THE MIDDLEBDBGH POST. GEO. W, WAGEXSELLER, Editor and Proprietor Middlebubob, Fa., Sept. 16, 1697. Italy had tinder operation last year 8800 miles of standard-gnage railways, 790 of narrow gnage and 1770 of street railroads. Much interest is taken in French naval circles in the discovery of a com position which is alleged to have the marvellous property of rendering ves sels invisible beneath the rays of eleo trio searchlights. It is stated that at the naval manoeuvres oft" Brest torpedo-boat No. 61, representing the enemy, succeeded in traversing un seen the luminous zone produced by the electric projectors, having been coated with the new composition. Many inquiries are being made 81 to the possibility of getting into the Klondike country during the coming fall and winter, Mates tho New York Tribune. The answer may be unhesi tatingly given. It would be folly to attempt to get in at such times. Those who are now on their way may get in, though it is believed that not more than half of them will. To attempt the trip after this month would be al most as hazardous as a journey to the North role. The new Dutch Cabinet is com posed of statesmen whose names can only be described as singularly appro priate to their respective offices. Thus, the Ministor of War rejoices in the patronymic of Van Dam; the Minister of Justice is a Trofossor Drucker ("drucker" being the Dutch for some one who presses down heavily); the Minister of Finance is a Baron Gold stein, while the Minister of Foreign Affairs goes by the peculiar name of Van Oldnailer; the Minister of Canals and Waterways is a Mr. Lily; the Minister of the Interior is a stout nobleman of the name of Jonkheer van Roll; the Minister of Marine in a Scotchman, an Admiral Macleod, while the Fremier rejoices in the exceeding ly English name of Pearson. The Committee of Ten fronfthe great colleges, which is appointed to consider standards of requirements in entrance English, and to secure, if practicable, uniform entrance examina tions in that subject recently appoint ed, to further its work, a sub-committee of fifteen, headed by Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler. This committee, in order to ascertain the opinions of well known English masters on the best books for additional reading in Eng lish, sent out a list of forty-three books, to which was appended this re quest: 'Tleose mark with a cross the books in the following list that you have found desirable, with a double cross those that you have found espe cially desirable, with a circle those that you hove found unsatisfactory, with a double circle those thot you have found especially unsatisfactory." Those who received this list replied readily, and as a result this committee has indubitable expert testimony on the best books for preparatory read ing. The balloting resulted in tho ranking of the books as follows; 1, Merchant of Venice; 2, Julius Csar; 8, Vision of Sir Launfal; 4, Sketch Book; 5, Silas Marner; 6, Ivanhoe; 7, Evangeliuo; 8, As You Like It; 9, Sir Roger de Coverly Papers; 10, Macbeth; 11, Lady of the Lake; 12, Bunker Hill Oration; 13, Ancient Mariner; 14, Courtship of Miles Stanilish ; 15, Mar tnion; 1G, L'AIlcgro; 17, II Penseroso; 18, House of the Seven Gables; 19, Conciliation With America; 20, Twice Told Tales; 21, Essay on Milton and Addison; 22, Vicar of WakeQold; 23, Frincess; 24, Midsummer Night's Dream; 25, Conius; 20, Life of Sam uel Johnson; 27, David Copperfleld; 28, Tarailise Lost, Books I. and II.; 29, Sohrab and Rustum; 30, Lycidas; 31, Tales of a Traveler; 32, Twelfth Night; 33, Escoy ou Burns; 84, American Scholar; 85, Last of the Mo hicans; 30, Tope's Iliad; 37, Wood stock; 38, Second Essay on Chutham; 39, The Abbot; 40, Lifo of Nelson; 41, Flight of a Tartar Tribe; 42, Pnlamon and Arcite; 43, History of the Plague. Of these books Merchant of Venice alone received no unfavorable ballot. The History of the Plague ranked low est in favorable ballots, aud at the same time received 123 double crosses, the largest number of negative ballots cast for a book. The low ranking of the Second Essay on Chatham, which always seemed to be a favorite with the masters, will bo doubt surprise manj, ' . ' . ' " If you pny your debts promptly, you are entitled to more credit than a man who is charitable, or a woman who is literary. THE DREAM There is an Island la Slumber sea Whore the drollest things are done. And we will sail there, It the winds are (air, Just after the set of the tun. Tls the loveliest place., In the whole wide world. Or anyway so it seems, And the folk there play at the end ot each dar In a curious show called "Dreams." We sail rltcht into the evening skies, And the very tirst thing we know We are there at the port and ready for sport Whore the dream folks glvethelr show. An. I what do you think they did last night When I crossed their harbor ban? They hoisted a plank on a groat cloud bank And teetered among tne stars, Jb 4": i i: ? 1 Ily MARGARET JOIJANN ; " s rl $? HE teacher stood by the blackboard reviewing with Ralph Burrows a problem in alge bra. Most of her pupils were from the lower walks of life, rude in dress and manner, and backward in in telligence. The schoolroom was a relio of an ancient educational regime, with broken, be grimed walls, curtaiuless wiudows and backless, splinter-fringed benches, whose present incumbents could, upon the clumsy "forms" before them, carve their initials side by side with those of their fathers', or im prison flies in dungeons gougod out by the jack-knives of their grand fathers. This pupil in algebra was the sole representative there of the township aristocracy. The teacher was very proud of him. He had already passed the entrance examination for the high school in a distant city. He showed what he could do when she had material to work with, she thought, and she was fond of showing him oil" when the trustees made their pro scribed "two visits a year." The boy hud au earnest though merry face, and he bore with good-humored indif ference the distinctioli of being the best-dressed and most scholarly pupil there. It was a raw January day. The wind made the old schoolhoiise quake, but for pity of the children, it piled pro tecting ridges of snow about tho case ments. For the comfort of the smaller children benohes were drawn close to .the stove; but at the forms the older ones wrung their hands to dispel the jiumbness of their lingers, and sat upon their feet to keep them warm. A. little girl with stringy, yellow eurls, a lace-bordered apron, torn and dingy, and a soiled ribbon around her neck, tugged at the teacher's gown. "Tin me and WeaserTon do home?" "Weasor Tan" (Louisa Rutan) by her side, hung her head bashfully and pulled her mouth awry with her lingers. There was no attempt at finery in Weasor Tan's costume. She was au ugly child, with part of her unkempt hair gathered into a short, tapering braid aud tied with a bit of thread, and the rest of it hanging in strings ubout her eyes and ears. The teacher hesitnted. "'Me and Weaser Tan' will freeze on the way, Miss L ," said Ralph, good-naturedly turning from his prob lem, "they have ucarly as far to go as I hove." Miss L stepped anxiously to the window aud surveyed the road. "If Me and Weaser Tan' will wait till school's out I'll take them homo ou my sled," continued Ralph. The teacher looked relieved. "If you'll do that, Ralph," she said, "you may go right away; for the storm's getting worse every minute." The boy was dolighted to get out of school so early. "Proof that a good action is never thrown away,?' he said, with roguish familiarity. Then he slammed his books into place, put on his wurm overcoat and tied a bright homo-knit scarf around his neck, and the little girls pinned on their threadbare shawls. They went out into the storm to- gethcr, and he seated them a-tundem upon his sled. "Put ou your mittens, Weaser Tan," he said, for the child's liuiuls holding to the sides of the sled were chapped aud red. "She ain't got none," said Grace, pulling at the wrists of her own and giggling self-consciously. "Put these on, theu," said throwing his own into her lap. he, She drew them on shamefacedly. The little girls lived in adjoiuing cabins; and when he left them in front of their door he said: "You may keep the mittens, Weasor Tan; mother'll knit me another pair. They're not so gay us Grace's, but they're warm." Rulph Burrows, home ou a college vacation, came out of tho woods be hiud the Rutan cabin with his gnu upon his Rhouldcr. His dog had rim ou ahead and Ralph came upon him eagerly lapping water from a trough in front of the house. Grace and Weaser Tan were there, tho latter with her hand upon tho handle of the pump, from whose nozzle a stream of fresh water was falling gently for the ani mal's enjoyment. "Don knows whore the best water in the neighborhood is to be found," said Ralph, throwing a bunch of game upon the grass and pumping a dipper ful of water for himself an the girl stepped bashfully aside. The dog, a magnificent English setter, went to TOWN SHOW. And they sat on the moon and swung their feet, .Like pendulums, to and fro. : : j Down Hlumber sea U the sail for me, , , And I wish you were ready to go. For the dream folks there on this curious isle Begin their performance at eleht. There are no encores, and they close their doors On every one who Is late. The sun Is sinking behind tha hills, The seven o'clock bell chime. I know by the chart that we ought to start ir we would be tnere in time. Oh, fair is the trip down Hlumber seal Hot sail, and awav we go) The anchor is drawn, we are on ana kouo To the wonderful dnam town show. -Ella Wheeler Wilcox, Hi V? ""-I5 i? Tv i -J? '! v. - v 4! i v? i ss her and laid his tawny head against her. hue spoke gently to him, fond ling his silky ears. "He seems to be au acquaintance of yours," suid Ralph, by way 'of being sociaole. "Sh'd think heought to be," giggled Grace. "She's always saving bones anil things for him." "That's very kind, I'm sure," said tlie young fellow, turning toward the game which Grace was inspecting. "That blue-jay was au accident I (lulu t mt'un to shoot him. "You might give me his wings for my lint, said Grace, saucily. "His wings? with pleasure," and, tukiug cut his knife, he cut them oil. "One for Grace and one for 'Wea sor Tan,' " he said, giving one to each and laughing at the recollection of the old childish name. He went whistling out of the crate; and Grace, with each hand grasping a picket of tho rickety fence, watched him out of hearing. He drew a long breath as she turned away. "Gracious, ain't ho handsome!" she said, "and, Wease, you like him awful good." For answer Wease splashed her well with water. Then Grace went crying into the house, and Weuse, in the covert of the high pump, softly stroked the jay's whig oud watched the giver out of sight. "Room in our town for another physician, " wrote distant relatives. and there Ralph Burrows went fresh from an extended course of study and travel abroad. He opened his office in the heart of tho town; his home was with his relatives ou hills that over looked it. Business came to him In a gingly, but love came ou smooth, swift wings. Marguerite, heir of beauty, wealth and goodness, sat on tho yerauda. fieldglass in hand. A dozen times a day she focused it upon Ralph's office in the towu below. A few moments since she haw him lock his door and set out upon the homeward rood. Now he was hidden from view, but she knew just what landmark ho had reached (she had timed him so often). To speed the minutes she took up a magazine aud scauned au article thut essayed to settle for all times and for all people the question: "Is life worth living?" When he came she met him at the foot of the torrnces, and with his arm around her he led her buck to the veranda. "What's in it?" he asked, tossing the magazine aside to make room tor them both upon the willow settle. "Oh, Ralph," she cried, archly, "is life worth living? ' He took her face between his hands and looked unutterable love into eyes that paid him back his own. "Is lifo worth living? And with Marguerite? A thousand, thousand times, sweetheart, and forever and ever! He kissed her rapturously. "For shame," sho whispered, look ing rosily foolish and happy, "there's .Louise; she must have heard and seen the whole performance. And, by the way, Ralph, when you write your mother, thank her again for solving for us tho servant problem in so far as a waitress is concerned. This Louise Rutau has been with us two months now, and we find her all we could de sire; only (witha little deprecative shrug) her face is so stolidly sorrow' ful. I'm so happy myself, Ralph, that when anyone else is sad I feel a sort of remorse almost as if I were re sponsible. "Well, poor girl," he said, "I've kuown her ever since sho was three feet high, I suppose, and she's had pretty hard lines. She 11 brighten, never fear, in the atmosphere of this home. "Louise," said Marguerite next day. "I believe I'll let you drive me into town; you re accustomed to a horse, aren't you?" "Not very; but I'm not afraid," was the reply; so they went. Marguerite had made her purchases. had achieved a merry consultation with Ralph in front of his office, and they were upon a homeward, uphill road that lay along the bed of a little stream, The queer, reticent girl by her side was a study for Murguorite. Through out the drive she had tried to make her talk; but, baflled, she had by now lapsed into a silence akin to pique. A new thought came to her. "Louise," she asked, "is life worth living?" "For you it must be, Miss Mar guerite." It was a lengthy sentence for the girl to utter, but her eyes looked staight ahead and her hands holding the slack rein lay limp in her lap. . . . "And why not for you, Louise?" The girl hesitated, and Marguerite, always prone to moralizing, improved me opportunity. . My good girL" she said, "you wage-earners make m great mistake in thinking that wealth brings happiness. All of us, noh and poor alike, meet with disappointments, and we can either make the best of them ana be happy or make the worst of them and be miserable. ' Now, here are these gloves that I've just bought. I couldn't get the oolor I wanted; these are fully three shades too dark, but I'm not going to fret about them; I'm going to be happy in spite of circum stances." "Yes, ma'am," said the girl, apatheti cally. "You have health, home and plenty to eat and to wear, Louise, and I have no more than that." ' "Yes, ma'am" but there was repu diation in the tone. Marguerite recognized it, and went on, s softness stealing over her glad, flower-like beauty. "Of course, I have Ralph; but some day, Louise, some honest hearted young fellow will come to you, aud will love you as his life, and then, Louise, if your heart responds" (her voice weighed with the sweet mystery of love dropped into rhythmic cadence) "you will be blest indeed." "Yes, ma'am," said the girl again, but feigned an interest in the land scape and leaued forward to hide her homely face from the gaze of the beau tiful and blest. Suddenly the feigned interest be came real, for she half rose to her feet, grasping the dashboard. "Whoa!" She threw the reins into Marguerite's lap; and, springing to the ground, pressed into the thicket of blackberry aud catbrier that upon one side bor dered the road. Partiug the tangle with her bare hands, she took one look through the opening she had made. The next instant she had loosened the traces and was leading the horse out of the shafts. "Why, Louise" began Marguerite; then she got down and went to her with a face full of astonished inquiry. Tho girl's ringers were flying from buckle to buckle along the harness. "Go home as fast as you can go, Miss Marguerite," she said. Her voice was steady, but her hands shook. "What do you mean, Louise?" The girl dragged the harness off: "For you," she said, "life is worth living; for me" she backed the horse to tho carringe-side "death is worth dying." From a hub she vaulted to the horso'ii back. "3o home!" she shouted, fiercely; for by now she had lost control of her voice. ' "I believe you are insane," said Marguerite, half iu auger, half iu fright. To the quivering girl the suggestion was an inspiration. She waved her hands wildly: "Go!" she shouted, jerking the horse upon his (-haunches, "start, or I'll ride you down!" Marguerite fled in terror. Once she looked back. No one was in sight, but she heard the horse's hoofs clatter ing downward into the town. A catalpa, little and old and scarred and only of late protected from vandal ism by a box, stood in front of the doc tor's office. A horse wheeled under it, and Ralph reached the sidewalk as the rider slipped to the ground. "What's wrong, my girl?" he asked, with forced professional calmness. Her breath camo pantingly. "Go home," she gasped, with tense, white lips, "they want you." He sprang toward his office, but she clutched his sleeve. She was not fierce now, but her tone was an agony of pleading. "Oh, go!" for the first time in her life she looked full into his face "don't stop for anything she's dying, I tell you Murguorite she's bleed ing to death by the roadside above the dam." She pressed the bridle into his hand, but he tore away into his office. He was out again liko a flash, hatless but his emergency kit iu hand. He snatched the bridle and the next min ute the woody, up-hill road plucked horse aud rider out of her sight. Almost fainting, she held to the tree box. The street was nearly deserted, bat two women, talking earnestly, came round a corner. She clutched the gown of the nearer, b) "The dam," she whispered, "there's a leak" The woman started and gathered her skirt closely about her. "Poor creature!" she said to her companion, "rum is the curse of this land," and they turned nervously into the nearest Btreet. Then Weaser Tan's strength came again. Two boys tore past her in a wild game of chase. She seized the foremost by his shoulder, his compan ion grabbed him at the same instant, and both wheeled stumblingly in front of her. "Run for the hills!" Bhe shook the boy as if to awaken him from Bleep "the big dam is giving wayl Don't stand aud store! Alarm the people!" , She flung them from her, and they plunged ahead one shrieking like a maniac, the other dumb with terror. The girl herself dashed after the two women. Ahead of her and on the op posite side, upon a bank of the "branch," was a factory. In its seo ond story young girls were working; she could see them through the open windows. She was flying up the stairs when a suspicious foreman stopped her. . "Whereaway so fast, young wo man?" "The flood is coming!" "Nonsense!" he smiled pleasantly. "It's the dam, the great dam above the South Fork! Look out at the branch!" and she tore past him. The girls were already staring wild ly iuto one another's faces, for a new din. the roar of n raiting river, min gled with the whir and clatter el the machinery.' "Run for your livosP They rushed to the street and fled their various ways. One, half para lysed, elung to easer Tan. "The railroad bridge is high and very strong." From both sides peo ple were crowding upon it. Only a moment but in it, to thai struggling cityful, terror enough to freight eternity and Louise, her arm around her -fainting charge stood upon the bridge. Then the dam sur rendered its last defense and pande monium plunged into the valley. The work of rescue was going on. The young doctor had not lain down, they said, for two days and two nights. He was everywhere, directing, com manding, executing. Some sixty rods below where the bridge had been was a wooded knoll, for whioh the branch in its peaceful days had turned tran quilly aside. A mass of drift was piled there now, sand and soil; trees, cattle aud the wrecks of homes; stone buttress; brace and girder and ntanchion of steel and human flesh and blood wisps of straw flipped aside by the torrent, the discarded playthings of a moment. Gangs of men were sorting it over. A bit of blue cambric caught Ralph's eye. He knew it, for his mother had worn it once. "Careful there, careful," he warned, pressing in among the laborers, "take away that piece of roofing. Not your axe, man! For heaven's sake don't use that! There's a young girl lying just beneath! Help me lift it, half a dozen of yon so that will do." He scooped away some debris with his hands and wiped the soil from the dead face. "Thank God, there's no mutilation. That iron beam there twisted like a thread it confines the arm. Set your lever just here,. Steady steady; that will do. "Now, some one help me carry her. Not you, Van Courtlandt; some one with an awful sorrow tugging at his heart. You'll do, McCall. "Gently, my man, tenderly as you'll lift that little girl xtt yours when you find her. Lay her hero, McCall. "One moment more, my friend. Here's a pillow, soft and white and frilled, a dainty thing Marguerite sent it. Put it into place while I lift the head. Now the spread thank you, McCall." Weaser Tan lay in her coffin; her face as plain in death as iu life, but more serene. Ralph stood and looked at her wonderingly and sadly. His old dog came aud, whining, laid his muzzle in his hand. "Yes, Don, you've lost a friend. She loved you." . Marguerite came softly in. "Here's something else she loved," she said. "They say she would not sleep without it under her pillow." Ho opened the little box she gave Kim, gazed into it for a moment, touched its contents tenderly, then tucked them under some roses that lay upon her breast. They were a pair of gray yarn mit tens and a blue-jay's wing. Short Stories. Novel Way to Tell the Time. "The Navy Department clerks have a good one on me," said Senator Jones recently to a Star reporter. "I have had frequent occasion to visit the State, War and Navy Department building during the session of Congress, and somehow always managed to get there about noon each day, though I had no particular object in getting there the same hour each day. But it happened that way. I noticed on several occa sions as I passed through the halls of the building that some of the clerks or messengers sang out 'down' as I passed them, and, though I could not under stand the reason, I did not connect it with myself. When the thing hap pened three or four times in succes sion, it began to make me think. About three weeks ago I had business there, and just as I entered a room looking for a friend, an official, a clerk broke out with the usual 'down,' looking at me straight in the eyes. I got a little hot under the collar at it, and said, 'Young man. There is nothing par ticularly down about mejthat I know of, and will you please explain why all of you speak of me as down as I pass through?' .The clerk reddened up somewhat and explained that his 'down' had no reference to me what ever; that what he meant by it, as also the others, was that the time ball which is dropped from the flag staff at the top of the building at noon each day had dropped for 12 o'clock; that it was a custom of the olerks and messengers of that building whenever they hap pened to be watching the ball to sing out 'down,' so as to inform their fel low clerks who were not watching tho ball that it was down. Of course, the explanation was satisfactory and that is all there is of it. I admit, however, that the clerks in that building have one on me, and I'll try to even it up some time with them." Washington Star. . Steel ItalU In China. A Pittsburg artificer, Walter Ken nedy by name, has taken charge of the steel rail plant at Han-Yang, China, and is turning out rails ol standard quality, as good as those of Pittsburg, Bethlehem, Joliet or any of the American or European rolling mills, to be laid down on the new Wo-Sung railroad. The introduction of, this new industry, says the New York Tribune, is likely to be of more importance to China than anything which has happened in her history since the days of Confucius. As her guide in this new and momentous industrial departure, the country did well to take an American, and it seems apparent that she has picked out a capable one, who understands his business and is qualified to make the pigtails understand it also. mi6i;cu::! sub a pregnant thoughts from the world's' Greatest prophets. i 1 1 ... At Twlllht-The Ai-tlit uprem-. Ing rrayer-Whea the Great Tran,iu0 Comee-The Handwriting of Character -" t fc" ' "J ma Alloy, Vm In rwwtl Aft vtniM a! j . The lonely bittern shifts hi. rwdv J 7. " In garden trees sate hid from ourtou. auest -. The tree-frog pipes tha hour of dusk awa . Above the Una In tangled mae of play ' The fire-fly swings his ellln torch ot Heh, While sweet wood-thrushes thrill ,,k And whlppoorwlll takes up her evening .T In matted crass the ebon cricket And dusty moths flit through the win'.ll,w Thn lmn hllthpafa thu Hnslr with AA.t And rest returns to smooth the brow oi care ; The lisping pines Breathe low a sweet re- mm, And hotniug cow-bells tinkle down the IUUO. Professor B. F. LegKett. Christ the ArtUt Supreme, Bishop Thoburn tells a bimtifui Btor, about a picture of bis dead child. It sw-niHl a very Imperfect photograph, to blurred that scarcely a trace of the loved feuturii oould be seen In it. But one day he t,, the picture to a photographer, nnd asked him If he could do anything to improve it. In three Weoks the bishop returned, am) M be saw the picture in its frame mi it,. wall, be was startled. It seemed as if hi ouuu worn living again ueinre nun. The image had boon in the old picture, but km concealed beneath the blurs and mints tlmt were there also. The artist, however, hnd brought it out In strong, living beautv,' un til It was like life in Its tender charm. every true disciple of ChrUt there in the Im age of tho Master. It may be very dim. lu leaiuren are ovonaiu oy uiurs ami blemishm and am almost unrecognizable by huiniin eyes. It is the work of Christ In our live to bring out this likeness, more ami ninn clearly, until at last It shines in umllmmni Deuuty. inis is wnat Llirlst U doing in many oi uis ways witn us. "Who from unsightly bulb or slender root Could guess aright The story of the flower, the fern, the fruit Iu summer s height ' ' Through tremulous shadows voices call to I mo, 'It doth not yet appear what we shall Is.' " An Kvenlug Trayer. Lord, abldo with us, for It is evening mil tli night Is upon us. Give us l.'iv proteo- lion in unu lurougn me uurKness. l no .ltirk ness and the light are both alike to the. slid we shall sloop without fear, tor thou an our keeper. We ask for thy upu.-r. Kanh'i ttnnm lu unullv hrnlren Itv nlnritia nn.l i. , ... j u ..j . uim uy m i troubles that snriuir ud coutinuullv : I, -it th. I 1 peace is eternal not as the world giveib dost thou give, and we long to stay our weary hearts on thee. We lay at thy feet the work of this day. Tcui'h u the lesion thou wouldt nave in lenrn (rum Its experiences. What is stained with tin wilt thou graciously cleanse. Correct our mistakes and let them not mar our work nor hurt 6ther lives. We axk special ldiii upon our Irlonds. Lena tnem in paths ul thiue own choosing. Knnctifv our hom life. Help us to Hnd the best iu each other, and preserve us from criticism, inipntienv and displeasure. May love so abound in oat hearts tfiat nil our human relations shall lie- come mure thoughtful and tender. Aivent our gratitude for tho common mercies ul every day. t old us all now in thine ever lasting arms, and may the grace of our lord jesus Christ be upon us. Amen. When the Great Trannllion Comei, Some day It may happen that, having mi'!' his visit to our neighbors. Death will hate a miud to call on us, and we sliull go softly about our changed bouse in sad amaze ment. 9r a fleecy cloud, which only lent pleasing softness to the arch of blue will suddenly gather into a thundercloud, inJ lay desolate our golden coruilelds. Or t flue passage from tho prophets, whos III erarv cruce and felloitous ImacKry we have often tasted, will fllug aside its em broidered cloak and spring upon w. grlp-l ping our conscience and heart with irenl hand. We shall be taken fiom the miilstoll the multitude, among which we were WJ-I den. and the cross we had seen on other shoulders shall rest on our own. Ilofor. w had marchod along on the outskirts ol lllej now, we are brought into its secret jilaeeJ where Jesus traveletn Witn his compamraj along the sorrowful way tl fulllU the will tfl Uod. tan juaciuren. Time Purge Away the Alloy, T atiur In Itnmn." unvs n modern writer "un old coin, a sllvor deunrius, nil coatel and crusted with areon and Miriilo rust ' called it rust, but I was told that It wai copper: tho alloy thrown out from tlwM j until tnero wus none leit wiunu, m ' was all pure. It takes ages to du It, 11 does get done, souls are nto uim. tliinf illnYPR ill them Blowlv. till the ilel'l" munllu nil ihpnwn nut Home) dnV tierllfll1 lkat.AFwtm.niuh shli 1 1 hft ink ltl off. " l'1' there la this nllov. this ttirnish, iu alio! k nml llin mluentlon of life is to liUW It ' nway by sorrows, by disappointments, W failures, bv judgments, J "lly llres fiir tlurcor than are blown to wl And purge the Bilvur ore auiiunu. Canon Karrtr. Oheilleinro thn Price of PrngreM Tho Uiblo rings with one long demiml fo Deuteronomy is, "Observe nod il''" 1 burden of our Lord s farewell diseour -j "If ye love Mo, koep My oomniuntimeuiM We must not inioetion or reply or ourselves. We must not pick nui ni'"""": wnv. Wn mint tint think tllttt ol'li',U' 11 one direction will compensate for oln"ti iu somo other particular. Cod eiv'" nnmtnini.l nt B tl.wi. It rthV M i. lie '1 Hood our soul with blessing, and l1"'"! wnrd Into new paths and pastures. i Ota rttfuan wa nlinll remniii s!Iinnlit ' wator-logged, muke no progress lu i'hrWl experience, ana iuuk ooiu power nuu. Itev. i V. Meyer. Par Hom-la Mnlta rlanr Vi'lna. Fverv norm It tori alii Incrnsts tho wiO'k! of the soul and blinds our vision, and "1 victory over evil clears the vieion oi ij soul so that we can see God a lif.m P','07J The unholy man could not OoJ 1 wure set down iu the midst of hoaven: men aud women whose hearts are pur H Him in the very oommonoat walk of '6 J. Wilbur Chupman, D. D. Blowlv, through all the unlversn, theW pie of God Is being built. Wneo, in J1' hnrd fight, In your tiresome drudirerv. your terrible temptation, you cawu w r- pose of your being, and give T0Urs"j God, and so give Him the chance to n Himself to you, your life, a living taken up aud set Into that growing l'hllllps Brooks. Do not fancy yourself safo "nil fouTfn because you foel no burden. There J a thing as a laden slave gloepluir on h den. Xhe rst stage of nsortliicatlos ' aro painful ; after that the benumb- cease to warn. ,Tho frost-blttoa "J warned by strangers. ' Bo is it In Pi of oonselonoe. Frederick, W. BolwrU ' If we; look, down, then our 1,bM5 stoop. If . our tbougbte look dov character benls. It Is only when our heads np that the body become It Is only when our thoughts go up " life becomes erect Alexander 1U" n. d. Nil Si Htr Hi III Ml