THE HIDDLMBGH POST. GEO. W, TAGEXSELLER, Editor and Proprietor JIidolrbuboh, Pa., Ju.sk 17, 1897. There are only about 1000 German! in the whole of Mexico. Chicago has a jxyiny savings bank for school children, inaugurated by the Civic Federation. The chemist of the agricultural de partment in Washington thinks that the oil made of sunflower seed, which he says is a perfect substitute for olive oil, is the coming salad oil. Southern California has a popula tion of about 320,000 comprising 64,000 families and the railroad mileage is equal to one mile of road to about forty families. The population is increasing at the rato of from 16, 000 to 20,000 families a year. By the provisions of a new Texan law, bond and investment companies doing business iu the state must de posit with the state treasurer $5000 and ten per cent, of net premium re ceipts yearly until the amount to their credit shall reach to $100,000. According to the government return just issued there are in Scotland 9237 agricultural holdings of one acre and under, 20,150 of from one to five acres, 83,921 of from five to fifty acres, 25,568 of above fifty acres aud seventy-six of more than 1000 acres. "Within the last twenty-two years our southern iron product has in creased 800 per cent.," declares theAt lunta Constitution, "while that of the north and east has increased less than 400 per cent. In 1880 the south pro duced only 3,700,000 tons of coal. Ten years later.however.the product of our mines reached 24,000,000 tons, aud in 1896, 30,000,000 tons." The local branch of the Boston loan and trust company iu Kansas City has received notice from its head office that heareafter loans may be taken on first-class properties in northeastern Kansas. Huh is said to be one of the first orders of the kind affecting Kan sas property that has boeu given by a loan company in years. The, order is limited to Douglass, ,AAbisoa, Jeffer son, Brown, Nemeha and a few other counties in the portion of the state named. Thongh the tomb of General Grant in New York city is now practically completed, there yet remains some work of ornamentation to be done. It is intended to place upon the cap of the pyramidal top of the monument a colossal statue of peace. General Porter says that provision has been made for the erection of this statue, and that work upon it will soon begin. There remains in the treasnry of the association $12,000. The statue may cost $15,000, but there is no fear that there will be difficulty in raising a few thousand to complete the tomb. Vaccination against typhoid fever seems to be an assured resource in the war on disease. Two professors con nected with the Army Medical school at Netley, England, have elaborated a process of antityphoid vaccination. Cultures of the bacilli are used iu the process. Observations were made upon a number of persons, mostly medical men, with satisfactory results. A medical journal says the vaccina tions can be practiced without risk, and their adequacy, also, cau bo easily controlled by examinations of the blood. Persons exposed to the risk of typhod infection may secure immu nity, through this process, if the pres ent degree of success is maintained. On a railroad aiding four miles above Hollidaysburg, Penn., stand thirty-two Pullman palace cars, closely guarded day and night by watchmen whose only duty it is to see that no one interferes with the process of de cay and despoliation which the ele ments have inaugurated. The cars are the property of the Pennsylvania railroad company, and represent an outlay of $400,000. These handsome coaches have been dragged through the slow and tortuous processes of liti gation for over five years. Both the railroad and the Fulman company have claims or thecars, and until a final decision is rendered in the courts these magnificent vehicles of travel by rail are left to rot and crumble in the open air, exposed to all kinds of weather, and will soon be unfit for any use except kindling wood and old crap iron. i '" ! When the average mnn la nor en gaged la talking too much hu la u Siiged In whistling too much. . I & IK A Mysterious Q Disappearance. i fS) T3y BOPHIE BWETT. H, I should like to go as far as the pasture wall once more. I expect the black berries are be ginning to be ripe; and how thick they used to be along that wall!" Mrs. Leafy Todd, as she spoke, leaned back in her rocking chair on the vine-shaded piazza and looked wist fully across the summer fields. "Perhaps you could go if you tried, mother," said her daughter Penelope, hopefully. "You walked as for as the clump of sumacs, you know, last week." Mrs. Todd shook her head until her wiry block ringlets quivered. "I've foiled since then. 'Pears strange to me that you don't see it, Penelope. But there's considerable Todd to you; you don't feel for folks like some." "Ls, Leafy, you just spunk up and go! Take the short-handled dipper and bring home a mess of blackberries for tea. You'll feel a sight better for it," spoke Mrs. Scliua Todd, the in valid's sister-in-law, fut, comfortable and blunt of speech, as she loid a shill ing tin dish on the piazza seat at Leafy's band and disappeared within doors, after winking slyly at Penelope, who sat upon the doorstep. Penelope did not respond to the wink; instead, the pucker deepened be tweeu her brows--o deeper pucker than it was pleasant to see between eighteen-year-old brows. Penelope was dutiful nnd conscientious, and she was not so sure as her Aunt Helino that nervous prostration was, in her moth er's cose, only a new-fushioned suy onym for being spleeny. "Perhaps you'd better wait till I can go with you, mother," she said, anx iously. "Now I must go and give lit tle Persis Dowd her music lesson." "I'm used to waiting," said the in valid, with bitter patience. "I haven't any real expectation of getting as far as the pasture wall again. That walk I took last week came near bringing on a numb spell; and I felt consider able as if I was going to have one just after I got up this morning." The pretty pink color drifted out of Penelope's cheeks. Those "nnmb spells" were the terror of her life. Her mother was sure they meant heart dis ease, and Penelope bad thought that the doctor had looked grave over them. Penelope kept watch and ward to prevent the occurrences which were sure to bring them ou, such as a visit from old Mrs. Polly Nesbit, who told her mother that "she looked full older'n her mother did at her age," and "if she wos pindlin' she ought not to be surprised, for the Pingrens, her mother's folks, wa'n't apt to live to be more'n forty-five." Then thore hnd been a numb spell after the call of Penelope's friends, Ham and Lizzie Nute, from Orinoco. Penelope couldn't understand why these callers should conduce to numb spells, but her mother explained vaguely that there had been some trouble about a mortgage between the Nates and the Todds, in olden times, and that with her sensitiveness she knew- she should never be able to heal th e sight of a Nute. "Cot's foot! Aro you as blind as a bat, Pouelope Todd?" was the remark which Aunt Hclinn had made when the explanation was repeated to her. Hut Penelope would have felt tin dutiful to harbor the least compre hension of what Aunt Helino meant. Of course Bam Nute was not quite like anybody else, and they had thought a good deal of each other ever since they were children. That was the way in which Aunt Selina con nected Sam Nute with tho numb spells. Perhaps Aunt Selina was, as Penelope's mother said, a trifle hard, and lacking in fine feelings. Penelope went off heavily burdened to little Persis Dowil't music lesson. Sho wished she could have helped her mother, now that the rore impulse was upon her to take a little walk that might do her good. But every thing depended ou her music teach ing, and she must not neglect a pupil. The invalid hy bock with her eyes closed ; thou she opened them suddenly and looked ugain wistfully across the summer fields. Sho gazed around her furtively ; no one was in sight. She arose aud walked feebly down the steps. Midway she turned and reached back for the dipper. "I used to be one that liked to have something to go for," she said to herself. It was pleasant to her even to cross the stubby field wheu the grasshoppers were thick, aud the locusts shrilled monotonously, and the afternoon sun ' was hot. She raised her hand suddenly to her head. "I've got on Seliuy's old shade hat," she murmured. "Once I wouldu't have worn it even wheu there was nobody to Bee me."' . . The sun dazzled her eyes and her head felt a little giddy. It was long since she had walked so far; but she persevered. Along the wall of the stubby field grew a tangle of vines; but they werea-sspberry vines -that had al ready shed their fruit," and traveller's joy, and here and there, a red gleam Ot ivy. . "Across the railway-track, along the pasture-wall, there's where the ' black berries grow," she said to herself. i "I haven't been.bj-'i for twb years, but I remember just a well 1 ' Here's the gap la tho wall where I used to go through. OS I I s'pose I better elimb across one of them cars instead of going around the end of 'em all. It'a just scandalous the way railroad folks leave cars stand ing ou this siding most every day till they want them for the suburban folks evenings aud mornings." The sun glinted through the chinks in Selina's battered hat a man's hat bought at the store for ten cents in the haying season and Leafy was near sighted at the best. She listened. No locomotive was in hearing. The short cut was across a car platform. When she Climbed up to it, she said to her self, "I feel a mite dizzy I guess I'll sit right here on top of the steps and rest a little." Tenelope had gone with a heavy heart, as has been said, to little Persis Dowd's music lesson. Penelope was a responsible person as well as a deeply affectionate one, and since her father's death she had felt herself to be in an especial sense her mother's keeper. Old Doctor Bemis, a little puzzled by uen-ous prostration, which was less common in North Goshen than in places where people have more leisure for it, hod said very gravely that his patient must not be crossed; and Pene lope felt guilty that she had even been tempted to cross her. The temptation had been dutifully resisted; a letter of many poges to Sam Nute now lay heavily in her pocket and still more heavily upon her heart. It had required many pages to tell Sum that what he had asked her could never be, because her duty to her mother forbade it. She had set forth fully and pathetically her mother's sad and dangerous condition, the more so that sho suspected Aunt Seliua of hav ing mode light of it to Hani. Penelope hod to go a little out of her way to reach the postoffice, and at the turning of the road she halted, her resolution weakened by the tugging at her heart-strings. Little Persis Dowd really ought not to be obliged to wait ten minutes for her lesson; aud to morrow would be soon enough to send that letter. Old Captain Dowd, Persis's grandfather, drove Penelope homo around by the river-rood, so the letter was still in her pocket when she renched home and found Aunt Selina frantically tooting the horu aud ringing the diu-uer-bell to raise an alarm. "Bo calm, Penelope, be calm!" im plored Aunt Seliua, hysterically; "but little Aaron Scattergood says he saw her going across the field in the middle of the afternoon, aud my big hat and the short-handled dipper uint any where, nor she aint! I thought she was taking a nap in her room, aud I didn't ring the supper-bell, waiting for her and you () Penelope, don't look like that! It's most likely she has just gone to oue of the neighbors." The two women stood looking at ench other, Penelope's white-lipped, dry-eyed silence iu strong contrast with Aunt Selina's feverish excitement. They both knew that Leafy never went to the neighbors. Penelope had heard that nervous prostration sometimes developed into The thought was too dreadful to en dure iu silence! "The pond! Aunt Selina, the pond!" she gasped. "Now don't you go to thinking of that, child! I haint let myself think of that!" sobbed Aunt Seliua. "Oh, poor old Leafy! I don't know as I bad feeling enough for her sufferings though I did know they wa'n't all vain imaginations." Penelope felt the letter in her pocket, an awful witness to her guilt. She thought that her mother had probably discovered that Sam had written to her, nnd anxiety for the result had driven her to some dreadful deed. "Oh, my poor suffering mother! Could you think I would be so heart less as to leave you?" she cried aloud, her self-restraint giving awoy sudden ly. Then she arroused herself to action, on seeing little Aaron Scatter good standing, highly entertained and curling his bare toes with excitement, iu the gateway. "Bun, Aaron, to every house in this neighborhood and ask if my mother bin been there or been seen!" suid Penelope, imperatively. "I've been, and she haint, "answered little Aoron, concisely. "Nobody saw her go herryin' but just me. Mubbe a bear cat her," ho said, cheerfully; "only there ain't none." Little Aaron's head drooped dejectedly with a sense of the tameuess of life, and he medita tively essayed to pick up stones be tween his bare toes. "Aunt Selina, the pond must be dragged at ouce! I'll go and give the alarm." Penelope sped down the hill toward the village, and at the foot she met the messenger boy from the centre with a telegram for Miss Penelope Todd, which she opened with shaking fingers. "Your mother safe with friends. Will return soon." The telegram was unsigned. It came from Orinoco. Penelope . drew , a . long, sobbing breath of relief; but the mystery op pressed her. - Her mother must have wandered away, and that implied a much greater degree of mental weak ness than she had hitherto shown. "I am going to Orinooo at once," she declared, when she had carried the telegram home to Aunt Selina. - "But it's a large town, and you haven't a mite of a duel I'd just wait patiently, seeing you know sWs safe," aid Atrat Selina. " "''- Fenelope, when ih grew calmer, felt that this was good advice, and waited; but the monotonous "one, two, three" of her small piano pupils seemed to pound upon her brain. But her mother did not return, and the. next day Penelope set out for Or inooo. There was no train until after noon. On her way to the station aha stopped at the postofnee to mail her letter to Sam Nute. She had a vague feeling that it was a propitiation of fate, this sacrifice which was so bard. Without it her mother would not be returned to her. Before she could slip the letter into the box the postmistress handed her one, addressed in the loose, wavering hand that had been her mother's since her illness, and she went directly out with it. Penelope sat down upon the grass by the wayside and opened it, her heart leaping at the 'dear, familiar words. Mr Diab Dacohtib: I want you to send me my best bonnet, right off. And you might send, too, your little lace cap that you think is so becoming to me. They want me to stay to tne county conference, and as there are things about It that seem kind of providential, as you might say, I don't know but I shall. And Lizzie ls real stylish, you know. I'm wearing one ot her hats, and they say It isn't a mtte too young tor me. I torgot that you don't know how I came here, but I suppose you must have kind of guessed by this time. I went serous the ueid to tne railroad track, thinking to pieic a few blackberries. My head flow round, but I kept right on, for I never was one to give up easy. I went to climb over the empty passenger-ears that are most always mere in tne daytime, and l sat down to rest; and I guess I must have fallen asleep, for first thing I know there was a jerk, and cue train was moving. I thought at first that I was only dizzy, and the noise it made was in my head: but when the atone walls begird to slip along backward I knew what haaMiappened. I got up to go inside. ut the door was locked, and nobody saw or heard me till the conductor come along and unlocked the door. I told him I must bo put off, but he said they couldn't, for they were behind time. Hi was saucy, anyhow; when I said I couldn't go to Orinoco which was the first stopping-place he said, as cool as could be, "Madam, what will you do? And wuon i HHi'i i snonid ai pejore I got mere, he said, as polite as a basket of chips. "In that case, madam, I will sen that your re mains aro sent to your friends!" He gave mo a comfortable seat I'll snv that for him and there I sat in Hellna's old baying hat, with the tears triokling down my cheeks and him and two brake men staring at me. When I got off at Orinoco I was trembling in every limb, for I hadn't any money, I couldn't bearto ask nny questions, nftoirthoblood-curdling wav that that conductor answered me. Ilut 1 declare, I don't know but it kept me up to bo so mnd as he minle mo! While I was standing on the platform of the Orinoco station, wondering what I should do. who should come driving up but Hnm and Lizzie Nute! You know I've hnd kind of a feeling against Nutes, but I didn't think of it then, I never was so glad to see any folks in all mv born davs, and I said so right out. They took me right home with them, and here 1 am. It seems queer that I should have been carried off so to the county conference, that I never expected to go to again. The ltev. Orslno Cheney is stopping here at Deacon Nute's to attend the conference. Your Aunt Hellna will know who ho Is. lie used to kind of keen company with me when I was a girl. Tliey say be has come home Tor a wife, and Lizzie keeps teasing me; but, of course, that is ridiculous. Not but what I should feel equal to laboring in tho Lord's vineyard wherever He was pleased to call me, after what I stood yes terdav. That makes me think that I don't know ss .you've treated Ham Nuto Just right. Maybe you've thought too much of that old difficulty between the two families. Folks ought not to treasure up such things. If I should have to leave you and the most unexpected things do happen in this world I should like to think that I loft you with such a protector as Ham Nute would be. lOl'U IjOVINO mother. P. 8. Before vou send the bonnet vou might get two little sprigs of those blue Mowers that you thought were so becoming to mo and let the milliner pin them in. Penelope laughed a little and cried a little, sitting by herself on the grass beside the rood. Then she tore the long, hateful lotter to Sam all into lit tle bits and tossod them into the air; and the winds of heaven swooped down upon them nnd bore them afar. Youth's Companion. Husband and Wife fur Eighty-Seven Tears. Mr. aud Mrs. Jacob Killer, who live near La Grange, Ind., have just completed eighty-seven years of mar ried life, and both bid fair to live a few yeors longer. Mr. Hitler is now 107 years old and his wife 105, and the little frame cottage they occupy has been their home for nearly eighty-five years. This house consists of one room, and this room contains all the aged couple's earthly possessions. Mr. Hiller is a vigorous looking man for his extreme old age. His band is as strong and his step as firm as those of a man of forty. His eyes are bright, and his long hair falls in unmixed whiteness almost to his shoulders. His wife has long sinoe passed under the spell of old age. She is bent al most double with the weight of her years and is totally blind. "It'a a caution," says Mr. Hiller, speaking of his age. "I never counted on . living so long or anything like it." He tells how he was born in Jamestown, near Kingston, Canada. He was twenty two years old when the war of 1812 came along, and he describes Canada as a very wild country in those years. The first year of the war he and his wife left ' Canada and settled near Marine City, and went from there to Emment, whence they came to their present home. They were married when Mr. Hiller was twenty and his wife eighteen. With his old age have come symptoms of a second childhood, the most amusing and amazing of which is the cutting of two teeth lately. The old couple have eleven, children, the oldest eighty-two and the youngest fifty-seven. Chicago Times-Herald. Scarcity of Rubber. Owing largely to the use of India rubber for, bicycle Aires,' the demand for the , product has increased so enormouslv that there is Brent risk of the supply failing if the natural produe- ' tion upou which we now depend is not supplemented by the artificial cultiva tion of the trees whioli yield the ma terial. A company has recently been formed for the purpose of developing plantations: of rubber-bearing trees la Mexico, JHEIMCMIQII PREGNANT THOUGHTS FROM THE WORLD'S GREATEST AUTHORS. Teach Cs Daily Traaasuated Tkrsaah Harrvader Iaarratabla Thoag-k Mot . Vaiatcllla-IMa-A Prayer for Prepara 61a and KrlfUhnt-M-Uod Knows Uet. O, Jesus Christ, grow Thou in me, And all things else recede; 51 y heart be dally nearer The From sin be daily freed. , In Thy bright beams which on me fall Fade every evil thought; ' That X am nothing, Thou art all, ' 1 would be dally taught. . Make this poor self grow less and loss, Be Thou my life and aim; O, make me dally, through Thy graoe, More worthy of Thy name! Transmuted Through Hnrrender. It you enter the Turner Gallery ot Art In London, you are at once arrested by the flaming picture ot unrivaled magnificence. Yoa have sunrises that coma blushing o'er the incense-breathing morn aud sunsets that seem to open the very gateways of glory suns la their meridian splendor, suns shining through the rifted clouds, giving exquisite shadows, turning the water Into silvery sheen and clothing the heathery hill sides In purple robes. If you examine what gives brilliance to those pictures jewels and all precious stones, think you? Nothing of the kind. The genius of Turner took the worthless metallic oxides and pigments which were pulverized, cleansed and assimi lated sacrificed, If you please and then bandied to Incarnate on the canvas the Ideal creations of his n.lnd.aud now the worthless pigments are transmuted into n value which the wealth of a Vanderbilt could not pur chase from the nation. How tine is the analogy here! If the surrender of these worthiest pigments to tho bands of a Turner lifts them to such peerless value, making them the milliliters of bounty through the ages, tho surrender of any soul to God gives tho services of that soul an inuoneelvable preclousness. George? Douglas, 1). 1)., in "The Sacrifice of Herviee." Inscrutable Though Not I'nlntelllglble. It is vital Christianity wheu the believer can say. "I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth iu me. This is not a shadow which we pursue, nor a dream of the night. Tho union of sunlight with flower, of heat with lire, of life with the body, Is not more roal. There is a lite which is bid with Christ in God for sinful, helpless men and women; not a fancy of the mystic in his solitude, not n prize for him who lias leisure nnd learn ing, but a reality for all believers amid their temptations, troubles, duties, cares. Man has a body; ho is a spirit. Spiritually he may be joined with Christ and become a son of God. Ilut this union does not destroy personality. It is. however, vital the life of Christ within the believer as distinguished from external influence or assistance so that the apostle says, "He that hath tho Hon hath life. ' It is inscrutable though not unintelligible. Wo cannot fully comprehend it. but may know it by experience. It is increasingly revealed to every faithful dis ciple. "Of His fullness have all we re ceived, and grace for grace." ltev. Herbert W. Lathe, in "Chosen of God." A Prayer for Preparation. We present ourselves to thee today, our father. Prepare us for what thou seest to be waiting for us in the valley of the day, now veiled In mist. I.i't not sin have dominion over ns. If tempta tion assails, may it find no foothold In our hearts; If wo pass through scenes where the Itilcction oi evil is strong, may we not bo susceptible to it; if we are strongly pro voked, may we not yield. If thou goest uot with us carry us not up hence. Apart from thee we eau do nothing. He nearer to us than our denrest friend; be closer to us than the most Insidious craft of the enemy. May we put on the Lord Jesus, so that he shall be tho vesture of our souls. Be with us as our shepherd, keeping us; as our cap tain, leading us; as our friend, warning and Helping us. Let the secret place of the Most High be our home and the shadow of the Almighty our abiding place. Do more thnu go with us, dwell in us, walk in us. possess us, uso us. When we nre most absorbed in our necessary business, may thy presence not withdraw itself, but bo perma nent aud abiding. Amen. Sin nml Hclllshiiess. A brittle thing Is our earthly happiness- brittle as some thin vuse of Venetiuu glass; nnd neither anxiety, nor sorrow,, nor the dart of death, which is mightier than the oak-cleaving thunderbolt, can slm.ter a thing even so brittle as the earthly happi ness of our poor little homes, if we place that happiness under the care of God. But though neither anguish nor death can break it with nil their violence, sin can break It at a touch; nnd selfishness can shatter It, just as there are acids which will shiver the Venetian glass. Hin anil selfishness God's balm docs not heal In tills world tho ravages which they eauso ! Canon Ferrer. (ind Stands at Threshold. In Holman Hunt's great picture callei! "The Light of the World," we seo One with patient, gentle face, standing at a door which ls ivy-covered, ns if long closed. He ls girt with tho priestly breastplate. lie bears iu His hand the lamp of truth. He stands and knocks. There is no answer, and He still stands and knocks. His eye tells of love; His face beams with yearning. You look closely and you perceive that there is no knob or latoh on the outsido of the door. It can bo opened only from within Do you not see the moaning? The Spirit o God comes to your heart's door and knocks- He stands there while storms gather and break uuon His unsheltered head, while the sun declines and night conies on with its chills and Its heavy dews. Ho waits and knocks, but you must open the door your self. Tho only latch is inside. J. II. Miller, D.D. Tho Tide of God's Grace. I saw a vessel which tho waves did spare, Lie sadly stranded on a sandy beach, Beyond the tide's kind reach: Within Its murmur of lumeutlng speech Long she lay there; Until at length A mighty sea arose In all Its strength, . And launched her lovingly. And thus, alas! our race Lay stranded on the Deaon ot numan sin And misery, Beyond all help, until God's gracious graee, A mighty tide, All crimson dyed, Swept grandly Iu, . And set us free. . Anon. - God Knows Best. ' We may be led ot God all the time, and. like Moses, we should be eontent with the place where He bids us dwell. I doubt not that tome of you may feel that you have been, ana even now are. kept Daoic rrom tne greatest usefulness. ... I would not have you feel thus, but rather use very care fully all that the Lord gives you. And don't be afraid of the "bock side of the desert," and never think you are forsaken ot Qod because kept long there. - He knows just how much of quiet, humble life we need to servo Him iu the best manner hereafter. Mary Lyon . , . My God, I thank Thee, who bast mad . The earth so bright; Bo full of splendor and of joy, ' ', Beauty and Light: ; ' go many glorious things are here, Noble and right! Adelaide A. Tractor. . ana -cma w& TOPIC FOR SURDAY, JUNE 2 Ou Bretasra Stayers." Ota, l ODB SBOTHSBS' K(rf OS, June 11 Our neighbors: lT. U. 18, . June 15. Helpfulness. Dent. ,U l-s. Jute 16. Meroy. Zecb. vit, g,j4. June IT. Humility. John uL j-15, June la Love. Gal v. 6-15. June 11 Cnselnshnees. 1 Cor. 23-331 . Bcairroaa Vsasas. L, . U-. Jer. li Luke zL 62; svit 1. 3; Bom. '" 10: lit ii M;lCor.U. 12; x. 13. 'H ' utssox tboc0T, j The laws of the stata aad the lnvi J Simplest morality hold mn rPonilbl (, bodily murder of, or any pDylel Ujgn? bis brother. What, then, nutt our txoia. ability, before the perfect Justice 0f God, t, the spiritual death of any tDOut uti , Our responsibility for 0tber dtxt w ' cease when we have mere), refrained i doing them, any posltlva injury, it a Z duty also to go after thoaa w60 hivt Mia, ed, and actively seek to atVe those Uuiaj tuai. SKAICTlOHg. Come. let us work for By faith and earneat nryer. The wanderln ones tro0 us Should data our constant car. Then let us work for Jnt Before the sun ftoe don: We've hearts to win for JU Ere we can wear a cro"0 Inquire diligently what blood mortRu, there Is on your property in tne intermix missions, bow much you to the baUiam because of what you owB to Christ forT deeming you with his proio" blood. I m you that It will go bard with Ton when y0 Lord oomi-s to reckon tu you if bo ttk your wealth invested in aiiperBous lumria or boarded up in needle accumulation Instead ot being sacredly de'otod to glta. the gospel to the lost, Amid the snares misfortune Unseen, beneath the stent ot all. Blest is the love that seet, to raise t And stay and strengthen those who tn. ' Till, taught by Him who for r sak ' Bore every form of life's distress, With every passing year w ""tie The sum of human sorro The great problem is not how to Mvtti, world, nut bow to pursusd each Cbrkiu that it ls his business to be tbs mttj saving some one unu iq tD "oriu. Let us reach into our boons For the key to other iM And with love toward er''nR oatur, Cherish good that mil survives; 8o that wbtn our dlirobd spirits Soar to realms ot vnt above. We may say, "Dear Patb8'- lovs ni. E'en as we bsve shown 0(r lovs." lie "Drank Hue Plh." A young man of witU and hiirh i position died recently ju London uo iu tiuunuiy iruui unu, tig v1" DC Stt'Q lro the tollowiug reports of the Huai.'ltv at u. quor put down to this y0UQg muilijujj account. On the dav Ills .i.vith h. said to have had ten giuses of whisky.if'Y a uouiu oi i-omroryi a giass ot U'tii-. tine, a glass ot sherry. npd two hultl Marcobrunner. This mte of eonsiimtiti was exceeded on other Hoys, and alcnhoUn clearly had marked this misguided smu raau lor its own. ilxo dclH gave a ;& pie aacouni oi nis condition. Trust God With Affair-. A friend went oue tnnruing t Sir l!obr.l Peel's house aud founJ him with airrml bundle of letters iviui; oeior,i nun, ii0u over it la prayer. Tho frll'nd .."-tired. I camo back Iu a short tim" Rnd safari Ktl your pardon for intruding upon your (H vate devotions. isir po"ert saw: those were mv nubli,, ,ivotlns. I w 1st giving the affairs of 8t,it Into the han il tlod, fori could not nui" trusting the living u0j wmi your niw i or your housekeeping. -J1- t . noo-rep I Lord's wie - KlToiiipPiw. it we truly feel that tb J-ord iivcth bSl v horn we stand we Runli want ii itmnir'si for our work but His hiii'1": ami shaU i I that the light or isee is all we t I Thut thought should deaden our Mkl outward tilings. nv Hie triuu'stni"! fever our souls by pursuing uiilirrt! lieitris wuen n v lose " "I ceil' "J an-' How small and vulj;,tr the )ri;:e" oflWl people call them, will iM'Pear.-A MicImI Arise, snd heart ; If tlm" 'lost n : T.:ttea'l t'hrixt'fl resurreetl.,., thine rnav Lr. I Do not by hangiug down "r,'uk fr .i;uuvSj wnicji us it riHeiii, riiitu tu Arise ! Ari ! -Herb I Home people will uer know loyltsf 1 ...,. ...I..., hUi-M3 ItUOUi dt'BH" l ilt mi pXCI K WM " I I tin lives ,f His diu.,i..lus. We mi'trl people of Christ by living the t'!:r:..!-:ilt'-l rfivro. u un-fc Ytt u ... Christ that people, win uot Christ. Bishop Thobtif-1 Yon can't jump awftY froai .vv;r 'f4! oin n you turn io the Bun- vo" behind vou. ami If yod u.l ual-!rth your shallow Is beue'-'U y,J- HWJ should try to do is to Hve uuJ''-'t'il"r Sun, with our sim.iov?, suit, una tow - ltev. V. li. Meyer. Yon ennnrt trace Jems VOU "MS 1 lyze Jes his bint i us. His Intense spiritualty "'H dicity of thout.'1''. I' ,"f l.i ...nil.. .,,1 ti'irLllpe. abnegation and his uun,t .IUII ttliv mil QI'-'TIT ,a scended on a Worn iiit, hopi'i'1 .JS.-Joli3 I dew upon the ury gra-s. HUt'll UO cwillj n01 ei'- " m tians; wheu he nt ti""' heathen." Inscription on urn ..il l. I . . ... t V. TV .i-.' '1 1 L-" ionu ucuuiu i Anciw ,;: 1Mb bay, YHC GREAT 0,h -tf power! ullr sad qic,lf. CVrJ ,'' louu men will n-M "i i men will recover ,eir To HKVIVO. It niitekirMd''rt!T aesa. Lost VlUlltr lpiPoleiK '"' it Lost Power. Fsillu. Mrmonr,.? all meet ot self-abui" oreH'MLnr which nnOto one tor sO"1. W ,1 js not on It cases by urlw si lb" 7 U s surest nerve t W d iDg back tfi Pink a-'0 P. ,Trf Storing tb Aro of wli. I' """..(l and Conmimptloa. i't on ""!, other. Ii on t crrll In '"ir 1 .00 aer rack.er "..0 tire written n',r''te. , the money. Otrottisr'n- fTjC , or aaia at l'ualBU 'V WANTED-AN WW ' . t thing to patent? PrfiLL1' .route traMtt- Mi' JL