empty flour barrels, and oold fire grate, and worn out. annareiaaad afcMgJW aoaaav sad un- medicate-1 Sickness, and ghastllnegs ana horror. It la a gate of struggle. A gate of penury. A gate ot want, A gate of disap pointment. A red gate, or what Isaiah would have called a gate of carbuncles. Now, as I bave already suggested, as there are obstacles in all our paths, we will be happier if we consent to have our life a straggle. I do not know anyone to whom It la not a strugle. Louis tbe Fourteenth thought he had everything flied just right and Axed to stay, and so he had the great clock at Bordeaux made. Tbe hours of that olock were struck by figures In bronze rep resenting tbe kings of Europe, and at a cer tain time of day Willi, m the Third of Eng land and other kings were made to come out and bow to Louis the Fourteenth. But the dock got out of order ons day and just the opposite of what was expectod ocourred, as the elock struck a certain hour Louis the Fourteenth was thrown to the feet of Will iam the Third. And so tbe clock oftlestiny brings many surprises and those go down that you expected to stand, aud at the foot of disaster most regal conditions tumble. In all styles of Ufa there eome disappointment and struggle. God has for suae' rea son arranged It so. It it in not vuvrty It is stcknesa. It it is not sickness, it Is persecu tion. If it Is not persecution, it Is contest with some evil appetite. It It Is not some evil appetite, it is bereavement. If it is not one thing, it is another. Do not get soured and cross and thing you.- case is p leuliar. Yon are just like the rest of lis. You will have to take the bitter draught whether it be handed to you in golden chalice or pewter mug. A man who has a thousand dollars a year income sleeps rounder and has a belter appetite than the man who has five millions. If our lfe were not a struggle we would never consent to get out ot this world, and we would want to stay here, and so block up the way of the advancing generations. By the time that man gets to be seventy years of age, end sometimes by the time he gets to be fifty years of age, be says: ''I have had enough ot this, and when the Lord wills It I am ready to emigrate to a country where there are no taxes and the silver of the trumpet put to one's lips has no quarrel with the gold of the pavement under hia feet." We have In this world more opiort unity to cul tivate patience than to cultivate any other grace. Let tbat grace be strengthened in the Royal Gymnasium of obstacle and op position, and by the help of God, having overcome our own blnoranoes and word ments, let ns go forth to help others whose struggle is greater than our own. Too Biany Rooks. A remarkably clever woman, ilia wife of a German writer, was con stantly urged by her friends and ail tuirers to write, but a smile was her usual reply. She thoroughly appre ciated her husband's genius and sue cess, but one day, when usked why she "wasted" so much time knitting, Instead of finding some occupation more suited for her brilliant talent. she replied placidly: "I have never heard tbat there are too many stock ings in tbe world, but 1 have of ton heard it said that there are too many books. So it seems to me it is more praiseworthy for me to knit a stock ing than to write a book!" That her decision was a wise one facts seeiu to prove; even eminent authors cannot always dispose of their work. Thoreau waa once able to boast that lie had ou his shelves a library of several hun dred volumes, the greater pari of which he had written himself. ills publishers could not dispose of the first edition ot his tlrst book, and thinking It useless to keep the vol umes longer, had ttietu sent to their author. James llusscll Lowell was rather more fortunate. He brought out his tlrst volumes of poems at his own risk a modest edition of 500 copies. Small as the edition was, however. It was not small enough, and the young poet was in danger of heav y loss; but fate was kinder than the Kecalled "reading public." His pub lisher's warehouse took tire, the books were burned, and they were fully in sured! Not only bad the poet lost nothing, but he could boast w ith Lruih that the flrtt edition of his book was exhausted. He had sold it to the In surance company. I'M ana Abuse of the Uit-yclfc, Bicycle-riding oil a good concrete road and apart from all attempts at speed suggests the noiseless, unforced movement of a bird through the air, aud has almost the effect of a quiet sail on placid water. Its influence ou the iiiiud is no un important part of its usefulness. It isstajthing, with just enough of pleas tint exhilaration, lu this resiect it is superior to walking, since it. pre vents tl at absorption in thought which is so apt to defeat the walker's purpose of complete relaxation. What is known as a "constitul ional," moreover, is too often a task raiher than a pleasure. "Cycling," ou the contrary, is at tractive iu itself. One comes to it as he used to come to his pi a v. It Is equally adapted to gentlemen and ladies a point very much in its favor, since women are largely shut out from more vigorous sports, while walking for health Especially irksome to them. As for carriage-riding, it is too pas sive, involves a cramped posture, is too expensive for most persons, and Is of little advantage except as extended over miles of road. Horseback-riding Is In many respects superior, but in cities, at least, comparatively few can afford it Keneflclal as bicycle-riding is, it may nevertheless be abused. The London Lancet says: "The use of the cycle is a form of bodily recreation in itself doubtless wholesome: none the less is it open to the mischievous effects of undo in dulgence. Every one duds he can do something with it, and considerations of weather, constitution, age and health are apt to tie dismissed with summary imprudence. "One fruitful source of injury is eompetition. In this matter not even the strongest rider can afford to ignore his limit of endurance. The record-breaker who sinks exhausted at bis journey's end has gone a point beyond this. The septuagenarian, who tries to rival his juniors by doing and repeating his twenty or thirty miles, perhaps against time, is even less wise. "Lady cyclists, too, may bear in mind tbat their sex is somewhat the weaker. So, likewise, among men the power of endurance varies greatly, and it is better for some to admit this and be moderate than to labor after the achievements of far more muscu lar neighbors. "In short, whenever prostration beyond mere fatigue follows the ex ercise, or when digestion suffers and weight is markedly lessened, and a pastime becomes an anxious labor, we mar be sure that it is being over done." Youth's Companion, S0 ,4. .v-v-... -