s-ll Wash's v THE BLUEBinD'S SONO, ' It the swaying mountain barelioll Hal It choice. An t co til I shatter the sweet silence With a voice t If A Vlol-t till 1 Its ffSkTMlt Koul hn I fonn 1, An i would treat .in the lovely secret Forth In souud t If Hip summer sky the meaning of a run Would unfold In one cnchau'lu j Hit of tun" ; If a poet lil fl 't fancies, HingM in villi. Would o'crt i';o In one compe'.linf IVr'e.'t strain i If n tover til flrt nr I t. Hi. 1. 1, ti Inn, Won! I r',-i In on? rcve.ilin? T n-lT song : ri"Wi-r nnd "Kf, sky nn I lover, Weil mivlit o.iit ,ir rr.vn a Win-Mr !' fir :it the mi tin Tuin of riptu'". -I'.ill.-rt Iv, in Mpnln tt. THE STRAW-RIDE. r.v rr.vr-r a. yh-m Xl, l,i; ii pack or M 111 l I ' to tl H timt'e nil I've put I t-. sny n'.inut it !" j HKV'I.Kn pnek of I r '14" '"'"n 1'le. i?iU H it- 1 the loi .ic.m .iop ii into the bowl of Lis pipe lis he Hpnke. I'lu n lie opctieil the dour of tlii- hitclii ti Move, dexter oiily traniffrreil a live eonl to the pipe, mi I tli'-ti loaned Imck to putT contefitodly, Liivnig nuveii tbe value of a liiiitch. ' "Yniiii folk can't lie cxpeetel to lip ji-nt iiB htid lruHoll mien like un, JSllllDU. If tlli-V thlllk t!ll'l'i;'rl miro comfort ridm' over a frot-n road in an oM hny-wii.'on with straw on the liottolil oll't til keep thirfe?t lrotlj freezin', it ain't for us t ) iunrrol with 'em 'liout it." Ho leiMini-d S.imnnthii l.il?, who wt elutuiin the Mtjipt r uihe at the tink. "It's well 'nonsh f r the Jenks g'tln mi l the young feller up to ('iirtor'," ndniitte.l Simon, nitha MiilV. "Hut 1 thought M'rye LaiI more hclr than to ko with 'in. I cliiiitl 1 hiniled to see you go to h ht raw-ri le when you Wii9 goin' on t wenty-eiglit. " "We'd been married nun year then, Simon," nui reniindeii hint. "So M'ryo wnuld have been if she hadn't sot her mind on bavin' William I'rye'a khm. l'retty nili ton years fiuee thoy had their falliu' out, niu't it, SamniithnV" "It'll bo ten roar Thai)kniviu' time." "And they lmven't spoUe to one 'not her since, have they'" "Votaworl." his mother. And as for M'rye "Hush, Kiinou I Here cou .ue wagon, uinkiu' as much noisa as a train of ears. And here's M'rve, h!1 rcaiiy." The door from tho stair way hud aoftly opened, aud a tall voting wotnitu, mutHed up in hood nu I lnr, and with a heavy nhitwl on her nr:u, came into the room. With her praoeful curves, sa'tly- j rounded cheeks, with n dish of piuk in them, and a sweet dignity of bear ing1, Maria (Sale was im.ro beautiful, perhaps, than she had erer boon before iu her life. "They are coming, mother," she aid. "Guess everybody thi side of the State line will hear Via!" said her father, with n'twUt of his shaven lips. The rumble of the heavy waou could not, iudeed, have been mis taken, aud with a chatter of merry Toices and ripple of laughter, it wa plain that the occupants of tho hay wagou felt little apprehension, of frozen feet or stinging ears. The team drew up at the door with s flourish. "Halloo, house!" came from mascu line voiceH. I . And then, from the Jenks girl : t, "M'rye 1 All aboard for Wi-sonV" - "Do you think I'm silly to go? I'm o much older thun the others," Maria faltered, as her lips touched her moth er's cheek. "So, no. child; it'll do you good; you're alius so hober-like. And be sides, they'll need sjnieboly oiler aud Middicr to bakuou their giddy heads. " "I so like to hoiue, with its jf, homelike ii"okn. ' go to the Wi,;son rout tu'epliices aud its "Yes, child, an 1 they're chcerfuller tiiAn we be, and they've read more and hnv more to tali; about. Go along, M'rye, and Le sure nnd not git Cold. (lot my heavy shawl, have ye?'1 "Yet-, mother, and I promise to be careful." rihe wer.t out into tho keen Novem ber air and up into the big wagon, with its settees set lengthwise, with barely room upon ouo of them for Maria to sit. Joe Carter, a stripling of seventeen, lifted her into the cart. With her feet buried in the muss of straw on the tloor, and with a Jenks girl upon one sida and Lou Jluxter on the other, there see. nod little danger of suffering from either cold or en nui. "I'm via l the wagon mukei lots of noise," Lon confided to her, as they weut clattering away tlowu the road. "For there's something I'm just dy ing to aar to you, aud nobody can Lear any more than if we were all soul alone. You know I alwuy tell you vervtnlug, aitria. , "It is about 1'hil Marstou, of course, and your voice and sliming eyes tell me that it is something good this time ; don t deny it, you rogue !" f A little tremor of delight shot 'through tht petite form of Lwu Bax ter. "Yea, Marin, it is really ao. lie spoke to me this very night, tad he has loved tne ail along, and he haa never cared for Almn dray. Ob, I am bo Loppy! lint poor Alma, when ihe come to know " "Perhaps Alma won't cara, Lon. Ton mustn't think that Thil has the power of making everybody so miser alilo as he could you," said Maria, with her sweet amile. And so she listened to the raptuons confidences of Lon Master, teeming to enter into the joy of her fresh young heart, though there was a faint mem ory of pain at her own. Down a long hill tlnw the heavily freighted wagou. Three powerful horses male tip the team, and Joe Car tor' twin brotlii-r, Jerry, was driving. He was said to be a famous lad to hnuille hornf, nnd ly the rate they w en1 goitK some of the older members of the party judged that he wan yield ing to the youthful propensity for 'Vhowiii'' lift." The union wm "in the full," and hid not Tit ribrii high enough above tin' horizon t ) ail'ord much light upon the road. There were few house and many trees; and At the foot of the long hill the driver niAde the most of the momentum guined in the dt scent to help the team tmrthe begi tmng f tho u. gr.i lo which began at that i "e : H P'd'lt. The feat caused the was successful, bat it setters to give a bounce n;i I a fltde toward the reir end of tho H''on, while a ehor.is of fciiinine sort urns and luuv'itline shouts of wai'tiiir to the reckless driver inter rupted the cliAt nn i laughter which had beeu going on. There was a moment of desperate clinging to Heats and wagon rails, a shouting to the driver to stop, in the midst of which confusion Lou l!axter found the sneet delight of a strong hand to hold her from falling out, with Phil's magnetic voice telling her not to be afraid whispering the as surance unnei'es:rily close to her ear. It took some moments for the driver to bring tho horses down to a walk, however, and when they got the set tees back into place, and the occu pants had rcluescd from avoiding into chatter and liughter again, Lou found herself in tli forward end of the wagou, with l'hil mumbling his happy nothings ut h-r side. "And joyous iugrate that she was not a thought of Maria Gale entered her mind until the tam drew up with a flourish iu tr.mt of Wigsou'i. liy this tunc the :noou was high enough to hh'.sl transforming light upou t'ueiu. JoL'C.uirr, with the shy, boyish likiug for a young woman many years older tiiau him self, lookod around for Marin, bent upou showing her how easily he could li;t her out. Hot tiie wuou was quickly emptied, nnd Joe blankly looked to find how Maria had given him the slip. "Whero'a M'rye?" he demanded of Lou. ported, aroused from ut own -lenant thoughts. "I'm sure I dom : know. Who must have jumped out al)d gone into the house nhe.ul of us. Yon know she was at the rer cud of the wagon. And that imikes me think. I don't believe she suspected that ho was with us. It was so dark she couldn't hnve seen him, and I kuow she wasn't told of his intention to go." Jou shrugged his shoulders and scowled. "I s'pposo you mean Jimmr Frye?" he nskeu. "Of course. And he sat right op posite to us when she got iu. Uut ho was so muillcd up aud so glum that I'm sure" "Don't kuow what that aigniflos," snapped Joe. And he abruptly turuod hi back upon this youu lady, who, with nil her own experience, had no thought tor tho fU-rcd llamo of jealousy which her miggestiou roused iu his boyish heart. He I e'an his search for Maria dale theu iu earnest. But not for her alone did he in quirefor it was quickly discovered that James Fryo, the "old bachelor" of tho party, was also missiug. Groat was the consternation when there could be no longer any doubt as to tho truth. It was Lou Baxter who first put it into words. "They must have been jolted ont of tho wagon when we all eaute so near being upset! aha oried. Joo Carter, without saving so, had reached this conclusion some time be fore, and while the others were talk ing of going back to see if the missiug ones were injured, he was striding alone down the moonlit road, with his young hnirt alow with the resolution to show Maria Gale that he had been tho first to discover her mishap, and the promptest to come to her relief. "As for Jim t rye," ho muttorod. as he strode along, "he is too much of a mummy to appreciate anv decent nirl. let alone such a real lady as M'rre Gale!" Joe suddenly slackened his pace; then withdrew his sturdy form in among the roadside shadows. Up the road two form were slowly walking, vury closo togather. The low murmur of their voices sent a seething rlame to the heart of Joe as they drew near passed almost within reach of his outstretched liApd, with the moonlight full upon thn and theu on up the hill and out) ol his sight. ( "It was them!" gasped Joe, as be stooo I for a moment gazing after them in a tragio attitude. "I thought I heard umeon holler ing for us to stop, when we was all jumbled up in the wagon there at the foot of the hill," he added. "Audit was him calling to us, and aha waa there, tool Why didn't I jump out aud go baok? If I only wasn't so ttiok-heded!" While poor Jo waa tUtu lashing himself into a jealous fury, Jimmy Frye, with Maria upon hi arm, met I'hilip Marston and Lou Baxter on the porch at W'igson'a. They were just starting ont to find the missing ones, and a horse and buggy had been brought to the door to expedite the search. "It i such a joke that is, if yoa arennhnrt?" Lon exclaimed, with one of Maria' hand between both her own. "I was a little stunned tor a mo ment," she explained, as Jimmy and l'hil left them together, and they lingered in the hall where the tall old clock was solemnly ticking. "But Jimmy was he stunned, too?" "Oh, no; for yon see ho wasn't thrown out at all. He saw me fall aud jumped to save me, for there he was sitting right opposite us all the time while you nnd I were talking." "Perhaps I didn't know," said Lon, her bright eyes looking into those of her friend. Hometuintr, like happy tears were glistening in the eyes which had been sweet and grave for ao many years. "I almost knew," Lou hurriedly tittered, "that if you could only bo brought together again, that the ice would be broken, and that your fool ish pride and his would give way. Maria, dear, it is so, isn't it? Yon have made up with each other you aud that obstinate Jimmy Frye haven't you?" "Yes, you silly child. Now hash !" was the soft answer. The moon ro le high in the heavens as tho big wagon and its loal went back over the hilly road. Tho air was stinging cold, and shawls an I muftlcrs were w rapped close about chins and ears, while aching feet shuffled about amongst tho straw on the floor of the wagou. Thre was much chatter and aomo laughter, but on tho whole the home ward ride, for various cause was quieter than it hail been when they were going toward Wigaou'e. Jerry Carter did not attempt any new exploits with the team. Jon Carter, w th his taco like a thunder-cloud, did not break tho si lence all the way. When the crowd had all been distributed among the straggling houses, and Joe and his brother wero driving the team to the stable, Jerry leered into the face of the former, and said ; "M'rye and Jimmy Frye have made up. I reckoned she'd do better than to adopt me or you. " "James Bays that ho was an obstinate brute," wero Maria's words, with her cheek against her mother's sympathetic lips. "And yet yon havo taken him back, M'ryo?" "I told him that I was more in the wrong than he and I know it was no, mothe.'. Ho toll futacr not to blame him any more." Simon Gale only sniffed - in creduonsly when Saraanth old him wL. ... acknc iut 1. Saturday Night. Chemistry to Regenerate the World. In a reaent address beforo tho manu facturing chomists of Paris, M. Per the let indulged in some extraordinary dreams of what chemistry is to do for this world of ours. Ha said that by utilizing tho central heat of tho earth, which can readily bo procured by means of shafts sunk to the depth of ilOOi) or 4 .Mil metreswhich modern en gineering can dig with little trouble from these water will be obtained hot enough to keep nil possible machinery going ut tho smallest expense, and it would bo an uufniling souroo of me chanical nnd electrical energy. With such a source of heat all chomical 'j"iisfonuatiou would be easy. Tho production of alimentary matter will be one consequence. This production is resolved in principle, aud ha been for forty years, by the synthusoa of grease aud oils. That of hydrates of carbon is going on, aud that of nitro genous substances is not far off. When energy can be obtained thus cheaply, food can be made from carbon taken from carbouio acid, hydrogen taken from water, and nitrogen from tho air. What work tho vegetables havo ao far done science will soon be able to do better, with far greater profusion and independently of seasons or evil microbes or iuseots. There will ba thon no passion to own land, boasts need not bo bred for slaughter, man will be milder and more moral, and barren regions may become preferable to fertilo a habitable places, because they will not be pestiferous from age of maturing. The reign of chemistry will bonutify the planet. There will, under it, be no neod to diedgiire it with tho geometrioal works of the agriculturist, or with tho grime of factories and chimneys. It will re cover its ver '.uro and flora. The earth will be a vast pleasure garden and the human race will live in peace and pleuty. New Orleans Picayune. Do Minerals (iron I The disousiion at the meeting of tho National Aoademy of Soienoe, held in Washington last week, brought up the very curious question whether there was not some sort of life in min eral substances. It was averted that crystal certainly have the power of growth. If injured or broken they can, under favorable circumstances, redevelop their characteristic form. A grain of sand broken from the parent rook age ago, and worn aud polished by the restless wave to a round ball, will, if placed under certain condi tions, resume it normal cbryatalline shape, with polished face of geomet rical regularity. In order to do this the injured crystal muit be placed in some solution of it own element. New Orleans Picayune. The most rtluahla seavougora about the trett aud iu the sewer of a large city art the rat. REV. DR. TALMAGE. TIIK BROOKLYN WVIXE'S SUX DAY 8KRMOX. Subject: "Another Chance." Tit : "If the tri fall towaM the south or towsnt the north, in the piai-e where the true fnlleth there It shall be." Ecolesiaste SI., 9. There l a hnverlnn hope In the mind of a vast multltiiilethnt there will tm an op portunity In th nxt worlil to eorreet the mistaken of this ; that If we iio make com plete shlpwreelt of our earthly life it will be on a shore, up which we may wulk to a pal ace i that, as a lfen'lsnt mv lose his ease In the circuit court and o.irry It up the su preme court or court of chsncerv an.! Bet a rerernsl of Jm lament In his hchnlf, all the ots .elnir thrown over on the other psrty, so, If we full In the earthljrtrhl. we mnr In Him hleher jurisdiction of eternity have th i'.lilirment of the lower court set esdle, all Ihe com remlite'l, sii'l we mnr l victorious defendants forever. My olijecf In this ser mon is to show thnt common sense as well ss my text leclnrcs that u,Mi an expectation Is c'llmerieii. You say that I h Impenitent men. hnvitnr cot Into the next worhl anil seeing the disaster, will, as a result of that rtlnter. turn, tho pain the cause of Mi relormatlon. lint von can llml 10.000 In tnnces in this worM of men who have done wrong, end ditr-ss overtook them sud denly, in,) the distress heal them? No i tliev went riir;it on. Tlmt man w.is flunij of dissipations. "You mit-t stop ilrlniiinir," silil the ilootor, "end Hint the fat tlf yon nro lending, or It will ili stroy you." Tiw p.itient surfers paroxvsm aftr pn-oxvm. .nt under skillful medical treatment he tieglns to sit up, lieuins to walk shout tin room, l.eifins to ko to luislnes. And. lo. he noes ,:,k to the same iiroif-nhop for li s inornluu dram, and his evening drsm. and the itr.ims Let wen. Flat down nitain? Hume doctor ! Sa-ne physical nnculsh ! Hame medical warning ' Now the lllne is more protract-I. the liver Is mote stuhhorn. tha tnitic:i more Irnt-i'.K ami thedigesilve or Bstis nre more rebellious. Hut ater a while he Is out again, goes hack to the drnmshops and goes the simie round ofsacrilegs ugainst bis physical heilth. He ee Unit his downward course is ruin ing his household . thnt his life. Is a perpet. tinl perjury ngiilnsr his mnrringe vow i that that iToki'ii hearted w uiiiin Is so unlike the hopeful young wife whor.i he married thnt her old schoolmates do not recognize her s thnt his ons nre tn he fitinted for n lifetime by the father', drunkenness i thatthednugh ters me to pns Into life under the scarifica tion of n disreputable uneeitor. He Is drinking up their Imppiness. their prospects fortius lii'e, and perhaps forthe life to come. Sometimes nu appreciation of what he Is do lug come upon him. His nervous system Is all ii-tangle. From crown of head to sole of foot he is one aolnng, rasping, crucifying, damning torture. Where Is Uet In hell ou eurth. Does It reform him? A'ter awhile he has delirium tremens, with a whole juugle of hissing reptiles let out on his pillow, nnd his screams horrify the neighbors as he dashes out of his bed, cry ing, "lake these things off me !" As he sits rale nn 1 conv.ilex.ent the doctor says 'Now, I w.iut to have a plain talk with vou, my dear fellow. The next attack of "this kind you have you will hn beyond all medi cal skill, nnd you will die." "h guts better end sons lorth Into the same tight again. This tune medicine takes no effect. Consul tation of physicians ngree in saying there is no hope. Death ends the scene. That process of iuebriution. warning ami dissolution Is goingon within n stone's throw of you, going on Iu all the neighborhoods of Christendom. Pain does not correct. Suf fering does not reform. Whit Is true in one onse is true in all senses and will forever be so, and yet men expecting In tha next world purgat rejuvenation. Take up tne printed reports of the prisons of the United htstrs, and you will rind thnt the vnst majority of the In vireersted have bsn there before, some of thnm tour, five, six times. With 1.O0D.000 Illustrations all work ing the other way iu this world, people are expecting that distress In thu next state will he salvutory. Vou cannot Imagine anv worst torture In any other world than that' which some men have suffered here, au 1 without any salutary consequence. Furthermore, the prospect of a reforma tion in the next world is mare Improbable than a relorinntion here. ual world the life started with Innocence 'A Infancy. In thu case supposed the other life will opsn with all the accumulated bad habits of many years upon him. htir;!y it Is easier to build a string ship out of new timber than out of au old hulk t hut has lie mi ground up In the breakers. If with innocence, to begin with In this lite a man does not become sodlv. what prospect Is there that In the next world, stnrtiug with sin, there would be a seraph evoluted? Surely the sculptor has mora iirospect ol umklug a II no statue out ol a block of pure white Parian marble than out of nu old Mack rock seamed and cracked with the storms of a half eenturv. fcurely upou a eleim white sheet of paper it is easier to write a dee 1 ora will than upon a sheet of paper all scribbled an 1 blottsd aud torn Irom top to bottom. Yet men sesra to think that, though the lire that began here com paratively perfect turned out badlv, the uext lite will succeed, though it starts with a dead failure. "JJut," says some one, "I think we ought lo have a chance In the next life, beoaus this life Is so short it allows only small op portunity. Wo hardly have time to turn around between crjidle and tomb, the wood of the one almost touching the marble of the other." Hut do you kuow what made thean clent deluge a necessity? It was the longe vity of the antediluvians. Tuny were worse In the second century ol tbuir lifetime than in the first hundred years, and still worse In the third century, and still worse all th way on to 700, 800 aud WW ye:irs, ani the oarth bud to be washed au l scrubbed and souked and anchored clear out of sight for more thun a mouth before it could be made fit for decent people to live In. Longevity never cures impenitency. AU the pictures of Tim represeut hlin with a scythe to cut, but I never saw any picture of Time with a cuse of medicines to heal. Seneca says thnt Nero for the first rive years of his publlcj life was set up lor an example of clemency and kindness, but his p.itn all the way descended until at lis A. I), be be came a suicide. If N00 yours did not make antediluvlaus any better, but only made them worse, the age of eternity could have no effect except prolongation of depravity, "But," says some one, "in th future state vil surrounding will be withdrawn and elevated Influence substituted, and. bene expurgation nnd sublimation and glorillca tlou." Hut the righteous, ail their sins for given, have passed on luto a heatlllo state, and consequently the unsaved will be left alone. It cannot ba expected that Dr. Duff, who exhausted himself In teaching Hindoos the way to heaven, nnd Dr. Ahsul, who gave bis life in the evangelization of China, and Adoniram Judson, who tolled for the re demption of Uorueo, should he sent down by some celestial missionary society to educate those who wasted all their earthly existence. vaugiilstio ami missionary efforts are ended. Tlis entire kingdom of th morally baakrupt by themselves, where are the salvatory Influences to come from? Can on speckled aud bad apple in a barrel of dis eased apples turn the other apple good? Can those who aro themselves down help other up? Can those who hav themselves failed In th business of th soul pay th debt of their spiritual Insolvents? Can a million wrouifs uiak one right? 1'oneropoli was a city whore King Philip of Thraci nut all th bad people of hi kingdom. If any man had opened a primary cuool at I'ousropolls, I do not think th parent, from other oil la would hav seat their children there. Instead of amendment in tha other world, all tb association, bow that th good r. evolved, will be degenera ting and down. You would not want to ud a msa to a cholera or yellow fever nor:ts.t for his health, and the great Isssmtto of the next world, containing the diseased nni plague struck, will be a poor place for moral recaverv. If the surroundings in this world were crowded of temptation, th surround ing of th next world, after the righteous hare passed up and on. will be a thousinl perer t. more crowded of temptation. The Jount of Chateaubriand made his lit tle sob sleep at night at the top of a castle turret, where the wind howle l, and where specter were ssld to haunt tha place, and white the mother and sister almost died with fright the son tell ns that the process gave him nerve thnt could not tremble and a courage that never faltered. But I don't think that tower of darkness and the spec tral world swept by sirocco and enroolydon will ever fit one for the land of eternal sun shine. 1 wonder what Is the curriculum of that college of Inferno, where, after proper preparation by the sin of this life, the can didate enters, passing on from freshmnn elas of depravity to sophomore of abandon ment, and from sophomore to junior, an t from Junior to senior, and Hay of gradua tion comes, and with diploma signe t by satan, the president, an! other professorial demoniacs, attesting thnt the candidate has been long enough under their drill, he passe up to enter heaven I 1' mdemonlti'ii a preparative course for heavenlr a Imls. slon ! Ah, my friend, sntan and his coherts have fitted uncounted millions for ruin, but never flttei one soul for happiness! Furthermore, It would not b" safe for this world If men hAl another chance In the next. If It had been announced thnt, how ever wickedly a man might net in this world, he could tlx It up all right in the u-'Xt, society would be terribly demoralised, mi l the human race demolished in a l-w yetr". The fear that If W are bad nnd unforivn here It will not be well for us In the n 'Xt ex. Istence is the chief influence thnt keeps civil isation from rustling Imck to scmbctr ar ism, and B'-mlhnrbarisin from rushing Into mighty savagery, and midnight siv.igerv from Mtinction. for it Is the nstringcut Im pression of all nations. C'nr.stl in nn I hsthn, that there is no future chance for those who have waste 1 this. Multitudes of men who are kept within bound would say "(it to, now Let me get all out of thls'llfe there is In It. Come, gluttony and Inebriation and uncleanneM and revenge end all sensualities, nn i wait upon met My life may be somewhat short ened in this world by dlsolutenes, but that will only mnke heavenly Indulgence on a larger scale the sooner possible. I will over take tha saints at last nnd will enter the heavenly temple only a little later than those Who behaved themselves here. I will on my way to heaven take a little widr ex cursion thnn those who were on earth piou-, and I shall goto heaven via gehenna nnd via sheol." Another chnii"e in the next world means free license nnd wild abandon ment in this. Suppose you were a party In nn Important case at law, and you knew from consultation with judges and attorneys that It would be tried twice, and the Mrt trial would be of little importance, I ut tlmt the second won, I decide everything, for which trial would you make the most preparation, for which retain the ablest attorneys, for which be iuot anx ious about the attendance of wituesse? Y-jii would put all the stress upon the second trial, all the anxiety, all the expenditure, saying, "The first is nothing, tin Inst Is everytnlng.'' (live tho rucenn assurance of a second aud more importune trial in the subsequent life, and nil the preparation f r eternity would be "post mortem," post Mi neral, post sepulchral, nnd the world With one jerk be pitched off into impiety and joi lessuess. Furthermore, let me ask why a ehnn"e should be glveu iu the next world It we have refused innumerable chances iu this? Sup pose you give a banquet, an 1 you invite a vast number of friends, but one man de clines to come or treats your invitation with Indifference. You in the course of twenty years give twenty banquets, nnd the aniue man is invited to them all nnd treats them all Iu the same obnoxious way. After a while ycr. re.nnv to another house larger and bet ter, nnd you a , t.it your frl-uds, .' '. end no Invitation to the man who decline 1 or neglected the other Invitation. Are you to blume? Has he a right to expect to be invited nltr all the indignities he has done you? God iu this world has Invited us all to the banquet of Mis grace. He invited us by His provi dene and His spirit 8 '.5 days of every year since w knew our right hau I Invn our left. If we decline I It every time or trentol the Invitation with IndilTereuce au 1 gave twenty or forty or fifty years of indignity ou 'ir part toward the huuqueter, mi l nt hi't Hi spreads the banquet in a more luxurious nil 1 kingly place, Hinld tho heavenly g.irten. have we a right to expect Him to iuvite us agiiin, und hnve we a right to blame Hun if He does not Invite us? II twelve gates ot salvation stool ojvn twenty years or llfty years for our n luiis siou, uud at theend of that time they are closed, can we complain of it nni sav : "These gates ought to be open again, (iive us a not In-r chance?" If the steamer is to sail for Hamburg, aud we want to get to Ger many by that line, an I we read iu every evening and every morning newspaper that It will sail on a certain day, for two weks we have that advertisement before our eves. and then we go down to the nooks tlitci'ii minutes alter it has shoved oT luto the stream and say- "Come back! Give me auother chance ! It is not fuirtotre.it me In this way I Swiug up to the doik ag.iiu aud throw out plan. s and let me come on board 1'' tfucli beliavior wouid invite arrest as a madinau. And if, alter the gospel ship has lain at aucbor before our eyes for years and years, and all the beulgn voices of earth and heaven hav urgdd us to get on board, as she might ssll uway at any moment, uud after awhile he sails wuhoat in, is it common sense to expect her to come back? You might as well go out on the highlands at Navesluk aul call to the Majestic after sLs has been three dnys out uud expect her to return as to call back an opportunity for heav4U when it once his spid away. All heaven offerej us a a gratuity, nud for n lifetime we retuse to take it, nud then rush on the bosses of Jehovah s bu lkier de manding unotber chance. There ought to be, tuer can be, there will be. no such thing as posthumous opportunity. Thus our common seuss agrees with my text, "If the Ire fall toward the south or toward the north, in the place where tha trie .Jul loth there It (hall be." You ee this Idea lifts this world up from an unimportant way station to a platform of stupendous Issues und makes all eternity whirl around this hour. Uut one trial for which all the preparation must be made In this world or uever ma le at ail. That piles up all the emphusesand all the climaxes and all the destinies luto life here. No other chance I On, how mat augments the value and Importance of this chance ! Alexander with his army used to surround a oily and theu would lilt a great light in loken to th people that if they surreudere I befor that light went out all would be well, but if one the light went out then tha but tering rams would swing against the wall, and demolition nud disaster would follow. Wall, all we need do for our present and everlasting safety is to make surrender to Christ, the King und Conqueror surrender of our hearts, surrender of our lives, sur render of everything. And He keeps a great light burniug, light of gospel Invitation, light kindled with tha wood ot th cross aud flaming up agulnst the dark night of our sin and sorrow, hurroinler while that grout light oontinues to burn, for alter It goes out th.r will be no otheroppurtunlty ol making peso with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. Talk of another chuuoel Why, tbl I a aupernsl ohsncs I la th tlm of Kdward VI., at tb battle of Musselburg, a p rival soldier, seeing that tb Esrl ol Huntley bad lost hi helmet, took oft hi own helmet aud put it upou th head of th arl, and th head ot the p rival sol. dler, uncovered, be wss soou slain, wtill bis commander rode salely out of th battle. Hut la our on, instead of a private soldier offsriug helmet to an arl, it 1 a Klug put ting Hst orowa upon au unworthy auhjuot, he Ring dying that w might live. Tell it to all points ot the compass. Tell It 1o night and day. Tell it to all earth end heaven. Tell It to all cnturies. All Ages, all millenni um, thst we have such amngnlfleent chanco In this world that we need no other chance in the next I nm In the huriishel Judgment hnll r.f the last day. A gr-at white throne is lifted, but the judge has not yet tnken It. While we are waiting for hi arrival I hear Immor tal spirits In conversation. "What nro you wnltlnf here for? ' say a soul that went up from Madagascar to a soul that nscended from America, The latter say. "I came from America where fortv years I hear t the gospel preached and Bible read, and from the pr.iyer.thnt I learned In Inmny on my mother's knee until mv Inst hour I had gos pel Advantage, hut for some reason I did not mnke the Christian choice, and I nm here waiting for the judge to give me a new trial end Another chance." "Striuge !" savs the other. "I had but one gospel call In Mada gascar, nnd I neeeptcd It, nud I do not need Another chance." "Why nre you here?" says oni who on ear;h had feiipt fnf-llect to one who had great brain an I silvery toncue nn I set.ters of Influence, 'f he latter rcpou Is "Oh. knew more than my fellow-. I mas;erel libraries and had learned titles from eoU lege, and mv name was a synonym for eloquence and power. And yet I neglect e.l mv soul, nn i I am hern w.i tini for n new trial.'1 ".Htrangc." says the one of the feni.le earthly cap iclty. "I knew tint little of worldly knowledge, but I knew t'hri: and ma le Him my pinner, uu i hav -no nee 1 of nnoth'T oh inc. Now the ground trembles with the ap pro "!ilng chariot. The great f ildlii - do ,rs of the hail swin j open. S!an l h i"k'.'" tv the celestial tihi r. ".-Van 1 biek. n-i 1 )-t th Judge of quick nnd d".i I pas through '. ' He takes the thron. nnd longing nvrthe. turong ol nations H sav, "(,'.v.n to la le nient. th last Jn l.'itvnf. t n holy in Ij. nient?' llv on" It h fro u tliethrii'ta'.l tlie lii-torv of e idi oil" flames for.u to the s'on of Himself mi l nil other-, Divide!" savs the Ju I re to the nss - n'ilv. "I ivi I" !' echo the walls, "Divide I" cry the guar is unrclK Andnowthn Immortals separate, rushing this way nu I that, nn I niter nwhlle ther ' Is a great nllo between them, and a great vacuum widening nnd widening, nn l tho judge, turning to the throng on on side, says, "He thnt is righti'O.n. I -t bi n be right eous still; nnd lie that Is holy, l-t him bn holy still," mil then, turuin,; tu.v.irl the throng on the nppnite hc, he say-, "He that is unjust, let iiltii be unjiwt still: and he that Is'llithy, let him lie lllttiy still,'' and then, lifting one bun I loe'iird each group, he declares. "If the trn fall toward tin sou'h or toward the north, iu the place where the tr" falleth there It shall be." And theu 1 hear simetiiiiig jnr with u great sound. It Is the closing of the bon ot ju Igment, Tim Judge nccni th stairs be hind the throin. Tin hall of the last nsi. is cleared nnd shut. Tne Uiga court of eternity is a tjourne. I forever. Makm? the Desert to IMossom. "The desert wastes of New Mexico an I Arizona may jet be broad fields of pasturage covered ',U herds of fattening cattle if the', opes of the men who nre deeply interested iu cer tain experiments are realize," said J. F, Wilcox, n lnrflo rauch owner in the ranhnuillo country of Texas. "The expectations of the-e mn are based upou the wonderful vitality of Alfalfa, or Mexieau clover, tho growth of which is astouiuhtupdy rapid and a field of which will yield several cropa iu a' season. Its roots nre .said to go far down iu search of moisture, Koine times to a depth of eighteen to twenty feet, aud its nutritious properties and tho avidity with which stock eat it ar" rm'f kncwD. Ths larje land and li stock investment companies which are now operating iu New Mexico and Arizona have, as an essential part of their schemes of utilizing the desert lauds, the Krowiui? of lare tract of hi fulfil, with which to feed their range cattle nnd other btock. At one ranch iiluiie, La Cueoii, in Mora County, New Mexico, 10J0 head of rauqe cattle are now being fed and fattened for mar ket ou iilfalfa. The Mexican clover is grown by aid of mo lern irrigation and the hinds laid down to it tend to improve iu fertility. Stockmen down in that country have lost nil iuith in tho prowess of modern rain-maker mid their schemes, und they are turn ing; their etl'orU into limro practicable channels." Sun Francisco Chronicle. Nutritious Fruits, There are many kinds of fruit which of themselves nro Hiillicieut t ) sup port healthy life, am U;jr which may1 bo mentioned the date, bausua nud plautaiu, tigs when drie 1, the beau of the carob or locust tro, aud the fruit of tho baobab or monkey-brend tree, which is euteu by tha natives iu West Africa. All the cotitniu sullioieut fat, sugar, starch, pocUu, gum and nitrogenous matter to support healthy life. Of all these preference must be given to the banana, which supplies to many millions a permanently nutri tive food, and to the fruit of the data palnl.sjor Fhueuix dactylifera, which serves as an exclusive article of ali ment iu parts of North Africa, Arabia aud l'ersia. "Iu all Fezzau," says one authority, "the date is the staple food not only for men, but for camels, horses aud dog. Nineteeu-twen-tieths of the population live ou dates alone during nine mouths of the year." In tho Hadji, or pilgrimages, tho price of dates at Mecc aud Me diua forms the first ipiebtiou aslted be tween the Arab pilgrim goin.g; to nnd returning from the sacred city. Cakes J of dates poundeti an t kneaded into a solid muss constitute the maiu nutri meut of the caravans crossing the Sahara. From the fresh juioe of the date wine and, also, vinegar are made, aud spirits distilled, while the stones or seeds are roasted and largely tued instead of coffee. New York Dis patch. The Lighthouse Hop, A dog owned by Captain Orctitt,! keeper of the Wood Island light, haul become famous this week. Jt is cus tomary for passing steamers to salutel the light and the keeper returns it byl riugiug the bell. The other day a tuA whistled three tunes. The captain dull not hear it, but the dog did. He raul to the door aud tried to attract the I captain's attention by howling. Fail ing to do this ha rau away aud theul came a second tune with no better re-j suit. Then ha decided to attend tu the matter himself, ao ha seized tUel rope, which hangs outside, between! nu teetu ana uegan to ring in ueu-i Lewistou (Ue.) Journal.